Salalah Known for its glorious history, UNESCO heritage place,Ubar Lost city of Arabia,Al-Baleed Fort,Jobs Tomb, Khor Ruri,Prophet Umran Tomb near hafa house
Khor- Rori ("Sumhuram") Arabian archaeological site near Salalah
Khor Rorī is an Early South Arabian
archaeological site near Salalah in the Dhofar region of modernOman. The small
fortified town was founded as an outpost for the kingdom of Ḥaḑramawt around
the 1st century CE, but the site shows signs of Ḥaḑramite settlement back to
the 2nd century BC. The settlement was probably abandoned in the seventh
century. One of the Queen of Sheba's palaces was located here.Inscriptions
at Khor Rori reports that the town, called "Sumhuram", was founded on
royal initiative and settled by Ḥadramite emigrants. Dhofar was the main source
of frankincense in the ancient period, and it seems likely that the foundation
of the settlement was in part motivated by a Ḥaḑramite wish to control the
production of this valuable commodity. Most scholars identify Khor Rori with
the frankincense exporting port of Moskha Limen mentioned in this region in the
1st century CE merchants guide Periplus Maris Erythraei.Khor Rorī /
Sumhuram was first discovered by James Theodore Bent during his travels in the
region in the late 19th century. The site has been excavated by the American
Foundation for the Study of Man in the
early 1950s and by the Italian Mission to Oman since 1994. The excavations have
uncovered the ground plan of the settlement and has attested maritime contacts
with the Ḥaḑramite homeland, India and the Mediterranean. It was inscribed in
2000, along with other sites along the Incense Route in Oman, as part of the
UNESCO World Heritage Site "Land of Frankincense"
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