LE TOMBE COLLETTIVE A CORRIDOIO DELLA NECROPOLI DI DABA¯ : ORIGINE E DIFFUSIONE DI UNA STRUTTURA A CARATTERE FUNERARIO SULLA BASE DELLE EVIDENZE DEL SUD-EST DELLA PENISOLA ARABICA

Francesco Genchi

Abstract


This paper takes as its starting point the exploration of two collective tombs of the corridorshaped type,
also known as ‘long-chambered’, identified in the 2nd/1st millennium BC necropolis at Dibba¯ al-Bayah,
on the east coast of the Musandam Peninsula in the Sultanate of Oman. The spread of this type of tomb is
limited to the northern region of the Oman Peninsula, and to the period between the middle/late Bronze
Age and the beginning of the Iron Age (first half of the 2nd millennium BC - first half of the 1st millennium
BC). These tombs are of monumental character with a corridor chamber, usually semi-subterranean, that
can reach a length of up to 30 m. The focus is therefore on the diffusion confined to the northern area of
south-eastern Arabia, comparing the investigated specimens, and describing similarities and differences in
order to hypothesise construction patterns. Furthermore, light is shed on the origins of this phenomenon,
which are probably to be found in Iranian Luristan, on the basis of some similar architectural choices linked
to funerary aspects and on the presence of objects of clear Iranian derivation among Dibba¯ findings.


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