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Al Ula ruins: Saudis revive forgotten past

Pre-Islamic site throws light on Saudi Arabia’s rich archaeolog­ical treasures

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Trudging up a caramelhue­d cliff pocked with ancient tombs, guide Bandar Al Anazi gazed at the stunning view: a windswept desert landscape of pre-Islamic ruins at the centre of Saudi-Franco preservati­on efforts.

Al Ula, an area rich in archaeolog­ical remnants, is seen as a jewel in the crown of future Saudi attraction­s as the kingdom prepares to issue tourist visas for the first time — opening up one of the last frontiers of global tourism.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman signed a landmark agreement with Paris on Tuesday for the touristic and cultural developmen­t of the northweste­rn site, once a crossroads of ancient civilisati­ons.

“All of Al Ula is an open air museum,” Al Anazi said during a media tour just days before Prince Mohammad’s trip, revealing a patchwork of rockcut tombs containing niches for burials.

“There is so much history here still waiting to be discovered.”

The tombs, some containing pre-Islamic inscriptio­ns and drawings such as hunting scenes, are a legacy of the Nabataean artistic tradition.

The chiselled rock art forms could help unravel the mysteries of millennia-old civilisati­ons on the Arabian Peninsula.

The area, roughly the size of Belgium, served as an important way station and bedouin watering hole on the trade route linking the Arabian Peninsula, North Africa and India.

Over 2,000 years old

It is home to the kingdom’s first Unesco World Heritage Site, Madain Saleh, built more than 2,000 years ago by the Nabataeans. “Every day something new is being discovered,” Jamie Quartermai­ne, an expert from the Britain-based Oxford Archaeolog­y group, said.

“The potential is endless. Look behind you,” he said, pointing at ancient animal art depictions engraved on a rocky spur inside an Al Ula hotel resort.

A helicopter tour of the area revealed a desert landscape that appeared like the top of a foamed latte, dotted with heritage sites and towering mazelike rock formations.

The Saudi-Franco partnershi­p is in part aimed at preserving the site from further erosion and vandalism it has faced.

At one archeologi­cal site called Al Khoraiba, Al Anazi pointed at a bereft cistern.

Photos taken by French explorers Jaussen and Savignac, who visited the area in the early 20th century, showed the same cistern once featured the statue of a deity.

The walled city of Al Ula, with tightly packed mud-brick and stone houses that were inhabited until modern times, sits decaying under the scorching sun.

But before a preservati­on plan is launched in collaborat­ion with France, all archaeolog­ical treasures need to be accounted for, said Amr Al Madani, head of the Royal Al Ula Commission.

A massive two-year surveying programme began in March, which includes scanning via helicopter­s, satellites, drones and a remote sensing technology called Lidar, he said.

“This is a significan­t undertakin­g incorporat­ing all levels of survey from aerial survey down to ground checking,” said Quartermai­ne.

A Franco-Saudi deal to develop Al Ula calls for the creation of a dedicated agency modelled on the lines of the French museums agency. At least one large museum is planned to be built in Al Ula. Gerard Mestrallet, the former CEO of French electric utility company Engie, has been appointed special envoy of French President Emmanuel Macron for Al Ula.

Al Ula is expected to fully open up to global tourists within three to five years, launching the site as what Saudi officials describe as “a gift to the world”.

Al Ula is among a hidden trove of Saudi archaeolog­ical treasures.

Archaeolog­ists last year used Google Maps to find hundreds of stone “gates” built from rock in a remote Saudi desert, which may date back as far as 7,000 years.

They also discovered evidence of 46 lakes believed to have existed in Saudi Arabia’s northern Nefud desert, which experts say has lent credence to the theory that the region swung between periods of desertific­ation and a wetter climate.

“This is about national pride in our own past,” Al Anazi said.

 ?? AFP ?? The Qasr Al Farid tomb (The Lonely Castle) carved into rose-coloured sandstone in Madain Saleh, a Unesco World Heritage site, near Saudi Arabia’s town of Al Ula.
AFP The Qasr Al Farid tomb (The Lonely Castle) carved into rose-coloured sandstone in Madain Saleh, a Unesco World Heritage site, near Saudi Arabia’s town of Al Ula.
 ?? AFP ?? The ancient tombs at the Khuraiba archaeolog­ical site near Al Ula town.
AFP The ancient tombs at the Khuraiba archaeolog­ical site near Al Ula town.
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