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A Hoard of Abbasid-Era Gold Treasures Has Been Discovered Along an Ancient Pilgrimage Route in Saudi Arabia

31.05.2026 | 07:49 |
 A Hoard of Abbasid-Era Gold Treasures Has Been Discovered Along an Ancient Pilgrimage Route in Saudi Arabia

A unique discovery by Middle Eastern archaeologists at the excavation site of the ancient settlement of Dariya in Al-Qassim Province has shed light on the true extent of the wealth and trade and economic prosperity of the Arabian Peninsula during the early Islamic period. As reported in an official report by the Saudi Arabian Heritage Commission, during the sixth field season, researchers discovered an ancient ceramic jar carefully hidden in the ground, which contained a monumental jewelry set that had been preserved in perfect condition for twelve centuries.

The total number of precious artifacts recovered exceeded one hundred, including massive gold pendants, richly decorated discs, delicate necklace dividers, and numerous multicolored beads. Scientists have determined that the objects date back to the early Abbasid period, with accompanying organic remains pointing to a precise time frame between 743 and 753 CE, when the caliphate was just beginning to unite vast Eurasian spaces through trade, pilgrimage, and art.

A study of the technological features of the discovered hoard, dubbed the Treasure of Darius by the scholarly press, has demonstrated the highest level of jewelry craftsmanship of the early Middle Ages. Craftsmen of that time created jewelry by hand-forging thin sheets of gold, followed by the application of complex relief embossing, combining plant motifs and the strict geometric shapes characteristic of nascent Islamic art.

The central element of the set is a large disc-shaped medallion, symmetrically inlaid with semiprecious and colored stones, hand-set in special gold settings, around a complex central ornament.

Beyond its aesthetic value, the discovery has enormous geopolitical significance, as Dariya was a key strategic station on the famed Basra Hajj route, linking southern Iraq with the holy city of Mecca.

The discovery of such an expensive private set, which could have belonged to a member of an elite family or a wealthy merchant, proves that desert caravan routes were not lifeless spaces, but bustling transit corridors where global financial flows, new technologies, and high material culture intersected.

Photo: news.artnet.com

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