The main center for his worship was at the Awwam Temple, which remained in use until the fourth century AD.
Jacques Ryckmans states, Almaqah is considered a moon god, but Garbini and Pirenne have shown that the bull's head and the vine motif associated with him may have solar and dionysiac attributes.
[citation needed] Almaqah is represented on monuments by a cluster of lightning bolts surrounding a curved, sickle-like weapon.
The Awwam Temple was also an important site of pilgrimage across South Arabia during the month of ḏū-Abhī.
Additional sites of devotion are known from the Yemeni highlands, including an important one from the Alāw mountain, the center of the worship of several tribes and perhaps a secondary branch of the main Awwam Temple.