lunes, 31 de mayo de 2010

3,300-year-old tomb of Ancient Egyptian official Ptah Mes discovered at Saqqara





3,300-year-old tomb of Ancient Egyptian official Ptah Mes discovered at Saqqara

Archaeologists have discovered the 3,300 year-old tomb of Ptahmes, 19th Dynasty army leader and royal scribe, at Saqqara. The discovery of the tomb – dated to the second half of the 19th Dynasty (1203-1186BC) - by the Archaeological Faculty of the Cairo University was announced today, putting an end to a 300-year-old archaeological riddle.
Ptahmes' tomb is 70 metres long and contains numerous chapels. Dr Zahi Hawass commented its design is similar to that of the tomb of Ptah Im Wiya, a royal sear bearer who lived during the reign of Pharaoh Akhenaten, discovered in 2007 by Dutch archaeologists.
As Ptahmes was appointed to several official posts – including mayhor of Memphis, royal scribe and supervisor of the Ptah temple – Dr Ola El-Egezi, who led the excavations, concluded he must have been a prominent figure. The 19th Dynasty cemetery, located on the south side of the ramp of the Pyramid of King Unas, was reserved for the burial of ancient Egypt's top government officials.
The excavation revealed several stelae, amongst which an unfinished depiction of the deceased. It shows Ptahmes and his family before the Theban triad: Amun, Mut and Khonsu. Such a stela, El-Egezi said, reveals that during the second half of the 19th dynasty, the cult of Amun was revived.
The sand revealed several fragments of the statue of Ptahmes and his wife. A painted head depicting a female – most probably the mayor's wife or one of his daughters – was unearthed, along with a limestone statue that belongs to the deceased. The archaeologists also unearthed clay vessels, shabti figurines and amulets.
According to archaeologist Dr Heba Mustafa, part of the excavation team, the pillars of the tomb were reused for the construction of chapels during the Christian era. Part of its walls are severely deteriorated. Several pieces of the wall were found in the debris inside the tomb. These pieces were collected in order to be registered and restored. It is thought most of the damage to the walls was sustained when the tomb was first opened in the 19th century.
The location of the tomb of Ptahmes was last recorded in 1885 and artifacts from the burial site were taken to museums in the Netherlands, the United States, Italy and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Its location was soon forgotton, and Egypt's desert sands covered up the tomb again.
Ptahmes' sarcophagus is not yet located. Excavations to find the main shaft of the tomb – leading to the burial chamber with the coffin and funerary equipment – continue.
Saqqara, located 40 kilometres south of Cairo is one of Egypt's oldest burial sites, also known as the 'City of the Dead'. It is a 6 kilometres long necropolis and home to a great number of mastabas, rock-cut tombs and pyramids, amongst which the famous Step Pyramid of Djoser.
Earlier this year at Saqqara, French archaeologists discovered the burial chamber of 6th Dynasty Queen Behenu – wife to either Pepi I or Pepi II – and an Egyptian mission found a 26th Dynasty tomb, the largest rock-cut tomb ever discovered at the necropolis. Several archaeological teams are excavating at the vast site, amongst which the team of Dr Dobrev hoping to find Userkare's pyramid

Fuente: Heritage Key: http://heritage-key.com/blogs/ann/3300-year-old-tomb-ancient-egyptian-official-ptah-mes-discovered-saqqara

domingo, 30 de mayo de 2010

Aparecen grietas en el Museo Arqueológico de Granada

Aparecen grietas en el Museo Arqueológico de Granada

La Consejería de Cultura ha solicitado un estudio técnico tras la aparición de grietas en el Museo Arqueológico de Granada, en dependencias como el salón de actos, que ha tenido que cerrarse para apuntalar algunas vigas deterioradas.
Según han informado fuentes de la Delegación de Cultura en Granada, el estudio comenzará por el inmueble renacentista de la Casa de Castril, uno de los dos que compone el recinto museístico junto con la Casa de Latorre, que permanecerá abierta por lo menos hasta finales de junio cuando finalizará la exposición actual, dedicada al que fuera su dueño, el pintor Rafael Latorre.
El estudio arquitectónico y museístico ha sido encargado a la empresa sevillana Vorsevi, especialista en materiales y rehabilitación de inmuebles, y su primera fase, de consultoría, costará 15.000 euros, que se invertirán en fotografiar las humedades, recoger testigos de madera y pequeñas catas, han precisado las fuentes.
Los trabajos, a los que habrá que añadir labores de albañilería que podrían suponer el cierre parcial o total de las distintas áreas del museo, se prolongarán durante los dos próximos meses.
Diseñado para detectar y analizar "las patologías" del museo, el informe ha sido encargado una vez que el arquitecto de la Delegación de Cultura comprobara que los daños en la estructura del edificio podían revestir problemas para su conservación y el normal desarrollo de sus actividades.
En función de los resultados que se obtengan, la Junta de Andalucía dará traslado al Ministerio de Cultura, propietario del espacio, para que incluya la intervención necesaria en los Presupuestos Generales de 2011.
La Casa de Castril perteneció a la familia de Hernando de Zafra y se halla enclavada en la Carrera del Darro, en el antiguo barrio árabe de Ajsaris, sede a partir del siglo XVI de parte de la nobleza granadina tal y como muestran sus construcciones blasonadas.
En 1962 se adquirió la casa del pintor Rafael Latorre, aledaña a la anterior con el objeto de convertirla en una ampliación del espacio del Arqueológico de Granada, uno de los primeros fundados en Granada, junto con los de Barcelona y Valladolid.

Fuente: La Opinión de Granada: http://www.laopiniondegranada.es/cultura/2010/05/30/aparecen-grietas-museo-arqueologico-granada/191881.html

Secrets of ancient Scottish hunters revealed by camp

Secrets of ancient Scottish hunters revealed by camp

It was an age when reindeer roamed the Scottish landscape, competing for territory with human raiding parties from what is now the North Sea.
The country lay under glaciers as far south as the Highland Line, and a mini ice-age was fast approaching.
Today, for the first time, Scottish archaeologists will tell the story of this remarkable period at a national conference in Glasgow.
Alan Saville, of National Museums Scotland, will join archaeologist Tam Ward to discuss ongoing work at Howburn Farm, an ancient human campsite discovered by amateur enthusiasts in 2005. The discovery, north of Biggar, is the oldest so far found, and proves that humans lived in Scotland as long as 14,000 years ago.
Initial estimates suggested stone tools at the scene were made in around 2000 BCE, but last year they were shown to be more than four times as old, making them the earliest signs of humanity so far discovered in Scotland.
Now, experts have pieced together some of the life story of the humans who would have used them.
Saville told The Herald these early arrivals would have been physically similar to today’s Scots, but with a markedly different lifestyle.
“If you dressed them in a suit and walked them down the street you wouldn’t notice the difference, but they were nomads, hunters,” he said.
“They lived in small groups, probably tribes of some sort. It’s virtually impossible to tell how many used this site at one time, but probably no more than half-a-dozen or so.”
Saville described the Howburn Farm site as “a forward camp rather than a base camp”, suggesting it was a temporary home for a hunting party.
The hunters would most likely have been men and younger boys, he said, but archaeologists are still debating how they would have used the stone and flint tools that have been discovered.
“It’s one of the $64,000 questions about this period – whether these small, blunted points were used as tips and barbs of spears or of arrows,” Saville said.
The implements are about 4cm in length, and as many as 40,000 fragments have been uncovered so far.
It appears that the hunters made their own weapons at the campsite, and it may have been visited by several groups over a number of years.
The men would most likely have hunted reindeer and horses, Saville said, citing similarities between their tools and others used for this purpose on the continent.
In those days, Scotland’s climate would have been similar to modern Scandinavia, but a mini ice-age that began about 13,000 years ago sent temperatures plummeting for a 1000-year
period in the interim.
This would have forced hunting parties and their prey back across the North Sea basin towards Denmark and Germany, meaning the humans who roamed Scotland 14,000 years ago were probably not ancestors of modern Scots, unless their descendants returned during one of numerous invasions over the last two millennia.
Saville said the find in Scotland was slightly different in character to other sites in Yorkshire and southern England, and that it had more in common with those in other northern European countries.
The absence of any discoveries in the north of England may point towards a buffer zone between two distinct populations of early nomads.
The nomadic way of life persisted for thousands of years, until the neolithic age saw the advent of farming. Advances in the Bronze and Iron Ages then allowed urban centres to spring up, paving the way for the world as we know it today.
Tam Ward, the amateur archaeologist who led the exploration of Howburn Farm, said his group – the Biggar Archaeological Trust – was turning up new sites every weekend.
“We’re finding mesolithic sites all over the place, dating from about 10,000 years ago to 6000 years,” he said.
The Archaeological Research in Progress Conference 2010 takes place at the Burrell Collection, Pollok Country Park, Glasgow today. Entry is free.

Fuente: The Herald Scotland: http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/secrets-of-ancient-scottish-hunters-revealed-by-camp-1.1031197

sábado, 29 de mayo de 2010

Dos estudios cuestionan el "hallazgo del año"





Dos estudios cuestionan el "hallazgo del año"

El fósil de Ardi fue, según la revista Science, el "hallazgo del año 2009". Este espécimen de hace 4,4 millones de años era, según los autores de su análisis, el ancestro más antiguo de los humanos. La revista, uno de los altares más respetados de la ciencia mundial, publicó un número especial con 11 estudios que diseccionaban al Ardipithecus ramidus hasta límites insospechados. Determinaban su antigüedad, comprobaban que andaba sobre dos piernas, reconstruían el lugar donde vivió y especulaban sobre costumbres sociales y sexuales que presagiaban las de los humanos que estaban por venir. En un rincón mucho menos vistoso de su último número, la publicación reproduce hoy lo más parecido a una pelea a puñetazos que puede existir en el civilizado mundo de la investigación.
Dos artículos firmados por grupos diferentes cuestionan las conclusiones del equipo que presentó a Ardi al mundo, liderado por el veterano paleoantropólogo de la Universidad de California Tim White.
El primer trabajo niega que Ardi fuera un ancestro humano y que andase sobre dos piernas. El ramidus vivió tan cerca del momento en que divergieron el linaje que desembocaría en el Homo sapiens y los que llevarían a chimpancés o gorilas de hoy que es "imposible decir si está más cerca de uno que de otro", explica a Público Esteban Sarmiento, autor del trabajo e investigador retirado del American Museum of Natural History, en Nueva York. Argumenta que ninguno de los caracteres del fósil de Ardi que White destacó para defender su teoría, como la forma de sus pies que evidenciaba bipedalismo, o sus dientes de menor tamaño, son exclusivamente humanos. Añade que muchos también aparecen en los otros linajes. En su opinión, es imposible decir si Ardi es un ancestro del hombre, del chimpancé o el gorila.
Sarmiento "no ofrece ninguna interpretación alternativa", contraataca el equipo de White en otro artículo. El experto incide en rasgos del cráneo, la pelvis y otras partes del cuerpo que emparentan a Ardi con los australopitecos de los que después surgiría el género humano.
La otra discusión se centra en si Ardi vivió en un bosque o una sabana. El debate es clave, pues la teoría más aceptada mantiene que la aparición de ecosistemas con menos árboles empujó a los ancestros del hombre a abandonar los árboles y andar sobre dos piernas. White se basó en fósiles coetáneos de animales y plantas para afirmar que Ardi vivió en un bosque espeso, lo que contradice la "hipótesis de la sabana". Pero un equipo dirigido por Francis Brown, de la Universidad de Utah y firmado por otros seis expertos de otros centros ha repasado los datos de White y dice que confirman que Ardi vivió en una zona despejada y con pocos árboles. White y su equipo defienden su interpretación en otro artículo.

Fuente: Público: http://www.publico.es/ciencias/316012/estudios/cuestionan/hallazgo/ano

viernes, 28 de mayo de 2010

Visita a las entrañas del Coliseo





Visita a las entrañas del Coliseo

A finales del verano se abrirán al público las estancias donde se entrenaban los gladiadores y permanecían los animales antes de los espéctaculos del circo romano
Visitar uno de los monumentos más representativos de la Roma tendrá dentro de unos meses un nuevo aliciente. A partir de finales de verano, se abrirán al público el subsuelo del Coliseo, lugar donde se entrenaban los gladiadores y en el que permanecían los animales antes de los espectáculos, la arena del circo, varias de las galerías y la parte superior del monumento, que han permanecido cerradas durante varios años.
Junto a este anuncio, los conservadores del monumento han resaltado la necesidad de desarrollar un ambicioso proyecto de protección para paliar las agresiones que sufre el Coliseo, que recibe la visita de 6 millones de personas al año y recibe las vibraciones del tráfico de una de las principales avenidas de la ciudad.

Fuente: El País: http://www.elpais.com/articulo/cultura/Visita/entranas/Coliseo/elpepucul/20100527elpepucul_8/Tes

Aquitaine préhistoire, 20 ans de découvertes

Aquitaine préhistoire, 20 ans de découvertes

Cette exposition présente les dernières avancées de la recherche en préhistoire, du paléolithique ancien (-500 000 ans avant J.-C.) et de la fin de l'Âge du Bronze (-800 ans avant J.-C.), à partir d'exemples aquitains. Les principaux thèmes abordés sont : les nouvelles méthodologies de recherche et l'essor de l'archéologie préventive, les territoires des sociétés passées, les évolutions culturelles, l'art et la place de l'artiste aux temps préhistoriques, l'homme face à la mort.

Thème(s)Période (préhistoire), portail culture (Architecture - Patrimoine) Archéologie)Horaires / DatesDu 2/6/2010 au 2/1/2011
Horaires : de 11h à 18h
TarifsTR 2,50 euro(s), TN 5 euro(s) AdresseMUSÉE D'AQUITAINE
20 cours Pasteur
Bordeaux 33000

www.mairie-bordeaux.fr

Fuente: Culture.fr: http://www.culture.fr/fr/sections/themes/archeologie/evenements/offre_eve_link_EVE1049114518Off199

Family Cemetery in a Roman Period Tumulus near the Village of Borissovo, Elhovo Region





Family Cemetery in a Roman Period Tumulus near the Village of Borissovo, Elhovo Region

The large number of various and luxurious grave goods and personal belongings found in the graves, most of them being imports; show that the buried people had been representatives of the Thracian nobility. Most probably they had been members of a wealthy aristocratic family living in one of the villas situated near the present-day village of Borissovo during the second half of the 1st – the early 2nd century AD.
The fifth field season of the Strandzha expedition, within whose frames a team headed by Daniela Agre (NIAM-BAS) is making systematic archaeological excavations of tumuli in the Elhovo region. The tumulus is part of a big cemetery situated near the village of Borissovo. It was 8 m high and its diameter was 60 m. Seven burial structures and two pits were discovered under the tumulus. One of the pits yielded a chariot together with the skeletons of a couple of harness horses and the second one – the skeletons of two riding horses. The chariot was completely preserved. It was placed in a pit measuring 2.80×6.20 m, 1.40 m deep. The long axis of the pit was north-south oriented and its northern part was slanting making it easy to drive in it the cart and the horses.
Because of the narrowness of the pit, the spokes of wheels had been broken, the wheels had been detached and placed at the walls of the pit. As a result of this action, the naves remained attached to the axles. In contrast to the wheels, the framework and the basket of the cart rested on their original places. The cart was supported by stones in order to be fixed in upright position. The fact that the axels, the framework and the basket of the cart were preserved in situ provided opportunity to define very precisely its type as well as the location of its parts.
The cart has no suspension; it is four-wheeled, with a short basket and a seat and is a very luxurious vehicle indeed. It was aimed to carry a charioteer (driver) and a passenger. At the front the basket was open; the two long sides of the basket are provided with timber beams, strengthened in the upper part with iron rims. The seat is at the back side of the basket.
All reconstructions of carts made until present were based on the assumption that this was a closed type of vehicle. The discovery of the Borissovo chariot offers the possibility to revise the reconstruction of this type of ancient vehicle. The surviving wooden and leather parts of the cart provide opportunity to define all details of its construction.
There is a boot (storage compartment) situated behind the back edge of the seat. It is a new element of the construction of this cart type. Until now it was believed that there were luggage boxes, which were attached to the four-wheeled carts. The boot found in situ proves that it was part of the Roman cart construction. Besides being there, the boot of this cart was full. A bronze ellipsoid pan and a set of a bronze ladle and a bronze strainer with long handles were lying on the bottom of the boot. There were also an iron grill on which were placed four prismatic and a large spherical glass bottles. Red slipped vessels – a small pitcher, a jar and a bowl – were placed in front of the bottles. A clay mortarium was found on top. The bronze artefacts are Italic imports. The bronze ladle is stamped on the handle with the name of the manufacturer. The four prismatic glass bottles were made by blowing in a mould and had been used for transporting and storing commodities. The large spherical glass bottle finds parallels in the Eastern Mediterranean and was most probably manufactured in a Syrian atelier.
The analysis of the position of the horses in front of the cart provided the conclusion that they had been killed in the pit. The horses were buried with lavishly decorated harnesses and a yoke. The iron bars were placed on the horses’ heads. The shape of the yoke can be reconstructed after the few traces of wood, the yoke rings found in situ and the silver ornaments of the horse collars. The yoke is abundantly decorated with bronze appliqués and has 13 bronze rings. The central ornament of the cart – an exquisite figurine of a panther on a solid bronze stand – was found on the shaft, between the skeletons of the two horses. A skeleton of a dog was unearthed behind the cart, tied up to it with a chain.
The chariot is dated back to the late 1st – the early 2nd century AD.
A second pit, which yielded two sacrificed riding horses of the Thracian warrior, was excavated immediately to the south of the first one. The horses’ skeletons were lying in an anatomical order next to each other. The iron bars were found between the horses’ teeth and the bronze halters and the ornaments of the horse collars were taken and thrown on top of their bodies. There were timber shields with solid bronze shield bosses placed on the lower part of the horses’ bodies. The shields are round, 1 m in diameter. They were covered with animal hide, fixed to the wooden part with bronze rivets.
East of the pit with the riding horses, the grave of the warrior, the owner of the chariot and the horses, was discovered under a special burial stone structure – a stone revetted tumulus, whose entrance faced the south. His body had been cremated there, in a two-stepped pit. The body had been placed on a special litter covered with a textile. The deceased had been buried in full armour: six iron spears, two swords, a poniard and spurs. One of the swards is double-edged and is 0.98 m long. It had been suspended on a leather strap decorated with gilded silver appliqués; its scabbard ends with a bronze tip with tracery patterns. On the knees of the deceased there were round bronze lamellae (probably used as greaves), which overlaid some kind of fabric. Two bronze silver-plated fibulae were found at the left shoulder and a highly patinated and burnt bronze coin was lying at the skull.
The medical and sporting accessories are represented by a bronze toilette box and two iron strigils. The strigils have iron strigil holders and before being placed into the grave pit, they had been wrapped into a textile. The toilette box has two bronze tubuses. In a special drawer of the box there are medications crushed into powder and medical instruments made from bronze.
Apart from being a warrior, the deceased had been a literate person. A ink-well, a bone tablet made of bone, a bronze stylus tied up with a chain to the tablet as well as a spatula, which would have been used to spread wax onto the writing tablet, had been laid beside the body.
Ceramic vessels and glass lacrimaria had been put at various places in the grave pit.
Solid bronze vessels had been placed as grave goods on the upper step of the grave pit – amphora, podanipterus, oinochoe, two casseroles, bowl and patera as well as luxurious ceramic and glass vessels. The oinochoe was placed in the patera – this typical set was most probably related to the libatio ritual (for water and wine libation). An extremely exquisite silver diadem was discovered next to the podanipterus covered by a red slipped bowl. Gilded medallions representing two human faces facing each other are stamped on the diadem. The appliqués on the leather strap of the long sward bear the same images. The diadem, which was undoubtedly a ceremonial jewel, indicates the high social status of the deceased. The luxurious grave goods and the burial ritual provide ground to accept that the deceased was a Thracian nobleman, a warrior-cataphractarius, a wealthy and educated member of the community, who had had a high social status. He had probably been an officer in the Roman army in the second half of the 1st century AD. Although Thrace had already been turned into a Roman province in this period, the Thracian aristocracy had kept its privileges.
Seven burials were unearthed under a stone structure in the center of the tumulus. Three of them yielded skeletons of adults and the grave goods provide ground to suggest that these were females. The shallow, rectangular grave pits yielded cremation burials and the cremation ritual had been performed in them.
The central burial is a female one. The dead body had been placed on a timber stretcher covered with a textile. The deceased had been buried with a large number of bronze, ceramic and glass vessels as well as with bronze, glass and bone personal ornaments. All bronze vessels had been ritually cut into pieces (killed) before being placed into the grave pit. The bronze appliqués for toilette boxes comprise beautiful figurines of eagles and swans, masks of satires and deities, busts of deities, etc. The burials yielded remains of wallnuts and raisins.
The second female burial yielded a skeleton of a young woman, which also had been laid on a timber stretcher covered with a textile. The woman had leather shoes decorated with gold foil. The grave goods include ceramic and glass vessels, an exquisite bronze mirror, a bone spindle with a bone spindle whirl for fine spin, a bone comb, a bronze hair pin and a miniature bronze spoon. Pieces of textiles were found at different places of the grave pit. Various textiles were found in the rest of the burials of adults as well.
Three of the burials are children’s ones and contained bones of babies. They had been buried in timber coffins, placed in grave pits. The grave goods comprise glass and ceramic vessels as well as bronze mirrors. The fact that the children were the only ones who had not been cremated indicates that they had been treated with a special care.
The last burial in this group is the cremation burial of a juvenile. Part of the cremated bones had been gathered and placed in a krater-shaped vessel. An amphora was placed in the grave pit as a grave gift.
Two large triznae were unearthed at two spots among the burial structures. They consisted of local and imported pottery as well as large ruminants. The triznae are connected with the female burials.
The excavations provided favorable conditions for observations on the function (which was not clear until present) of the special stone structures abutting the stone structures of the graves. These structures yielded complete food and drinking ceramic vessels, which, in my opinion, are related to commemoration rituals. It was the place where the alive got connected to the souls of the dead by rituals including symbolic feeding. Such small stone structures are found in all tumuli yielding rich burials in the Strandzha Mountain in the Roman period.
The large number of various and luxurious grave goods and personal belongings found in the graves, most of them being imports; show that the buried people had been representatives of the Thracian nobility. Most probably they had been members of a wealthy aristocratic family living in one of the villas situated near the present-day village of Borissovo during the second half of the 1st – the early 2nd century AD. It was probably possible to access each grave for a long period of time since they were not covered by a heaped pile of earth. This statement is supported by the triznae as well as by the fact that the graves do not overlap. They abut each other and each of them is covered by a separate stone structure. However, they are not contemporary because the periphery of one of the children’s graves slightly disturbs another children’s grave. After burying the Thracian warrior-nobleman (in the late 1st – the early 2nd century AD), who had probably been the head of the family as well, a huge pile of earth was heaped on the graves. The tumulus served as a cemetery of this family only. It yielded no other graves or structures.
The important discoveries made by the archaeological team were highly valued by the Government and the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Bulgaria as well as the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. Funds were granted for an emergency conservation of the cart and the horses’ skeletons in the two pits as well as for constructing a temporary shelter protecting them against the hazards of the weather. A museum is planned to be constructed on spot in the next season. Since it will be the first museum of the ancient cart in Bulgaria, we consider it an important achievement of the Bulgarian archaeology.

Fuente: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences: http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=76997&CultureCode=en

La revista 'Mastia' recopila hallazgos del último año

La revista 'Mastia' recopila hallazgos del último año

La Concejalía de Cultura de Cartagena ha editado su número anual de la revista 'Mastia' que resume a través de reportajes especializados los principales hitos de las excavaciones arqueológicas realizadas en la ciudad. La portada está dedicada al hallazgo, en diciembre de 2009, de un pedestal ecuestre dedicado a un magistrado romano que debió estar situada en el foro de la antigua ciudad romana.

Fuente: La Verdad de Murcia: http://www.laverdad.es/murcia/v/20100528/cartagena/revista-mastia-recopila-hallazgos-20100528.html

XI Jornadas de Arqueología Medieval: Epigrafía Árabe y Arqueología

XI Jornadas de Arqueología Medieval: Epigrafía Árabe y Arqueología Medieval

El grupo de investigación «Toponimia, Historia y Arqueología del Reino de Granada» (Hum-162) organiza estas XI Jornadas de Arqueología Medieval cuyo tema central es en esta ocasión la Epigrafía árabe. Para ello, se darán cita algunos de los expertos más destacados en la materia que expondrán algunas de las conclusiones más destacadas de sus dilatadas carreras investigadoras así como los nuevos retos y temas por abordar. Estas jornadas, por lo tanto, se presentan como un foro en el que presentar y debatir sobre lo que ha aportado hasta el momento y lo que puede contribuir en el futuro la Epigrafía árabe al estudio de las sociedades islámicas andalusíes.
La Epigrafía árabe es una ciencia de carácter híbrido, en esta disciplina se evidencia con suma claridad el cruce de caminos entre los estudios de la cultura material y los de la documentación escrita, dado que su soporte es, generalmente, un producto arqueológico mientras que su contenido es objeto de estudio de arabistas.

Programa:

LUNES (31 DE MAYO)
17 h. PRESENTACIÓN
A. MALPICA (Universidad de Granada): Arqueología Medieval y Epigrafía. Un debate abierto.
17.45 h. Mª A. MARTÍNEZ NÚÑEZ (Universidad de Málaga): La epigrafía monumental y las élites sociales en al-Andalus.
18.30 h. PAUSA
19 h. G. ROSSELLÓ BORDOY (Universidad de Islas Baleares): Espontaneidad epigráfica: propiedad, función, decoración…
19:45 h. DEBATE

MARTES (1 DE JUNIO)
10 h. Visita a Madinat Ilbira (A. MALPICA).
17 h. J. CASTILLA BRAZALES (Escuela de Est. Árabes, CSIC, Granada): Corpus de las inscripciones árabes de Granada.
17.45 h. J. M. PUERTA VÍLCHEZ (Universidad de Granada): Caligramas arquitectónicos e imágenes poéticas de la Alhambra.
18.30 h. PAUSA
19 h. V. MARTÍNEZ ENAMORADO (Escuela de Est. Árabes, CSIC, Granada): Reflexiones sobre la introducción de la epigrafía cursiva en el Occidente musulmán.
19.45 h. DEBATE
21 h. RECITAL FLAMENCO a cargo de MANUEL LORENTE Y RICARDO MIÑO: Cante, toque y explicación (en Sala de Juntas de la Corrala de Santiago).

MIÉRCOLES (2 DE JUNIO)
10 h. La Alhambra, monumento epigráfico (Visita guiada por J. M. PUERTA VÍLCHEZ)
17 h. ANA LABARTA (Universidad de Valencia): Epigrafía en Garb al-Andalus.
17.45 h. J. LIROLA DELGADO (Universidad de Almería): La información histórica aportada por la epigrafía: el caso de Almería.
18.30 h. PAUSA
19 h. CARMEN BARCELÓ (Universidad de Valencia): Corpus epigráfico andalusí ¿Un proyecto posible?.
19.45 h. DEBATE
20 h. BILAL SARR (Universidad de Granada): Epigrafía árabe y Arqueología Medieval. Balance de las jornadas y perspectivas de futuro.
CLAUSURA

Organiza:

Grupo de Investigación «Toponimia, Historia y Arqueología del reino de Granada» (Hum-162)

Coordinan:

Antonio MALPICA y Bilal SARR

COLABORAN:

Universidad de Granada
Museo "CASA DE LOS TIROS" (Junta de Andalucía)

Visita y actuación gratuitas (limitadas a 30 personas).

Más información y preactas de las Jornadas en www.arqueologiamedieval.com

Inscripción gratuita en bilal@ugr.es aportando dni, nombre y apellidos

jueves, 27 de mayo de 2010

´Pepita´ cambiará su estancia en la Cueva por un museo





´Pepita´ cambiará su estancia en la Cueva por un museo

FRAN EXTREMER. NERJA La Fundación Cueva de Nerja ha informado de que una de las piezas estrella del futuro Museo de Nerja, cuyas obras ya están terminadas en la nueva plaza de España, será el esqueleto conocido popularmente como ´Pepita´. Estos restos, actualmente en la Cueva, son de una joven de 20 años que falleció hace 18.000 años.

Fuente: La Opinión de Málaga: http://www.laopiniondemalaga.es/municipios/2010/05/27/pepita-cambiara-estancia-cueva-museo/343060.html

Le retour de l'Ephèbe



Le retour de l'Ephèbe

Cette année, le Musée de l’Ephèbe du Cap d’Agde fête ses 25 ans ! Un anniversaire qui s’articulera autour de plusieurs temps forts : le retour de l’Ephèbe après restauration ce 23 avril, la Nuit européenne des Musées les 14 et 15 mai, les nocturnes en juillet et août, les Journées Européennes du Patrimoine des 18 et 19 septembre, ainsi qu’un cycle de conférences.
Unique statue en bronze de période hellénistique découverte en France (et présentée in-situ), «l’Ephèbe» d’Agde est une représentation d’Alexandre le Grand. Il est daté du IIème siècle avant Jésus-Christ et est attribué à l’école ou au style de Lysippe de Sicyone, portraitiste officiel d’Alexandre le Grand. En effet, tout ici s’y réfère, que ce soit les proportions au 1/8ème, le contraposto (contrepoids) donnant ce léger déhanchement, la finesse des traits, l’expression du visage, la tête sensiblement tournée vers la droite…
Classé Monument Historique, il a été découvert le 13 septembre 1964 dans le fleuve Hérault, au pied de la cathédrale d’Agde, par l’équipe du GRASPA (Groupement de Recherches Archéologiques et Sous-marines du Pays d’Agde) alors dirigée par Denis Fonquerle. Depuis, cette œuvre majeure du patrimoine national retient l’attention des chercheurs et spécialistes. D’abord identifié en «Apollon» lors de sa remontée des eaux, c’est finalement l’appellation «d’Ephèbe» qui sera attribuée à cette représentation plastique d’un homme jeune, nu, n’ayant pour seul attribut qu’un drapé sur l’épaule gauche s’enroulant autour du même bras. Fortement endommagé lors de son long séjour sous-marin, l’Ephèbe avait été une première fois restauré en 1967 au laboratoire Arc’Antique de Nancy-Jarville. La statue avait alors été consolidée et sa jambe gauche, trouvée quelques mois après par le GRASPA (en avril 1965, à 600 mètres en aval du lieu de la première découverte), rattachée au corps. C’est à cette époque qu’a commencé la «re-naissance» de l’Ephèbe, qui fut alors exposé au Musée du Louvre au côté de la Victoire de Samothrace, au sein du département des Antiques dans la salle des originaux grecs, avant de revenir définitivement au Cap d’Agde en mai 1987.
En 2006, une commission scientifique de restauration de l’Ephèbe d’Agde se met en place, visant à repositionner le bras, jusque là honni de toute intervention. Une dé-restauration du manchon est entreprise en 2009. Elle montre que ce dernier a subi une déformation lors de son séjour dans l’Hérault, ce qui a eu pour incidence de plonger l’axe du bras trop en avant le long du corps. L’Alexandre d’Agde se rapprocherait plus d’une stylistique empruntée à l’Alexandre à la lance, portant une épée ou un fourreau d’une main le long du corps et une lance de l’autre plus relevée.
Toute la problématique de cette intervention réside dans la technique à mettre en place afin de mettre en connexion les deux parties (manchon et bras) sans soudure et sans altération du bronze. C’est la Maison André de Paris, qui a déjà collaboré avec les équipes de conservation du Musée du Louvre sur leurs collections, qui est chargée de ce délicat travail qui comporte deux phases : tout d’abord l’installation d’un nouveau soclage, car l’ancien donnait un air penché à la statue, ensuite la mise en place d’une «machinerie interne» permettant le positionnement technique du bras. En plus de cette intervention technique, l’Alexandre a fait peau neuve avec une reprise des surfaces apportant une plus grande cohésion visuelle entre parties d’origines et comblements. Un ponçage total a enfin permis de mettre à nu le métal, donnant ainsi un aspect plus «archéologique» à la statue et donc moins maquillé qu’après sa première restauration.
Un résultat à découvrir au Musée d’archéologie sous-marine du Cap d’Agde à partir du 23 avril

Fuente: Cultura.fr: http://www.culture.fr/fr/sections/themes/archeologie/articles/retour-ephebe

Un grand prix multimédia pour Lascaux





Un grand prix multimédia pour Lascaux

Le jury du Festival international de l'audiovisuel et du multimédia sur le patrimoine a décerné le 14 février 2010 le grand prix AVICOM toutes catégories au site Internet Lascaux du ministère de la Culture et de la Communication.
Développé en cinq langues, le site propose une immersion multimédia dans la grotte avec une visite virtuelle ou le plaisir esthétique se conjugue à une approche didactique. L'internaute se déplace de salle en salle, depuis la ronde fantastique des Taureaux jusqu'à la Scène du Puits, en déroulant le film ou en s'attardant sur un panneau, une figure, ou un détail. Selon le jury, "l'impact émotionnel rendu par l'utilisation optimale de la technologie transforme la visite virtuelle en expérience réelle".
Au delà de l'émotion et à la lumière des recherches les plus récentes, la visite virtuelle est complétée par des séquences sur les techniques de l'art pariétal et sur les orientations actuelles de la recherche scientifique sur les grottes ornées.
La production du site Internet associe le secrétariat général (département de la recherche, de l’enseignement supérieur et de la technologie) du ministère de la Culture, le Centre national de Préhistoire, la direction générale des patrimoines ainsi que l'agence LaForme Interactive.
Le Festival international de l’audiovisuel et du multimédia sur le patrimoine est un événement organisé par AVICOM (Comité international pour l'audiovisuel et les technologies de l'image et du son dans les musées) qui relève du Conseil international des musées de l'UNESCO (ICOM.

Fuente: Culture.fr: http://www.culture.fr/fr/sections/themes/archeologie/articles/grand-prix-multimedia

Archaeological study unearths Roman Villas and clues to Iron Age Yorkshire





Archaeological study unearths Roman Villas and clues to Iron Age Yorkshire

The combined results of a five-year aerial archaeological study which uncovered Iron Age and Roman forts in West Yorkshire have been revealed today in a new book.
Aerial photo mapping undertaken as part of English Heritage's National Mapping Programme was combined with older aerial photographs, the results of field walking and geophysics together with data from archaeological digs to produce the study, which covers the 65-kilometre Magnesian Limestone Ridge, running from Wetherby in the north to Dinnington in the south.
Most of the cropmarks belonged to the Iron Age (600BC to 50AD) and Roman period (43AD to 410AD). The potential site of a Roman villa near Aberford in West Yorkshire has also been revealed for the first time, along with a possible new Roman fort on the south bank of the River Don at Long Sandall, near Doncaster, adding weight to a long held belief that such a fort once existed locally.
Evidence of what are supposedly pre-Roman defensive works are also found on the north side of the River Don.
Hundreds of prehistoric trackways were also revealed along with scores of enclosures, some likely to have been used to corral cattle.
"This study combines all the available evidence for the historic landscape of this area of Yorkshire which covers 1,500 square kilometres," explained Ian Roberts, Principal Archaeologist with West Yorkshire Archaeology Services and one of the authors of the new report.
"The only documentary source for how people lived 2,000 years ago are Roman writers, so we need to be able to read the landscape to make sense of how our ancestors lived.
"In many areas settlement was surprisingly intensive, while others are bereft of evidence. Alarmingly, we also noted that some cropmarks clearly visible in photographs from the 1970s and 1980s have vanished in more recent images because they have been ploughed out. That adds urgency to the need to record and understand clues in the landscape before they are lost for good."
Cropmark Landscapes of the Magnesian Limestone of South and West Yorkshire by Ian Roberts with Alison Deegan and David Berg is available from Archaeological Services WYAS, PO Box 30 Nepshaw Lane South, Morley, Leeds, LS27 0UG. £15 (£3.50 post and packaging).

Fuente: Culture 24: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history+%2526+heritage/archaeology/art79156

La restauración de la Puerta Villa permitirá visitar el interior de los cubos





La restauración de la Puerta Villa permitirá visitar el interior de los cubos

BELÉN ALONSO, VILLALPANDO La Junta de Castilla y León ha dado luz verde a la redacción del proyecto para restaurar la Puerta Villa de Villalpando y su entorno. Entre las novedades del estudio se contempla la posibilidad de visitar el interior de los cubos a través de escaleras. Según confirmaron fuentes municipales la elaboración del proyecto «finalizará en breve y continuación se aprobará y se adjudicarán las obras, con importe aproximado de 600.000 euros».
Así, tras los análisis previos el proyecto se prevé realizar trabajos de tratamiento de la piedra y drenaje perimetral; el vaciado total de los cubos y la recreación de la situación original de la fortaleza, recreando, con menor altura, los taludes originales y abriendo un foso delante de la puerta.
Además se harán visitables los interiores de los cubo del monumento con la construcción de escaleras y pasarelas y por último, se acondicionará el espacio público existente en intramuros para realzar el entorno y una zona ajardinada en los alrededores.
Desde el año 2008 el ejecutivo regional ha realizado diversas actuaciones en el emblemático monumento villalpandino que se iniciaron con unas excavaciones arqueológicas en un total de 110 metros cuadrados, distribuidos en cinco sectores alrededor de la Puerta Villa. Los primeros trabajos se llevaron a cabo en el interior de los dos cubos donde se realizaron excavaciones en su interior con el fin de conocer la disposición interna de los mismos así como el cierre de las torres.
De forma previa al inicio de estos trabajos se llevó a cabo una importante labor de limpieza y desescombro del interior, en particular del cubo norte, dejan que la luz penetrase por unas pequeñas ventanas ubicada en la parte inferior de los mismos.
La Puerta Villa tenía adosada a sus muros una vivienda particular en ruinas que fue derribada tras realizarse una consolidación de los alrededores. Este edificio, en parte derrumbado y apoyado contra una parte de los cubos, ayudaba a aumentar las filtraciones de agua en el monumento. Los trabajos también afectaron al espacio intermedio entre los dos cubos y, por último, se hizo un sondeo rectangular de unos siete metros cuadrados al exterior del cubo sur para documentar la continuidad de la muralla.
Uno de los últimos estudios realizados en la Puerta de San Andrés fue el petrológico para conocer el estado real de la piedras que los conforman y la colocación de un cartel informativo sobre el monumento.
Elvira Fernández, jefa del Servicio de Cultura de la Junta de Castilla y León confirmó meses atrás que a pesar del tiempo transcurrido se seguía «trabajando en el monumento, hay un proceso y aunque lo parezca en la Administración no hay nadie parado». Aseveró que el proceso «lleva unos estudios muy serios que necesitan su tiempo».

Fuente: La Opinión de Zamora: http://www.laopiniondezamora.es/comarcas/2010/05/27/restauracion-puerta-villa-permitira-visitar-interior-cubos/437644.html