Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Archeologists discover huge ancient Greek commercial area on Island of Sicily
16 November 2011 [09:00] - Today.Az
The Greeks were not always in such dire financial straits as today.
German archeologists have discovered a very large commercial area from
the ancient Greek era during excavations on Sicily.
Led by Professor Dr. Martin Bentz, archeologists at the University of
Bonn began unearthing one of Greek antiquity's largest craftsmen's
quarters in the Greek colonial city of Selinunte (7th-3rd century B.C.)
on the island of Sicily during two excavation campaigns in September
2010 and in the fall of 2011.
The project is conducted in collaboration with the Italian
authorities and the German Archaeological Institute. Its goal is to
study an area of daily life in ancient cities that has hitherto received
little attention.
"To what extent the ancient Greeks already had something like
'commercial areas' has been a point of discussion in expert circles to
this day," said Bonn archeologist Dr. Gabriel Zuchtriegel, a research
associate who coordinates the Selinunte project together with Dr. Jon
Albers from the Institut für Klassische Archäologie der Universität Bonn
at the Chair of Prof. Dr. Martin Bentz. "A concentration of certain
'industries' and craftsmen in special districts does not only presuppose
proactive planning; it is also based on a certain idea of how a city
should best be organized -- from a practical as well as from a social
and political point of view, e.g., who will be allowed to live and work
where?" The University of Bonn excavations are now contributing to
finding a new answer to such questions.
Huge kilns, used communally
Concentration in a certain city district applied primarily to
potteries in Selinunte, which were massed on the edge of the settlement
in the very shadow of the city wall. "Consequently, their smoke, stench
and noise did not inconvenience the other inhabitants as much,"
explained Dr. Zuchtriegel. "At the same time, this allowed several
craftsmen to use kilns and storage facilities together." The excavations
showed that the potters joined cooperatives that shared in the use of
gigantic kilns with a diameter of up to 7 meters. The craftsmen's
district in Selinunte probably stretched for more than 600 meters along
the city walls and is thus among the largest ones known today. The
excavations are in the hands of faculty and students from Bonn and Rome
-- and they are exhausting. For excavations go on in August and
September, when the heat reaches its peak -- but in exchange, there is
very little rain.
"This work is a challenge for all involved," commented dig manager
Bentz. "This is no camping trip." But for students, it is a great
opportunity to learn archeological methods by doing. The Bonn
researchers were surprised to find even older remnants of workshops
under the 5th c. kilns. While these finds have not been completely
excavated yet, indications are -- so the archeologists -- that pottery
workshops existed in the same location during the city's early phase in
the 6th century B.C. This means that craftsmen were probably
intentionally housed on the edge as early as during the design of the
city, which was -- like many colonies -- planned on the drawing board.
Reconstructing the past
The finds from the craftsmen's district are not exactly treasures,
but they are still valuable for reconstructing the past. In the early
phase, widely ranging finds of clay vessels, tiles and bronzes -- among
them also imports from Athens and Sparta -- indicate that living and
work quarters were housed together. Over the course of the 5th century,
the two areas were separated increasingly.
"We hope to improve our understanding of that in future," said Prof.
Bentz. But so far, he continued, little was known about the social
conditions prevailing during the founding of a colony. What was certain
is that often, it was hunger and need that drove settlers to emigrate
and found a new city. Why and under what conditions some of them became
potters, other farmers, and others yet rich landowners who could afford
to participate in the Olympic games -- these are questions that the
excavations can shed some light on. /Science Daily/
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