Some of the finds from the excavations still in situ |
The Minister of Culture Gennaro Sangiuliano has already visited the restoration laboratory that has just welcomed the statues and is now applauding: "An exceptional find that confirms once more that Italy is a country made of immense and unique treasures. The stratification of different civilizations is unique in Italian culture ".The articles only mention the archaeology in passing ("specialists at work here of every discipline, from architects to geologists, from archaeobotanists to experts in epigraphy and numismatics". Archaeobotanists going through the waterlogged deposits, eh? Here we come to the crux of the matter, we should know an immense amount about the deposition of those objects, the state and layout of the site when they went into the water, what elements of building material were present (and what that means), changes in function of the area and so on. That is what the archaeological excavation is for, that is the "context we have the possibility to completely reconstruct". Yet that context is not presented by the articles about the site, just one of the find categories. What is important here are not the statues, but the mud. why is the mud not being written about? If we want the public to understand what archaeology is, we need to tell them what it is, not just present some cherry-picked snippets because they make nice pictures.
So, I would like to know what the actual evidence is that the sanctuary was destroyed "in the 5th century AD", when it had remained active but then "in the Christian era it was closed but not destroyed, the tubs sealed with heavy stone columns, the deities entrusted with respect to water". What is the archaeological and stratigraphic evidence of this date and scenario? Or is this just a romanticised literary trope imposed on the remains? The news items report it uncritically as "fact".
Vignette: It is the site the archaeologists are excavating for knowledge, not a treasure hunt for "things" to display as trophies.
Update 9.11.22
It seems I was misled by the label "archaeologists" used in these articles. Look at the way it seems that excavated material from this site is being documented and handled
Update 9.11.22
It seems I was misled by the label "archaeologists" used in these articles. Look at the way it seems that excavated material from this site is being documented and handled
This is very disturbing.
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