Etruscan Childbirth Image Followup

I swear I’d looked for coverage of this find at SMU’s site the other day, but it wouldn’t come up and we posted a related item from the Open University (Etruscan Depiction of Childbirth ). In any event, the SMU press release gives a few more useful details:

An archaeological excavation at Poggio Colla, the site of a 2,700-year-old Etruscan settlement in Italy’s Mugello Valley, has turned up a surprising and unique find: two images of a woman giving birth to a child.

Researchers from the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project, which oversees the Poggio Colla excavation site some 20 miles northeast of Florence, discovered the images on a small fragment from a ceramic vessel that is more than 2,600 years old.

The images show the head and shoulders of a baby emerging from a mother represented with her knees raised and her face shown in profile, one arm raised, and a long ponytail running down her back.

The excavation is a project of Southern Methodist University, Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, Penn., and the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, in collaboration with The Open University in Milton Keynes, England.

The identification of the scene was made by Phil Perkins, an authority on Etruscan bucchero and professor of archaeology at The Open University.

“We were astounded to see this intimate scene; it must be the earliest representation of childbirth in Western art,” said Perkins. “Etruscan women are usually represented feasting or participating in rituals, or they are goddesses. Now we have to solve the mystery of who she is and who her child is.”

The Etruscans were the first settlers of Italy, long before the Roman Empire. They built the first cities, were a conduit for the introduction of Greek culture to the Romans, and were known for their art, agriculture, fine metalworking and commerce. They occupied Italy for the first millennium B.C., but were conquered by the Romans and eventually became absorbed into their empire.

“The birth scene is extraordinary, but what is also fascinating is what this image might mean on elite pottery at a sanctuary,” said Greg Warden, professor and associate dean for academic affairs at the Meadows School of the Arts at SMU and a director of the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project.

“Might it have some connection to the cult,” Warden said, “to the kind of worship that went on at the hilltop sanctuary of Poggio Colla?”

The fragment was excavated by William Nutt, who is a graduate student in anthropology at the University of Texas at Arlington and who is legally blind. Nutt was participating in the Poggio Colla Field School, which has operated for six weeks every summer since 1995.

Under the supervision of faculty from U.S. institutions and graduate students in classical archaeology and anthropology, the field school has trained approximately 20 students each year, from more than 70 American and European universities, in the theory and practice of archaeological research. Through excavation and scholarship, these students have played an integral role in understanding the Etruscan occupation of the Mugello Valley.

“I was very grateful to be accepted to the summer program at Poggio Colla — it was my first archaeological dig,” said Nutt, who is attending UTA under a National Science Foundation fellowship.

“I found the artifact at the beginning of my second week there. It was quite dirty, and we weren’t sure what it was until it was cleaned at the onsite lab and identified by Perkins,” Nutt said. “It was thrilling to find out that it was so significant. To make a discovery like that, which provides important new information about a culture we know so little about, is exactly what makes archaeology and anthropology so appealing.”

The ceramic fragment is less than 1-3/4 x 1-1/4 inches (4 x 3 cm), from a vessel made of bucchero. Bucchero is a fine, black ceramic material, embellished with stamped and incised decorations, used to make eating and drinking vessels for Etruscan elites.

Typically, stamped designs range from abstract geometric motifs to exotic and mythical animals. There are no known Greek or Roman representations of the moment of birth shown as clearly as the Poggio Colla example until more than 500 years later. The fragment dates to about 600 B.C.E. (Before the Common Era).

Because the site at Poggio Colla has produced numerous votive deposits, scholars are certain that for some part of its history it was a sacred spot to a divinity or divinities.

The abundance of weaving tools and a stunning deposit of gold jewelry discovered earlier have already suggested to some scholars that the patron divinity may have been female; the discovery of the childbirth scene, because of its uniqueness, adds another piece of evidence to the theory.

“This is a most exciting discovery,” said Larissa Bonfante, professor emerita of classics at New York University and a world-renowned expert on the ancient Etruscans. “It shows an image of a type so far unknown in Etruscan context and gives us plenty to think about as we try to understand its religious significance.”

A paper about the find will be presented at the annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Philadelphia in January. The paper, titled “Defining Northern Etruria: Evidence from Poggio Colla (Vicchio di Mugello),” will be presented by Ann Steiner, provost, dean of the faculty and Shirley Watkins Steinman Professor of Classics at Franklin and Marshall College.

Poggio Colla is a highly significant and rare site. One reason is that it spans most of Etruscan history. Archaeological evidence suggests that the site was occupied from around 700 B.C.E. until 187 B.C.E., when it was destroyed by the Romans. Another reason is that it was not buried under later construction. The Etruscans picked beautiful, easily defended hilltops for their settlements. As a result, generation after generation built new cities on top of their sites. That means many have 2000 years of other civilizations on top of Etruscan settlements and cemeteries. Poggio Colla, however, remained in its original condition. Third, Poggio Colla represents an entire settlement, including tombs, a temple, a pottery factory and an artisan community. Excavations of workshops and living quarters are yielding new details about Etruscan life to scholars.

The site centers on the acropolis, a roughly rectangular plateau of one and a half acres at the summit of Poggio Colla. Excavations have found strong evidence that the acropolis was home to a sanctuary and have identified a temple building and an altar at the center of a large courtyard. Numerous offerings have been found buried around the altar, gifts left behind as part of a sacred ritual to a still unidentified deity. These votive donations range from a massive deposit of nearly 500 varied bronze objects, to a spectacular gift of women’s gold jewelry and semi-precious stones. Another votive deposit contains a collection of ritual objects that were laid to rest in a room at the northwest corner of the sanctuary courtyard, possibly by a priest.

Excavators discovered a large circular pit, at the center of which was placed a sandstone cylinder, possibly the top of a votive column. Carefully situated near the cylinder were two sandstone statue bases, the larger of which includes the inscribed name of the aristocratic donor. Buried alongside these objects were a strand of gold wire, a purposely broken bronze implement, and two bronze bowls that had been used to pour ritual libations, as well as the bones of a piglet, presumably sacrificed as part of a purification ritual. This unique religious context has allowed researchers to reconstruct, for the first time, the actual rituals and actions of the priest/magistrate who presided over the ceremonies.

Although the Etruscan site now called Poggio Colla has been known since the 19th century, it was first excavated from 1968 to 1972 by Francesco Nicosia, the former Superintendent of Archaeology in Tuscany. With Nicosia’s permission and encouragement, SMU professor Greg Warden, a Mugello Valley native, reopened the site in 1995, established the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project and launched the summer Poggio Colla Field School. Today the project continues to proceed with the permission and supervision of the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici per la Toscana and Luca Fedeli, Inspector.

Directors of the project include Warden; Steiner; Michael L. Thomas, senior research associate at the University of Texas at Austin; and Gretchen Meyers, assistant professor of classics at Franklin & Marshall College. They oversee a team of archaeologists, scientists, architects and conservators who are conducting a systematic and multi-disciplined study of Poggio Colla, including stratigraphic excavation, scientific analysis, geophysical mapping and land surveys.

… the original article has a nice video for ‘recruiting purposes’ and some photos from the project’s flickr set …

Portrayal of Libya

Not sure when the Met put this up yesterday (I think it was before the Ghadaffi business), but it caught my eye and — of course — computers were down at my school so I couldn’t send it when I had time. Whatever he case, it’s an intaglio depiction of Libya which is really interesting for the ‘crown’ the allegory wears … an elephant! I’d never seen that before:

Classics Confidential: Tony Keen

The Classics Confidential folks chat with Tony Keen (who I think is one of the Classicists who has been on the Internet at least as long as I have) about the upcoming Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space: The Fantastika and the Classical World conference:

CONF: The Many Faces of a Hellenistic King

Seen on the Classicists list:

Many Faces of a Hellenistic King

A multi-disciplinary conference on Hellenistic Kingship
Department of Archaeology – Durham University

In association with the Centre for the Study of the Ancient Mediterranean and the Near East (CAMNE) &
The Institute of Advanced Studies

11th-12th November 2011

Registeration for attendance at the conference of the Many Faces of
Hellenistic Kingship is now open.

To register please send an email with your full name, status and
affiliation to hellenistic.kingship AT durham.ac.uk

The conference will take place at the Durham University’s Oriental Museum with the dinner taking place at St.Aidan’s college on the 11th of November

Conference registeration fee is 20 GBP, dinner fee is 27 GBP

The dinner menu and practical information will soon be available on the conference’s webpage:

http://www.dur.ac.uk/archaeology/conferences/current/manyfaces/

Conference Programme
Friday 11th November 2011

09.00 Registration at the Oriental Museum
09.15 Welcome Note
Session 1:
09.45-10.30 Ivana PETROVIC, Durham University
Ptolemies as Religious Figures: Representation of Divine Kings in the
Third Century BC Poetry
10.30-11.15 Branko van OPPEN
“Lamentation in Early-Ptolemaic Cult”
11.15-12.00 Kyle ERICKSON, University of Wales, Trinity Saint David
A Century of Gods: a Reconsideration of Seleucid Ruler Cult

12.00-12.45 Cristian GHITA, University of Bucharest
Dynastic cults in Pontus – between Religion and Politics

12.45-14.00 Lunch Break

Session 2:

14.00-14.45 Prof. Kostas BURASELIS, University of Athens
"The Hellenistic King and his Officials as Social
Guarantors and Arbitrators"
14.45 -15.30 Shane WALLACE, Trinity College Dublin
Royal Benefaction or Civic Entitlement? Demetrius Poliorcetes’ Grant of Freedom to Athens
15.30-16.15 John Russell HOLTON, University of Edinburgh
Demetrios Poliorketes, Son of Poseidon and Aphrodite: an Athenian Face of the King
16.15-16.30 Coffee and Tea Break
Session 3:
16.30-17.15 Silvia BARBANTANI, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
“Ἀτθὶς ἐν Ἀσσυρίοις ναιομένα Γαδάροις. Persian war reenactments and reassessments of the Greek-Asian relationship – a literary point of view.”
17.15-18.00 Daniel BECKMAN, UCLA
Transmission of Cultural Information in Achaemenid and Hellenistic Babylon
18.00-18.45 Paola CECCARELLI, Durham University
‘Words from the King: power-relations in the Hellenistic world’
19.00-22.00 Dinner at St. Aidan’s College

Saturday 12th November 2011
09.00-09.30 Reception with coffee and tea
Session 1:
09.30-10.15 Dorothy THOMPSON, University of Cambridge
A Tale of Two Tents
10.15-11.00 Aleksandra KLĘCZAR, Jagiellonian University
The Image of a Good Foreign Ruler in Hellenistic Jewish Writings: The Case
of the First Ptolemies.
11.00-11.45 Rachel WOOD, University of Oxford
Setting the Royal Stage: Expressions of Arsacid Power at Old Nisa
11.45-12.30 Agnieszka FULINSKA, Jagiellonian University
"Ille rex post Alexandrum maximus. In Search of the Image of Mithridates
VI Eupator of Pontus"
12.30 -13.30 Lunch Break

Session 2:
13.30-14.15 Marie WIDMER, University of Lausanne
The Repudiation of Laodice the Third
14.15-15.00 Adrian DUMITRU, Universities of Paris IV Sorbonne &
Bucharest
Torn between Pleasure and Duty – the King as a Banqueter. A Case Study for
Antiochus III Megas and his euboic Marriage
15.00 -15.45 Miles LESTER-PEARSON, University of St Andrews
Tyranny under Alexander the Great and the Diadochi: A case study of the
Clearchids of Heraclea Pontica on the Black Sea
15.45-16.00 Coffee and Tea Break

Session 3:
16.00-16.45 Lloyd LLEWELLYN-JONES, University of Edinburgh
The Great King’s Robe Observations on Persian Royal Dress
16.45-17.30 Rebecca DODD, University of Glasgow
Seleucid “Queenship”: Images of Female Royal Power in the Seleucid Empire
17.30-18.15 Heba ABD EL GAWAD, Durham University
‘Schizophrenic or a spin-doctor?’: Ptolemy II’s Multicultural
Presentations
18.15-19.00 Martina MINAS-NERPEL, Swansea University
"Octavian as pharaoh: His (self-) presentation and the Egyptian kingship ideology – accord or disaccord?"

19.00-19.30 Discussions and Closing remarks