3500 BP under the Volcano - Dipartimento di Scienze chimiche e
Transcription
3500 BP under the Volcano - Dipartimento di Scienze chimiche e
3500 BP under the Volcano The protohistoric Village of San Vincenzo in Stromboli The San Vincenzo - Stromboli Project The project is a partnership among Soprintendenza di Messina, Parco archeologico delle Isole Eolie, Milazzo, Patti e Comuni limitrofi, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra dell’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia, CNR Istituto per le Civiltà dell’ Egeo e del Vicino Oriente, Rome, Associazione culturale Preistoria Attuale. Scientific directors Maria Clara Martinelli Sara Levi Marco Bettelli Parco archeologico delle Isole Eolie, Milazzo, Patti e Comuni limitrofi - Lipari Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia CNR-ICEVO Assistant-directors Andrea Di Renzoni Francesca Ferranti CNR-ICEVO Univ. Roma Sapienza 3 Scientific collaborations Geophysical prospecting: Emanuele Forte Univ. Trieste Michele Pipan Univ. Trieste Archaeological documentation: Valeria Corazza Nicoletta Giannini Leandro Lopes Univ. Ferrara Maria Marsella Univ. Roma Sapienza Daniele Pantano Nadia Torre Paola Vertuani Domenica Vivace Geoarchaeology and archaeometry: Gianna Ayala Univ. Sheffield Daniele Brunelli Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Mauro Coltelli INGV Catania Effie Photos-Jones SASAA Glasgow Matthew Fitzjohn Univ. Liverpool Richard Jones Univ. Glasgow Stefano Lugli Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Maurizio Mazzucchelli Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Alberto Renzulli Univ. Urbino Mauro Rosi Univ. Pisa Patrizia Santi Univ. Urbino Fabio Speranza INGV Roma Luigi Vigliotti CNR-ISMAR Bologna John Williams Univ. Bangor Paleobotany: Anna Maria Mercuri Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Conservation and models: Renaud Bernadet Frederic Masse 4 Freelancers: Dario Letizia Carmelo Triolo Mario Triolo Students involved in the project: Erica Camurri Univ. Lipsia Valentina Cannavò Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Elise Cazals Institut National du Patrimoine Sonia Conte Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Silvia Corti Univ. Ferrara Tudur Davies Univ. Sheffield Assunta Florenzano Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Pamela Fragnoli Univ. Ferrara Elena Lusuardi Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Ilaria Patania Boston University Eleonora Rattighieri Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Francesco Sartor Univ. Modena e Reggio Emilia Students and doctoral candidates from the following University are involved: University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Ferrara, Pisa, Roma Sapienza, Napoli Federico II, Catania, Lecce, Madrid Lipsia, Sheffield, Glasgow, Boston, Torino Study Abroad. Logistic support at Stromboli: Carlo Lanza, Maresciallo Riccardo Spanò, Don Luciano, Roberto Pagliero, Italo, Catena Utano Thanks to: Madeleine Cavalier, Umberto Spigo, Gabriella Tigano, Annunziata Ollà. A very special thanks to the people of Stromboli that enthusiastically support our project. 5 Stromboli in the panorama of the Aeolian Islands It was in 1980 that a protohistorical village, in San Vincenzo church area came to light. The village dates back to the Bronze Age (first half of the II millennium a.C.) and provides important evidence relating to the following ages, of which a burial ground from the Roman Era. This discovery has enriched the exceptional assets of the Aeolian Islands, the fruit of many years of research activity by Luigi Bernabò Brea and Madeleine Cavalier that helped outlay a temporal sequence of events for all of Southern Italy starting from the Neolithic (a phase in which Lipari played an important role because of the presence of a specific type of volcanic rock, obsidian, a rare and very prestigious raw material used to make cutting instruments.) Aeolian Islands and the view from the Village of S. Vincenzo at Stromboli. 6 The Aeolian villages Villages like San Vincenzo, typically made up of oval huts constructed of lava rock are also found in Lipari, Panarea, Salina and Filicudi. On this last island, on the Capo Graziano promontory there is the site that allowed the definition of the cultural facies namesake and to which the San Vincenzo settlement belongs. Remains of huts from the Capo Graziano at Filicudi (Bernabò Brea, Cavalier 1991). Topographical map of the village on the Lipari acropolis, with the various settlement phases: Capo Graziano in green, Milazzese in red, Ausonio in blue (Bernabò Brea, Cavalier 1980). 7 Contacts with the Aegean world The first evidence of contact between the Aegean-Mycenaean worlds and the low Tyrrhenian date back to the Capo Graziano period. San Vincenzo village is situated in a strategic, controlling position on the seaways, like an outpost on the north-west archipelago, with views from the straights of Messina to the Phlegrean Islands. From this moment in the Bronze Age the West Mediterranean routes and markets were controlled by Cretans, the young minoan rulers looked for new sources of copper and tin in directions that allowed them to navigate visually and that touched the Aeolian Islands. The navigation routes in the low Tyrrhenian in the Bronze Age 8 The Cavalier excavation The excavation by Madaleine Cavalier in 1980 at San Vincenzo established the nature and the time sequence of the archaeological deposits bringing to light part of the village. In the main trench, 16 x 9 metres, a number of structures emerged set up on artificial terraces, both housing and accessories, built with typical techniques from that period. Furthermore many pieces were discovered and are exhibited in the Aeolian Archaeological Museum in Lipari. The author emphasised the site “enriched with ceramic fragments... it should be systematically researched in the near future”. Walled structures discovered by M. Cavalier (Cavalier 1981). 9 New research The present series of field-work, begun in 2009, have interdisciplinary and didactic purposes. The work team includes geo-archaeologists, volcanologists, geo-physicists, archaeomagnetists, engineers, paleo-botanists, surveyors, renovators, restorers and archaeological reporters. To reconstruct the way of life of the inhabitants of ancient Stromboli the investigations cover many different aspects: interaction with the Volcano, the natural environment, their sustainable means, raw materials, the technology, craftsmen products, topographic organization, the temporal sequence of events, the contacts with Mediterranean commerce. Many of these aspects are treated by students working on the dig for their degree thesis, dissertation or doctorate. On-site work covered both extended stratigraphical dig and a trench in depth. For the investigations on the extended dig, new sectors have been opened up covering an area of over 300 square metres. The complete layering has been investigated in a deep trench dug until insitu rock has been reached. The temporal sequence shows traces form Neolithic age up to today. Amongst the more recent discoveries agricultural activities have been found most likely vineyards. From rock specimens some samples have been taken to carry out volcanological, geo-archaelogical and pollen tests. Excavation area from north-east, with trenches 2 and 3. 10 Geophysical measurements with a magnetometer Extended stratigraphical dig in trench 3 Paleomagnetic analyses Sample collection in the deep trench for sediment and pollen analysis (trench 4) Excavation documentation and registration 11 3 dimensional topographic measurement with laser scanner On-site restoration work: extraction of a vase Classification and cataloguing of specimens Drawings of specimens with major scientific interest Thin section investigation 12 The protohistorical village In the new trenches, oval huts built in stone have been found, with the largest side measuring approximately 6 metres. Some stone wall and pavements filaments have been conserved, placed one on top of the other in pressed earth that show the existence of different floors in the same structure. The hut in trench 2, with a detail of the hearth. The mortar discovered in the hut of trench 2 (left). The hearth of the hut in trench 2 (right). 13 Wide view of the trench 2 and the area excavated by M. Cavalier (trench 5). Making the model of the heatrh. 14 Remains of the hut discovered in trench 3. A wide view of trench 3 with a huge amount of walled structures (left). Excavation of a pot discovered on the floor of the hut (right). 15 In the huts and the surrounding layers an abundance of impasto pottery has been restored, hand-made related to the Capo Graziano facies, amongst which some decorated examples with geometrical carved patterns. Of particular interest is the discovery of fragments of Mycenaean vases turned and painted, already discovered in the Filicudi and Lipari villages but up until now never seen in Stromboli. They are vases used for drinking, produced in the Peloponnese and dating back to the beginning of the Mycenaean civilization. In the same levels some vitreous beads have been found probably of Aegean production. This type of object, is present, in the same period, with particular abundance as well as in the Aeolian islands in the Vivara archipelago. The discovery of this ceramic in Stromboli, helps to define more precisely the dynamics of the circulation of prestigious goods in the Mediterranean in relation to the commercial interest of young powerful Mycenae. The link to the Mycenaean ceramic‘s chronology also allows better punctual dating of our village in the advanced phase of Capo Graziano (XVII-XV cent. BC) already indicated by the rich decorations on the local ceramics. Mycenean pottery and glass bead imported from the Aegean (Late Helladic I-II) . 16 17 local pottery from the new excavation. The carved decorations are typical of the late phase of Capo Graziano period. 18 The later periods In some trenches of the excavation area, notable evidence of activity dating back to an epoch after the protohistoric village has come to light. The ceramics and building materials or Roman-Hellenistic age can be attributed in part to a nearby burial ground and in part to agricultural activity. The many ceramic pieces discovered such as glazed-pottery and majolica can be attributed to a more recent age during the agricultural use of the plains. The systematic study of these specimens could shine a light on the role of Stromboli within the Mediterranean traffic, particularly of Greek and Roman age. Hellenistic, Roman, Medieval and Modern finds from the excavation. 19 Aeolian Islands Chronology Aegean chronology Absolute chronology Capo Graziano I Early Bronze Age Mesohelladic 2.300 - abt. 1.650 BC Capo Graziano II MiddleBronze Age 1-2 Late Helladic I-II abt. 1.650 - 1.400 BC Milazzese MiddleBronze Age 3 Late Helladic IIIA 1.400 - abt. 1.300 BC Ausonio I Recent Bronze Age Late Helladic IIIB-C abt. 1.300 - abt. 1.150 BC Ausonio II Final Bronze Age Late Helladic IIIC Protogeometric abt. 1.150 - 900 BC Comparative chronology between Aeolian Islands and the Aegean in the Bronze Age. Selected bibliography Bernabò Brea L. 1985, Gli Eoli e l’inizio dell’età del bronzo nelle isole Eolie e nell’Italia meridionale, Napoli 1985. Bernabò Brea L., Cavalier M. 1968, Meligunìs Lipàra III. Stazioni preistoriche delle isole Panarea, Salina e Stromboli, Palermo. Bernabò Brea L., Cavalier M. 1980, Meligunìs Lipàra IV. L’Acropoli di Lipari nella preistoria, Palermo. Bernabò Brea L. Cavalier M. 1991, Meligunìs Lipàra VI. Filicudi. Insediamenti dell’età del bronzo, Palermo. Cavalier M. 1981, Villaggio preistorico di San Vincenzo, Sicilia Archeologica, nn. 46-47: 27-54. Di Renzoni A., Bettelli M., Ferranti F., Levi S.T., Martinelli M.C. 2012, Archivio digitale e indagine archeologica interdisciplinare: il caso di San Vincenzo-Stromboli, VII Convegno Nazionale di Archeometria (AIAr), Modena. Levi S.T., Bettelli M., Di Renzoni A., Ferranti F., Martinelli M.C. 2011, 3500 anni fa sotto il vulcano. La ripresa delle indagini nel villaggio protostorico di San Vincenzo a Stromboli, Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche LXI. Martinelli M.C., Fiorentino G., Prosdocimi B., d’Oronzo C., Levi S.T., Mangano G., Stellari A., Wolff N. 2010, Nuove ricerche nell’insediamento sull’istmo di Filo Braccio a Filicudi, nota preliminare sugli scavi 2009, Origini XXXII, NS IV: 285-314. Rattighieri E., Florenzano A., Mercuri A.M., Levi S.T. 2010, Una ricostruzione archeoambientale del sito di San Vincenzo, villaggio del bronzo a Stromboli, Atti Soc. Nat. Mat. Modena 141, 219-230 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNKRBtRqsbg (Stromboli San Vincenzo) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXpByBmWwto (Stromboli San Vincenzo) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOzIAkwW5bM&feature=related (Stromboli San Vincenzo) graphical project by Andrea Di Renzoni, Francesca Ferranti © Preistoria Attuale 2011 Soprintendenza di Messina, Parco archeologico delle Isole Eolie, Milazzo, Patti e Comuni limitrofi Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra dell’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia CNR-Istituto per le Civiltà dell’Egeo e del Vicino Oriente Comune di Lipari Associazione Culturale Preistoria Attuale