Tuesday, 3 May 2022

Holsworthy ARCHAEOLOGICAL News_ Phoenician ‘harbour’ in Sicily revealed to be religious site aligned with stars

 

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  • Phoenician ‘harbour’ in Sicily revealed to be religious site aligned with stars

    View of the refurbished ‘kothon’ with a replica of the statue of Ba'al at its centre.

    Research upturns theory that pool in ancient city of Motya was used by military and underlines Phoenician connection to astronomy

    Rafqa Touma
    Thu 28 Apr 2022 08.35 BSTFirst published on Wed 27 Apr 2022 20.00 BST
  • Off the west coast of Sicily lies the remains of the ancient city of Motya. There, a compound of temples and shrines offers a window into the life of Phoenician settlers who journeyed from Lebanon across the Mediterranean in the first millennium BC.

    While Motya has been studied for a century, the site is still giving up new secrets. Earlier this month a rectangular basin, long-believed to have served as an artificial harbour for protecting naval ships and participating in trade, was revealed to be something else entirely – a religious site, designed and constructed to perfectly align with the stars.

    The basin, larger than an Olympic-sized swimming pool, was rebuilt in 550BC along with Motya after it was destroyed in an attack by Carthage, another Phoenician colony across the sea in Tunisia. The city was then abandoned in Roman times.

    The southern wall of the ‘kothon’, separating the pool from the Marsala Lagoon.
    The southern wall of the ‘kothon’, separating the pool from the Marsala Lagoon. Photograph: Sapienza University of Rome Expedition to Motya

    Since the pool’s discovery in the 1920s, it was thought to be a “kothon” – an artificial military harbour. Kothon are quite common in the Mediterranean, says Ania Kotarba, a senior lecturer in archaeology at Flinders University. The most famous is in Carthage. But recent excavations and decades of research led by the archaeologist Lorenzo Nigro of Sapienza University of Rome and published in the journal Antiquity this month unearthed clues suggesting instead the pool is the heart of a sprawling religious site.

    “Sacred pools are less common [than kothon],” Kotarba says. “So one on such a scale is quite impressive.”

    Since his team’s research, perceptions of the basin have “drastically changed,” says Nigro in a statement.

    What was thought to be a harbour for centuries may soon be interpreted as “a sacred pool at the centre of one of the largest cultic complexes of the pre-classical Mediterranean”.

    A sandstone statue of a male deity found in 1933 in the Marsala Lagoon, Palermo, Italy.
    A sandstone statue of a male deity found in 1933 in the Marsala Lagoon, Palermo, Italy. Photograph: Sapienza University of Rome Expedition to Motya

    Unearthing the truth

    Reinvestigation of the basin began 12 years ago, when remains of a temple to the god Ba’al were discovered where excavators expected to find harbour buildings. Ba’al – a widely used Semitic word meaning “lord” – has often been likened to the Greek god Orion, who was believed to exist as a constellation among the stars.

    Kotarba says Ba’al was associated with the god of storms in the Phoenician period. As Phoenicians were known to be seafarers, traders and explorers, their deities were associated with celestial bodies. “Their livelihoods were connected to celestial movements around the sky,” she says. “Storms are the greatest adversary to seafarers, and the god of storms could interrupt their safe passages.

    “So it is not unexpected that their key sanctuary would be dedicated to Ba’al, and have something to do with astronomy working out movement of celestial bodies,” Kotarba says.

    A 10ft statue of Ba’al once stood at the pool’s centre. Its torso was discovered in the 1930s in a nearby lagoon, and stone blocks used for its feet were found by the pool’s edge.

    The basin off the coast of Sicily is now thought to be a sacred pool aligned with the stars.
    The basin off the coast of Sicily is now thought to be a sacred pool aligned with the stars. Photograph: Lorenzo Nigro

    Quoting Leonardo da Vinci, Nigro says; “the only good mirror in antiquity is water.

    “It became clear the function of the basin was to be a pool for watching the stars, reflecting them like a mirror,” he says. His research found the water’s reflection was used as a tool to map movement of the stars for navigation – something crucial to Phoenicians, who Kotarba calls “the greatest navigators of the Mediterranean and beyond”.

    ‘A piece of humankind in the past’

    Upon mapping the site, the research team also found the configuration of Motya itself aligned with the heavens.

    An aerial view of the sacred area of the ‘kothon’ on the island of Motya.
    An aerial view of the sacred area of the ‘kothon’ on the island of Motya. Photograph: Sapienza University of Rome Expedition to Motya

    Key features line up with constellations – the temple of Ba’al aligns with the rise of Orion’s constellation at the winter solstice. Recent excavations also found several more temples bordering the pool, alongside inscribed stone columns, altars and offerings.

    Critically, unlike harbours, the pool is not connected to the sea. The draining of the kothon for excavation began in 2005. So, one morning when Nigro arrived to find a small pond of “beautiful transparent water” in the basin, he “could not understand how it was possible”.

    It was not until 2019 that excavation revealed channels carrying water to the pool from three natural springs.

    Nigro calls discovery of the Phoenician’s “pre-scientific tool” a “piece of human-kind in the past”.

    “We can not use our science to understand this past science,” Nigro told the Guardian. “But it can teach us there exists a diversity in science. There could be solutions in it for us. The Phoenicians colonised, built up cultures and civilisations. They built roads and crossed seas, but they never destroyed their environment.

    “We are the only civilisation destroying the environment,” he says. “We should ask, are we the ones who have more science, or them?”

    This article was amended on 28 April 2022 to correct the spelling of Leonardo da Vinci.

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  • Holsworthy Paranormal _Haunted Edinburgh: The ghostly spectres that still walk Mary King’s Close today

     

    Haunted Edinburgh: The ghostly spectres that still walk Mary King’s Close today

    If you ever visited Mary King's Close before it was a visitor attraction, or have felt the small hand of ‘abandoned Annie’ grab at your leg as the temperature in Edinburgh’s underground street dropped inexplicably, read on.

    By Liam Rudden
    Saturday, 30th April 2022, 4:55 am

    Let us know what you think and join the conversation at the bottom of this article

    In the early 1980s, Mary King's Close was a mythical place talked of in hushed tones. Back then it wasn't open to the public and the only way to access this secret piece of the Capital’s forgotten history was through a visit arranged by a local Sports and Social Club or similar organisation. Those lucky enough to have the connections to do just that would find themselves taken around the historic 17th century street deep beneath the City Chambers by a guide whose improvised storytelling highlighted the close's darker and spookier tales. With dim, flickering jury-rigged lighting and an ever present chill in the air adding to the atmosphere, his tales of ghostly haunting seemed only too plausible.

    At the time it was still possible explore what remained of the businesses and homes that lined the close. There was an old bakery, on the right as you climbed the hill towards the High Street, and a tenement with a front room lined with fragments of cyanide impregnated wallpaper - no doubt 'Health and Safety' had something to say about that before the close opened as the visitor attraction it is today.

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    Prince Charles visits Mary King's Close  Picture by Rob McDougall
    Prince Charles visits Mary King's Close Picture by Rob McDougall

    In the Eighties, you entered through an anonymous door that led down into the chilly underworld, that chill along with the tales of plague, death and murder still remain today and Mary King's Close is now reputed to be one of the most haunted places in the Capital. Indeed, there are those who would have you believe the infamous thoroughfare is regularly visited by the shade of Mary King herself - allegedly captured as a ghostly image by ghost-hunters with an infrared camera late one night after the public had left the site.

    Others claim to have seen the male witch, Major Thomas Weir, who walked through the close on his way to his execution, while the spirit of local resident Andrew Chesney, it has been claimed, told local paranormal investigators to, “Just get out,” when they asked, “Would you like us to leave here now?” And that's before we even touch on the plague victims who perished here when the black death came calling in 1644.

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    While there is no doubting the tragic history of the close, not everyone is convinced by the tales of its ghosts and one in particular draws much attention.

    Mary King's Close in the Royal Mile Edinburgh, fallen into disrepair in October 1976 Picture by Hamish Campbell

    A more recent haunting, abandoned Annie was first 'encountered' in 1992 by a Japanese psychic named Aiko Gibo who came to the close with a film crew to make a documentary about paranormal activity.

    Arriving at a specific room towards the end of the close, Gibo refused to enter, citing a terrible sense of sickness, hunger and cold. Finally going inside after apparently being 'invited' in by the ghost of a little girl called Annie who had died of the plague, she declared the girl had been abandoned by her family and had lost her doll.

    Depending on the story you hear Annie either tugged at the hand of the psychic or grabbed at her leg, and in keeping with the Japanese tradition of honouring the dead, Gibo went to the Royal Mile and brought back a tartan Barbie doll. Since then, visitors to Annie's room have left similar gifts for the spirit.

    Chris Trotter, a guide at the attraction at the time said he too knew of many instances of tourists suddenly feeling unwell, of feeling a little hand grabbing at them or feeling a dread sense of cold.

    Deep inside Mary King's Close beneath the Edinburgh City Chambers in the High Street Picture by Hamish Campbell

    “I've had a few experiences,” he told the News. “People, when they come into this room, sometimes feel quite uneasy. About a year ago one woman came in and she felt very overcome after about 30 seconds and had to go out.”

    Author and Edinburgh tour guide Graeme Milne is more cautious when considering of the venue's ghostly tales, he said, “Stories about early hauntings in Mary King's Close were mentioned in a book called Satan's Invisible World, in which an occupant described outlandish ghostly visitations, but the book was pretty much a religious tract and suggested anyone not being devout could potentially see ghosts.

    “Published in 1685 it was the work of Presbyterian professor of philosophy, George Sinclair; it claimed to prove the existence of Satan, witchcraft and apparitions through a collection of 'true' stories.”

    He continued, "The original hauntings were described by someone who was possibly ill or suffering from religious fervour and likely embellished. However, I do believe that the location is quite possibly haunted because of more recent reports… the older ones must be taken with a pinch of salt.​”​

    Mr W Hush illuminates stalactites in Mary King's Close beneath the Edinburgh City Chambers on the High Street Picture by Hamish Campbell

    Admitting to the spine-chilling creepiness of the close is one thing, but deciding that you believe in ghosts is quite another but it has been written that there are few places better to debate paranormal phenomena than in depths of Mary King's Close.

    Ryan O'Neill from Scottish Paranormal, a group of amateur enthusiasts of the supernatural, might agree, his group captured "very faint white or transparent spheres… spiritual orbs" and in April 2001 Dr Caroline Watt of Edinburgh University's Koestler Unit revealed she too had an experience of ghosts in the close during an experiment. Se revealed, “I was in a part of the close where no one else was supposed to be. I heard footsteps and the sound of rustling clothing. From a professional point of view I was annoyed because I thought it was someone intruding on our experiment, but when I asked the tour guides I found out there was no one there.”

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    A photographer in Mary King's Close, the entrance to which was revelaled by workmen digging up the floor of Edinburgh City Chambers - picture taken in October 1986 Picture by Stan Warbuton
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