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Baptismal font found in crypts beneath Quedlinburg Collegiate Abbey

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Archaeological investigations of a crypt at the Quedlinburg Collegiate Abbey have revealed a baptismal font dating from the Ottonian Dynasty period.

Quedlinburg Collegiate Abbey was founded in 936 in what is now, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The abbey functioned as an Imperial Estate and was one of the self-ruling Imperial Abbeys of the Holy Roman Empire.

Excavations of the western area of the crypt have uncovered a quatrefoil cut into the sandstone, which according to the archaeologists served a baptismal font.

The font measures around 2 metres wide by 0.5 metres deep and dates from the 10th century during the Ottonian Dynasty period.

The Ottonian Dynasty, also known as the Saxon Dynasty, were ruling German monarchs from the Liudolfings family. The dynasty is named after three of its kings and Holy Roman Emperors named Otto, especially its first Emperor Otto I.

According to the researchers, the font must have been the lay room of a sacred building, possibly a church, and represents an important piece of architectural history from a period during the abbey’s medieval past for which little evidence survives.

According to the Roman-Germanic pontifical in the 10th century, unlike today, baptism took place once a year, on Holy Saturday, as a collective baptism of infants or small children by immersion.

Ceremonies were often performed by candlelight and was accompanied by liturgical songs and litanies. Candidates for baptism were immersed in holy water in the shape of a cross and the words “I baptise you in the name of God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit” was spoken.

A press statement by the State Office for Monument Preservation and Archaeology Saxony-Anhalt, said: “It is conceivable that Duke Henry I of Bavaria (born around 922, died in 955), who attempted to kill his brother, King Otto the Great, in an attack in Quedlinburg at Easter in 941, was baptized at the uncovered location.”

Header Image Credit : State Office for Monument Preservation and Archaeology Saxony-Anhalt

Sources : State Office for Monument Preservation and Archaeology Saxony-Anhalt

This content was originally published on www.heritagedaily.com – © 2023 – HeritageDaily

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Archaeology

Archaeologists explore submerged Mesolithic site of Bouldnor Cliff

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Archaeologists from the University of Warwick are conducting an underwater study to document the submerged Mesolithic site of Bouldnor Cliff before it vanishes due to erosion.

Bouldnor Cliff is situated in the Solent between the Isle of Wight and the southern coast of England. The site was first discovered in 1999 when divers observed a lobster discarding worked flint tools from its burrow on the seabed.

At a time when Britain was cut off from mainland Europe by rising sea levels, the area of the Solent was a river valley inhabited by an advanced Mesolithic community who developed a boat building technology 2,000 years ahead of their time.

The study aims to find new data on the nature of the late Ice Age environment during the development of the Mesolithic era, and the extent of the interaction between the inhabitants of Bouldnor Cliff and Europe, including the exchange of materials.

Professor Robin Allaby, who is leading the expedition, said: “This is an incredible opportunity to understand the lost world in which the Mesolithic developed using the latest techniques before our chance is gone.”

The study will involve a comprehensive palaeoenvironmental analysis, in addition to state-of-the-art techniques such as optical simulated luminescence for constructing ecological profiles. Furthermore, archaeologists intend to recover archaeological artefacts and environmental markers to reconstruct the past environment.

Dr Kinnaird adds: “This is an exciting research project to showcase the new innovations in luminescence dating, which can tell when an object was last exposed to the Sun. The relevance of this technique in writing the narratives for 4000 years of history, at the time that the British coastline was rapidly changing, is huge!”

According to the researchers, these discoveries carry the potential to significantly transform our comprehension of the era when Britain emerged as an island.

Header Image Credit : University of Warwick

Sources : University of Warwick

This content was originally published on www.heritagedaily.com – © 2023 – HeritageDaily

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Archaeology

Origins of “Excalibur” sword identified by archaeologists

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A study of the “Excalibur” sword found in Valencia has been revealed to have Islamic origins sometime during the 10th century AD.

Valencia is one of the oldest cities in Spain, founded under the name of Valentia Edetanorum by the Romans in 138 BC.

The city was conquered by the Moors in the 8th century AD, and was destroyed by Abd al-Rahman I of the Umayyad dynasty. Under Caliphate rule, the wider city area became known as Madînat al-Turâb (meaning “city of earth” or “sand”).

The sword was discovered back in 1994 in a house on Valencia’s Historiador Chabàs Street, where it was found standing upright in a grave beneath an Islamic era house.

Dubbed “Excalibur” due to the circumstances of its discovery, the sword is made from iron and has a hilt decorated with bronze plates. In mythology, Excalibur was the legendary sword of King Arthur and appears in various medieval poems describing Arthur pulling the sword from a stone.

However, the “Excalibur” from Valencia was found in a sedimentary strata from the 10th century AD and was likely the weapon of a cavalryman from the Andalusian Caliphate Era.

According to the archaeologists, the sword measures 46 centimetres in length and has a slightly curved blade towards the tip. Swords from this period are rarely found well-preserved due to the levels of oxygen and water in the soil that causes oxidation of the iron.

“It is the first Islamic sword that appears in the city of Valencia, with only one similar example being found during the excavations of Medina Azahara, the caliphal city of Abd al-Rahman III, in Córdoba,” said the Valencia City Council.

Header Image Credit : The Archaeology Service (SIAM) of the Valencia City Council

Sources : Valencia City Council

This content was originally published on www.heritagedaily.com – © 2023 – HeritageDaily

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