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Liquid containing cremated human remains is the world’s oldest known wine

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Archaeologists have discovered the oldest known preserved wine, a 2,000-year-old white wine of Andalusian origin.

The origins of wine is debatable, with some sources citing the invention to China, or from Georgia, Iran, and Armenia. Wine was an integral part of the Roman diet and most major wine-producing regions of Western Europe were established during the Roman Imperial era.

The wine was found in a Roman era tomb in the Spanish town of Carmona. It was used for a funerary rite, where the wine was placed in a glass urn and used to immerse the cremated remains of one of the deceased.

“At first we were very surprised that liquid was preserved in one of the funerary urns,” said the City of Carmona’s municipal archaeologist, Juan Manuel Román. “After all, 2,000 years had passed, but the tomb’s conservation conditions were extraordinary and allowed the wine to maintain its natural state.”

Ancient wines absorbed into vessel walls or their residues can be identified using specific biomarkers. However, the example from Carmona is the first instance where the wine has been analysed while still in its liquid state.

The results of the study, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, applied high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS) to identify the polyphenols in the liquid, allowing it to be identified as white wine.

Identifying the origins of the wine was challenging due to the absence of surviving samples from the same period for comparison. However, the mineral salts in the liquid suggest that the wine may originate from the former province of Betis, particularly the Montilla-Moriles region.

A second urn contained the remains of a cremated woman but no traces of a liquid or wine. According to the paper authors: “The fact that the man’s skeletal remains were immersed in the wine is no coincidence. Women in ancient Rome were long prohibited from drinking wine. It was a man’s drink.”

Header Image Credit : Juan Manuel Román

Sources : Daniel Cosano, Juan Manuel Román, Dolores Esquivel, Fernando Lafont, José Rafael Ruiz Arrebola, “New archaeochemical insights into Roman wine from Baetica”, Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, vol. 57, 2024, 104636. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104636

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

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Archaeology

Archaeologists study submerged Nabataean temple

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In 2023, archaeologists discovered the submerged remains of a Nabataean temple during an underwater survey of the ancient port of Puteoli, located in modern-day Pozzuoli, Italy.

Puteoli was established in the mid-6th century BC as a Greek colony called Dicaearchia. After the Roman conquest of Campania following the First Samnite War, Dicaearchia was annexed into the Roman Republic, which later founded the colony of Puteoli.

Puteoli served as one of the primary trading hubs for Rome, emerging as the great emporium of foreign trade for the Alexandrian grain ships and goods from across the Roman world.

Due to the position of Puteoli in the Phlegraean Fields, an active volcanic region, volcanic bradyseismic activity has raised and lowered the geology on the peninsula, resulting in parts of Puteoli being submerged.

The results of a year-long study, published in the journal Antiquity, has mapped and reconstructed parts of the submerged temple, the only known temple located outside of Nabataea – an allied kingdom of Rome that controlled territory from the Euphrates to the Red Sea.

The Nabataean temple and the internal routes of the vicus Lartidianus (dotted lines) at the current stage of research – Image Credit : M. Silani

Using a photogrammetric survey, the researchers have identified that the temple had a rectangular plan and two rooms with access facing north, linked to the internal routes of the vicus Lartidianus (an area designated for foreign people engaged in trade).

Within one of the rooms (designated Room A) are two altars made of white Luni marble, and a mensa with eight rectangular recesses for housing aniconic betils. In the second room (designated Room B), the southern perimeter wall has a white marble slab covering, one of which shows the inscription Dusari sacrum, meaning “consecrated to Dushara”, the chief deity of the Nabataean pantheon.

According to the study authors: “The existence of a Nabataean sanctuary within the port area confirms that there was a community from that region participating in the commercial activities of Puteoli.”

“The integration of these individuals within the local community is evident in the building techniques and materials used in the construction of the temple, and for the choice of Latin for the inscriptions to their supreme god, the lord of the mountains and the germinating force of nature, Dushara.”

Header Image Credit : M.Steanile

Sources : Antiquity | https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2024.107

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

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Archaeology

Treasure hoard discovered in Viking farmstead

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Archaeologists from the Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger have discovered a Viking treasure hoard in the Hjelmeland municipality, Norway.

Excavations were in preparation for the construction of a new farm track to identify any archaeological remains in situ. The researchers discovered traces of a Viking farmstead, consisting of several structures for both the inhabitants and their animals.

Numerous domestic and agricultural objects have been unearthed, including soapstone pots, knife blades, rivets, and whetstones used for sharpening tools.

Mari Krogstad Samuelsen and Ola Tengesdal Lygre were excavating a dwelling used for housing slaves, when they identified what appeared to be twisted hedging wire at a depth of 20 centimetres.

Upon further inspection, the objects were revealed to be four heavy silver bracelets, each adorned with distinct decorative elements.

“This is definitely the biggest thing I have experienced in my career”, says archaeologist and project manager Volker Demuth from the Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger.

“This is a unique find, because we very rarely find such objects exactly where they were placed. As a rule, such valuable objects are discovered on fields that have been ploughed, where an object has been completely removed from its original context,” added Demuth.

According to the archaeologists, the hoard dates from around the 9th century AD and shares similarities to silver necklaces found in Hjelmeland in 1769. At that time, there were no silver mines operating in Norway, so all the silver used by the Vikings was sourced from abroad, obtained through trade, received as gifts, or taken as loot during their raiding expeditions.

Evidence of burning also indicates that the farmstead was destroyed by fire, likely during a time of conflict that required the necessity for the inhabitant’s valuables to be deposited in the ground for security.

Header Image Credit : Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger

Sources : Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger

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

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