Archaeologists have detected long-hidden features of a Visigothic city in Spain, including unexplored parts of a palace and a building that may be one of the oldest mosques in Europe.
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A geomagnetic look at Reccopolis in 2015 [Credit: Henning, J. et al. Antiquity 2019] |
"In every space that we were able to survey, we found buildings and streets and passages," study co-author Michael McCormick, a medieval historian and archaeologist at Harvard University, told Live Science.
The Visigoths were Germanic people who established a kingdom in southwestern Europe in Late Antiquity, just before the Middle Ages began. They famously sacked Rome in the year 410.
In the second half of the sixth century, the Iberian Peninsula was the center of Visigothic power. King Leovigild made his royal capital in Toledo, Spain, and farther upstream along the Tagus River, he constructed a new town called Reccopolis in 578.
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This layout shows the ancient city of Reccopolis [Credit: Henning, J. et al. Antiquity 2019] |
The researchers and a few other colleagues teamed up the next year to perform the first geomagnetic survey of the site. This noninvasive prospecting technique allows researchers to see structures underground by mapping magnetic anomalies beneath the Earth's surface.
Their results quickly showed that empty spaces inside the city walls of Reccopolis were full of hidden streets and buildings. There was even a suburb outside the city's monumental gate. The findings were published last week in the journal Antiquity.
"Thanks to this new geomagnetic survey, we have learned that the space encircled by the city's walls was fully developed and that its population was large enough even to spill beyond the city's walls," said Noel Lenski, a professor of classics and history at Yale University, who wasn't involved in the study. "Just as importantly, this was happening in a period long thought to be characterized by urban decline and demographic collapse."
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The possible mosque of Reccopolis [Credit: Henning, J. et al. Antiquity 2019] |
Researchers have recently defined a period of rapid climate change, called the Late Antique Little Ice Age — which lasted from 536 to about 660 and was brought on by a series of volcanic eruptions in the Northern Hemisphere — that may have been the catalyst for the widespread upheaval.
"It's really remarkable to see the Visigothic monarchy coming together at this time and assembling the resources to be able to found a new city," McCormick said.
The Visigothic rulers of the region were deposed during the Islamic conquest of 711, and the new geophysical evidence shows some signs of Muslim occupation before the city was abandoned around 800.
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Reccopolis is located on the Tagus River in Spain [Credit: Henning, J. et al. Antiquity 2019] |
Author: Megan Gannon | Source: Live Science [June 22, 2019]
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