Polish archaeologists have gained an insight into the 18th century layout of an old city in what is now Sudan using geophysical research.
A Polish archaeological mission from the University of Warsaw’s Centre for Mediterranean Archaeology has been working in Old Dongola since 1964.
A Polish archaeological mission from the University of Warsaw’s Centre for Mediterranean Archaeology has been working in Old Dongola since 1964 [Credit: PCMA UW (CAS UW)] |
Now the archaeologists have shown that the city outlasted the change in power, surviving until the early 19th century, when it fell suddenly, reports Science in Poland (Nauke w Polsce).
Fieldwork in Old Dongola [Credit: M. Reklajtis/PCMA UW (CAS UW)] |
The geophysical research, encompassing magnetic and ground-penetrating radar methods, was carried out by Tomasz Herbich and Robert Ryndziewicz, experts at the Polish Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography. The resulting images showed the city’s layout shortly before its downfall.
A citadel and adjacent area with a mosque, which before 1316 was a throne room [Credit: S. Lenarczyk] |
The geophysical research also showed that the city’s walls changed function over time. Initially, they served to protect the city; later, they separated different districts from each other.
Excavations in Dongola reveal remains of 18th-century housing [Credit: M. Reklajtis/CAS UW] |
“Interestingly, in the 18th Century Dongola’s inhabitants were probably heavy smokers. We found a few pipes in every house, and tobacco was not a cheap good at the time,” Obłuski observed.
Author: Anne Chatham | Source: The First News [July 11, 2019]
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