Monday, October 26, 2015

Open Access Publications of The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology


Recent Open Access Publications of The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology
PCMA Archaeological Guides are concise, richly-illustrated overviews of the history and material culture of chosen sites, based on up-to-date research. They will satisfy the needs of students who look for a scholarly, yet user-friendly introduction to the site and its background and for enthusiasts of the history and archaeology of the region. Travelers planning a journey off the beaten track will find it a first-rate (and often the only available) source of information on the historical monuments they are about to visit. The series was established in 2013.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Bronze Age Stone Defences in Maszkowice


Image credit: M.S. Przybyła // PAP
Archaeologists have discovered a Bronze Age stone wall  at the hilltop site of Zyndram’s Hill in Maszkowice beneath a settlement occupied throughout the first millennium BCE (Jen Pinkowski, 'Archaeologists Unearth 3700-Year-Old Wall in Poland', Mental Floss September 22, 2015):
The early stone wall is much older; based on radiocarbon dating of organic materials discovered with the architectural elements, the researchers estimate it dates to between 1750 BCE and 1690 BCE. It’s a highly unusual find not only for Poland but for the wider region, the archaeologists said. "In the whole Central Europe there are only a dozen sites dated so early with more or less well-preserved stone fortifications,” Jagiellonian University researcher Marcin S. Przybyła said in a press statement.

The site also produced a so-called violin idol. “Such statuettes were produced in large amounts in Mycenaean Greece, and [the] Northern Balkans," Przybyła said.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Survey of 1410 Battlefield


Archaeologists probe the terrain of the 1410
Battle of Grunwald [Credit: PAP/Tomasz Waszczuk]
TANN 'Archaeologists probe medieval battlefield in Poland', 20th August 2015. The Battle of Grunwald (Tannenburg) July 1410 is regarded as one of the seminal clashes of the medieval era, with the Teutonic Order defeated by a Polish-Lithuanian alliance commanded by King of Poland Władysław Jagiello. An international team of archaeologists is now examining the site.
Dr. Piotr Nowakowski, head of the archaeological and historical department at the Museum of the Battle of Grunwald, has told Polish Radio that the area has yet to be thoroughly explored by archaeologists. He noted that during probes made in the 1980s, researchers only had the use of shovels and their own hands. During the current action, participants are equipped with metal detectors and ground-penetrating radar (GPR). “With these devices, you can explore a larger area in a short time,” Nowakowski said. Besides Poles, archaeologists from Denmark, Norway and Great Britain are taking part. This year, the team is trying to survey terrain where it is believed that the Teutonic Knights camped. In 2014, during a probe that covered another area, a number of small metal objects, pieces of armour and horseshoes were discovered. 
 

Friday, August 21, 2015

Reality Behind the "Nazi Gold Train" Hype


German Castle Somewhere in Poland
There are a load of reports going around at the moment about the discovery using GPR of a 150 metre train buried 70 metres down somewhere near Walbrzych. It is said to contain the legendary gold of Wrocław (Breslau) and cultural property. Fine. The only problem is that people have been looking for, and thinking they've "found" this rumoured train since the later 1940s. When I worked in the Ministry of Culture, three separate such matters ended up one after the other on my desk (and we learnt that another separate one was being handled - I would say illegally - by the Ministry of Internal Affairs). All four of them came to nothing. A mirage. It seems to me that there is a link here with local folklore (in this formerly German region) of the 'buried treasures in caves' topos. The legend has deep roots, but in my processing of the three on my desk I went quite deeply into the historical basis for the story on the basis of the relevant literature and documents, and my conclusion was that all the 'reports' and 'sightings' of this train in the 1940s and subsequently were as dubious a piece of unsubstantiated storymaking as the next.  Possibly some had been deliberately planted for political reasons.   There is material (money and cultural property) missing from Breslau banks and collections, but I don't think it is buried in any mystical underground train.  But it would be nice to be proven wrong.

Local reports are suggesting the site in question is a branch line shown on pre-War maps to the north of Lubichow (50°50'16.37"N 16°20'3.33"E). If so, the finders' claim to have found a train buried here "70 m down" must be wrong, as GPR in such substrate can only penetrate 15-20 m. (but then the difference between the top of the hill and the railway line  here is 30-50m).

UPDATE 31st August 2015
At a news conference Tomasz Smolarz, the Voivoda of Lower Silesia pours cold water on the claim, the documentation which the president of Wałbrych has passed on to him does not confirm this find, consisting as it does of "merely a few - hardly legible - maps" [I presume bad copies of old maps]. He makes no mention of any radar plots or other instrumental records of any investigations. As usual, more people are coming forward to say it was "they" who "discovered the train" and making unsupported accusations of claim-jumping.

Meanwhile, there may be consequences for the hapless General Conservator of Historical Monuments (GKZ) Piotr Żuchowski who - astonishingly - announced he'd seen the proof of the existence of the train and was "99% sure it exists". Such a statement - which some might say lies outside the competence of this office - has led to the prosecutor being informed, interestingly by our old friends the metal detecting 'Fundacja Thesaurus', who are demanding his dismissal for unprofessional conduct and spreading false information. After all, he only has to go to the archives of the office he runs to find my reports on the three matters I handled (exactly the same lunatic claims) and my analysis of why the whole lot simply have no basis in any verifiable material. But then, what happens in heritage is generally this, out go the old teams, in come new (and there have been half a dozen - and utterly dramatic - changes in the GKZ since my days there), and all the old paperwork is put in boxes and buried in some dark cellar. The right hand does not know what the left has been doing. There is no gold train here.

UPDATED UPDATE 5th September 2015
The men who claim to have made this find are named as Andreas Richter and Piotr Koper, sand they a appeared on Polish TV claiming that they do have "irrefutable proof" that it exists, and that it is not in a tunnel but "buried underground". Hmmm. Mr Koper read - with some difficulty it seems - a statement prepared in Polish by their lawyer(s) which was internally inconsistent and mainly addressed what the press had been saying about them.They say they have firm proof that it is there and what it is, and several sentences later that they will use their own equipment to identify the site and whether there is something there.
Andreas Richter, left, and Piotr Koper, centre,
gave a statement to Polish channel TVP

Here's their website: XYZ Spółka Cywilna Piotr Koper and Andreas Richter . According to this (trans.) "the XYZ partnership in engaged in subsoil investigations in terms of exploration of tunnels, cellars, the [finding of] metals and any other objects underground". For this they announce that they use a GPR made by the German firm KS-Analysis, model FMCW model KS-700 (Frequency-Modulated Continuous-Wave). For metal detecting they use a Lorenz Detecting Systems, model Lorenz Deepmax x6 (which interestingly is an obsolete model- replaced by the DEEPMAX - Z1-DL).

The webpage showing the shaft tagged 'Gold Train'
Here are some georadar plots purporting to show a "shaft" which contains the "Gold Train" (see tag at bottom of page) and one showing a tunnel (no gold train mentioned here). OK, so how do you drive an armoured train vertically down a shaft fifty metres deep? More to the point, only two waggons would fit vertically in such a "shaft", so we can forget the story that this train is "150 metres long". Of course - since any digging is not likely to take place (this is Poland folks, minus 20 in the winter) until spring, treasure hunting firm XYZ gets some nice free publicity until then - and the (as I expect) the revelation that there is nothing there.

There is a legal problem here if we consider this as cultural property. By Polish law, both the original survey and any later one and (especially) digging done by these two require them to have a permit, and the issue of that is dependent on them having certain qualifications which it is my guess they do not have. Their idea that they can just go out and dig it up themselves for their sponsors' money, unfortunately cannot be accommodated by the existing law. It will be interesting to see how that one is resolved.

UPDATE 6th September
Hmmm. We are, after all dealing with metal detectorists. So it will be no surprise then that yesterday their nascent website showed a colourful picture of a shaft with something at the bottom and the tag "gold train". Today the tag has disappeared and the page is labelled "Badanie NIE przedstawia pociągu". Yeah, well when you stop playing childish games and get your act together, gentlemen, do let us know when you have something to show...


Sunday, July 5, 2015

Film of Cracow's Archaeological Museum


"The Best of the Archaeology Museum in Kraków Poland"
.

posted on You Tube by Mat Siems 25.09.2012

The Archaeology Museum located in the heart of the Kraków Old Town is one of the oldest institutions of this type in Poland. It was established in 1850 and has today over 500,000 items of historic heritage including some remarkable artefacts ranging from the Palaeolithic Period to modern times. The Museum is home to Swiatowit statue, a four-faced 8-foot-tall stone idol [unearthed in Ukraine] considered the world's only unearthed Slavonic god. 
The film suffers from a surfeit of models...

Monday, June 1, 2015

Herodotus


Tom Holland ‏@holland_tom posted this cartoon featuring #Herodotus by : https://twitter.com/holland_tom/status/405440531590705153 

Sunday, April 19, 2015

18th Century Sex Toy Found in Gdansk Latrine



Eight-inch, 250-year-old sex toy ()
A 250-year-old sex toy has been found by archaeologists during a dig of an ancient toilet in Poland.
The eight-inch leather dildo with a wooden head was discovered during an excavation at an old school of swordsmanship in the coastal city of Gdansk. A spokesman for the Regional Office for the Protection of Monuments in Gdansk, said: 'It was found in the latrine and dates back to the second half of the 18th century. 'It is quite thick and rather large, made of leather and filled with bristles, and has a wooden tip that has preserved in excellent condition. It was probably dropped by someone in the toilet 'Whether that was by accident or on purpose is anyone's guess though.' Archaeologists at the site earlier discovered old swords leading them to suspect that the place was once a school of swordsmanship. The artifact has now been taken away for preservation work.

Kate Pickles, 'Leather sex toy from the 18th Century is discovered by archaeologists at ancient Polish training arena for swordsmen' Mailonline, 15 April 2015

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Bronze Hoard Discovered in Poland


(Fot. D. Szuwalski)
'Bronze Hoard Discovered in Poland' Tuesday, February 17, 2015:
RZEPEDZ, POLAND—At a remote site in the Bieszczady Mountains, beyond the Carpathian Mountains, Polish archaeologists have uncovered a hoard of bronze artefacts including a pickaxe, and a necklace and bracelet hidden inside a clay vessel. According to Science & Scholarship in Poland, the find was originally made by an amateur who saw the axe sticking out of the ground and immediately alerted the local museum. "For me, as an archaeologist, it is very important that after finding one object the discoverer did not explore the place further himself, but reported the discovery and waited for specialists,” says Sanok Museum archaeologist Piotr Kotowicz, adding, “We do not yet know who and why had hidden the treasure so carefully.”