Resurrecting Selinunte

One of the ancient world’s greatest tragedies, frozen in time for almost 2500 years, is at last yielding up its long-lost secrets. Archaeologists are gradually unearthing an ancient Greek city — Selinunte in Sicily — whose inhabitants were slaughtered or enslaved by North African invaders in the late fifth century BC. Like an ancient Greek Pompeii, the whole city remained at least partially intact, despite the tragic loss of most of its inhabitants.

At Pompeii all the houses and other buildings were interred almost instantaneously under volcanic ash — but at Selinunte they were buried more gradually by hundreds of thousands of tons of earth and windblown sand. Archaeological excavations are now revealing how the exact moment that Selinunte ceased to exist as a major living city was preserved in graphic detail.

Buried under a collapsed roof in a building burnt by the invaders, the archaeologists have even found the half-eaten remains of meals abandoned by the townsfolk as catastrophe engulfed them. Scientists are now analysing visible food residues inside half a dozen bowls left around a hearth in that building. What’s more, they have also found dozens of unfired ceramic products — pots and tiles — abandoned by terrified local workers before they’d had a chance to put them in their kilns.

Over the past 15 years, using geophysical techniques and sometimes excavation, the archaeological investigation has so far identified all 2,500 of the long-abandoned city’s houses, all its streets, its harbour and its once-flourishing industrial zone. It’s the first time archaeologists have been able to produce a detailed comprehensive plan of what a classical Greek city looked like. Previously, they had only been able to gain a relatively fragmentary appreciation of how such cities looked and functioned.

The new knowledge from Selinunte has begun to transform scholars’ understanding of some of the key demographic and economic realities of the ancient world as a whole. “Selinunte is the only classical Greek city where the entire metropolis is still preserved, mainly buried under sand and earth. It therefore gives us a unique opportunity to discover how an ancient Greek city functioned,” said Professor Martin Bentz of the University of Bonn, director of the major current excavation at Selinunte.

Eighty kilns have so far been identified — including dozens of very large circular ones  (used to produce thousands of roof tiles and large ceramic food transport containers) and a dozen large rectangular ones dedicated to producing giant ceramic food storage containers and ceramic coffins!  Other smaller kilns were used to make fine tableware, loom weights — and small statues of gods and goddesses. The potters even had their own religious chapel — equipped with altars dedicated to a special working class deity, Athena Ergane (Athena of the Workers) as well as to Artemis (Goddess of Hunting and of Childbirth), Demeter (Goddess of Fertility and of the Harvest) and the king of the gods, Zeus himself.

The archaeology of Selinunte is unique, mainly because the entire city simply ceased  to exist as a major population centre in less than a day — as Carthaginian troops (from what is now modern Tunisia) punctured the defences and butchered 16,000 of the Greek inhabitants and soldiers who had been trying to defend it. Some 5,000 more men were taken as slaves, as were many thousands of women and children. Literally from one day to the next, the once bustling city became a ghost town.

Of the tens of thousands of ordinary people who lived there during the 219 years of its existence, only a dozen names have been recovered by the archaeologists — names scratched on the bottoms of drinking cups and jugs found in houses facing the city’s great market place.

Around 15 per cent of the 250-acre city — mostly its temples and its acropolis — has, to this day, survived above ground. Its jumbled ruins were regarded by participants in the Grand Tour as particularly picturesque and alluring, not just because of its tragic ancient history — but also because the surviving temples had been toppled by a massive earthquake more than 500 years ago. Using their original columns and building materials, two of the temples were re-erected in the mid-20th century and have become major tourist attractions. Selinunte is now the largest archaeological park in Europe.

 

–The Independent–