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Royal ornaments of a late antique African kingdom, Early Makuria, Nubia (AD 450-550). Early Makuria Research Project

Autor
Then-Obłuska, Joanna
Data publikacji
2017
Abstrakt (EN)

After the fall of the Meroe kingdom, three entities – Nobadia, Early Makuria, and Alwa (Alodia) – emerged in northeast Africa between the 4th and the 6th centuries AD. Richly furnished elite cemeteries with tombs of the Nobadian kings are known from Qustul and Ballaña in Lower Nubia (Emery and Kirwan 1938), but until now no royal tombs of Early Makuria have been identified. A comparative analysis of some recently excavated adornments and ornaments from the tumulus cemetery of el-Zuma in Upper Nubia have now enabled the Early Makuria royal tombs (AD 450–550) to be placed there. The assemblages from three large tumuli are dominated by personal adornments (beads, pendants, earrings, chains, crosses, and a ring), royal regalia (cabochons and settings), and other decorated items (metal sheets, an intarsia and ivory gaming pieces). Apart from beads of various materials, like marine mollusk shell, ostrich eggshell, faience and stone, which were made probably in local workshops, the remaining items were imports from the Mediterranean and Sri Lanka/South India (glass beads in the latter case). Moreover, many of the decorated objects and the techniques used to make them find parallels in the elite Nobadian cemeteries of Qustul and Ballaña, hinting at the royal origin of some of the Early Makuria tomb owners at el-Zuma. These parallels induce the thought that there was a single workshop in late antique Nubia producing artifacts for the elite.

Słowa kluczowe EN
beads
pendants
jewelry
cabochons in silver settings
ivory containers
intarsia
ivory gaming pieces
Nubia
AD 450–550
late antiquity
Early Makuria
Indo-Pacific trade
Christian symbols
Dyscyplina PBN
archeologia
Czasopismo
Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean
Tom
26
Zeszyt
1
Strony od-do
687–718
ISSN
1234-5415
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Inna