British Museum assists Sudan in rescue archaeology project
For the past 10 years, the British Museum, in conjunction
with the Sudan Archaeological Research Society (SARS), has been
working to survey, record and excavate the region surrounding the
Fourth Cataract of the Nile in Sudan, prior to the damming of the
river. The Fourth Cataract is currently being flooded to provide
hydroelectricity for Sudan. The British Museum/SARS team is one of
nine international missions under the banner of the “Merowe Dam
Archaeological Salvage Project”, which have uncovered thousands of
sites dating from the Middle Palaeolithic (150,000 years ago) to
the very recent past. The project has revolutionized our knowledge
of ancient Sudan.
Until recently, the cataract zone was considered a poor and
inhospitable region, marginalised at all periods. It was considered
a border zone viewed primarily as a place of refuge. The MDASP,
with the discovery of vast numbers of sites of all periods, some of
them of high status such as a granite pyramid and massive
fortresses, is forcing a total reappraisal of the nature and role
of the region in its Nile Valley context. As a final phase of the
project an appeal was made by the Sudan National Corporation for
Antiquities and Museums (NCAM) for missions to save from inundation
rock art, rock gongs and any buildings that could be moved, for
display in a proposed new museum to be dedicated to the ancient and
modern cultures of the region.
In response to this appeal the British Museum, in collaboration
with Iveco, one of the world’s leading manufacturers of commercial
vehicles, New Holland, a leader in the construction equipment
business (both companies belong to the Fiat Group) and NCAM mounted
a project in November 2007 with the aim of relocating over 50
pieces of rock art and rock gongs dating to between 5,000 BC – AD
1500 as well as the 390 blocks of an early Kushite (c. 8th-5th
century BC) granite pyramid, along with its offering chapel and
enclosure wall.
With the aid of two Iveco Eurocargo four-wheel drive vehicles,
one equipped with a crane provided specifically for the project by
the Group’s headquarters in Turin and with a back hoe supplied by
New Holland, the mission was successfully completed.
In recognition of the efforts of this mission, 20 blocks were
donated to the British Museum and it is hoped that early next year
some of these can be put on permanent display along with other
material from the region of the Fourth Cataract. This will allow
the Museum to highlight the rich and vibrant cultures of the region
as well as the efforts of the Sudan Antiquities Service and the
international community to research into and preserve where
possible the ancient cultures of this important part of the Nile
Valley. The blocks include examples of early rock art on basalt and
granite featuring anthropormorphs, camels, sheep and cows, an
animal of particular importance to the people living in the region.
One block features a small but finely executed human figure with a
feather in its hair, the traditional way the people of this region
were depicted by the ancient Egyptians. Two rock gongs have also
been given to the Museum, these slabs of rock would have been
played by striking them with quartzite pebbles, producing a quite
extraordinary range of melodious sounds. Rock gongs and rock art
are often found together and are suggestive of an important ritual
landscape.
Derek Welsby, Curator in the Department of
Ancient Egypt and Sudan at the British Museum and head of the
mission said ‘The work at the Fourth Cataract has transformed our
view of the Middle Nile Valley in northern Sudan and we are pleased
to have been able to assist in the rescue of these important
archaeological objects. The contribution of Iveco and New Holland
was very considerable, we would not have been able to conduct this
project without their input’.
Notes to editors:
- The Merowe Dam Archaeological Salvage Project has
revolutionized our knowledge of settlement in the Fourth Cataract
and the ancient history of Sudan. Previously considered to be an
area inhospitable for human settlement, the rescue missions have
revealed a long and complex history. From the Kerma period, 2400 –
15 BC with its abundant cemeteries, to the time of the
powerful Kushite kings who ruled over their neighbour Egypt in 8th
and 7th centuries BC to the medieval Christian and the later
Islamic period. Many thousands of sites have been discovered in the
course of the project, with over 2,500 being found by the Sudan
Archaeological Research Society/ British Museum mission
alone. More information can be found at www.sudarchrs.org.uk and
www.nubiansociety.org
- Video materials regarding the presence of New Holland at the
project site are available at the http://www.thenewsmarket.com/
For further information or images please contact
Hannah Boulton
Tel. 020 7323 8522
hboulton@britishmuseum.org
or communications@britishmuseum.org
Other contacts:
Iveco
Maurizio Pignata
Tel: +39 011 0072122
maurizio.pignata@iveco.com
New Holland
Silvia Cassani
Tel: +39 011 0086251
silvia.cassani@newholland.com
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