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PEF Activities in 2003
International Wadi Farasa Project
Zoara Survey and Excavation Project
Excavations at El-Khasneh (The Treasury), Petra
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The Garden Triclinium, Wadi Farasa, Petra |
Dr Stephan Schmid, presently at Montpellier
University, originally proposed to the Department of Antiquities of Jordan
to clean the Renaissance Tomb in the Wadi Farasa at Petra. This initiative led to the Wadi Farasa Project, which has been in
progress from 2000 to 2003, jointly funded by the Palestine Exploration
Fund and the Swiss organisation, Association for the Understanding of
Ancient Cultures (AUAC). During
September 2003 excavations were carried out at the ‘Garden Triclinium’
and the ‘Soldier’s Tomb’ in Wadi Farasa.
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Dr Schmid has long argued
that many of the rock-cut tomb facades in Petra had built platforms and
colonnades in front of them. One of his main objectives therefore was to
demonstrate this through excavations in the Wadi Farasa. After three
seasons of work, architectural fragments and in situ column bases and
walls have provided good evidence for built structures in front of the
Soldier tomb, and probably for most tombs at Petra. This is invaluable
information for understanding Nabataean architecture and its origins.
A second objective of the
Wadi Farasa project has been to systematically excavate inside and in
front of the rock-cut installations. Although some tombs were cleared in
the 20th century, these activities did not employ modern
archaeological methods. Consequently, most information belonging to the
tombs’ original history has been lost. Dr Schmid’s work, however, has
succeeded in finding some of this material, contributing substantially to
understanding the history of Petra. Since most of the characteristic
Nabataean pottery sherds recovered during excavations were unstratified or
residual, Dr Schmid initiated a strategy of extracting small fragments of
such pottery from the mortar and plaster from the Nabataean tombs. By this
method, he was able to identify and date the pottery and consequently date
the tombs themselves.
The structures at Wadi Farasa had later architectural additions that were incongruent to
Nabataean styles. This was particularly apparent at the ‘Garden
Triclinium’ where I excavated, which had roughly made stone walls and
evidence for the re-use of the cisterns (see Fig.
1). The material finds associated with these structures also reflected
this post-Nabataean phase. The dating is based on medieval period (11th-13th
century AD) pottery finds and Christian tombstones which may indicate a
marked presence in Petra during the Crusader period and the continuity of
Christian communities beyond the Byzantine era.
Work carried out at the
‘Renaissance Tomb’ succeeded in exposing 14 loculi
cut into the floor of this tomb that were excavated. Although all of them were looted in the medieval period,
enough remains (including human bones, pottery and coins) were found to
give an insight about funeral customs of the Nabataeans during the
second half of the 1st century AD. |
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