Saturday, 17 November 2018

SU NURAXI DI BARUMINI: THE NURAGHE IN CAMPIDANESE

Joseph de Ca'th Lon with a drawing of Su Nuraxi
Today, Joseph de Ca'th Lon and his friends have visited Su Nuraxi di Barumini, a Nuragic archaeological site.

As you know, Joseph loves Archaeology and History and visiting Su Nuraxi is a good opportunity to know more information about the past of these European civilizations. They are enjoying the last days in this wonderful Sardinian country and they have wanted to finish their trip in the same way they started: discovering the Nuragic culture.

Before travelling from Casteddu to Barumini, The Grandma has studied a new lesson of her
Elementary Language Practice manual (Grammar 15).

More information: Present Perfect-Affirmative

Su Nuraxi is a nuragic archaeological site in Barumini, Sardinia. Su Nuraxi simply means The Nuraghe in Campidanese, the southern variant of the Sardinian language.

Su Nuraxi is a settlement consisting of a seventeenth century BCE Nuraghe, a bastion of four corner towers plus a central one, and a village inhabited from the thirteenth to the sixth century BCE, developed around the Nuraghe. They are considered by scholars the most impressive expression of the Nuragic civilization and were included in the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in 1997 as Su Nuraxi di Barumini.

The Grandma & Claire Fontaine visit Su Nuraxi
The oldest part of the Nuraghe consists of a central tower with three superposed chambers of 18.6m high. It was built in blocks of basalt between the seventeenth and thirteenth centuries BCE. Later, during the Late Bronze Age, four towers joined by a curtain wall with an upper balcony, no longer extant, were built around the central tower, all communicating with an inner courtyard served by a well. During the Iron Age, the complex was surrounded by a curtain wall with seven lobes, heptalobate.

The real function of the nuraghe is still debated. The discoverer of Su Nuraxi, the archaeologist Giovanni Lilliu, confirmed the traditional interpretation of fortress-site. Other archaeologists believe that the oldest part of the complex was destined for a religious purpose, refuge, civil or even parliament or registered the village chief, while the towers were added perhaps intended for military purposes and stock.

More information: UNESCO

A village, intended to accommodate the surrounding population, was built around the Nuraghe in the Late Bronze Age. The many phases of life in the village render it impossible to establish the number of huts in one phase, the number of huts varied from forty to two hundreds, so the population ranged from 100 to 1000 inhabitants and the settlement was built on a circular plan with large boulders covered with dry stone walls and conical roofs made of wood and branches.

Though the huts were structured in a single unit in more remote periods, there was a later, more prevalent tendency to subdivide housing into individual units. Of the huts found, the most significant appear to have been reserved for meetings of the local leaders. These huts were larger and more complex in structure, and the hut reserved for the inhabitants' meetings contained symbols of the deities worshiped by locals. Other rooms have been identified as workshops, kitchens, and agricultural processing centres. During the 9-8th century bc a sewerage system was built along with a paved square and streets.

Joseph de Ca'th Lon in Su Nuraxi di Barumini
During the sixth century BCE, the buildings were destroyed and subsequently restored by Carthage before being occupied by the Romans. They were eventually completely abandoned.

The Nuraghe and the village were strategically connected to the system of other Nuraghes, such as the polylobate nuraghe found beneath the fifteenth-century Palazzo Zapata in the village of Barumini.

The archaeological site was fully excavated between 1950 and 1957 under the direction of Giovanni Lilliu, a local expert. The excavations allowed archaeologists to retrace the different stages of the construction of the towers and surrounding village, confirming that the entire complex was a vibrant, vital centre up to the first century BCE, during the Roman period.

More information: Sardegna Turismo

Excavations brought to light important remains in the form of tools, weapons, pottery, and ornaments.

This site is essential to an understanding of the timeline of Sardinian civilization: The relative chronology of Sardinian prehistory is largely based on the first modern excavation of a 'nuraghe' at Su Nuraxi, Barumini. Giovanni Lilliu used a combination of structural phases and pottery typology to construct a general Nuragic sequence.

There is another important nuragic site at nearby Casa Zapata, the important finds of which are on display at the site's museum. 



One of the few things that can be said 
for certain about Europe's prehistoric peoples 
is that they all came from somewhere else.

Norman Davies

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