Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Genuine Bosnian Archaeology
Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > Unexplained Mysteries > Ancient Mysteries & Alternative History
keithisco
I include here a transcript from Archaeo News.

I was stunned to know that Illyrian ships had been found submerged in just a few metres of water, in the marshlands at Hutovo Blato, in Southern Bosnia. I also despair that the funding to secure this and other sites from looters is not readily available.

Is it not time that the wealthier nations financially backed the preservation of such sites. These represent sites of internationally important discovery.

Does anyone have a link to any of the underwater photography?

"Archaeologist Snjezana Vasilj has won her battle with the forms that go with Bosnian bureaucracy, securing the research grant needed to continue her own treasure hunt. Vasilj and her small team of volunteers used the 7 000 euros in funding to help make an extraordinary discovery at the Hutovo Blato marshlands in southern Bosnia. The archaeologist said she cried when divers she could only afford to pay in 'sandwiches' surfaced from a small lake in the nature reserve to confirm what lay on the bottom - Illyrian ships dating back some 2 200 years.
"I'd spent three years trying to secure financial backing for the research. Throughout that time, the site was being looted," Vasilj said. "The underwater photography I made when I was preparing the project proved presence of many more artefacts, but they are now gone," she added. Illyrian ships are mentioned in Greek and Roman historic records, but this was the first time they have been found. The wooden relics of the two ships, located some eight metres under water, are believed to have been trading or pirate ships that sank in the marshlands.
Illyrians, who frequently engaged in piracy on the Adriatic Sea, were the earliest known inhabitants of the western Balkans, including Bosnia, long before the Roman Empire took control of the region. At the site, archaeologists also found seven graves believed to date from the Bronze or Iron Age.
The owner of the property where the research is taking place said how he has spent years trying to rouse the interest of authorities in the site and to fight off looters. It all started in 1976 when he went net fishing with his father, and, instead of fish, pulled up the amphoras. Some modest research had been carried out at the site after they alerted authorities and gave them 22 whole amphoras found there. However, after Bosnia's 1992-1995 war, the site only drew thieves who were diving for amphoras to "use them to decorate their homes or to sell them".
Hutovo Blato is not the only example of neglect for cultural heritage in Bosnia. The purported find of the pyramids north of the Bosnian capital last year by self-styled explorer Semir Osmanagic drew outrage from experts who questioned the authenticity of the discovery. They were angered about what they said was the wrongful redirection of public and financial support towards Osmanagic's so-called 'Pyramids of the Sun' ahead of more important archaeological projects. "The popular support for the research of the pyramids bordered on hysteria," Zilka Kujundzic Vejzagic, a specialist in prehistoric archaeology, said. "One day we might be held to account for the neglect of cultural heritage which is not Bosnian, but European," she warned.
Bosnia first began attracting interest among archaeologists around the world in the 19th century. In 1894, Sarajevo hosted the International Congress of Archaeology and Anthropology. The remains of one of the best researched Neolithic settlements were discovered in Butmir, also near the capital, in 1893 and excavation work in the area continued until 1896. What has become known as Butimir Culture is distinguished by unique pottery with some characteristics suggesting connections to the Minoans of Crete."
Themis
http://irna.lautre.net/article.php3?id_article=79

This site has pictures of some of the discoveries.

QUOTE
Is it not time that the wealthier nations financially backed the preservation of such sites. These represent sites of internationally important discovery.


Yes, yes and yes again for all sites - but where is the money going to come from - Don't get me wrong - I'm all for lots of money going to preserve our cultural heritage - How do we get the government to pay it?
keithisco
QUOTE(Themis @ Jun 3 2007, 10:57 AM) [snapback]1706624[/snapback]
http://irna.lautre.net/article.php3?id_article=79

This site has pictures of some of the discoveries.
Yes, yes and yes again for all sites - but where is the money going to come from - Don't get me wrong - I'm all for lots of money going to preserve our cultural heritage - How do we get the government to pay it?

Thank Themis!
As always you make incisive and useful posts.
I am amazed at how much Archaeology has been performed with just 7000 euros. I have no idea how you get Governments interested in donating money for these projects. If a trust was set up, with proper Governance then it would give those of us with such an interest the opportunity to invest in future discoveries, not for gain, but for the knowledge derived. I would happily donate another another 7000 euros to Ms Vasilj tocomtinue, but I just dont know how to do it.
Wouldn't it be amazing if the Mods on this site saw their way clear to setting up a UM sponsored Archaeological support base! Something that would make a real difference.
Well thanks again Themis... I see Diechecker is viewing this forum, I would like his input to this idea
Themis
I like the idea of a peoples trust - then we could vote as to what should be excavated/preserved.

There may be a national trust in Bosnia for their archaeology - similar to English Heritage in the UK?
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2008 Invision Power Services, Inc.