Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

THE SUBMERGED CITY.

a— ■ . RUINS OP ANCIENT CARTHAGE. SACRIFICAL RELICS IN URNS. ELOQUENT SYMBOLS OP PAST GLORY. The airplane, pressed ihto the service of archaeology, has yielded remarkable results in connection with our researches on the site of ancient Carthage, writes Count Byron de Prorok in a message to the London “Daily News” from Carthago. Price ■\Yaldcck, piloted by Pelletier d’Oisy,' the French ace, has taken a unique film of the ruins of Carthage that lie beneath the s«a. He has been able to follow the sea wall of the city and trace it under-water for seven miles. In this way, columns have been seen at a distance of a hundred yards from the shore. Search is now being continued over the Gulf of Tunis in the hope of locating sunken galleys. I propose leaving for the Sahara shortly to make an airplane search for lost cities. RUINS OF SIX CITIES.

Some further details of the excavations carried out and the important discoveries made since we began the second year’s operations may be interesting. After obtaining official permission, and equipped with pickaxes, ropes, shovpls, etc., we started for the lull of Juno to continue the exploration of tlie subterranean temple, the early l Christian chapel, the Roman palace, and Runic tombs located the previous year. It is amazing the quantity of archaeological treasure the soil of ancient Carthage contains. The first results were sufficient to fill a small museum—bronzes, gold rings, a necklace, 2G lamps of all epochs and civilisations, ivory hairpins, hundreds of coins, and bits of glass and pottery. Cartilage, once the proudest capital of the Mediterranean, has the ruins of six cities, one on top of the other, to dig through. Nearly all ot it Is underground, covered up by the debris of many destructions and the alluvial deposits of Is centuries. Every day a relic of its past grandeur has been found by one ol#tlie excavators, to be catalogued and placed in tho cases installed in the new museum or the expedition. The most startling discovery was a quantity of huge teeth found at iho bottom of a pit in the hillside where the Carthaginian elephants wore supposed to have been kept. Nothing of Hannibal has ever been found in Carthage uji to date, but a few ex-votos, with the name “Hanne .Bui” on them, but we found a number of objects reminiscent of the great days of the Punic wars, such as huge sling-stoucs and bits of rusted swords and armour. THE PUNIC REMAINS. Everywhere we dug through beds of ashes to get to the Punic remains, in one corner we discovered a hoard of Vandal coins—of the period of Gcnseric —buried perhaps hastily at tlie time of the capture of the city by Bolisarius and his Byzantine army.

In the early Christian chapel we unearthed a bronz- cross—a rare hud —and near-by the tombs of the Christian martyrs of Carthage, with relics of Egyptians, Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantines and Crusaders. There were broken debris found of all those people, fragments ot their lurid dtslinies in the form of a broken column, or the pathetic significance or a melted tear bottle, or a bronze mirror. Sometimes we are forced to put hundreds of bits together like a Chinese puzzle to remako an inscription on an ancient vase. In the subterranean temple there remains what once seemed to bo the dressing-room of a Carthaginian actress. In this apartment was found perfume bottles, with the scent of the centuries; ivory hairpins, with the name Aris-at engraved on them; vaporisers in the form of sacred monkeys; grotesque masks used on the stage,; bracelets and rings and jewels, broken beads, several emeralds, and rock crystals. The soil we dig up in Carthage is passed through sieves of several di-

mormons a long and tedious job, but gory prolific in a city that lasted tor twenty centuries and had a million souls at a time living within tho space of three square miles. We laid bare three mosaics in a month—one depicting a hunting scene of the fourth century, with the dogs in armour to protect them from the tusks of the boar—all in vivid colours and a delight to the eye.

SACRIFICIAL RELICS. One* of the interesting chambers where we hope to continue our work Is the Temple of Tainit, where hundreds of urns were found containing thq bones of little children from the ages of four months to 12 years, sacrificed alive to the cruel god of the Carthaginians, Bnal Moloch. Very little is known about the Carthaginians,, and we hope to lay bare a great many long-buried secrets from this lost sanctuary.

The world little knows how romantic and full of excitement and adventure archaeology is. It in one of The least-known of sciences, and full of human interest. Wo hope to interest the world in archaeology, with Carthage as the centre; to bring all lovers of art, history, legend and religion to see the actual unveiling of objects that awaken one to the Internal Past, so deeply connected with the Present.

Hannibal, Dido, St. Cyprian, St. Louis, Hamilcar, St. Augustinegreat names connected with great deeds, but nearly all forgotten—are brought back to us daily, by the uncovering of numerous eloquent symbols of lost empires.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19230807.2.81

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume XLVII, Issue 2715, 7 August 1923, Page 8

Word Count
878

THE SUBMERGED CITY. Manawatu Times, Volume XLVII, Issue 2715, 7 August 1923, Page 8

THE SUBMERGED CITY. Manawatu Times, Volume XLVII, Issue 2715, 7 August 1923, Page 8

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert