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>ANSA-FOCUS/50 yrs since discovery of Giants of Mont'e Prama

From the first find to the current excavation projects

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - MADRID, SEP 19 - (By Paola Del Vecchio) It was March 1974 when Sisinnio Poddi, while plowing on the slopes of Mont'e Prama, in the Sinis peninsula, in Sardinia, found a stone head.
    He didn't imagine that it would be the beginning of one of the greatest adventures for the knowledge of the Nuragic civilization - and of a story that is still largely unwritten.
    Fifty years later, the necropolis of Mont'e Prama continues to amaze archaeologists and enthusiasts.
    From the thousands of fragments brought to light, over 30 sculptures of the Stone Giants have been reconstructed, an army of archers, warriors and boxers, which constitutes the first example of statuary in the Mediterranean, dating back to the Iron Age (between the 9th and 7th centuries BC).
    It's a unique heritage exhibited in the Giovanni Marongiu Civic Museum in Cabras, where you can admire the sculptures in 3D reconstructions, and at the National Archaeological Museum in Cagliari.
    The colossi, like the nuraghes, have become symbols of the identity of the ancient Nuragic culture and its ambassadors in the world, as demonstrated by the arrival of the boxer 'Manneddu' at the Archaeological Museum of Madrid.
    The first excavation campaigns at Mont'e Prama, which began between 1975 and 1979, under the guidance of archaeologists Alessandro Bedini and then Carlo Tronchetti, brought to light over 5,000 fragments, parts of the mighty limestone sculptures, models of nuraghes of various types and betyls.
    Between 2007 and 2011, the work of recomposing and restoring the enigmatic figures with triangular faces and characteristic eyes with concentric circles was carried out at the Li Punti Restoration and Conservation Centre in Sassari.
    And then there was the reconstruction of a large sector of the necropolis, which houses a type of burial unique in Sardinia: a funerary road with a long sequence of individual well tombs, covered with sandstone slabs.
    The skeletons, in a contracted position, are almost exclusively of young and adult males.
    For this reason it is thought to have been a place of cult to the hero, reserved for the burial of the warrior elite, the aristocracy of the Nuragic people.
    In 2014, the resumption of excavations south of the areas investigated by Bedini and Tronchetti, highlighted the continuation of the alignment of the tombs.
    And it led to the most striking discovery: the recovery of parts of two statues of boxers, different from the first ones, whose iconography is characterized by a flexible shield, which covers the belly of the boxer and then bends to wrap around his arm and shoulder.
    The birth of the Mont'e Prama Foundation, chaired by Anthony Muroni, was decisive for the development of the site in 2021.
    The Ministry of Culture entrusted it with the sculptures and the expansion of the Cabras Civic Museum, as well as the archaeological area of ;;Tharros, the Tower of San Giovanni and the hypogeum of San Salvatore.
    The current investigation programs aim to expand the excavation surface to clarify the organization of the necropolis, from the layout to the formation of the sculptural complex, to its destruction.
    The year 2024, with the fiftieth anniversary, marked the opening of important new construction sites at the sites of 'Conca Illoni' and 'Cannedosu', and for an underwater survey of the Cabras pond.
    With the 'museumization' works at Mont'e Prama, for the widespread natural archaeological park, the opening of the new wing of the Civic Museum is scheduled for the three-year period 2024/26. (ANSA).
   

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