(By Silvia Lambertucci)
(ANSA) - ROME, MAY 7 - The powerful torsos of two boxers, a
large flexible shield that covers the stomach and envelops an
arm; then a head, legs and other body parts - just days after
the resumption of the latest excavation campaign, the Mont'e
Prama Nuragic necropolis at Cabras has yielded the remains of
two new monumental statues.
They are two giants that join the army of warriors and boxers
that are still shrouded in mystery and have made the Sardinian
archaeological site famous all over the world.
Superintendent Monica Stochino told ANSA that the discovery was
truly "important" and bodes well for more surprises in the
coming weeks.
Culture Minister Dario Franceschini expressed enthusiasm too and
recalled that the find has taken place just under a year after
the birth of a foundation for the site featuring the culture
ministry, the Cabras town council and the Sardinian regional
government.
"It's an exceptional discovery and others will follow," he
commented.
The field study, which began on April 4, has confirmed that the
necropolis stretches southwards and there is a major burial road
flanking the tombs,.
"It is evidence for us that we are on the right rod," stressed
Alessandro
Usai, the archaeologist who has been the scientific director of
the excavation since 2014.
The two new giants have different characteristics to the boxers
uncovered at the site in the middle of the 1970s after the
accidental discovery of this incredible place, Usai explained.
He said they are of the "Cavalupo" type, like the last two
uncovered in 2014, not far from the current dig, distinguished
by their very distinctive curved shield.
"It is rare figure in the model of the Nuragic bronze statuette
conserved in the Etruscan Museum in Villa Giulia in Rome," said
the archaeologist, referring to the little masterpiece that came
from a tomb at the Cavalupo necropolis at Vulci, in Lazio.
Careful examination, cleaning and the removal of the two large
torsos - which will take time due to the particular fragility
of the limestone they are sculpted from - is certain to provide
new elements of study.
Stochino said that the new intervention, financed by the
archaeology, fine arts and landscape superintendency for the
metropolitan city of Cagliari and the provinces of Oristano and
South Sardinia with a gross figure of 85,000 euros, comes ahead
of a another bigger one of 600,000 euros involving the regional
secretariat of the culture ministry.
This is on top of the 2.8-million-euro project to restore
everything that was discovered between 2014 and 2016 in order to
put the new statues on show along with the others at the Cabras
Museum.
It is a team effort that involves a variety of professional
figures and universities working alongside the superintendency
and the foundation - anthropologists, restorers and architects,
as well as archaeologists.
They will all work together to find answers to the history
problems raised by this special cemetery from 3,000 years ago,
built along a burial road and reserved almost exclusive for
young men, said Usai, explaining that "elderly and children are
almost completely missing" and there are very few women in the
170 tombs studies so far.
A great deal of mystery remains about this site, which was
started around the 12th century BC, and the giants, which
experts date between the 11th and 8th centuries BC, as well as
about their end.
Who were these colossal, two-metre-high pieces of stone -
ancient custodians of a sacred area, representations of the
social functions of the buried, heroes, ancestors or identity
symbols of a community?
And why had they fallen down and been reduced to rubble on the
tombs they were meant to watch over?
Was their end the consequence of a fight between local
communities or was it down to the Carthaginians?
Usai said that he was inclined towards another hypothesis, that
of "natural" destruction.
"My opinion is that the giants fell down one at a time on their
own, as the way they were made was overbalanced forwards," he
said
The passage of time, the movements of the earth and the
cultivations of this stretch of land, which has always been
precious for wheat crops, would have done the rest,
The archaeologist concluded that it is necessary to go beyond
stereotypes.
"Here we are seeking answers based on facts," he said.
Who knows? Perhaps the new period of research will produce
decisive discoveries (ANSA).
Two more Giants discovered at Mont'e Prama
Franceschini hails huge 3,000-year-old sculptures as exceptional