The Department of Antiquities, Ministry of Transport, Communications and Works, has announced the completion of five weeks program of excavation, survey, and study at Maniki Harbour under the direction of Joan Breton Connelly, Professor of Classics and Art History of the New York University.
Aerial view of Geronisis island [Credit: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus] |
An international team of scholars gathered at Maniki Harbour to take part in the innovative multi-disciplinary program of research. The small, ancient port at Maniki served as the main harbour for Geronisos and the ancient settlement at Agios Georgios of Pegeia from the Hellenistic through the early Byzantine times.
Dr. Theotokis Theodoulou, Head of the Cretan section of the Ephorate for Underwater Antiquities in Greece, Dr. Alexandros Tourtas of University of the Aegean, and Konstantinos Kostakis of Plano S.L.A., Crete, executed a coastal and underwater survey of Maniki Harbour. This included aerial mapping, 3D modelling, video-recording, snorkeling and reconnaissance diving. A custom-made platform bearing a digital camera was used to photograph the western seabed of the cove.
3D model of Maniki Harbour, Geronisos [Credit: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus] |
Rounded rock-cut “bollards” for mooring ships were identified at the west side of the promontory, as well as in the middle of the harbour. Rock cut channels preserved in the limestone shelf at harbour’s edge may have accommodated wooden frameworks for loading and unloading or hauling ships and boats.
Dr. Georgia Andreou of Cornell and Brown University undertook coastal analysis employing ArcGIS, Agisoft PhotoScan and Digital Shoreline Analysis Software. She produced georeferenced 3D models of the harbour, contour and bathymetric maps, and a digital elevation model that is suitable for visualization and viewshed analysis.
3D model of Maniki Harbour, Geronisos [Credit: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus] |
Miltiadis Polidorou of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens undertook geomorphological surveys of Geronisos Island and coastline from Agios Georgios to Maniki, with drone mapping, 3D modelling, and orthomosaics.
Excavation focused on three stratigraphic sections dug through the vast dumps of late Roman transport amphorae at the harbour’s edge. Prof. Thomas Tartaron, Chair of the Graduate Program in Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Pennsylvania, directed a surface survey as well as the excavation of one section through the dump.
Contour and bathymetric map of Maniki Harbour, Geronisos [Credit: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus] |
Prof. Jolanta Młynarczyk of the University of Warsaw identified the dominant amphora type as southwestern Cypriot in origin, dating from the 5th to mid-7th century AD. Also prevalent are Palestinian “bag-shaped” amphorae of the 5th-6th centuries and “Gaza jars” dating from the 4th to 6th centuries AD. This assemblage attests to pilgrimage movement between the basilicas of Agios Georgios of Pegeia and the famous monastic centers of south Palestine, particularly during the years of Justinian’s reign.
Source: Press and Information Office, Republic of Cyprus [October 14, 2018]
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