The Phnom Penh Post

Two more boxer statues from Iron Age Sardinia unearthed

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ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS in Sardinia have unearthed the torsos of two more limestone statues of boxers within the Iron Age necropolis of Mont’e Prama, Italy’s culture ministry said on Saturday.

Culture Minister Dario Franceschi­ni called the find at the archeologi­cal site in Cabras, western central Sardinia, an “exceptiona­l discovery” that should shed more light on the ancient Mediterran­ean culture whose tombs and statuary have been slowly uncovered since the 1970s.

The naked torsos and other fragments have been identified as boxers, due to a shield that wraps around their bodies, and are similar to another two sculptures unearthed a few metres away in 2014 and now on display at the local museum, the ministry said.

Archaeolog­ists working on the southern part of the sprawling necropolis – first discovered in 1974 by local farmers – also found the continuati­on of the site’s funerary road on a north-south axis, along which have been found tombs dating back to between about 950 BC to 730 BC.

While small and mediumsize­d fragments are being documented and recovered from the earth, “the two large and heavy blocks of torsos will need time to be freed from the sediment surroundin­g them and to be prepared for safe recovery,”

said the culture ministry’s superinten­dent for southern Sardinia, Monica Stochino.

The site is believed to be part of the Nuragic civilisati­on that controlled the island of Sardinia for centuries beginning in the Bronze Age. The people erected mysterious stone towers called “nuraghe” that today dot the Sardinian countrysid­e and whose original purpose remains unknown.

Thousands of fragments and major pieces from Mont’e Prama discovered over the decades have so far been reassemble­d

into about two dozen statues, each over 2 metres tall, that have been identified as warriors, archers or boxers.

Archaeolog­ists still do not know precisely what the statues represent or what purpose they served.

Nor is it clear where they were originally located before being deliberate­ly shattered in ancient times, according to researcher­s – who cannot agree whether by Phoenician­s, Carthagini­ans, or by warring Nuragic groups themselves – and strewn above and near the tombs.

 ?? AFP ?? One of the two statues of boxers on display at the museum.
AFP One of the two statues of boxers on display at the museum.

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