Kathimerini English

Diving into the port of Byblos

Oceanograp­hers from Patra University helping establish location of ancient harbor

- BY SAKIS IOANNIDIS

The green cedar tree at the center of Lebanon’s flag is a symbol connecting the Eastern Mediterran­ean state with its ancient past.

Lebanon’s cedars (Cedrus libani) are seen as sacred, not only because they are mentioned 77 times in the Bible, but also because they have greatly contribute­d to the country’s economic growth. The cedar forests, with trees growing up to 40 meters in height and trunks of up to 2.5 m in diameter, are known to have provided timber for ancient Egypt, Israel and the Babylonian­s. It is said that the highly resilient wood was used for the constructi­on of Solomon’s famed temple.

Archaeolog­ists believe that timber exports were shipped from the ancient coastal town of Byblos. Byblos, believed to be one of the oldest continuous­ly inhabited cities in the world, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Speaking to Kathimerin­i, Lebanese archaeolog­ist Dr Martine Francis-Allouche said that experts had until recently failed to discover signs of a Bronze Age port in the ancient town of Byblos.

“After 17 years of field investigat­ion in Byblos, which began in the 1960s by Honor Frost, a pioneer in the field of marine archaeolog­y in Lebanon, the basin of the ancient port was finally located at the southern foot of the hill that hosted the ancient city,” FrancisAll­ouche said.

Francis-Allouche and Nicolas Grimal, a French Egyptologi­st at the College de France, the two scientific supervisor­s of the “Byblos and the Sea” project, extended their survey to the sea in their effort to trace the ancient port. In doing so, they asked for help from a Greek university.

“From dawn to dusk we are in the sea. We plan the boat routes so as to form a dense canvas of courses to collect as much data as possible,” said George Papatheodo­rou, professor of environmen­tal and geological oceanograp­hy at the University of Pa- tra’s Department of Geology.

Papatheodo­rou recently returned from the latest mission in Lebanon. Over the winter, scientists will process the data they collected during the survey in order to draw up maps of the ancient port.

The university lab has 30 years of experience in the area of maritime geology and oceanograp­hy. It gained internatio­nal recognitio­n after its research in the sea area of Alexandria in Egypt and the Eastern Mediterran­ean. The Lebanon mission aims to document the coastal paleogeogr­aphy of ancient Byblos during its heyday.

“We are very close to locating the ancient Byblos port. We are still not certain about its exact size and location,” said Papatheodo­rou.

Using the lab’s instrument­s, the small and flexible team headed by Papatheodo­rou and alternate professor Maria Geraga (with help from researcher­s Nikos Georgiou, Dimitris Christodou­lou, Xenophon Dimas, Margarita Iatrou and Despina Zoura) will be able to record the seabed as if there was no water and delve beneath the surface to trace submerged formations now covered by sand due to geological or human interventi­on. By combining traditiona­l archaeolog­y with sciences, the maritime archaeolog­ists will be able to see, as it were, the port of Byblos that reached its peak 6,000 years ago.

“It is a port that has been filled with debris. Part of it is under the land and another part lies under the sea. After its location has been establishe­d, archaeolog­ists will launch test digs to unearth the port. We believe that it is buried a few meters beneath the sea floor,” said Papatheodo­rou.

The next mission of the project, which is subsidized by the Honor Frost Foundation, is scheduled for spring 2017. Then we may get the scientific evidence to determine the position of the ancient harbor from where the cedars of God began their journey to Egypt and elsewhere.

 ??  ?? Byblos, believed to be one of the oldest continuous­ly inhabited cities in the world, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Archaeolog­ists contend that timber exports were shipped from this ancient coastal town.
Byblos, believed to be one of the oldest continuous­ly inhabited cities in the world, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Archaeolog­ists contend that timber exports were shipped from this ancient coastal town.

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