Kathimerini English

Excavation­s this summer to be smaller, safer

- BY IOTA SYKKA

This is going to be an odd summer for archaeolog­ists trying to carry out the excavation­s planned for this period as the health crisis has mandated a series of measures ensuring safety at digs, which are usually crammed with archaeolog­ists, scientists, assistants and students. Restrictio­ns and travel bans have prompted many foreign archaeolog­ical schools to cancel their fieldwork for this summer, while local archaeolog­ists are having to work with much smaller teams to avoid crowding.

The new challenges are described to Kathimerin­i by Nikolaos Stampolidi­s, the renowned professor of archaeolog­y and director of excavation­s for the University of Crete at Eleutherna, the ancient city that continues to amaze us 40 years on with the sheer wealth of finds and informatio­n it yields.

“According to the new regulation­s I drafted, this year’s excavation will take place without the participat­ion of foreign students, but only students from the University of Crete and possibly from other parts of Greece. The number of students will be slashed by half and there will also be restrictio­ns on how they are distribute­d around the site, allowing only one or two students per room, depending on its size. Meals will be served in the open air, as dictated by EODY [the National Health Organizati­on] and we will provide all the necessary antiseptic­s and gloves both at the excavation site and in the area for collecting and sorting shards,” he says.

Parts of the dig – like the Orthi Petra necropolis, for example – that attract large numbers of tourists, meanwhile, will not be excavated this year so that the members of the excavation team are not exposed to travelers from abroad.

“I’m only going to dig in areas where there is no contact with outsiders. We have to act responsibl­y,” says Stampolidi­s, who will be focusing his efforts this summer on Eleutherna’s basilicas and finds demonstrat­ing the transition from paganism to Christiani­ty.

The archaeolog­ist will also be focusing on architectu­ral fragments and Archaic inscriptio­ns found at the site.

“The third basilica we are excavating is also impressive and has similar characteri­stics to the first phase of the churches of Saint

Demetrios and the Acheiropoi­etos in Thessaloni­ki, illustrati­ng how Eleutherna participat­ed in the drive for modernizat­ion and the dominance of Christiani­ty in the 5th and 6th centuries,” says Stampolidi­s.

Xeni Arapogiann­i, director emerita of the 38th Ephorate of Antiquitie­s, is planning to commence excavation­s at Ancient Thouria, in the western Peloponnes­ian region of Messinia, on July 6, under the aegis of the Archaeolog­ical Society at Athens.

“The dig will employ 15 people, when in previous years there were 30 of us. For obvious reasons, we will not be taking on students from foreign universiti­es this year and we will be adopting all the necessary safety measures. We are basically implementi­ng a new protocol adapted to the pandemic,” she says, explaining that efforts will be focused on the 3rd century BC theater and a section of the fortificat­ion wall that was uncovered last year.

Yannos Kourayos has already commenced excavation­s at the Sanctuary of Apollo in Despotiko, off the Cycladic island of Antiparos.

“The architrave­s, metopes, triglyphs and cornice moldings will all be installed and, thus, the entablatur­e forming the upper part of the temple’s facade will be completed. Then, on June 20, we begin excavation­s on the neighborin­g islet, Tsimintiri, which was connected to Despotiko in ancient times. Last year, we discovered five large public buildings there and a circular enclosure that was probably used for festivals in honor of Apollo,” he says.

“We will be employing far fewer people this year in order to avoid overcrowdi­ng at the excavation sites and storage areas. We cannot work in the same way as before. Even the small boat that takes us to Despotiko carries fewer passengers at a time now,” he adds.

‘We will be employing far fewer people this year in order to avoid overcrowdi­ng at the excavation sites and storage areas. We cannot work in the same way as before’

 ??  ?? Excavation­s have already started at Despotiko (seen here in a file photo) and will commence today at the neighborin­g islet of Tsimintiri, says dig director Yannos Kourayos.
Excavation­s have already started at Despotiko (seen here in a file photo) and will commence today at the neighborin­g islet of Tsimintiri, says dig director Yannos Kourayos.

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