The Italian Egyptian Project of Study and Conservation of the Monastery of Abba Nefer at Manqabad 2018 - 5th Campaign
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
The 2018 fieldwork was long enough to
consent both archaeological and restoration
activities and to go on with the topographical
survey in order to provide a complete and georeferenced
map of the site. It was also possible to
start an overall pottery survey, and to conduct a
preliminary investigation of the area immediately
South of the town wall.
The thorough survey of the selected Areal
Units allowed us to confirm some preliminary
considerations about the Northern Sector
complex raised from the 2014 campaign. The
complex appears as composed of two long rows
of buildings, realised in successive phases. All
the AUs selected for investigation in the 2018
survey pertain to our Pattern 2 (Pirelli et alii
2017), where the northern row is occupied by a
cell (HU) and the southern one appears as an
extension of it, and is formed by an open court
that, in later phases, was completed with some
service structures32. However, we realised that
this pattern is more various than we expected
based on the observations of the 2014 survey.
All the HUs that we have surveyed (AU 2,
3, 833 and 26) belong to type 1, and underwent
lesser changes through time, both architecturally
and structurally. They were originally completed
in the South by a simple open court, which was
limited, on the East, West and probably also
South sides by thin walls (12/14cm) intended
ideally to separate the monks from each other,
however without creating an effective isolation
and without forcing them to be really
independent. Actually, as far as we could
observe, during the first phase, none of the HUs
was furnished with hearths, external storerooms,
wells or basins. It was in a second phase that
important changes occurred in the open courts in
front of the cells, some of them common to all
the observed AUs, others differentiating them
from each other. In most cases, the West walls
were reinforced to host niches with embedded
vases, hearths, and store-boxes, while the floors
were raised and sometimes paved with limestone
slabs and reused architectural ceramic, granite
and limestone elements, not only from the first
Christian phase, but also from the Pharaonic
period (AU3S, AU8/9). In a third phase, some
walls were reinforced once more to support
staircases that were to give access to upper
(AU3S) or underground storerooms (AU8/9S1);
it is likely that the addition of these storerooms
caused the closing of some of the annex rooms of
the underground space of the cells.
The preliminary observations on (baked
and unbaked) bricks, building techniques and
plaster types demonstrate that the major
architectural changes also correspond to different
qualities of materials and to different degrees of
accuracy in realising and/or repairing structures
(B.2 and 3).
The newly discovered texts and stone
architectural elements point, once more, to a
lively and refined cultural environment and a
long and complex history of the monastery,
which are also confirmed by the first results of
the two pottery surveys. They were conducted in
different areas of the site and with different
approaches (see above B5 and 6) and notably
enrich our data on this category of material, as
the study in 2014 included only complete and
mostly decorated items kept in the storehouse of
el-Ashmunein. The samples analysed on the site,
by contrast, were diagnostic fragments belonging
to more varied types, mostly ranging from the
late 4th/early 5th to the 7th century, and belong
both to Egyptian original and imitation
production and to imports.
As to the Egyptian production, several
items could be attributed to well known Saqqara
and Assuan types, but several different wares
collected all over the site - including the area of
the southern
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Manqabad; Monastery; Coptic Archaeology
Elenco autori:
Pirelli, Rosanna; Bosco, Angela; Buzi, Paola; D'Andrea, Andrea; Kenawi, Mohamed; Incordino, Ilaria; Musella, Pasquale; Mainieri, Stefania; Diletta Pubblico, M.; Ragionieri, Andrea; Salsano, Anna
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