Coordinatore | THE UNIVERSITY OF SHEFFIELD
Organization address
address: FIRTH COURT WESTERN BANK contact info |
Nazionalità Coordinatore | United Kingdom [UK] |
Totale costo | 172˙434 € |
EC contributo | 172˙434 € |
Programma | FP7-PEOPLE
Specific programme "People" implementing the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community for research, technological development and demonstration activities (2007 to 2013) |
Code Call | FP7-PEOPLE-IEF-2008 |
Funding Scheme | MC-IEF |
Anno di inizio | 2010 |
Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) | 2010-09-13 - 2012-09-12 |
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1 |
THE UNIVERSITY OF SHEFFIELD
Organization address
address: FIRTH COURT WESTERN BANK contact info |
UK (SHEFFIELD) | coordinator | 172˙434.64 |
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'This project is intended to study pottery from the Early Medieval Vega of Granada (Spain, 8th to 11th centuries) with archaeometrical and cutting-edge approaches. The aspects researched on will be the changes in technology, distribution, use of resources and organization of pottery production. The techniques used for the study will include thin section petrography and chemical (NAA and SEM) analyses, reproduction of actual shaping techniques and comparisons with local clay samples, known collections of studied materials and ethnological examples. The results will be linked with the evolution of society and economy in the Early Medieval Vega of Granada, where great changes were taking place. These changes are related to the general process of decline of the Roman world in the Mediterranean and the emergence in the territories of Spain of an Islamic State that would be known as al-Andalus. It has been shown in an earlier work (PhD thesis defended by the applicant) that pottery production and distribution reflects these changes. The insights that this project can offer will allow a better understanding of this questions and the linking of the Andalusian pottery production and socio-economic evolution with those of the rest of the Islamic world.'
Novel techniques for studying Islamic pottery in Europe and the Mediterranean could help build stronger historical and cultural ties between the EU and the Muslim world.
When most of Europe was going through upheaval in the Middle Ages, Andalusia in southern Spain was flourishing academically, scientifically and artistically under Islamic rule.
Sophisticated pottery emerged in the region, its design being influenced by the social events of that time.
The EU-funded project 'Archaeological research on Andalusian pottery (8th-11th centuries)' (ARANPOT) worked on identifying ceramic patterns and interpreting their significance in today's context.From a technical perspective, the team studied the composition, glazing techniques, manufacture, chemical analysis and petrography of the ceramics, including the provenance of raw materials in glazing.
It then extrapolated society's development in the Granada area based on the results of the pottery study, comparing it with other European and Mediterranean models of social development.After intense petrographic analysis and neutron activation analysis, the emerging chemical data yielded in-depth understanding of compositional variability, especially in the fine ware ceramics.
The project led to the publication of papers in both English and Spanish that are opening new horizons in Andalusian archaeology, as well as in Islamic and Medieval archaeology.The topic is being published in the Oxford Journal of Archaeology, revealing two distinct patterns of Islamisation and two separate social conceptions of Islam in early Medieval Vega de Granada.
These intriguing results and their implications were presented at different archaeology-related events in Europe.
The project team has also taken this kind of archaeological analysis to different parts of the Mediterranean and has worked on pottery retrieved from different sites in Palestine.These new theoretical and methodological perspectives can have a strong socioeconomic impact, considering Islam from its material cycle of production, distribution and consumption, even beyond pottery.
This helps academia study a cultural division that was not so acutely perceived in the early Medieval period, bringing forth common origins and mutual influences of Europe and Islam.The idea of Europe and Islam as interlinked historical entities is a strong one that citizens and policymakers can exploit.
This is particularly important as more Muslim citizens are becoming part of a greater Europe.
Ultimately, it could give Europe a stronger role as a balancing power in the Mediterranean region, bringing closer cultural ties with Muslim nations.
Perceiving heritage as a common denominator will help undermine fundamentalism on both sides.
At the end of the day, Europe with an Islamic past is not a lesser but a greater Europe.
If history is portrayed in this light, conflict and radicalism could one day have less of a reason to exist, encouraging peace and coexistence instead.
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