Il “progetto Palmira” (Siria)

Authors

  • Maria Teresa Grassi Università degli Studi di Milano

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13130/2035-4797/218

Keywords:

Syria, Palmyra, town-planning, residential area, italian-syrian mission, excavation

Abstract

A new research program, in which the Università degli Studi of Milan (Italy) and the General Directorate of Antiquities and Museums of Syrian Arab Republic are involved, has begun in 2007 in Palmyra. The research aims at the investigation of the central south-western quarter of Palmyra, in the sector between the Agorà in the south-east, the late roman wall in the south /south-west, the Third Transverse Street and the Upper Great Colonnade Street in the north-west and in the north-east.Enclosed inside three columned streets and included inside the late antique town walls, this area is traditionally well known as “residential area”. In spite of its centrality in the urban texture – till today left out by systematic and deepened excavation activities - it doesn’t seem to contain monumental public or religious buildings; so it’s reasonable to suppose a prevalent, or even exclusive, residential destination but it’s necessary to verify these suppositions through a close scientific archaeological research.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

Maria Teresa Grassi, Università degli Studi di Milano

Maria Teresa Grassi is Professor in Archaeology of Roman Provinces for the Università degli Studi of Milano (Italy) and Deputy Director of the Department of Antiquity Sciences of the same University.Since 1980 she has been taking part in the research, study and educational activities of the Section of Archaeology. In particular, she took part in the excavations of the Roman settlements of Angera (VA) and Calvatone (CR), in northern Italy. Since 2005 she is the Director of the excavations in Calvatone.Her principal interests concern the Romanization of Cisalpine and the relations between the Celts and the Romans; the material culture of Roman age (in particular, pottery); numismatics; Roman Provinces, particularly Northern Africa and Middle East. She is also concerned with activities of high scientific popularization.In 2007 she organized the agreement between the Università degli Studi of Milano and the General Directorate of Antiquities and Museums of Damascus to start an italian-syrian Archaeological Mission in Palmyra (excavations in the south-west quarter of the site). She is the italian Director of the joint Mission.

Published

2009-05-13

Issue

Section

ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS AND RESEARCHES