Log in or Sign up
Coin Talk
Home
Forums
>
Coin Forums
>
Ancient Coins
>
Ancient ... but not a coin! Artifacts thread! Post 'em!
>
Reply to Thread
Message:
<p>[QUOTE="GinoLR, post: 8368681, member: 128351"]A strange clay statuette from Chad</p><p><br /></p><p>Roughly 25 years ago I was in Chad for some business with a local university. One day, a group of professors proposed to show me the "Sao mounds" north of N'djamena. They are low clay mounds made of debris of adobe ancient villages or towns, exactly like the "tells" in the Middle-East. But unlike in the Middle-East, very few archaeological research has been undertaken there. Only two of these mounds had been dug in the 1940s and 1960s, but there are dozens others nearby. All are entirely covered with pottery shards. </p><p><br /></p><p>When I say entirely covered, here is what it looks like :</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1485096[/ATTACH] </p><p><br /></p><p>When visiting one of these mounds, I noticed something different half-buried among the shards. We took it, it was a 20 cm baked clay statuette. I did some research about it: it is a typical "Sao" statuette much like some others that had been excavated from a nearby mound c. 1948 and are now in the Quai Branly Museum in Paris. Archaeologists think they date back to the 9th-15th c. "Sao" means nothing historical, it is just a popular local term for "ancient", before islamisation (in the 16th c.). </p><p><br /></p><p>I took 2 pictures of it and the day after I went to the local national museum. They used to have a lot of "Sao" pottery and clay figurines and statuettes, but nearly all had been looted during civil wars and unrest in the 1970s or 1980s. I met with a curator and gave him this statuette, with all its whereabouts (where precisely it was found, the known parallels, etc.). He looked at me as if I was nuts but accepted it, thanked me, etc. </p><p><br /></p><p>A few years after I went back in N'djamena. I wanted to see this statuette, but no trace of it. I was told the curator I had met had retired and now lived in some remote village very far from there. No trace of this artefact in the registers. Vanished. Maybe someday it will resurface in some collection or auction... </p><p><br /></p><p>Here are pics of this lost statuette. </p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1485095[/ATTACH]</p><p><br /></p><p>I could look down on Third World ordinary corruption... But when I read that the very former director of the Louvre Museum in Paris has been accused of antiquities trafficking those last days, and that the Metropolitan Museum in New York is involved too, I feel truly embarrassed.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="GinoLR, post: 8368681, member: 128351"]A strange clay statuette from Chad Roughly 25 years ago I was in Chad for some business with a local university. One day, a group of professors proposed to show me the "Sao mounds" north of N'djamena. They are low clay mounds made of debris of adobe ancient villages or towns, exactly like the "tells" in the Middle-East. But unlike in the Middle-East, very few archaeological research has been undertaken there. Only two of these mounds had been dug in the 1940s and 1960s, but there are dozens others nearby. All are entirely covered with pottery shards. When I say entirely covered, here is what it looks like : [ATTACH=full]1485096[/ATTACH] When visiting one of these mounds, I noticed something different half-buried among the shards. We took it, it was a 20 cm baked clay statuette. I did some research about it: it is a typical "Sao" statuette much like some others that had been excavated from a nearby mound c. 1948 and are now in the Quai Branly Museum in Paris. Archaeologists think they date back to the 9th-15th c. "Sao" means nothing historical, it is just a popular local term for "ancient", before islamisation (in the 16th c.). I took 2 pictures of it and the day after I went to the local national museum. They used to have a lot of "Sao" pottery and clay figurines and statuettes, but nearly all had been looted during civil wars and unrest in the 1970s or 1980s. I met with a curator and gave him this statuette, with all its whereabouts (where precisely it was found, the known parallels, etc.). He looked at me as if I was nuts but accepted it, thanked me, etc. A few years after I went back in N'djamena. I wanted to see this statuette, but no trace of it. I was told the curator I had met had retired and now lived in some remote village very far from there. No trace of this artefact in the registers. Vanished. Maybe someday it will resurface in some collection or auction... Here are pics of this lost statuette. [ATTACH=full]1485095[/ATTACH] I could look down on Third World ordinary corruption... But when I read that the very former director of the Louvre Museum in Paris has been accused of antiquities trafficking those last days, and that the Metropolitan Museum in New York is involved too, I feel truly embarrassed.[/QUOTE]
Your name or email address:
Do you already have an account?
No, create an account now.
Yes, my password is:
Forgot your password?
Stay logged in
Coin Talk
Home
Forums
>
Coin Forums
>
Ancient Coins
>
Ancient ... but not a coin! Artifacts thread! Post 'em!
>
Home
Home
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Activity
Recent Posts
Forums
Forums
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Posts
Competitions
Competitions
Quick Links
Competition Index
Rules, Terms & Conditions
Gallery
Gallery
Quick Links
Search Media
New Media
Showcase
Showcase
Quick Links
Search Items
Most Active Members
New Items
Directory
Directory
Quick Links
Directory Home
New Listings
Members
Members
Quick Links
Notable Members
Current Visitors
Recent Activity
New Profile Posts
Sponsors
Menu
Search
Search titles only
Posted by Member:
Separate names with a comma.
Newer Than:
Search this thread only
Search this forum only
Display results as threads
Useful Searches
Recent Posts
More...