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Early Bronze Age chieftain burial found in France

An Early Bronze Age estate with a richly furnished chieftain burial in the town of Écouché-les-Vallées in northwestern France’s Normandy region. It dates to around 1900-1800 B.C. and contains valuable grave goods including arrowheads, daggers and a fragment of a rock crystal pendant.

Archaeologists are excavating the site in advance of quarry expansion and have so far unearthed evidence of a Neolithic settlement as well as a grave from the Bronze Age Armorican Tumulus culture. The culture is known for the elaborate burials of their elites covered by a mound of earth (hence the name), but their graves had varied designs. Pit graves like this one are common. While the tumuli contained the remains of a single chieftain at the top of social hierarchy, less prominent graves are also deemed chiefly tombs based on the prestigious grave goods they contained. Daggers, axes and arrowheads were symbols of wealth and power, not just weapons.

The pit grave at Écouché-les-Vallées was originally covered by a tumulus, now lost. Most of tumuli have been found in Brittany, with only six known so far in Normandy. No skeletal remains were found in the tomb. The highly acidic soil in the area devoured the bone.

It contained 31 flint arrowheads of exceptionally refined craftsmanship. They are of the Armorican type: ie, finely cut to an extremely thin edge out of blond flint. The two bronze daggers found in the grave are also of the Armorican type, characterized by their riveted fastening and mesh decoration along the edges. The larger of the two is a foot long and was sheathed in leather, fragments of which remain on the blade. The other is eight inches long and was in a wicker sheath.

The discovery of the Écouché-les-Vallées tomb echoes another discovery in the neighboring commune of Loucé and fits into a broader context, as several exceptional Early Bronze Age sites have been identified in the area: a cult enclosure in Loucé, a few hundred meters away, and a large enclosure in Moulins-sur-Orne, six kilometers away. This presence of several Early Bronze Age sites on both sides of the Orne River contributes to making the area a vast domain, of which the Écouché-les-Vallées burial would represent the ruling elite.



* This article was originally published here

The bookshop aiming to spice up romance reading

The bookshop in Leamington specialises in dark romance and spicy romantasy for adults only.

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Trial date set for Trump's legal case against BBC

Donald Trump's multi-billion dollar lawsuit against the BBC is set to go to trial in February 2027.

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17th c. panel returned to church 30 years after it was stolen

A 17th century memorial painted wood panel stolen from a church in Hertfordshire in 1996 has been returned 30 years later, thanks to a keen-eyed Australian heraldry enthusiast.

The panel is 2’8″ x 2’2″ and contains a vividly painted coat of arms over a neatly lettered dedication. The inscription reads:

“At the upper ende of this midle ile lyeth intered the
Body of George Cordell Esquire, who served Queene
Elisabeth and was Sergeant of the Ewry to
King Iames & the late King Charles, in all Sixty yeeres:
Who maried Dorothy the only daughter & heyre of
Francis Prior of this parish, with whom he lives 57
Yeares & deceased the 25th of May 1653 he being
Aged 84 yeeres.”

Cordell’s and his wife’s families had deep ties to Flamstead and after serving as courtier to three monarchs (the Sergeant of the Ewry was in charge of all the linens and silverware for the royal table), he was buried at St Leonard’s Church. This marker was mounted on the north aisle wall.

The panel disappeared from St Leonard’s Church in Flamstead in April 1996. Authorities were notified at the time, and the theft was recorded in the database of the Art Loss Register in May. For decades there was no sign of it, and eventually the new staff and parishioners forgot about the purloined panel.

Then, all of a sudden on New Year’s Eve the vicar of St Leonard’s, Reverend Jo Burke, received an email from one Richard d’Apice, member of the Australian Heraldry Society in Sydney. He had perused the online catalogue of an auction at Dreweatts and spotted a panel painted with an elaborate coat of arms and a funerary inscription. This roused his nerdly suspicions, and a little detective work online led him to a description of the panel in the March, 1812, issue of The Gentleman’s Magazine which recorded it in St Leonard’s Church in Flamstead. The article quoted the full dedication, so there was no mistaking it for another piece.

After getting over her initial suspicions that this was a very weirdly specific new email scam, Reverend Burke had the church archivist search the church’s old files. They found a photograph of the panel and the ALR database information. On January 9th, Burke notified Dreweatts that the lot was stolen property. The company immediately withdrew it five days before the scheduled auction.

The seller had no idea it had been stolen and while Dreweatts had done their standard due diligence search in the ALR database, the panel had slipped through the search thresholds. ALR sent the seller a letter confirming the panel had been stolen in 1996 and registered with them since May of that year. The seller made arrangements for the church to pick up the panel, and two weeks later it was back home at long last.

The church is very happy as the panel is a “fascinating piece of local history”. The panel is now back with St Leonard’s and in a safe location until an appropriate display method can be purchased.

Burke added: “Our archivist and member of our Parochial Church Council is a retired curator of the British Museum and continues to have museum contacts. We are taking advice on how to display it securely.”



* This article was originally published here

रामायण से हटाए जाने की खबर पर भड़के विक्रांत मैस्सी:कहा- गैर-जिम्मेदाराना हैरान करने वाली कवरेज; बाद में पोस्ट हटाई, दावा था- राघव जुयाल ने किया रिप्लेस

नितेश तिवारी के डायरेक्शन में बन रही फिल्म रामायणः पार्ट-1 लगातार बड़ी स्टारकास्टिंग से चर्चा में है। इसी बीच खबरें रहीं कि एक्टर राघव जुयाल ने विक्रांत मैस्सी को फिल्म से रिप्लेस कर दिया है। रिप्लेसमेंट की खबरों पर अब विक्रांत मैस्सी ने चुप्पी तोड़ी है। उनका कहना है कि ये खबरें बेबुनियाद हैं, क्योंकि वो पहले भी इस फिल्म का हिस्सा नहीं थे। राघव जुयाल द्वारा रिप्लेस किए जाने की खबरें सामने आने के बाद विक्रांत मैस्सी ने ऑफिशियल इंस्टाग्राम स्टोरी के स्टोरी सेक्शन में लिखा, ओके, सब साफ करने के लिए कहना चाहता हूं कि मैं कभी भी इस फिल्म का हिस्सा नहीं था। मैं नहीं हूं, और कभी था भी नहीं। इतनी गैर-जिम्मेदार मीडिया कवरेज, वो भी ‘सम्मानित’ कहे जाने वाले मीडिया हाउसों से, सच में हैरान करने वाली है। आगे एक्टर ने लिखा, फिर भी, रामायण फिल्म के लिए सभी को ढेरों शुभकामनाएं। मैं जरूर टिकट खरीदकर इसे सिनेमाघरों में देखने जाऊंगा।” विक्रांत मैस्सी ने डिलीट की पोस्ट मीडिया कवरेज पर भड़ककर की कई इस पोस्ट के महज एक घंटे बाद ही विक्रांत ने अपनी पोस्ट डिलीट कर दी है। कैसे शुरू हुईं रिप्लेसमेंट की खबरें? हाल ही में वैराइटी की रिपोर्ट में दावा किया गया था कि नितेश तिवारी की फिल्म रामायण में राघव जुयाल लंकेश रावण यानी यश के बेटे मेघानद (इंद्रजीत) का किरदार निभाएंगे। इसके बाद से ही कई मीडिया रिपोर्ट्स में दावा किया जाने लगा कि पहले ये रोल विक्रांत मैस्सी निभाने वाले थे, ऐसे में राघव जुयाल ने उन्हें रिप्लेस किया है। कैसी होगी रामायण की कास्टिंग? फिल्म रामायणः पार्ट- 1 में रणबीर कपूर, भगवान श्री राम का किरदार निभा रहे हैं, जबकि एक्ट्रेस साई पल्लवी माता सीता के रोल में हैं। केजीएफ स्टार यश फिल्म में लंकेश रावण और सनी देओल भगवान हनुमान के रोल में है। वहीं एक्टर रवि दुबे लक्ष्मण का रोल निभा रहे हैं। इनके अलावा एक्ट्रेस काजल अग्रवाल मंदोदरी और रकुल प्रीत सिंह भी सूर्पणखा के रोल में होने वाली हैं। बता दें कि फिल्म रामायण 6 नवंबर को रिलीज हो रही है।

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Probe ordered into Daily Mail owner's £500m takeover of Telegraph

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy orders a review of the deal on public interest and competition grounds.

from BBC News https://ift.tt/oNeUskQ

Rare Mithraic altars found in Scotland go on display for the first time

Two exceptionally rare and beautifully carved Mithraic altars found in Inveresk, East Lothian, Scotland, are going on display for the first time. They are not just the only Roman altars ever found in Scotland, but are among the finest examples of Roman sculpture in Roman Britain. They are also uniquely early in date, having been made in 140s A.D. during Antoninus Pius’ reoccupation of southern Scotland, whereas most other archaeological materials related to the worship of Mithras in Britannia date to the 3rd century.

The altars were unearthed in 2010. Inveresk was the site of a fort on the Antonine Wall and a bustling town grew around the military base. It was also home to the northernmost temple to Mithras in the Roman Empire, and the two altars were the focal points of the temple, which would have been an underground space, dark and windowless, resembling or even built into a natural cave. The altars were found broken in large fragments, and required extensive conservation work so they have never before been placed on public view.

One of the altars is dedicated to Mithras himself and bears the inscription “DAEO / INVICT· MY / C · CAS ·/ FLA” meaning “to the invincible god Mithras” followed by the abbreviated name of the man who erected the altar, probably Gaius Cassius Flavianus, likely the legionary centurion commander of the fort. The capital is finely carved with leaves and flowers over a turned rope border, and topped with two scrolls on each end. The center top features a raven, which may have been one of a pair but the spot where the other would have been is damaged. Ravens played an important role in Mithraic mythology as the messengers from the sun god Sol Invictus to Mithras. The sides of the altar are decorated with relief carvings of other Mithraic iconography, including a griffin and a patera on one side, and a lyre, plectrum, a lyre and a jug.

The second altar is dedicated by the same centurion to the god Sol himself. The face of the god was carved on the front of the solid stone altar in high relief, but then the center of the stone block was hollowed out from behind and the rays around the sun god’s head, his eyes and mouth were punched through to make them cutouts. His chin was also punched through, although that was by mistake. It was later rebuilt in plaster, but that plaster is now missing exposing the cleft. The altar would have been illuminated from behind, and in the dark, cave-like interior of the Mithraeum, the eyes, mouth and rays of the solar crown would have glowed brightly. On the capital of the altar, female personifications of the four seasons are depicted in relief, representing the passage of time.

There were rare surviving traces of the original polychrome paint visible on the altars when they were first unearthed. Conservators found more evidence of the color accents when examining the surface with ultraviolet light. They didn’t find enough to make a complete map of how the altar were painted, but they were able to clarify areas with red and blue outlines.

The new exhibition, Roman Scotland: Life on the Edge of Empire, runs from November 14th 2026 through April 28th, 2027, and the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. It focuses on Rome’s attempts to conquer Scotland, how it was supplied and supported from the core of the Empire, the impact on the local population and the long-term effects of the occupation.

Dr Fraser Hunter, Principal Curator of Prehistory and Roman Archaeology at National Museums Scotland said:

“These stunning altars really bring the beliefs of the Roman frontier to life. The quality of the carving, traces of paint and dramatic lighting effects show they were impressive and expensive monuments. The cult of Mithras represented the triumph of good over evil and gave soldiers a sense that there was a purpose to their world and a life after death.[…]”



* This article was originally published here

What's it like in the village that inspired Wuthering Heights?

The Yorkshire village of Haworth is in the spotlight ahead of the new Wuthering Heights film release.

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Brad Pitt blockbuster F1 sequel in the works, producer confirms

"It's really a thrill to work with Brad," F1's producer Jerry Bruckheimer tells the BBC at the annual Academy Awards luncheon in Los Angeles.

from BBC News https://ift.tt/K4Cx9ia

Great hall from 4th c. bishop’s palace complex found in Ostia

The remains of a monumental hall belonging to a 4th-century episcopal palace have been discovered at Ostia Antica, Rome’s ancient port town. The base of the structure is eight by 20 meters (ca. 26 by 65 feet) and the walls were an estimated eight meters high. This is an extraordinarily large space, and it was richly decorated with mosaic floors and marble panels. It is one of the oldest Christian complexes ever discovered the environs of Rome, and its rich decoration and expansive facilities are on a scale previously unknown in the Constantinian period.

The archaeological remains of the 1,700-year-old structure lay hidden just inches below the topsoil, scraped and dislodged but not severely damaged by centuries of agricultural activity just above it. In fact, farming helped preserve the remains.

Ultimately, it was fortunate that the farmers continued to use the land until the Ostia Antica Archaeological Park near Rome was established. “Here, no buildings interfere with our excavations – we hardly have to take graves or anything like that into consideration,” says Prof. Dr. Sabine Feist of the Department of Christian Archaeology at the University of Bonn. A favorable situation for research – and not only for that reason: “We know of other churches from this early period, but these were completely altered in the Middle Ages.” That didn’t happen here either.

The newly-discovered structure is adjacent to a monumental church complex discovered by geophysical surveys in 1996 and excavated in 2023-4. The church was built around 330 A.D., late in the reign of Constantine (306-337 A.D.) on the remains of a Roman insula (apartment building). Measuring about 50 by 80 meters, the church complex covered 4,000 square feet and included am adjacent bishop’s residence.

For such an elaborate complex to have been built when Christians had only recently been granted legal rights (Edict of Milan, 313 A.D.) and freedom of worship is evidence of a well-organized Church apparatus, capable of emerging from the penumbra of private and literal underground spaces straight into sophisticated, large-scale architectural developments.

The Bishop of Ostia was an important church leader in the Early Church. He held the position of Cardinal Dean, charged with convening the conclave of cardinals to elect a new pontiff after the death of a Pope. The exact location of his titular church and residence were unknown until the 2023-4 excavation confirmed the identity of the building complex.



* This article was originally published here