Karanis Cemetery Survey Project
Egypt

Karanis Cemetery Survey Project


Cotsen Institute of Archaeology

Spending an entire field season roaming a cemetery and looking at bones may seem morbid to many, but to me it was a dream. Over the past several years, Willeke Wendrich, Associate Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, has lead an international team of archaeologists in excavations at the ancient city of Karanis. The project seeks to explore and understand the ways Karanis used the rich and lively landscape of the Fayum, a region known even in present day for its agricultural fertility. Specialists analyze the botanical remains to see what was living and growing over a thousand years ago, and excavations of an ancient granary this season help us understand life and prosperity in the past. So why am I sitting across the street immersed in the skeletal remains of the people of Karanis? How does studying the dead shed any new light on the project’s goal of understanding the living and growing landscape?

Contrary to popular opinion, the dead are actually quite talkative. Through analysis of their bones, they tell us the kinds of diseases people had to face, the daily work they had to undergo, their toothaches in old age and broken legs from their youth. While excavations can bring back into our public knowledge the growth of the city and activities of Karanis, skeletal analysis can populate Karanis with the real lives and struggles of its people.


See the above page for the full story.




- Growing And Grinding
IHC An advert for an upcoming talk by Willeke Wendrich, but it contains some information about the Faiyum and is quite well timed given the above discussions about the risks to the archaeology of the Faiyum. The north shore of Lake Qarun in the Egyptian...

- Daily Photo By Tony Marson
View over Karanis (Kom Aushim), Faiyum Depression I particularly like this photograph, shwoing the terrific foundations of the ruined town, with views out over the green expanses of the Faiyum. I have some very happy memories of Karanis. Su Bayfield...

- Fayum Project - Season 2008
Fayum Project 2008 (UCLA/RUG) Details of the 2008 season of work carried out by the Fayum Project at Karanis, and the prehistoric sites E29H1 and Kom K. The report is accompanied by some excellent photographs. Egyptology News Blog, Andie Byrnes...

- More Re Ucla Field School In Egypt
UCLA -Archaeology Field Program Field school student Susie Joyner takes another video, this time meandering around the dig site in the ancient city of Karanis to capture footage of her fellow students digging. We get a look at their brightly colored digging...

- Kelsey Museum Of Archaeology Newsletter Fall 2007
Kelsey Museum Newsletter Thanks to a post by Mia Rikala to the EEF email group for pointing me at a newsletter which had not come to my attention previously: the Kelsey Museum Newsletter. The most recent issue is the Spring 2007 publication. This and...



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