Petra 1929
  • Home
  • About
  • Prelude
  • Diary
  • Wider Context
  • People
  • Places
  • Resources
  • Illustrations

26 March 1929

2/10/2018

0 Comments

 
[by Agnes Conway and George Horsfield]

Dr. Nielsen spent the day working at the Sanctuaries on El Habis, and felt that he had discovered enough in one morning to justify his journey. This complex of cult monuments, all orientated to the west, seem to him to be the earliest Arabian sanctuaries, circa the 2nd millennium B.C.  He thinks that the bulls heads on the so-called “pulpit” and the cone shaped top, somewhat resembling a coil, of snakes, are of human workmanship, though much weathered.  (He turned this down afterwards).  A.E.C. spent the morning and afternoon exploring the Wady El Tughra.  Below El Habis, S of the sanctuaries, she found what might almost be called a cemetery of shaft graves, some leading into large tomb chambers below.  All were of solid construction and considerable depth, but the roofs in all cases had gone and the contents were rifled.  One shaft grave had 3 small detached obelisks near it, and the holes for the bases stood at the head of the grave 1.   The graves on the opposite side of the Wady under El Bijara are much later.  Two sumptuous Nabataean temple graves have later partition walls of large stones, regularly built (prob. Bedouin?).  One large tomb with a niche for a single grave has only a small hole knocked out of the slab and might be worth exploring for its contents.  

Following the Wady southwards a large irregular lump of sandstone in the middle (the Kegelberg) is also a collection of shaft graves, and further on on the western side are a few shaft graves in front of some of the largest Hellenistic tombs.  The green plateau between the Wady and the W. face of El Biijara is a mass of large worked stones, probably Greco-Roman and looked to her like remains of the town. 
 
Where the Wady en Mer runs into the Wady el Tughra are a few rock-hewn caves, almost entirely silted up with sand, which might be worth excavation. 

G. H. started digging in mound S.W. Zubb Pharoon [sic], on the part that lies above Dalmans [sic] “Byzantine” Wall.  It is covered with Byzantine pottery but the steps cut in the side of the mound produced very little.  The mound in this part is composed of sand and a certain amount of burnt debris, probably from wood fires, but contained no charcoal.  The sand is loose and the digging had to be done with caution for fear of a land slide.

In the afternoon moved further South, where the debris is deep, and higher up the mound, which is apparently surmounted by a fortified wall which is not shown in Dalman’s plan.  It breaks out from the Byzantine wall then turns until it meets the rock, with a shaft tomb.  Below this lies another with slabs in place, one being broken so that you can peer in. It is partially filled with debris, and seems to have a chamber on either side.  

The pottery finds were poor, but a deep cutting may be interesting. The evidence so far obtained points to the wall being pre-Byzantine, as it is buried in debris of this period.
Picture
George Horsfield (left) and Agnes Conway (right) sitting in a camp cave at Petra, 1929. Copyright UCL Institute of Archaeology.
Today the Camp was finished.  It is situated in the Wadi Deir, in caves on both sides.  In the West is the cookhouse, Living Room, W.C. and stables, and beyond a Bathroom.  Dr Nielsen and Miss Conway are accommodated in tents.  On the East is the Guardroom, which is also used as a Store House; adjoining is a small cave for G.H. and next door is the Guest Room. It is fairly compact, and the guard room covers all points of approach.  

Many deficiencies have been discovered in the equipment, which was reduced as much as possible.  These are being taken in hand, and Thos. Cook and Son’s camp, in the person of the Manager, has been most helpful.  It is impossible to buy anything at Elgi, except the poorest things.  No vegetables are obtainable.  Milk is procurable.  Chickens and sheep have to be got from the Arabs some miles away.  Arrangements are beginning to work, so that all the attention of the Expedition may be given to the work of exploration.
__
[Footnote]: 1. These are probably not holes for obelisks, but the ordinary ones for offerings.  Mr Horsfield excavated these shaft graves later on.


Reference: [unsigned, but by Agnes Conway and George Horsfield] 1929 (transcribed by A. Thornton). Petra Exploration Fund Diary. "Business Papers to be Kept", Horsfield Collection Box 8, UCL Institute of Archaeology, 26 March: 6-9. ​
0 Comments

27 March 1929

2/10/2018

0 Comments

 
[By George Horsfield and probably Agnes Conway]
​G. H. 
Continued the dig on Zibb Pharaoun [sic], but it continues to be very uninteresting and contains very little pottery beyond that lying on and 15 centimetres below the surface. Found two styloes [sic] a model of a camel in part, and two fragments of crude pottery of a type not turned up before. The trench has been driven forward, and works more easily with the increase of room.
  
Another dump of town rubbish has been found with the aid of one of the workmen, on the bank of the Wadi Matahar, which looks promising and will be taken in its turn.  Most of the site looks shallow, but as soon as the workmen are more used to organised work an attempt must be made on parts which offer difficulties greater than the carting away of sandy earth.  Explored the Wadi Siyagh to a quarter of a mile below the Spring.  At the angle of the shaft turn is the remains of a building. The sides have been quarried at many points on the surrounding cliffs, probably the source of the stone for the city buildings.  

Many toe and finger ladders have been cut in the sides.  

Visited many parts of the site in search of points to dig trial pits.  

The material and food lacking and previously ordered through Thomas Cook’s agent has in a large measure arrived, so that the worry of trying to buy small quantities, which could only be found at a price and bought with persuasion, is ended.  

The men and soldiers brought with us are all pulling well together; order is brought into the arrangement of the Camp and the food supply is sufficient.
​
A.E.C. explored part of the ridge W. of the Wady el Ma’aisera at Sharkiyah in the morning, and found a great number of cult sites and 3 definite houses, one of 2 stories with a first floor staircase, and another with a low enclosure wall in front plastered in the same way as the chamber.  This was joined to another house by a tunnel, and a staircase by the side seems to lead to the private altar 1.  She climbed to the highest points all along the ridge, and found the most interesting monuments at the very top – the views down on to the parallel western ridge of the Wady Ma’aiserat el Sharkiyah displayed a wide range of tombs of different types, and this area was visited in the afternoon and proved to be nothing but a necropolis – of shaft graves, shallow graves for sarcophagi, and tomb chambers.  There were 4 tomb groups of great interest.  In one case a shaft grave communicated with the chamber of a large Hellenistic tomb facade.  All seem to be empty.  How far these monuments are undescribed she does not yet know, but thinks that Brunnow and Dalman may have made all their observations from lower down the hillside, from which point the interesting monuments at the top are invisible. 

Dr Nielsen continued his work on the sanctuaries of El Habis.
__
[Footnote] 1. (The last two are cisterns). The “private altar” is a water catchment area.

​Reference: Horsfield, G [and probably Conway, A]. 1929 (transcribed by A. Thornton). Petra Exploration Fund Diary. "Business Papers to be Kept", Horsfield Collection Box 8, UCL Institute of Archaeology, 27 March: 9-11. 

0 Comments

    Categories

    All
    Accident
    Agnes Conway
    Ain Musa
    Akaba
    Ali Burar
    Al Khan
    Al Najr
    Al Qantara
    Aqueduct
    Arif Hussar
    Bdul
    Bedouin
    Birka
    Burials
    By Agnes Conway
    By George Horsfield
    By Tawfiq Canaan
    Camels
    Camp
    Caves
    Cemetery
    Circassians
    Cisterns
    Cooking
    Cook's Camp
    Copper Smelting
    Corinthian Tomb
    Deir
    Ditlef Nielsen
    Division
    Drifullah
    Dushara
    Edomite High Place
    El Barid
    El Basta
    El Biyara
    El Habis
    El Hremije
    Elji
    El Kantarah
    El Khazneh
    El Khubtha
    El Ma'aisera
    El Mataha
    El Medras
    El Nasara
    El Ramle
    El Wajra
    Excavation
    Exploration
    Farasas
    Garden Tomb
    George Horsfield
    Ghor
    Graves
    Great High Place
    Hammam
    Henry Mond
    Hormuz
    Houses
    Hrabet En Mer
    Huaymil
    Human Remains
    Huraimiya Gorge
    Idhra Al Hisha
    Inscriptions
    Jebel En Mer
    Katoote
    Klausenschluct
    Ma'an
    Mahmud Charish
    Mount Hor
    Mr Head
    Numara Pass
    Osair
    Packing
    Palace Tomb
    Payday
    Personnel
    Petra
    Photography
    Planning
    Quarries
    Recording
    Sabra
    Sanctuaries
    Sextus Florentinus
    Sheikh Bashir
    Sidd El Magin
    Sik
    Sik Tunnel
    Siyagh
    Strike
    Survey
    Tawfiq Canaan
    Theatre
    Tomb Of Onaisu
    Tomb Of The Urn
    Tombs
    Triple Dushara Tomb
    Turkomaniya
    Turkomaniya Tomb
    Visitors
    Wadi El Mataha
    Wadi El Muslin
    Wadi En Mer
    Wadi Umm Ratam
    Wady Deir
    Wady El Darraj
    Wady Marris Hamdan
    Wady Musa
    Wady Muzlim
    Wady Tughera
    Wahabi Caravan
    Weather
    Workmen
    Zantour
    Zibb Atuf
    Zibb Pharoun

    Archives

    October 2018
    September 2018

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • About
  • Prelude
  • Diary
  • Wider Context
  • People
  • Places
  • Resources
  • Illustrations