Ancient Greece: Exhibition on Macedonian kings in Oxford

Κυριακή, 20 Φεβρουαρίου 2011 9:09 μμ |

An exhibition on the ancient Macedonian royal lineage of Alexander the Great that presents evidence that his family and kingdom were firmly rooted in the culture and civilisation of ancient Greece is to open its doors in Oxford this coming April.
Entitled "From Hercules to Alexander: the legend of Macedonia," the exhibition will run from April 7 until August 29 and features exhibits currently held at the Aigai Museum in northern Greece that have never before been allowed out of the country.
According to archaeologist Angeliki Kotaridis, who worked on the digs at the palace in Aigai, it contains a "series of finds which prove that Alexander the Great did not just spring out of nowhere to take over the whole world. He was a scion of the Temenides dynasty that ruled the Macedonian kingdom for three and half centuries and who were 'descendants' of Hercules and Zeus."
The exhibition narrative will start from the genealogical tree claimed by the ancient Macedonian kings, starting with Zeus and Hercules and reaching up to Alexander the Great's son, Alexander IV. It will not be academic in nature but use all types of audiovisual media (video, photomosaics, 3-D digital reconstructions etc).
The five sections of the exhibition are the following: the Temenides dynasty; War and hunting; Princesses, Queens and High Priestesses, the role of women in the Macedonian Court; the Symposium, a central event in the life of Macedonians; Aigai, the building plan of Philip II and the Palace.
Among the exhibits will be a marble bust of Alexander from Pella (the only find that does not originate from Aigai) and portraits of Philip and Alexander from the gold-and-ivory mortuary couch found in the royal tombs at Vergina.

Unprecedented Miniature Carving of Alexander the Great Found on Israel

Σάββατο, 19 Σεπτεμβρίου 2009 0:00 πμ |

Unprecedented Miniature Carving of Alexander the Great Found

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by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz
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(IsraelNN.com) Excavations in Tel Dor have turned up a rare and unexpected work of Hellenistic art: a precious stone bearing the miniature carved likeness of Alexander the Great.

Archaeologists are calling it an important find, indicating the great skill of the artist.

The Tel Dor dig, under the guidance and direction of Dr. Ayelet Gilboa of Haifa University and Dr. Ilan Sharon of Jerusalem's Hebrew University, has just ended its summer excavation season. For more than 30 years, scientists have been excavating in Tel Dor, identified as the site of the Biblical town of Dor. The town's location, on Israel's Mediterranean Sea coast some 30 kilometers south of Haifa, made it an important international port in ancient times.

"Despite the tiny proportions - the length of the gemstone (gemma) is less than a centimeter and its width less than half a centimeter - the artist was able to carve the image of Alexander of Macedon with all of his features," Dr. Gilboa said. "The king appears as young and energetic, with a sharp chin and straight nose, and with long, curly hair held in a crown."

According to the archaeologists involved in the Tel Dor excavations, the discovery of the miniature Alexander gemstone carving in Israel is fairly surprising. The Land of Israel was not, for the Greek Empire, a central or major holding.

"It has been accepted to assume that first-rate artists - and whoever carved the image of Alexander in this gemstone was certainly one of them - were primarily active under the patronage of the large royal courts in Greece itself or in major capitals," the scientists explained. "It turns out that local elites in secondary centers such as Dor could allow themselves - and knew to appreciate - superior artwork."

Additionally, the new find is important for the study of the historical Alexander the Great. The gemstone was found in the remains of a large public building from the Hellenistic period in the southern area of the tel. Unlike most of the portraits of Alexander in museums throughout the world, with unknown origins, the Tel Dor carving was found and classified within its archaeological context. The face was definitively identified as that of Alexander the Great by Dr. Jessica Nitschke of Georgetown University and Professor Andrew Stewart of UC Berkeley.

Historically, Alexander himself passed through Dor in 332 BCE, during his voyage to Egypt. It appears that the city fell to him without resistance. Since that time until its conquest by the Hasmonean Jewish King Alexander Yannai around 100 BCE, Dor served as a stronghold of non-Jewish Hellenists in the Land of Israel.

MACEDONIA: Documentation for the Letter to President Barack Obama

Τετάρτη, 20 Μαΐου 2009 3:35 μμ |

Misappropriation . . . .  of Alexander the Great:  More recently even Alexander';s father, Philip, has also been abducted:

"When The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia renamed Skopje airport for Alexander the Great in 2007, this seemed a one-off to annoy Greece. More recently, however, the government has broadened a policy the opposition calls "antiquisation". The main road to Greece has been renamed for Alexander and the national sports stadium named after his father, and plans are afoot to erect a huge statue of Alexander in central Skopje." The Economist April 2, 2009

Even the popular but supposedly serious periodical Archaeology, a publication of the Archaeological Institute of America, has recently (January-February 2009) published an article with the name "Owning Alexander:  Modern Macedonia lays its claim to the ancient conqueror';s legacy."

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Read the rest of the article here:

http://macedonia-evidence.org/documentation.html