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CWA 106

2 mins read

It was the railways that first fired public interest in Old Oslo back in the 19th century. Although the crumbling ruins of palaces were still visible, when navvies began unearthing the well-preserved remains of timber houses where ordinary people dwelt, it ignited an enduring interest in the settlement. Now the railway has been at it again, with the Follo Line Project opening an astonishing window on to medieval life. This work is shedding new light on Old Oslo, with what was once viewed as a relatively uniform wooden town increasingly resembling a divided city.

An extraordinary concentration of rock art in Mongolia has also been springing surprises. Dating this imagery suggested that some examples were created back in the Upper Palaeolithic – thousands of years earlier than expected. All told, the 12,000 examples of rock art currently known belong to many different eras and capture a rich array of subjects, including wild animals, riders, archers, chariots, and the moment of birth.

Art was also on the minds of the 15th-century inhabitants of Rome. For centuries, Roman sculpture abandoned among the ruins of the imperial city had either been recycled as handy raw materials or ignored. But a new interest in forging links with the Roman past prompted citizens to seek out statues and claim them as ancestors. This very present need sowed the seeds of the great aristocratic collections of Classical sculpture, including the Torlonia marbles.

Contemplating small military outposts presents a rather different side to Roman life. These no-frills installations could be both numerous and distant from home bases. Just how did Roman soldiers find their fortlets?

In our travel section, Richard Hodges ponders the true identity of Homer’s Ithaca, while Oliver Gilkes recalls going in search of an Etruscan renaissance in Florence.

FEATURES

Altai rock art
Visions of the past in Mongolia

The Follo Line Project
Exploring medieval Oslo

The Torlonia marbles
An archaeology of a 19th-century antiquities collection

What’s in a name?
How to find your outpost on the Roman frontier

NEWS

NEWS FOCUS
Studying ancient ivory from a 16th-century shipwreck

CHARLES HIGHAM
The surprises hidden in archaeological archives

HORIZON
Art in the Amazon

TRAVEL

GREECE
Richard Hodges searches for Odysseus on Ithaca

ITALY
Oliver Gilkes examines an extraordinary collection of Etruscan masterpieces in Florence

CULTURE

MUSEUM
A virtual visit to Wahtye’s tomb

REVIEWS
The Archaeology of Seeing: science and interpretation, the past and contemporary visual art; Ages and Abilities: the stages of childhood and their social recognition in prehistoric Europe and beyond; Collecting Ancient Europe: national museums and the search for European antiquities in the 19th-early 20th century; Managing Archaeology in Dynamic Urban Centres

SPECIAL REPORT
The Society of Antiquaries’ campaign to stay at Burlington House

CHRIS CATLING
Food fads and fashions

FORUM
Letters, crossword, and cartoon

THINKING ALOUD
Archaeology and the silver screen

OBJECT LESSON
The lost relic from the Great Pyramid


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