Nearly 1,900 years ago, a scholar named Pausanias wrote an eye-witness account of his travels through Greece
There’s no better ancient text for visualizing the archaeology of the ancient Greek world
A thread about digital approaches to Pausanias & archaeology. #SwanseaCA2022
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In spring 2021, Julie Hruby & I were supposed to lead a group of @dartmouth students on a trip to Greece (cc: @Classics22FSP)
Covid nixed it
Instead, my class traveled digitally to Greece with Pausanias as our guide using online Classics & archaeology resources
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We started off simple, reading a book of Pausanias & mapping out his travels on Google Earth (map by Duncan Antich*)
The exercise revealed the routes Pausanias took around a region and allowed for an overhead look at the Greek landscape
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*all w/ permission to share assignments
Google Earth also shows some of the ancient ruins
1.24.5 “As you enter the Parthenon, all the sculptures you see on the pediment refer to birth of Athena, those on the rear pediment represent the contest between Athena and Poseidon. The statue itself is made of ivory & gold”
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Next we connected Pausanias with the wealth of information found in online resources: ToposText, @PleiadesProject, and digital archives from @ASCSAthens & museums
The students wove this data together by annotating the researched connections in Recogito (@aboutgeo@eltonteb)
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The collaborative result was a rich tapestry of historical information, archaeology photographs, and open-links for further exploration
All mapped to geographical locations along Pausanias’s itinerary
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*this was a whole class collaboration to map & annotate this material
Several of the students received the Justin Firestone Memorial Prize from @dartmouth Classics for their efforts to digitally visualize the ancient world
Check out one of the publicly accessible projects here by N. Curtis, E. MacTaggart & J. Winfrey: earth.google.com/earth/d/139LJw…
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These students digitally followed in the footsteps of generations of archaeologists who have connected Pausanias’s writings with on-the-ground archaeology
Pausanias has helped us locate sites, name monuments, and see their art in detail that’s been lost to the ages
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The truth of Pausanias’s descriptions of Greece cannot be denied, but as a scholar, I’m also curious in what he leaves out. His omissions and biases
I’ve been developing a database to try to crack this nut, not just for Pausanias but for a wide range of ancient Greek texts
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I’m lucky to study ancient Greek animals. Some were cute, others were tasty
And, unlike so much else in our evidence, animals were described by the thousands in ancient texts, depicted as frequently in ancient art, and millions of their bones have been dug up
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It’s my opinion that animals are key to examining the relationship between different sources in a rigorous, quantitative fashion
While many scholars combine “big data” to understand the past, I think the 1st step is to compare our sources of evidence to reveal their biases
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In so many ways, Pausanias is commendable because, like a true scholar, he readily admitted his biases in his description of Greece
In Book 1, he makes the bold claim to be recording “all things Greek” but by book 3 he amends this to “the really memorable things”
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Zooming in to his many descriptions of animal sacrifice, we see his self-critical assessment holds up as true
We have a good understanding of animal sacrifice from hundreds of textual descriptions and iconographic depictions and 1000s of burned bones
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Typically, the hindquarters (the thighbone and/or the tails) were burned as an offering to the gods. I have a thread on this topic here:
But Pausanias rarely describes this ritual clearly, and if so, it’s to set off a practice as unique or memorable
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For example, at the sanctuary of Herakles at Sikyon, he classifies standard forms of sacrifice to a deity and to a hero and examines how here the ritual practice combines the two
After all, Herakles was odd as a hero who was deified, and this practice was memorable
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Or at Olympia, where the huge quantities of sacrifices offered to Zeus were memorialized into a monumental altar constructed from the ashes of sacrificial victims
Who would not see this as exceptional?
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Throughout, Pausanias focuses on exceptions, whether simple (night-time sacrifices) or a one-off event (murder during a sacrifice) or over-the-top sacrifices like the festival of Artemis Laphria at Patrai where countless wild animals were thrown alive onto a fiery altar
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Pausanias doesn’t describe the ordinary, he presents the memorable
Taking a quantitative approach to the animals mentioned in Pausanias (counting sheep) allows us to go beyond anecdotes and compare his biases with those found in other sources, both textual and archaeological
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Looking at the primary domestic animals used as food (cattle, pig, sheep, and goat), it’s clear that Pausanias most frequently mentions cattle
This contrasts sharply with the animal bone record where cattle distantly trail sheep and goat at most Greek sites
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But, this contrast makes sense: cattle are larger animals that represented wealth and status. Cattle as livestock or as sacrificial victims were more memorable, and they fit in well with Pausanias’s acknowledged biases
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Interestingly, my database shows this bias towards cattle and other elite animals is true in much of our ancient Greek literary and artistic sources
I presented on some of my questions and preliminary results at #AIASCS2022. You can see it here:
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These results are important. They reveal the the formation processes of our evidence
And thanks to an “Innovation for All” grant from @CUHistArchRel & @CardiffUniversity, I’ll be publishing this animal database open-access on @OpenContext: opencontext.org
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On Sunday, @Classical_Assoc, I’ll present this animal database and my attempt to integrate it with other open-linked datasets available online
#SwanseaCA2022 attendees tune in to the Digital Pausanias session. For others, I’ll post my talk on YouTube after
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Anyone who wants to travel to ancient Greece, but can’t jump on a plane, I suggest giving Pausanias a read
But, remember, you can improve his eyewitness journey by connecting his text to the fantastic online resources that are available for free
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And finally, check out the digital Periegesis (periegesis.org) led by @AnnaOFoka. There are great resources there to visualize Pausanias’ journey on this website
Several of my students last year are finally travelling to Greece this spring. I’ll see them in a few weeks to present to them about ancient animal bones
Since last year was all remote, I’m excited to meet some in person
If he's letting some arrogant schlub tarnish his name on social media, then that's his own fault
He's using his celebrity platform to denigrate experts
This feud is now in the media. He knows what he's doing whether he wrote tweets or not. He doubles down on pseudoscience
Even if Shatner didn't write the script for #TheUnXplained, he is more than willing to profit by spreading pseudoscience
It might be his job, but he's not exactly poor. He can choose his job, and he chooses to spread fake history, pseudoarchaeology, and ancient aliens rubbish
School yard bully? @WilliamShatner I challenged you to a debate not a fistfight
I am outraged. I see a childhood hero profiting from twisting the hard work of archaeologists who devote our lives to uncovering, preserving & sharing our shared human past. You spread disinformation
@WilliamShatner you just want to play a game and rile your 2.5 million following
I work hard to share real archaeology with the public. Hundreds of thousands of people have read my Twitter threads. I've raised funds to help colleagues in war-torn Ukraine
@WilliamShatner might have 2.5 million followers, but my tweet almost had as many likes as his
I think what people want is Real Archaeology
Maybe I should start framing my research as solving mysteries
The MYSTERY of ancient Greek animal sacrifice. Do the burned bones represent a public feast or were they burned by aliens trying to confuse future archaeologists? Tune into @HISTORY after dark
The invasion of Ukraine threatens lives and livelihoods, but there are ways we can all pitch in to help preserve Ukrainian culture and help Ukrainian people
The articles in Arheologia cover over 30,000 years of archaeology in Ukraine from the Stone Age to today. It’s an open-access journal, free for all to read: arheologia.com.ua/index.php/arhe…
This thread highlights the importance of Ukrainian archaeology & how YOU CAN HELP the journal
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The archaeology of Ukraine is an essential part of our shared human heritage
Prehistoric mega-sites from over 6,000 years ago, are helping rewrite the history of urbanism. These cities, with 10,000+ inhabitants, date earlier than Mesopotamian cities found in textbooks
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There is no scholarly debate over who built the pyramids, nor is there a reason for scholars to debate YouTubers over who built them
The pyramids are splendid monuments. I know because I've seen them and climbed in them
But, there's no real mystery in their technology
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The innovation we think of as pyramids was a slow progression over generations
Nearly 5000 years ago in early Egypt, the 1st and 2nd dynasty erected funeral monuments at Abydos that were massive square enclosures made of mudbricks.