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Double Constructions with Verbs of Defending, Prohibiting and Protecting

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Normally, we can conceive that interclūdō (hold off) and prohibeō (prohibit) would take an accusative Person with an ablative Object (of separation).

  • He blocked their every approach: hōs totō aditū interclūsit.
  • They prohibit our approach: nōs adventū prohibent.

However, verbs of of defending, prohibiting and protecting may also take the accusative Object and dative Person.

  • He blocked their every approach: hīs totum aditum interclūsit.
  • They prohibit our approach: nōbis adventus prohibent.

Verbs with this Construction:

  • dēfendō, dēfendere, dēfensī, dēfensus: to defend
  • prohibeō, prohibēre, prohibuī, prohibitus: to prohibit or defend
  • interclūdo, interclūdere, interclūsī, interclūsus: to hold off
  • dētineō, dētinēre, dētenuī, dētentus: to hold off
  • muniō, munīre, munīvī, munītus: to wall off, defend
  • servō, servāre, servāvī, servātus: to defend

Recall that interdīcō is an exception: taking dative+accusative or dative+ablative.

For more: http://wp.me/p2eimD-bl
The Essential AG: 364n2



Weekend Roundup

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Hershel Shanks: Authentic or Forged? What to Do When Experts Disagree? His example: Geologists vs. philologists on the Jehoash Inscription.

Michael S. Heiser recommends the archive of ISIS, the journal of the ancient chronology forum.

Charles E. Jones lists titles relating to antiquity from the Brooklyn Museum Publications now available online.

A husband and wife team have been leading an excavation of  ‘Ayn Gharandal in southern Jordan.

“A new ancient city considered to be the Zeugma of the West and thought to be one of the lost cities of Anatolia has been unearthed in İzmir.” (Hurriyet Daily News)

The Exhibition Indiana Jones and the Adventure of Archaeology is now open at the Discovery Science Center in southern California.

Israel: Seeing is Believing – This six-minute film has some nice footage. The focus is as much on the modern as on the ancient.

At only $8.54, the ESV Study Bible for the Kindle is a great deal. Note that the index feature does not work with Kindle 1, Kindle Fire, or the Kindle apps.

HT: Charles Savelle, Jack Sasson, G. M. Grena

Maintenance: Server down 27th October from 3pm – 5pm!

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Maintenance: Server down 27th October from 3pm – 5pm!  

The reason for shutting down the servers is simply due to technical maintenance. During maintenance ‘Dyabola’ will not be available. Thanks so much for your support and understanding.


Filed under: Archäologische Bibliographie, Usability

Mexican Artefact Repatriation: ICE Media Circus

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Recently there has been quite a bit of tension on the US-Mexican border, especially after a number of shootings of Mexicans by U.S. Border Patrol agents. In statements made at a widely-publicised ICE-sponsored  "repatriation ceremony" of amassed seized smuggled or stolen artefacts at the Consulate of Mexico in El Paso, Texas on Thursday Oct. 25, one of the largest-ever repatriations between the two countries:
officials emphasized the healthy partnership between the two countries, at least when it comes to hunting down and returning stolen art. Homeland Security Investigations Assistant Director Janice Ayala touted the “teamwork and cooperation” between the countries, while Mexican Consul General Jacob Prado thanked U.S. officials for returning items “which are a part of the cultural heritage and the historical memory of the people of Mexico.”
Among the items on display in this show of international friendship were more than 4,000 pre-Columbian artifacts including: at least five pre-Columbian statues (one a Chinesco Nayarit figurine),  26 pre-Columbian pottery vessels, Pre-Columbian metates, manos, an Aztec-era whistle, copper hatchets  etc. A U.S.-Mexico treaty of cooperation regarding the recovery and return of stolen archaeological, historical and cultural properties, which was negotiated by the U.S. Department of State and enacted in 1970, restricts the importation of pre-Columbian artifacts and colonial-era religious objects into the United States without proper export documents.

The objects concerned were recovered in 11 separate seizures and undercover and sting operations  by special agents of ICE's Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) with assistance from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at various ports of entry. Many of the objects were uncovered during a string of raids in West Texas in 2009. Amongt the seizures discussed in the news items about this display the following are discussed:

1-2) Naco, near Douglas, Ariz.; "An undeclared pre-Columbian metate – grinding stone – was discovered in the vehicle of two individuals entering the United States from Mexico at Naco, Ariz. Also discovered at the Naco Port of Entry, was another metate with four manos – a stone used as the upper millstone for grinding foods – lying in the bed of a person's truck, who said he stayed at his grandfather's ranch during his visit to Mexico and was bringing back clothes and tools".

3-4) Del Rio (Texas) Port of Entry from Mexico: "A pre-Columbian undeclared clay statue was discovered hidden in the luggage area of a person's vehicle entering the US.[...]  another pre-Columbian statuette was "discovered along with an Aztec Eagle whistle concealed in the dashboard of another person's vehicle entering the Del Rio Port of Entry".

5) Laredo, Texas; "Three pre-Columbian statues were discovered during a CBP agricultural inspection of an individual who arrived on a bus at the Lincoln-Juarez Bridge Port of Entry".


6) San Diego, Calif. "Two copper hatchet artifacts were discovered in cargo received at San Diego International Airport via Sweden".

7-8) Chicago; "While screening express mail at the Chicago Port of Entry, a CBP officer intercepted a parcel for inspection containing a falsely declared clay anthropomorphic statue dating to the early first millennium A.D. CBP officers, assigned to the Chicago Port of Entry, also discovered a shipment containing a Chinesco Nayarit figurine exported from the United States".

9) Kalispell, Mont.; HSI special agents discovered that  a US dealer had paid members of the Tarahumara, a tribe in northwestern Mexico, to rob items from ancestral burial caves dating back more than 1,500 years in the Copper Canyon area of Chihuahua, Mexico, and the objects were being sold through the local art gallery. The agents seized 26 pieces of pottery following an investigation and "determined that the objects were removed from Mexico in violation of Mexican law and brought into the United States in violation of U.S. laws and regulations".  As Larry Rothfield notes, in contrast to what most antiquity dealers and collectors would want you to believe, this case:
sheds important light on the way in which archaeological looting in poorer "source" countries is driven by the demand side in wealthy "market" countries -- and not just spontaneously, but in some cases intentionally as an organized business 
 10) Most of the relics returned on Thursday  resulted from a string of seizures in West Texas in 2009, following a tip about relics illegally entering the US at a border crossing in Presidio, Texas. As a result of the tip-off undercover agents were led to Fort Stockton, a Texas town about 230 miles south east of El Paso. Here they reportedly found a man who was in possession of a number of artefacts including 200 that it was alleged had been stolen in the Mexican border state of Coahuila.
Homeland Security special agent Dennis Ulrich said authorities executing a search warrant in Fort Stockton found the largest portion of the cache. And further investigation revealed that the two men who organised the artefacts' smuggling were involved in drug trafficking from Mexico to the US, he said. Mr Sanchez said some of the relics found in Fort Stockton were stolen from a private collection at the Cuatro Cienagas museum in the Mexican state of Coahuila. The items also include arrows, hunting bows and even extremely well conserved textile items such as sandals and pieces of baskets.
[...]  Later in November 2009, Texas Department of Public Safety troopers assisting HSI special agents stopped the same individual in a vehicle for a traffic violation and observed artifacts in the vehicle that the driver admitted were undeclared when he entered the United States at the Presidio (Texas) Port of Entry. After HSI special agents seized the artifacts, they opened a second investigation associated with the seizure of more than 4,000 artifacts including arrowheads, bows, rabbit sticks, axes, spears, tomahawks, statuettes, sandals and beads, all relating to the same conspiracy.
There is also mention of a raid in Mexico City, in coordination with Mexican law enforcement agencies.

Stolen antiquities are just one of the illegal commodities smuggled across the U.S.-Mexico border, others include illegal migrants, drugs, and, most recently, reptiles.


A clay statue was among some seized artifacts
returned to Mexico (AP/The El Paso Times, Mark Lambie)
Sources:
ICE News release: 'ICE returns stolen and looted archeological art and antiquities to Mexico', El Paso, TX October 25, 2012.
Gina Benitez, 'Thousands of looted artifacts returned to Mexico' KFOX El Paso, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012

Richard Fausset, 'US returns more than 4000 stolen antiquities to Mexico' Los Angeles Times 25th Oct 2012.


Press Association ' Looted relics returned to Mexico', Irish Independent October 26 2012


Art Daily, 'ICE returns stolen and looted archeological art and antiquities to Mexico ', Art-Daily October 26, 2012 (simply a republication verbatim of the ICE press release).

Jared Taylor, 'US returns huge haul of pre-Columbian artifacts to Mexico', Chicago Tribune, 26th Oct 2012.

John Rosman, 'US Returns 4000 Stolen Antiquities To Mexico' KPBS October 26, 2012

Blogosphere ~ “She is a mass of riddles”: Julia Augusta Agrippina and the sources

Blogosphere ~ APA Blog : CFP: Graduate Conference at Cornell University

Blogosphere ~ Do You Think You Know All the Reasons for Rome’s Fall?

Blogosphere ~ Cheating in ancient sport


Blogosphere ~ Water supply and wastewater disposal in Pompeii : an overview

Blogosphere ~ Mycenaean baking

Blogosphere ~ Double Constructions with Verbs of Defending, Prohibiting and Protecting

This Day in Ancient History: ante diem vi kalendas novembres

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ante diem vi kalendas novembres

  • ludi Victoriae Sullanae (day 2) — games held in honour of Victoria commemorating Sulla’s defeat of the Samnites in 82 B.C.
  • 43 B.C. — Marcus Junius Brutus commits suicide in the wake of the defeat at Philippi (by one reckoning)
  • 113 A.D. — the emperor Trajan departs from Rome for his war against the Parthians
  • 251 A.D. — the future emperor Valerian is elected by the senate to the recently-revived office of censor
  • 1469 — birth of Erasmus

Classical Words of the Day

Do Not Pass Marathon … Do Not Collect …

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Tip o’ the pileus to Atticus Cox who found this on the Uncyclopedia:

Source (the top-selling board game of the 5th century B.C.E. …)


Storifying the Latin Tweetup/Pipiatio Latina

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As you might be aware, a couple days ago Darius Arya hosted another Latin Tweetup and although I wasn’t able to participate myself, I thought it might be fun to Storify the event:

… for the record, I did edit a bit, taking out some posts which were more technical than anything else; also anything that had a RT in front of it.



New Open Access Article- Arquitectura de asentamientos de la...

Fox News: One in every 146 Bulgarians a Looter

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Fox News is carrying a story to gladden the heart of every US coin collector ('Treasure hunters strip Bulgaria of its ancient treasures, destroying a cultural legacy',October 26, 2012), looters digging for ancient artefacts to sell on the black market are keeping the market well supplied. Thieves dig pits into archaeological sites looking for ancient coins and jewellery, everything else, including ceramic vessels and other historically significant artefacts of less commercial attraction, is smashed to pieces.
Police reports indicate that every day up to 50,000 people are engaged in treasure hunting raids across Bulgaria, a country of 7.3 million. According to Angel Papalezov, a senior police officer, hundreds of thousands of artifacts are smuggled out of the country every year, with dealers hauling in up to $40 million. 
Dealers and collectors are willing customers of this destructive commerce. 50 000 in a population of (recte) 7,037,935 is one in 141 people.  So how many productive archaeological sites would there have to be (have had to have been) in Bulgaria to sustain such a level of activity?

On the other hand, how sure are Fox News of their facts? According to the book produced in 2000 by the Center for the Study of Democracy (Bulgaria),'Corruption and trafficking : monitoring and prevention : assessment methodologies and strategies for counteracting transborder crime in Bulgaria' by Boyko Todorov, Ognian Shentov, Alexander Stoyanov - ISBN: 954477078X 9789544770785 (p. 33): 
"by rough estimates, some 3,500 people are actively engaged in treasure-hunting in this country..."
There is quite a difference between 50 000 and three and a half. That is still one in 2010 people.

FUN: Inspiration for the pyramids?

Bulgaria: Greedy Dealers and Collectors the Real Looters

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There is quite a bit of coverage at the moment of the article on archaeological looting by Veselin Toshkov which takes as its starting point what is happening at Archar, a site discussed several times on this blog. The site is described as a "moonscape littered with shards of ceramics or glassware destroyed by the diggers" who move in the moment the archaeologists leave the 80 hectare site. What has happed here on teh site of the ancient town of Ratiaria is "the most drastic example of the looting that has been going on over the last 20 years, since the fall of communism". "The first excavations here were carried out by Bulgarian archaeologists between 1958 and 1962. They were renewed in 1976 by an Italian team, but lack of funding forced them to leave the site in 1991".
Ancient sites were protected during communist times by a strong fear of the omnipresent police and harsh punishments for any law-breaking activity. Since the collapse of the totalitarian system, many have taken up looting to earn a living. Organized by local mafia, looting squads that have mushroomed all over the country are well equipped with metal detectors, bulldozers, tractors and even decommissioned army vehicles. [...]  In early October, some 5,000 Roman items were handed over to the National History Museum in Sofia. They were seized at a border crossing with Serbia, just few miles (kilometers) west of Ratiaria. [...] Coins and other treasures found by looters are sold to people who smuggle them abroad. Roman items from Ratiaria can be found in auction houses and antiquity collections around the world [...] Experts say they have no way to gauge the extent of the pillaging. "There are hundreds of tombstones and statues in local museums, but what we don't know exactly is how many more such relics were smuggled out of the country and are now in Italy, Munich or Vienna," said Rumen Ivanov, Roman History professor at the National Institute of Archaeology. . 
Certainly in a region which is one of the poorest in the European Union there is a huge temptation for local inhabitants to dig at the site to see what can be found. This however can only be a viable manner of raising money when there is somebody willing to buy the proceeds of this illegal activity. Archaeologist Krasmira Luka, who directs current excavations here is well aware of hgow the procedure goes. She told the story:
...of three men from the nearby village or Archar, who had found a golden coin and sold it to smugglers for 1,500 euro, which equals the amount of four monthly average salaries in Bulgaria. "Months later the same coin was sold in Germany at a price many times higher," Luka said. "But it is not only the looters with the shovels who are responsible," Luka said, "there are a lot of people up the chain, and they enjoy the highest protection."
In other words, not the looters but the dealers and collectors who buy from them. It is well worth taking note of just with whom it is that the middlemen and dealers who handle this material are themselves doing business. Again Krasmira Luka has been looking into what has been happening on her doorstep: 
Over the last two decades, she said, organized crime groups have constantly bribed police officers, prosecutors and local officials who have sheltered their illegal activities. Those who usually get caught and sentenced, however, are from the lowest level of the well-organized scheme. With more than 50 percent of the 2,700 inhabitants of Archar jobless, Mayor Emil Georgiev seems unable to stop the daily attacks of looters seeking the treasure that is supposed to change their life. "Usually they work late at night or at weekends or holidays," the mayor said, adding that some 20 villagers have been convicted over the last year and ordered to serve different terms of probation by performing community service.
Recently the local government received government funds that providing jobs for eight people to work as guards at the archaeological site, but this is clearly an inadequate number to protect such a large area.


Sources:
Veselin Toshkov, 'Treasure hunters strip Bulgaria of its ancient treasures, destroying a cultural legacy', Associated Press 26th October 2012.

Veselin Toshkov, 'Bulgaria Treasure Hunters Loot Ancient Rataria Site' Huffington Post , 26th October 2012. 

Bulgaria: Artefact Collector's Paradise

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The article by Veselin Toshkov ('Treasure hunters strip Bulgaria of its ancient treasures, destroying a cultural legacy', Associated Press 26th October 2012 - see the post below) discusses the terrible devastation caused to Bulgaria's archaeological heritage by commercial looting to fuel the international antiquities market, bot the high end (sculptures and inscriptions) as well as the trade in so-called "minor" artefacts sold as bulk lots by weight like so many potatoes. The country has a rich heritage and when  it is damaged, we are all the losers:  

Bulgaria hosts some of the most unique and vulnerable cultural resources in Europe. In addition to the numerous Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age settlement mounds, there are significant remains of Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine urban centers. Perhaps most notable among Bulgarian antiquities are the remains of the Thracians, a powerful warrior kingdom conquered only by Alexander the Great and the Roman Empire. The best known Thracian remains in Bulgaria are tombs and burial mounds which contain stunning gold and silver work.
All this is of course hotly desired by collectors all over the world. 

 
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