·
Study of results from
a perspective of frontier analysis in terms of: Definition, linearity and
movement of frontiers over time (movement, fluidity); Territoriality (what was
being divided); Permeability (crossing the frontier, hot and cold frontier?);
Cultural borders (Daunian/Lucanian, Roman divisions, religious divisions in Late
Antiquity).
·
Publication of
results.
The area concerned is known as “The Vulture”, in the northern part of the
Italian Regione of Basilicata. A virtual terra incognita in terms of
archaeology, the proximity of the Vulture to the Daunian region of northernmost
Basilicata, to the Ofanto valley (a conduit for trade across the Italian
peninsula from Puglia to Campania) and to the Lucanian heartland in the south
made it the "gateway to the mountains", from the time of the arrival of
Neolithic agricultural technologies in the 7th millennium BC, down to the
protohistoric and historical periods. The material remains of extensive
settlement in the Daunian region and the Ofanto valley, as well as the remains
of trade and other contacts, have been shown to have been astonishingly
precocious and intense.
Although little archaeological information has been published about the Rionero/Atella
zone, there is good reason to suspect that it possessed an important settlement
site during the Iron Age, and acted as a fluid frontier zone for most of the 1st
millennium BC and 1st millennium AD. This may be made clear from the number of
burials excavated illegally in the area in the 19th century. The contents of
those tombs, and their form, suggest Lucanian settlement in the area in the 4th
century BC. Sporadic finds (such as those made by Richard Fletcher at Torre
degli Embrici) indicate both Peuketiante and Daunian cultural contact in the
centuries prior to Lucanian infiltration into the zone (although it is unclear
which group was dominant, if either). After Roman conquest in the 3rd century BC
the Vulture underwent a number of changes; certainly from the Republican period
onwards (2nd century BC) baths and the large villa for intensive agricultural
production (villa rustica) seem to have been the most common type of structure –
such as those at Ruoti, Atella and Torre degli Embrici. Late Roman evidence both
at Ruoti and Torre degli Embrici indicate continuity after the fall of the
Western Empire and the latter suggests stability into the 7th century AD.
The identification of aqueducts in the area should also be possible using
survey. The area of the Vulture was probably always famous for the spring waters
of the area, particularly in the Roman period. M. Gualtieri has published a map
showing the centrality of the Vulture in the aqueduct system of northern
Basilicata – which is hardly surprising in the light of the popularity even now
of spring waters from the Vulture. It is hoped that the aqueducts can be
properly identified and mapped, which in turn could lead to the identification
of further sites since such aqueducts will invariably indicate as much.
The strategic importance of the Vulture, in military and economic terms, is
presumably what lies behind the frequent mentions of the area in ancient and
medieval literature (including Horace), mainly in terms of Venosa and Melfi
directly to the east and north of the proposed zone of investigation. The zone
is very fertile in agricultural terms, and has certainly has been very
productive in the past. One may assume that the Vulture possessed a primate
centre for the valley stretching between the volcano and Lagopesole in the first
millennium BC, since unpublished archaeological traces from the area suggest a
pre-Roman settlement of some importance.
2010 Season: Tomb Closing Photo