THE THESPROTIA EXPEDITION
A Regional,
Interdisciplinary Survey Project
in Northwestern Greece
The preliminary results of the
first two seasons of the Thesprotia Expedition are as follows.
I.
Archaeological survey
A
total area of 2.2 km2 at the very bottom of the Kokytos valley and the lowest
surrounding slopes was intensively surveyed during the first two years. In the
process, we documented 27 places of special interest, most of which constitute
archaeological sites. Concurrently with the survey work, the finds from 2004 and
2005 were intensively studied by visiting scholars in July 2005. An initial
outline of the valley’s settlement history is now starting to take form, and
preliminary answers to some of the questions that we posed before starting the
project are beginning to emerge.
The Prehistory of the Kokytos Valley
The Kokytos Valley in Classical and Roman
Times
Medieval and later finds
II.
Geo-archaeological survey
A
geo-archaeological survey has been conducted by Mika Lavento. Soil samples from
all the sites have been taken to Helsinki in order to be analysed at the
University’s Department of Archaeology. The texture, phosphorus content,
loss-on-ignition, and redox potential of these soil samples will be determined
in order to gain information about the nature of individual settlements and
changes in the environment.
The
partly buried settlement below the southern walls of Agios Donatos of Zervochori
has also studied with the help of a hand auger, revealing that cultural layers
have been covered by later material. These cultural layers will be dated with
the help of the Carbon-14 process, thus giving valuable information about the
history of the valley’s sedimentation.
III.
Historical research
After having collected all
published ancient and Byzantine historical sources for the area in 2004, the
historical research for 2005 concentrated on: (1) collecting and studying the
Roman inscriptions from the city of Photike; and (2) collecting archival sources
in Venice and Istanbul.
Of
the epigraphical monuments examined by Erkki Sironen, three were previously
unpublished. The most interesting inscriptions are a bilingual grave altar from
the second century AD and a monumental Latin grave inscription from the first
century AD. In addition, a previously unpublished Ottoman grave inscription from
the nineteenth century was documented.
Mika Hakkarainen collects
information in the Archivio di Stato di Venezia in Venice about Venetian
involvement in northwestern Greece in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
centuries. This was a period of great changes in our survey area. Shortly after
the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, the Venetians conquered and held parts of
Thesprotia for some years. Although Venice was eventually obliged to cede the
territory it had conquered, its brief involvement still led the local
inhabitants to hope for
liberation
from the Turks. After secret negotiations with Spain, they rose against the
Turks in 1611 under the leadership of Dionysios Philosophos, bishop of Trikka.
The uprising was savagely crushed. According to local tradition, people then
fled to the islands of Paxos and Kerkyra in order to start a new life.
Thesprotia may very well have become more Albanised and Islamised as new
settlers moved in after 1611. This is, at least, our working hypothesis; we hope
that Evangelia Balta will find evidence to support it in the Ottoman taxation
documents in the Başbakanlik Archives in Istanbul.
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