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How to Re-Place Carthaginian Votive Dedications into Context

Friends of ASOR present the next webinar of the 2024-2025 season on April 2, 2025, at 2:00 pm EDT, presented by Dr. Brien Garnand. This webinar will be free and open to the public. Registration through Zoom (with a valid email address) is required. This webinar will be recorded and all registrants will be sent a recording link in the days following the webinar.

Upcoming anniversaries of American excavations offer an opportunity to reassess the importance of Carthage, famous for its contacts and conflicts with Greeks and Romans across the Mediterranean and infamous for its alleged ritual infanticide. Two American teams conducted excavations at the city’s liminal open-air votive precinct, where one finds cremated infant remains buried in urns beneath stone memorials bearing dedications to the Mistress, Tinnit Visage-of-Ba‘l, and to the Lord, Ba‘l Hammon.

The Carthaginian precinct remained in use from the city’s foundation (ca.800 BCE) until its destruction by Rome (146 BCE). Thousands of inscribed stelae found there provide the vast majority ( > 90%) of the Phoenician-Punic epigraphic corpus and provide evidence for the development of alphabetic writing; uninscribed stelae add to iconographic repertoires; and key amulet and urn typologies arise from this site. In sum, no Phoenician precinct stands anywhere near equal in importance to this singular sanctuary, one of the most studied and least understood cultural features of Phoenician-Punic society. Interpretation of the site remains difficult—in no small part due to a lack of stratigraphic data since final reports have not been forthcoming.

The centennial and golden anniversaries of American excavations fast approach—one hundred years ago, F. W. Kelsey of the University of Michigan led a campaign under the auspices of the AIA (1925); fifty years ago, L. E. Stager of University of Chicago led another under the auspices of ASOR (1976-1979). Both teams excavated in the same propriété Regulus-Salammbô, with Stager’s Punic Project excavations picking up where Kelsey had left off. Even before the American campaigns, many stelae had already been extracted through clandestine or amateur excavation, including hasty extractions made just before Kelsey arrived on site, depriving us of their context. Nevertheless, our archival research at the University of Michigan has uncovered excavation records that, in combination with the Punic Project records, allow us to locate stela in plan and section. We have made practice scans of stelae, in the Netherlands and Denmark, in anticipation of scanning individual stela now held in Tunisian museum store rooms. This talk will demonstrate how 3D models of individual stelae can be replaced into their original positions by using archival site plans and annotated photographs and in reference to the positions of those stelae still in situ, and it will demonstrate how we can create a precise scale model of the Regulus-Salammbô sector.

Brien Garnand is a research associate of the Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East (HMANE) and a visiting researcher at the Netherlands Institute for the Near East (NINO), currently a member of a research group at the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies (IIAS). He has contributed to the final excavation report from the ASOR Punic Project Carthage excavations since 1993, recently co-editing a preview of that report in a thematic volume of the Journal of Ancient History (Infants as Votive Offerings 2023). Besides cataloging artifacts in the basement of the HMANE and in the store rooms of the Musée national de Carthage, he has scoured the archives of the F. W. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology at the University of Michigan and the J. B. Chabot archives at the Université catholique de Louvain in preparation for an exhibition timed to correspond with the issue of the Punic Project final report on the the 50th/100th anniversaries of American excavations. He once served as assistant director of the Stanford University Excavations at Mt. Polizzo in Sicily, and he has extensive experience in North Africa, both in field survey (Project Jerba—University of Pennsylvania/AAR/INP) and in excavation (Carthage Bir Messaouda—University of Amsterdam/INP). His current research focuses on votive stelae, both putting the formulaic-poetic language of Phoenician inscriptions into the context of Ancient Near Eastern literature and putting the sanctuary of Tinnit and Ba‘l in Carthage into the context of votive precincts across the Mediterranean. A mobility grant from NINO (2022) allowed him to test 3D scanning methods, and a recent ASOR Dar Ben Gacem fellowship (2023) supported a research visit to the Carthage precinct where he prepared a preliminary 3D site model.

SPONSOR A WEBINAR!

Several levels of support from $50-$1,000 are available. Proceeds go towards membership scholarships and towards increasing ASOR’s virtual resources. Each sponsorship is tax-deductible and includes benefits! Sponsor a webinar here. 

WHY SPONSOR ONLY ONE?

Season Sponsorships are also available from the ASOR Online Store here!

Click here for more information on the benefits of becoming a season sponsor or sponsoring a single webinar.

BROWSE THE NEWS ARCHIVE

  • 2025 Grant & Fellowship Awardees
  • New ASOR-Affiliated Projects 2025
  • FOA Webinar: Amy Gansell
  • Fieldwork Report: Rubar Yavuz

Latest Posts from @ASORResearch

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Initiating and supporting research of the history and cultures of the Near East and wider Mediterranean world.


Our newest Annual of ASOR, Ethics in Archaeologica
Our newest Annual of ASOR, Ethics in Archaeological Practice from editors Sarah Costello and Sarah Lepinski, is now available for purchase at a discounted price for ASOR members. The volume raises contemporary ethical questions around race, gender, disability, climate change, and cultural heritage that are pressing and relevant to archaeology students and professionals worldwide. Learn more by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR is pleased to announce 12 new field and publi
ASOR is pleased to announce 12 new field and publication projects have received ASOR affiliation since last summer. These projects cover sites in Italy, Iraq, Jordan, Turkey, Greece, Israel, and Cyprus. Learn more about these new ASOR-affiliated projects by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR invites Roundtable Proposals for the 2025 Ann
ASOR invites Roundtable Proposals for the 2025 Annual Meeting. Roundtables are an ideal format for informal discussion on topics of general interest in the field, collaboration on publication projects or future member-organized sessions relevant to meeting attendees. Proposals of 250 words or less may be submitted by members and exhibitors attending the 2025 Annual Meeting in-person. Learn more and submit your roundtable proposal by clicking the link in our bio.


Join us for our LAST FOA Webinar of the season: "T
Join us for our LAST FOA Webinar of the season: "The Queens of Nimrud’s Northwest Palace: Beauty, Power, and Presence in the Neo-Assyrian World, c. 865–705 BCE," presented by Dr. Amy Gansell on Wednesday, May 14th at 7:00pm ET. Nearly three thousand years ago, at the ancient site of Nimrud, a succession of ten Neo-Assyrian kings reigned in collaboration with their queens from the magnificence of the Northwest Palace, the seat of the empire. Too often overshadowed by the well documented legacy of Neo-Assyrian kings, this presentation illuminates the queens who reigned with them. Register for the free lecture by clicking the link in our bio.
#FOAWebinars


Disability has always been a part of human history
Disability has always been a part of human history, including in ancient Egypt. However, until recently the subject has rarely been studied in Egyptology or in a broader ancient world studies context. Read more about disability in Ancient Egypt in the newest ANE Today by Alexandra Morris by clicking the link in our bio.
#ANEToday


Make sure to join us TOMORROW at 2:00pm ET for our
Make sure to join us TOMORROW at 2:00pm ET for our FOA Webinar, "A Window on the Silk Road: Archaeology in Medieval Armenia," presented by Dr. Kate Franklin. You can still register by clicking the link in our bio. #FOAWebinars


Rubar Yavuz received a 2024 Eric and Carol Meyers
Rubar Yavuz received a 2024 Eric and Carol Meyers Fieldwork Scholarship to excavate with the Tayinat Archaeological Project in the Amuq Valley, Turkey. Read about Rubar's experience excavating an Iron Age pavement at the site by clicking the link in our bio.


Join us in Boston for ASOR’s 2025 Annual Meeting
Join us in Boston for ASOR’s 2025 Annual Meeting, November 19-22, at the Hilton Boston Park Plaza. ASOR has negotiated a discounted rate of $189 (plus tax), and the destination fee is waived for ASOR attendees. Don’t miss your chance to stay at this Boston landmark hotel at ASOR’s great rate – make your reservation online by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR is celebrating its 125th anniversary, but the
ASOR is celebrating its 125th anniversary, but the celebration isn't complete without you, our members! Please fill out our short Call for Memories and send us your favorite ASOR-related anecdotes, memories, and photos to help us honor 125 years of being a flagship for archaeology, history, and cultural heritage in the Middle East and wider Mediterranean. We’ll be putting together a slideshow presentation of your favorite ASOR moments for our anniversary celebration during this year’s Annual Meeting in Boston. Click the link in our bio.


Read the latest fieldwork report from Brady Hill.
Read the latest fieldwork report from Brady Hill. Brady received a 2024 G. Ernest Wright Fieldwork Scholarship to excavate at the site of Kani Shaie in Iraqi Kurdistan. Read about his experience recording pottery in the "Lower Town" by clicking the link in our bio.


Make sure to register for our next FOA Webinar: "A
Make sure to register for our next FOA Webinar: "A Window on the Silk Road: Archaeology in Medieval Armenia," presented by Dr. Kate Franklin on Wednesday, April 30th at 2:00pm ET. To imagine the medieval Silk Road is to conjure up images of exotic commerce: camel caravans crossing wind-swept dunes, bustling city bazaars, silks and spices spilling from saddlebags. Drawing on textual, architectural and archaeological evidence, this talk explores the social lives of people living not in the city centers of medieval commerce, but in the places in-between, along the road. Sign up for the free lecture by clicking the link in our bio.
#FOAWebinars


Happy World Heritage Day! In honor of the current
Happy World Heritage Day! In honor of the current theme, “Disaster and Conflict Resilient Heritage – Preparedness, Response and Recovery,” today is a fitting day to explore ASOR’s free tutorials on documentation and mapping software for heritage protection. Knowledge is strength! https://www.asor.org/chi/chi-tutorials #WorldHeritageDay


Most of our approaches to identity in antiquity fi
Most of our approaches to identity in antiquity fixate upon a binary, constructed in modern scholarship. But individuals embrace multiple collective identities, whether social, ideological, or kin-related. So how should we approach the complexity of such identities in antiquity? Read the newest ANE Today by Aaron Burke by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR was honored to welcome our Libyan colleagues,
ASOR was honored to welcome our Libyan colleagues, Dr. Mohammed Faraj Mohammed Al-Fallos (Chairman, Board of Directors, Department of Antiquities), Mr. Ashraf Mohammed Eletaeb (Director, Department of International Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Mr. Rabi’i Yousef Milad (Advisor, Department of International Law and Treaties, Ministry of Foreign Affairs), and Dr. Ahmad Emrage (Member, Board of Directors, Department of Antiquities) to our office in Alexandria on Monday for a presentation on ASOR’s Cultural Heritage Initiatives and a productive discussion on past and future collaborations to protect, preserve, and promote Libyan cultural heritage.

Following our meeting in Alexandria, we all shared a fascinating tour of the Library of Congress. Thank you very much to Dr. Muhannad Salhi of the African and Middle Eastern Division for an enlightening conversation about the long history of connections between the US and Libya, the contents and management of the Library’s collection, and the story behind the construction and decoration of the Library of Congress building. #CulturalHeritage #ASORCHI


A reminder to check out ASOR's spring book sale fo
A reminder to check out ASOR's spring book sale for publications 2+ years old! ASOR members (with a US mailing address) can purchase ASOR books at the discounted price of $15.00 through April 31, 2025. Click the link in our bio for a full list of available title.


Tomorrow is the last day to save on Annual Meeting
Tomorrow is the last day to save on Annual Meeting registration at the lowest Early Bird pricing. If you are planning to join us in Boston, November 19-22, save by registering before the Early Bird rates fly away. We are looking forward to celebrating ASOR’s 125th Anniversary in Boston and hope to see you there!


Registration is NOW OPEN! Join our first-ever Frie
Registration is NOW OPEN! Join our first-ever Friends of ASOR tour in Chicago on September 18 and 19 for an exclusive behind-the-scenes experience. We will be kicking off our two-day jaunt with the grand opening of a special exhibit on Megiddo at the iconic Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures, followed by walking tours, and day two will be full of visits to the Greek, Roman, and Egyptian galleries at the impressive Art Institute of Chicago and the renowned Field Museum of Natural History, home to the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton. Registration and details can be found by clicking the link in our bio.


Check out the March issue of Near Eastern Archaeol
Check out the March issue of Near Eastern Archaeology 88.1, with fascinating articles of archaeological studies from Cyprus, Iran, Armenia, and Jordan. Read the Table of Contents by clicking the link in our bio.


Do you know of a great book on the ancient Near Ea
Do you know of a great book on the ancient Near East and eastern Mediterranean published in the last two years? Nominate it for a Book Award today! The ASOR Honors & Awards Committee is proud to give three awards annually: the Frank Moore Cross Award, the Nancy Lapp Popular Book Award, and the G. Ernest Wright Award. Nominations are due by April 28. For more information on each award and to access the nomination form, click the link in our bio.


Riley Stockton received a 2024 P.E. MacAllister Fi
Riley Stockton received a 2024 P.E. MacAllister Fieldwork Scholarship to excavate at the military fortification site of Vigla in Cyprus. Read about Riley's experience excavating a trench from start to finish by clicking the link in our bio.



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