Saturday, January 10, 2009

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the Iron Age in the separation of body and Alma

Archaeologists in southeastern Turkey have discovered a carved stone slab of the Iron Age to provide written evidence, the first in the region, that the people of that time believed that the soul could be separated from the body.

An expedition of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago found the slab of basalt about 350 kilograms, about one meter high and about two feet wide, Zincirli, site of the ancient city of Sam ' al. Once capital of a prosperous kingdom, is now one of the archaeological sites under excavation major Hierro.La Age slab is the first of its kind to be found intact in its original location, allowing scholars to learn about the customs funeral and life in the eighth century BC At that time, vast empires emerged in the ancient Middle East, and cultures like the Israelites and the Phoenicians were part of a great mix activa.El man who is represented in the slab was probably burned practice Judaism and other religions reject due to a belief in the unity between body and soul. According to the inscription, the soul of the deceased lay in the small monolith.

"The slab is almost intact. It is unique in its combination of textual and pictorial representations, and thus provides an important contribution to understanding the culture and ancient language," says David Schloen, director of the issue of the University of Chicago Zincirli.Unos German archaeologists first excavated at the site of 40 hectares in the decade of 1890, and unearthed a number of buildings in the city, such as gateways to the same, huge walls protecting it, and palaces. Currently on display several royal inscriptions and other pieces in museums in Istanbul and Berlin. Schloen and his team at the University of Chicago Zincirli have excavated for two months every year since 2006.Zincirli is an extraordinary site. Because no other cities were built above it, the archaeologists have just below the surface excellent pieces of the Iron Age. The value is even higher due to the fact that it is rare to have written evidence with archaeological and artistic evidence of the Iron Age. Having all this information helps an archaeologist to study the ethnicity of the inhabitants, trade and migration, and the relationship of the groups that lived there.

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