Below are notable events in archaeology that occurred in 1897.
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Explorations
edit- Rudolf Ernst Brünnow and Alfred von Domaszewski begin a two-year expedition to the Arabian Peninsula, including Petra.
Excavations
edit- Excavation of Glastonbury Lake Village by Arthur Bulleid and Harold St George Gray begins.
- Maud Cunnington carries out her first excavations in the Devizes area of England.
- Excavation of the first Mycenaean chamber tombs in Kolonaki at Thebes, Greece, by Dimitrios Filios.[1]
- Excavation of Nekhen in Egypt begins (continues to 1899).
- Excavation of Susa in Iran by a French expedition led by Jacques de Morgan begins (continues to 1911).
Finds
edit- May - Yde Girl, a bog body, is discovered in the village of Yde, The Netherlands.[2]
- August 4 - The "Lady of Elche" Iberian sculpture (4th century BCE) is found at L'Alcúdia near Elche in Spain.
- Coligny calendar.
- Alekanovo inscription.
- Silver and gold tubes of the Maykop culture from a burial mound in Armenia, interpreted in 2022 as drinking straws for communal beer consumption.[3]
Events
edit- February 18 - Conclusion of the Benin Expedition of 1897, leading to the Benin Bronzes being carried off to London.
Publications
edit- William Copeland Borlase - The Dolmens of Ireland: their distribution, structural characteristics, and affinities in other countries, together with the folklore attaching to them; supplemented by considerations on the anthropology, ethnology, and traditions of the Irish people (3 vols, London).
Births
edit- June 1 - Yang Zhongjian, father of Chinese vertebrate paleontology (d. 1979).
- August 21 - Victor Erle Nash-Williams, Welsh archaeologist (d. 1955).[4]
- October 30 - Einar Gjerstad, Swedish archaeologist of the ancient Mediterranean (d. 1988).
Deaths
edit- May 5 - James Theodore Bent, English explorer, archaeologist and author (b. 1852).
- May 21 - Augustus Wollaston Franks, English antiquarian (b. 1826).
References
edit- ^ "The scientific work". Archaeological Museum of Thebes. Retrieved 2017-11-23.
- ^ "The Yde Girl - Drents Museum". drentsmuseum.nl. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
- ^ Bower, Bruce (2022-01-19). "Gold and silver tubes in a Russian museum are the oldest known drinking straws". Science News. Retrieved 2022-01-21.
- ^ "Nash-Williams, Victor Erle". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. The National Library of Wales. Retrieved 13 November 2017.