Sunday, June 11, 2023

CAN NEW RESEARCH METHODS REDISCOVER PUERTO BAGDAD?

(Ed.'s Note: One of our eight readers came upon this article on the CBC website and wondered whether these new archeological methods could find the site and layout of  Puerto Bagdad, a thriving smuggler port community that was established on the south side of the river in 1848 and struck by successive hurricanes starting in 1874 and finally wiped out in 1889. At it's height, some historians estimate the cosmopolitan population there at somewhere about 25,000. Bagdad was the main port for smuggled confederate cotton to run the Union blockade during the U.S. Civil War and historians say that as many as 300 ships from England and other European nations were anchored off the coast of Bagdad awaiting shipments of the precious fiber. While many claimed it was filled with criminals, some accounts say there might have been as many as seven churches in the town.)

By Sheena Goodyear
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

Rungholt was once a booming trade town where residents reaped profits from the land's bountiful natural resources – until a changing climate and rising sea levels ripped it all away.

The story may sound eerily familiar, but it happened 661 years ago.

Now – thanks to advancements in technology that allow scientists to identify structures buried deep beneath the Earth's surface – researchers are learning more about this medieval city that's been long buried off the coast of Germany.

"This is really a major problem we are facing today in many places of the world with rising sea levels," says Bente Majchczack, an archeologist from Germany's Kiel University who is helping to map the ancient town.

"We can see how the people lived there, and how they reacted — and how they ultimately failed — in maintaining this landscape," he told As It Happens guest host Helen Mann.

Atlantis of the North Sea

Rungholt was a 12th-century Frisian colony that, in the years since its destruction, has gained an almost mythical status. It's widely known as "the Atlantis of the North Sea" – much to Majchczack's chagrin.

But while Atlantis is, as far as anyone knows, fictional, Majchczack says Rungholt was a very real Medieval trading hub that met a grisly fate in 1362 when a powerful storm surge completely submerged it.

Its remnants, he says, are buried beneath the muddy flats near the German island of Hallig Südfall in the Wadden Sea.

That's where he and a team of researchers, funded by the German Research Foundation, are using a combination of geoscientific and archaeological methods to paint a picture of the town.

"We're doing a magnetic survey," he said. "And this enables us to find all these buried structures and to map them out really in a black and white map where we can see what's left of the Middle Ages in this area."
Two people, photographed from a distance, push a wheeled cart contraption along vast, water-covered mudflats.
The Rungholt Project team is using what archeologist Bente Majchczack calls a 'cart with the magnetic probes' to map a long-buried medieval city. (Dirk Bienen-Scholt)
So far, the team has mapped about 10 square kilometers, including 54 terps – or artificial mounds upon which medieval settlements were built – as well as systematic drainage systems, a sea dike with a tidal gate harbor and two small churches.

But they came upon their most significant discovery last month – foundations of what they believe was a 40-by-15 meter church built upon a previously unknown two kilometer long chain of terps. This was likely the town's central church, and a major community hub.

Kiel University geophysicist Dennis Wilken had the eureka moment.

"He was pushing the cart with the magnetic probes and he had found a new terp and was looking at the measurements … and then he realized what he was seeing on the screen," Majchczack said.

"I wasn't there. But a colleague said, 'And suddenly, he started dancing.' So ... it was really a very, very special moment."

To read rest of post, click on link: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/rungholt-church-discovery-1.6870278

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

The intense coverage of Trump’s legal difficulties in recent years may have made last week’s indictment feel inevitable to many people, but an indictment is just the start of the process of a criminal prosecution — one that can take many twists and turns in an unusual case.

This one is about as unusual as it gets along pretty much every conceivable dimension. As damning as the allegations in the indictment appear, we are a long way off from the end of this process, which will now be a central issue in the 2024 campaign.

Trump, in a very real sense, is running for his life.


Anonymous said...

lets dance

Anonymous said...

(As damning as the allegations in the indictment appear, we are a long way off from the end of this process)

That orange fatass wants to start a civil war. And I'm thinking it's probably going to happen.

Eldelasprietas.

Anonymous said...

muskies is interested, wants to ask for that area to be given to him FREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE. wants to become the first trillionaire in the universe...
y los enanos are ready to give it to him gratis.

Anonymous said...

Elon Musk, the genius CEO has been the talk of the town lately. His most recent controversy is a genius electricity saving idea, HE WANTS TO PURCHASE PUB FROM THE CITY, FOR A PENNEY and run it with AAA (triple a) batteries. rechargeables of course.

Anonymous said...

Sticking to the topic of the article, I plan to follow-up on the story to maybe find some historical story related to my family, who ran the hotel in
Bagdad in those days. It only matters to people who are actually related to the Tamayo's whose ancestor was a major part of the existence or the city.

Good story and I will look into the references made within the article cause my tatarahuelo died in that storm.

Anonymous said...

I heard that all the deeds to the valley are buried there by a pinche gringo of course, so take a couple of shovels.buena suerte

rita