Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord

New Osrhoene Mosaics Discovered In Situ in Northern Syria In 2017, a mosaic was discovered in a plain near Tell Shioukh Tehtani, located 60 km northeast of Aleppo in the Euphrates Valley and is known for remains from the Bronze Age found by an Italian-Syrian archaeological mission. The mosaic was f...

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Main Authors: Komait ABDALLAH, Alain DESREUMAUX, Mohamad al-KAID
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bursa Uludağ University Mosaic Research Centre 2020-11-01
Series:Journal of Mosaic Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1245877
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spelling doaj-b853e8e2b47e40c9bd44a2ece24fcc8e2021-03-23T07:12:54ZdeuBursa Uludağ University Mosaic Research CentreJournal of Mosaic Research1309-047X2619-91652020-11-011313410.26658/jmr.782048Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord Komait ABDALLAH0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9523-9991Alain DESREUMAUX1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-3529Mohamad al-KAID2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1572-0388Chercheur associé à AOROC/ENS-Paris, FranceDirecteur de recherche émérite au CNRS (UMR Orient & Méditerranée)-Paris, FranceRestaurateur à la DGAMS-Damas, SyrieNew Osrhoene Mosaics Discovered In Situ in Northern Syria In 2017, a mosaic was discovered in a plain near Tell Shioukh Tehtani, located 60 km northeast of Aleppo in the Euphrates Valley and is known for remains from the Bronze Age found by an Italian-Syrian archaeological mission. The mosaic was found during a clandestine excavation carried out before 2017. The Directorate of Antiquity in Damascus which was informed by the local society sent a team of restorers who excavated and documented all the floor mosaic before removing it to the service of antiquity at Al-Hassake province. The work of the restorers has shown that this mosaic is the remains of the pavements of a private villa. The drawing plan done by the restorers shows a part of this building composed of several rooms and a corridor. All these parts are paved with mosaics, some of them was in situ, others were looted. The apse main room is paved with a mosaic around a basin in the center; there remains only one carpet figured by the Achilles scene in Skyros; the figures are identified by inscriptions in Syriac. In another room, there is a mosaic around a basin in the center representing a foliage of vine coming out of the vases with four Eros. The mosaic of the corridor is decorated with geometric patterns. The stylistic study shows that these mosaics are very close to those found at Edessa (Urfa) and dated to the 3rd century AD. This mosaic has an exceptional importance because, on the one hand, it attests the diffusion of the Edessa mosaics workshops outside the city and its region, and on the other hand, it gives an idea on the decoration of the mosaics in the public buildings in this region in Roman times.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1245877syriaosrhoenemosaicsyriacmythology
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Komait ABDALLAH
Alain DESREUMAUX
Mohamad al-KAID
spellingShingle Komait ABDALLAH
Alain DESREUMAUX
Mohamad al-KAID
Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
Journal of Mosaic Research
syria
osrhoene
mosaic
syriac
mythology
author_facet Komait ABDALLAH
Alain DESREUMAUX
Mohamad al-KAID
author_sort Komait ABDALLAH
title Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
title_short Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
title_full Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
title_fullStr Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
title_full_unstemmed Nouvelles mosaïques d’Osrhoène découvertes in situ en Syrie du nord
title_sort nouvelles mosaïques d’osrhoène découvertes in situ en syrie du nord
publisher Bursa Uludağ University Mosaic Research Centre
series Journal of Mosaic Research
issn 1309-047X
2619-9165
publishDate 2020-11-01
description New Osrhoene Mosaics Discovered In Situ in Northern Syria In 2017, a mosaic was discovered in a plain near Tell Shioukh Tehtani, located 60 km northeast of Aleppo in the Euphrates Valley and is known for remains from the Bronze Age found by an Italian-Syrian archaeological mission. The mosaic was found during a clandestine excavation carried out before 2017. The Directorate of Antiquity in Damascus which was informed by the local society sent a team of restorers who excavated and documented all the floor mosaic before removing it to the service of antiquity at Al-Hassake province. The work of the restorers has shown that this mosaic is the remains of the pavements of a private villa. The drawing plan done by the restorers shows a part of this building composed of several rooms and a corridor. All these parts are paved with mosaics, some of them was in situ, others were looted. The apse main room is paved with a mosaic around a basin in the center; there remains only one carpet figured by the Achilles scene in Skyros; the figures are identified by inscriptions in Syriac. In another room, there is a mosaic around a basin in the center representing a foliage of vine coming out of the vases with four Eros. The mosaic of the corridor is decorated with geometric patterns. The stylistic study shows that these mosaics are very close to those found at Edessa (Urfa) and dated to the 3rd century AD. This mosaic has an exceptional importance because, on the one hand, it attests the diffusion of the Edessa mosaics workshops outside the city and its region, and on the other hand, it gives an idea on the decoration of the mosaics in the public buildings in this region in Roman times.
topic syria
osrhoene
mosaic
syriac
mythology
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/1245877
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AT mohamadalkaid nouvellesmosaiquesdosrhoenedecouvertesinsituensyriedunord
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