Home
Learn More
Features & Pricing
Success Stories
Contact Us
Search Archives
PRWeb Direct
Submit Release
October 7, 2008
 
Industry Categories  
News by Country  
News by MSA  
Todays News  
Browse by Day  
PR Trackbacks™  
Featured Videos  
ViewNews™  
eBook Digests  
RSS  
PRWeb, a leader in online news and press release distribution, has been used by more than 40,000 organizations of all sizes to increase the visibility of their news, improve their search engine rankings and drive traffic to their Web site.
 
Close Move
All Press Releases for March 17, 2008 Subscribe to this News Feed      
 

The Sword In The Stone Yields New Evidence In The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great

In 2004 Andrew Chugg published the hypothesis that the corpse identified as St Mark the Evangelist, which was shipped to Venice from Alexandria in the early ninth century, might actually be the remains of Alexander the Great. At that time this suggestion rested mainly on circumstantial evidence, but now a large block of sculpture found embedded in the foundations of St Mark's Basilica in Venice just a few metres from the Saint's tomb has been independently identified as a funerary relief from a high status Macedonian tomb of the 3rd century BC.

(PRWEB) March 17, 2008 -- In 2004 Andrew Chugg published the hypothesis that the corpse identified as St Mark the Evangelist, which was shipped to Venice from Alexandria in the early ninth century, might actually be the remains of Alexander the Great. At that time this suggestion rested mainly on circumstantial evidence, but now a large block of sculpture found embedded in the foundations of St Mark's Basilica in Venice just a few metres from the Saint's tomb has been independently identified as a funerary relief from a high status Macedonian tomb of the 3rd century BC. Stone tests have revealed a fossil mix which seemed at first to suggest a Roman quarry near Trieste, but it has recently transpired that the stone used for the core blocks of the pyramid of Cheop's son at Abu Roash in Egypt is also remarkably similar. This pyramid began to be quarried for sculptural stone by Alexander's successors in Egypt, probably in order to embellish their monuments in Alexandria, including Alexander's tomb. Alexandria lies just 100 miles down the Nile from this mostly destroyed pyramid, which would have been the most convenient source of good quality stone for the city at the time.

The ancient sculptural block from the foundation of St Mark's in Venice is decorated with high relief representations of typically Macedonian arms, including a circular life-size shield decorated with a starburst symbol (the badge of Alexander's family), a long spear, a pair of greaves (shin armour) and a mysterious single-edged sword of a type known as a kopis, which is depicted slung diagonally from a tasselled belt on one side of the stone. In 1998 Eugenio Polito, an Italian academic expert on Greek and Roman armaments, identified this relief as typical of the decoration of high status Macedonian tombs in a monograph entitled Fulgentibus Armis. Polito dated the sculpture to the late 3rd century BC and speculated that the stone might have been brought to Venice as ballast from an ancient mausoleum in the eastern Mediterranean.

The stone tests conducted by the Laboratorio di Analisi dei Materiali Antichi at the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia showed that the limestone of the block contains numerous fossilised rudists, which are a type of ancient shellfish that went extinct at the same time as the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago. A Roman limestone quarry at Aurisina near Trieste yields stone containing such fossils, but so does a region near the apex of the Nile Delta at Abu Roash, where the pyramid of Radjedef was quarried for sculptural stone by Alexander's successors in Egypt.

Full details of these dramatic developments are given in a new book entitled The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great by Andrew Chugg, which has just been published and which also includes much other new information on the hunt for Alexander's tomb. It incorporates the author's several academic articles on the subject as Appendices. See Andrew Chugg's website at www.alexanderstomb.com with further details of the new book.

Note that the Jan-Feb 2008 online edition of Archaeology Magazine (Vol. 61, No. 1, p.13) has published a poll on the question of which tomb of an historical figure their readers would most like to see discovered. The winner by a huge margin was Alexander the Great, who scored 47% of 2,200 reader votes cast (the next highest were Genghis Khan and Cleopatra, both scoring 18%).

About the Author
In pursuit of a life-long interest in the subject of Alexander the Great, Andrew has been actively publishing on the subject for the past 7 years. He has been researching the history of Alexander's tomb since 1998, including visits to Alexandria and Saqqara in Egypt and culminating in the publication of his first book, The Lost Tomb of Alexander the Great, in November 2004. Appearances on the BBC Radio 4 Today program and in a National Geographic documentary followed. Andrew has also had academic articles on the tomb published in the classics journal Greece & Rome, in the American Journal of Ancient History and in the Ancient History Bulletin and has written pieces on the theme for the magazines Minerva and History Today. In September 2006 he addressed the Eroi conference in the University of Padua on the subject of Alexander's tomb and the Proceedings of that symposium have also just been published. Andrew read Natural Sciences at Trinity College in the University of Cambridge in the UK, graduating with honours in 1985. He currently works as a Technical Expert in Bristol in SW England.

Contact: Andrew Chugg at http://www.alexanderstomb.com/main/contact/index.html; Mobile: 44 (0)7974 332152.

# # #

Post Comment:
Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/pingpr.php/WmV0YS1TdW1tLVRoaXItRmFsdS1Ib3JyLVplcm8=

Technorati Tags

Bookmark -  Del.icio.us | Digg | Furl It | Spurl | RawSugar | Simpy | Shadows | Blink It | My Web


Other Releases by this Member
OPTIONS
Printer Friendly Version
Download PDF Version
Download Reader Version
BlogThis
ShareIt

Share The News

Submit this press release easily to any of these major bookmarking and social media sites.

CONTACT INFORMATION
Andrew Chugg
AMC Publications
44-7974-332152
Email us Here
ATTACHED FILES

Cover image of the new book

Cover image of the new book

The anciently sculpted block discovered in the foundations of St Marks in Venice.

The anciently sculpted block discovered in the foundations of St Marks in Venice.
The front face depicts a shield embellished with a central starburst symbol with a spear slanting above it and a pair of greaves to its right. On the left-hand side are the remains of the "Sword in the Stone", an ancient kopis slung diagonally from a tasselled sword-belt: such swords were among the most prominent props in Oliver Stone's 2004 movie biography of Alexander.

ABOUT PRESS RELEASES
If you have any questions regarding information in these press releases please contact the company listed in the press release. Please do not contact PRWeb. We will be unable to assist you with your inquiry. PRWeb disclaims any content contained in these releases. Our complete disclaimer appears here.
 
Disclaimer: If you have any questions regarding information in these press releases please contact the company listed in the press release.
Please do not contact PRWeb®. We will be unable to assist you with your inquiry.
PRWeb® disclaims any content contained in these releases. Our complete disclaimer appears here.

© Copyright 1997-2008, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Copyright