Anthropology
Related: About this forumRare Roman mosaic depicting The Iliad found in British farm field
Nov. 25 (UPI) -- A rare Roman mosaic depicting Homer's The Iliad has been discovered in a British farm field, marking one of the most remarkable finds of its kind, researchers announced Thursday.
The mosaic found beneath a farmer's field in Rutland is only one of a handful from across Europe, according to the University of Leicester archeologists who unearthed the find.
On Thursday, Historic England recommended the site be temporarily protected by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport.
Jim Irvine, son of landowner Brian Naylor, discovered the site during the lockdown. He used satellite imagery to spot a "clear crop mark." Since then, it's been investigated by the university along with Historic England and Rutland county council.
Read more: https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2021/11/25/rare-Roman-mosaic-Homers-Iliad/8851637862276/
bucolic_frolic
(47,058 posts)Good thing it's in the UK. If it were in the US they'd all be in court suing for development rights.
sarge43
(29,158 posts)Mira
(22,480 posts)we'd be trying to drill for oil
PatSeg
(49,726 posts)and they have so much of it to protect.
Dark n Stormy Knight
(10,031 posts)in the UK.
Also, so different from here in the US, is the the right to roam.
In the United Kingdom, the freedom to walk through private land is known as the right to roam. The movement to win this right was started in the 1930s by a rebellious group of young people who called themselves ramblers and spent their days working in the factories of Manchester, England.
(snip)
England did not have a national park system at this time, and the trails that people could access were extremely limited. They walked where they could and trespassed where they couldnt. They climbed over fences and tried to stay hidden from the gamekeepers. And all over England, so-called rambling clubs started to form. And in polluted, industrial 1930s Manchester, there was a rambling club called the British Workers Sports Federation and a charismatic member named Benny Rothman.
(snip)
One day, a few people from Bennys group were walking in the hills near Manchester, but they were soon chased off by gamekeepers employed by the landowner. Benny and the other ramblers thought: if there were enough of us they couldnt stop us. Lets get a huge group together and walk onto this mountain called Kinder Scout.
A motley crew of hikers gathered at the base of the mountain, and Benny Rothman talked about the rights they had lost during the enclosure acts. He emphasized that the trespass on Kinder Scout was meant to be peaceful. And with that, the group set off up the mountain. At some point, the hikers did have a small scuffle with some gamekeepers, but the keepers backed off after they realized they were outnumbered.
(snip)
The young ramblers of Manchester had set in motion changes that would transform how England thinks about private property. The Kinder Scout trespass has been described as one of the most successful acts of civil disobedience ever in the history of the country.
jeffreyi
(2,061 posts)tavernier
(13,258 posts)What a rich experience for the students and the property owner!
TexasTowelie
(116,892 posts)I agree that everyone involved will gain from locating this find.