{"title":"非洲海洋考古","authors":"E. Pollard","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.419","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The continent of Africa has had a lengthy involvement in global maritime affairs and archaeological research with Middle Stone Age people using marine resources on the coasts of southern Africa, the Classical Pharos lighthouse of Alexandria, and Medieval Indian Ocean trade on the Swahili coast to the Atlantic triangular slave trade. Maritime archaeology is the identification and interpretation of physical traces left by people who use the seas and oceans. Middle Stone Age sites in South Africa such as Klasies River Mouth and Pinnacle Point have the earliest evidence for human use of marine resources including birds, marine mammals, and shellfish. This exploitation of marine resources was also coincident with the use of pigment, probably for symbolic behavior, as well as the production of bladelet stone tool technology. The extensive timespan of human activity on the coast around Africa occurred during changing relative sea levels due to Ice Ages and tectonic movement affecting the location of the coastline relative to maritime archaeological sites. Geomorphological changes may also take place over shorter periods such as the 1909 ce shipwreck of the Eduard Bohlen in Namibia lying c. one and half thousand feet landward of the shoreline.\n Ancestors of sea-going vessels have been recorded on rivers from dugout canoes excavated at Dufuna in northern Nigeria and the first plank-built boats, such as the Old Kingdom Royal Ship of Cheops of Khufu, found at the Giza pyramids, which imitated the shape of earlier papyrus rafts. Classical documents such as the Periplus Maris Erythraei and Ptolemy’s Geographia record Arabian and Indian trade with eastern Africa including ivory and rhinoceros horn and describe fishing practices using baskets and sewn-hull boats of the inhabitants. The increase in oceanic trade links here during the medieval period encouraged the formation of Swahili port cities such as Kilwa and Mombasa. The former was in a strategic position to manage much of the gold trade between Sofala in Mozambique and the northern Swahili Coast. Portuguese forts, constructed in the 15th and 16th centuries on their trade routes around Africa, such as Elmina Castle in Ghana, Fort Jesus in Mombasa, Kenya, and Fort São Sebastião on Mozambique Island, dominate the ports and harbors. The first sub-Saharan underwater scientific investigations took place in 1976 of the Portuguese frigate Santo Antonio de Tanna that sunk during an Omani siege from 1696 to 1698. At Elmina in West Africa, studies were made of wreck-site formation processes around the 17th-century Dutch West India Company vessel Groeningen, which had caught fire when firing its guns in salute to Elmina Castle after arrival. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

非洲大陆长期以来一直参与全球海洋事务和考古研究,从中石器时代的人们利用南部非洲海岸的海洋资源,亚历山大的古典法罗斯灯塔,以及中世纪斯瓦希里海岸的印度洋贸易到大西洋三角奴隶贸易。海洋考古学是对利用海洋的人们留下的物理痕迹的鉴定和解释。在南非的中石器时代遗址,如Klasies河口和Pinnacle Point,有人类利用海洋资源的最早证据,包括鸟类、海洋哺乳动物和贝类。这种对海洋资源的开发也与颜料的使用相一致,可能是为了象征性的行为,以及刀片石器技术的生产。人类在非洲海岸的广泛活动发生在相对海平面的变化期间,这是由于冰河时期和构造运动影响了海岸线相对于海洋考古遗址的位置。地貌变化也可能在较短的时间内发生,如1909年爱德华·博伦号在纳米比亚的沉船事故,沉船位于海岸线向陆地1500英尺处。在尼日利亚北部的杜富纳发掘的独木舟和最早的用木板建造的船,比如在吉萨金字塔发现的胡夫古王国皇家船,都是模仿早期纸莎草木筏的形状,在河流上记录了海船的祖先。《Periplus Maris Erythraei》和托勒密的《地理》等经典文献记录了阿拉伯和印度与东非的贸易,包括象牙和犀牛角,并描述了当地居民使用篮子和缝壳船捕鱼的做法。中世纪期间,这里海洋贸易联系的增加促进了斯瓦希里港口城市的形成,如基尔瓦和蒙巴萨。前者处于战略地位,可以管理莫桑比克索法拉和斯瓦希里北部海岸之间的大部分黄金贸易。葡萄牙人在15世纪和16世纪在他们环绕非洲的贸易路线上建造的堡垒,如加纳的埃尔米纳城堡、肯尼亚蒙巴萨的耶稣堡和莫桑比克岛的sfort s o sebasti堡,统治着港口和港口。第一次撒哈拉以南的水下科学调查是在1976年对1696年至1698年阿曼围攻期间沉没的葡萄牙护卫舰圣安东尼奥·德·塔纳进行的。在西非的埃尔米纳,研究人员对17世纪荷兰西印度公司船只格罗宁根号周围的残骸形成过程进行了研究,这艘船抵达埃尔米纳城堡后,在向城堡鸣枪致敬时起火。更广泛的研究解释了非洲海洋社会在其更广泛的环境背景下的功能,既包括其宗教建筑、港口、渔场、航行路线和沉船的物理背景,也考虑到影响沿海社会行为的信仰的非物质方面,从而导致了对其海洋前景的解释。
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African Maritime Archaeology
The continent of Africa has had a lengthy involvement in global maritime affairs and archaeological research with Middle Stone Age people using marine resources on the coasts of southern Africa, the Classical Pharos lighthouse of Alexandria, and Medieval Indian Ocean trade on the Swahili coast to the Atlantic triangular slave trade. Maritime archaeology is the identification and interpretation of physical traces left by people who use the seas and oceans. Middle Stone Age sites in South Africa such as Klasies River Mouth and Pinnacle Point have the earliest evidence for human use of marine resources including birds, marine mammals, and shellfish. This exploitation of marine resources was also coincident with the use of pigment, probably for symbolic behavior, as well as the production of bladelet stone tool technology. The extensive timespan of human activity on the coast around Africa occurred during changing relative sea levels due to Ice Ages and tectonic movement affecting the location of the coastline relative to maritime archaeological sites. Geomorphological changes may also take place over shorter periods such as the 1909 ce shipwreck of the Eduard Bohlen in Namibia lying c. one and half thousand feet landward of the shoreline. Ancestors of sea-going vessels have been recorded on rivers from dugout canoes excavated at Dufuna in northern Nigeria and the first plank-built boats, such as the Old Kingdom Royal Ship of Cheops of Khufu, found at the Giza pyramids, which imitated the shape of earlier papyrus rafts. Classical documents such as the Periplus Maris Erythraei and Ptolemy’s Geographia record Arabian and Indian trade with eastern Africa including ivory and rhinoceros horn and describe fishing practices using baskets and sewn-hull boats of the inhabitants. The increase in oceanic trade links here during the medieval period encouraged the formation of Swahili port cities such as Kilwa and Mombasa. The former was in a strategic position to manage much of the gold trade between Sofala in Mozambique and the northern Swahili Coast. Portuguese forts, constructed in the 15th and 16th centuries on their trade routes around Africa, such as Elmina Castle in Ghana, Fort Jesus in Mombasa, Kenya, and Fort São Sebastião on Mozambique Island, dominate the ports and harbors. The first sub-Saharan underwater scientific investigations took place in 1976 of the Portuguese frigate Santo Antonio de Tanna that sunk during an Omani siege from 1696 to 1698. At Elmina in West Africa, studies were made of wreck-site formation processes around the 17th-century Dutch West India Company vessel Groeningen, which had caught fire when firing its guns in salute to Elmina Castle after arrival. More broad-based studies that interpret the functioning of the African maritime society in its wider environmental setting, both physically in the context of its religious buildings, harbors, fishing grounds, sailing routes, and shipwrecks, and by taking account of non-material aspects of the beliefs that influence behavior of coastal societies, have led to interpretations of their maritime outlook.
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