ASI plans detailed excavation in Pulicat Fort area

Date:

Share post:

Encouraged by the initial findings during trial trenches in the Fort area at Pulicat, north of the city, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has planned a detailed excavation in other parts of the mound, hoping to unravel the antiquarian origins of the site.

ASI plans detailed excavation in Pulicat Fort area
The Pulicat excavation site [Credit: The Hindu]

The ASI has written to the Tamil Nadu government for acquiring 11 acres on lease as no archaeological excavation has so far been done in this area. “The aim is to study the cultural sequence of the site and identify the layout of Fort Geldira and its remains. We will team up with the Geological Department of Anna University for GPS mapping,” said G. Maheswari, Superintending Archeologist, ASI, Chennai Circle.

She said the cleaning of the mound started in February this year and  materials recovered from the Fort area, built by the Dutch in 1612, suggested that it had multi-cultural  artefacts datable between 11 CE to 18 CE. The antiques found during the excavation were quite varied and fairly representative of almost all conceivable materials of the day.

It included copper coins, the nob of a lid, bell, bronze coat button and chain, broken pieces of iron, terracotta figurine, spouts, hopscotch, smoking pipes and glass bangles, beads and copper beads. The embossed seal impression of foreign origin on the smoking pipes (china clay) indicates that they might have been imported. “But, it is yet to be ascertained,” Ms. Maheswari said.

ASI plans detailed excavation in Pulicat Fort area
Pulicat smoking pipes [Credit: The Hindu]

The Fort is square with bastion at the corners, and its curtain walls are built of brick and laterite with lime mortar. The most impressive structure is the gate to the cemetery, now under the ASI’s control.

A ‘ring well’ was exposed on the northern side of the moat. It has three courses of terracotta rings and a number of ‘ring well pieces.’ Further, two glass beads were collected near the well.  Ms. Maheswari said the pottery assemblage of the Fort could be classified into two categories.

In the first category are red wares (associated with thin variety of celadon ware), which are chronologically earlier in date.  The second category comes from foreign wares (imported from China, Thai and Arab countries) like Zhangzhou (blue colour under glaze looks dark gray), Jindezhen (blue and white). Guangdong, Fugian ware and Islamic ware were found in the first four layers. Overall, it promises to be a very exciting prospect for the ASI.

Author: B. Kolappan | Source: The Hindu [May 25, 2014]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

“Frankenstein” bog bodies discovered in Scotland

In a "eureka" moment worthy of Dr. Frankenstein, scientists have discovered that two 3,000-year-old Scottish "bog bodies" are...

The Hi-Tech Archaeological Scientists

The lone fedora-clad archaeologist armed only with his trusty whip on a swashbuckling adventure to discover ancient relics...

Warming ocean water undercuts Antarctic ice shelves

"Upside-down rivers" of warm ocean water threaten the stability of floating ice shelves in Antarctica, according to a...

2,800-year-old swords found in Bavaria

During archaeological excavations last March ahead of construction work on a fire station in the Andechs district of...

Expedition yields unexpected clues to ocean mysteries

A University of Houston (UH) geoscientist and his colleagues are revealing new discoveries about Earth's development, following a...

Ancient parasite uncovered in 6200-yr-old Syrian grave

The discovery of a schistosomiasis parasite egg in a 6200-year-old grave at a prehistoric town by the Euphrates...

Rare mammal first sighted in Vietnam in years

One of the rarest and most threatened mammals on earth has been caught on camera in Vietnam for...

Planet 9 takes shape

Astrophysicists at the University of Bern have modelled the evolution of the putative planet in the outer solar...