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Society For Libyan Studies Welcomes Easier Access To Archaeological Sites


 

 

 

Islamic Tourism Mr Paul Bennett, Chairman of the Society for Libyan Studies, said that the ongoing improvements in Libya’s relations with Britain and rest of the world have made the country more accessible and facilitated the development of new archaeological fieldwork.

 

He was speaking at his presentation of the chairman’s report to the society’s 36th annual general meeting held in London recently at the British Academy.

 

Mr Bennett pointed out that it is clear that increased economic pressures for urban growth and infrastructural development of roads, water and oil pipelines pose severe threats to the country’s archaeological heritage which remains ineffectively protected by planning legislation.

 

In March three representatives of the Department of Antiquities of Libya came to Cambridge to discuss with Professor Graeme Barker the return to Libya of material from Professor McBurney’s excavations at Haua Fteah which had been held in Cambridge for the past 50 years. It was agreed that all the material would be returned to Libya once it had been fully catalogued.

 

The first season of a new project to study rock art in Wadi al-Hayat, Fazzan took  place  at the end of 2004. It was directed by Dr Tertia Barnett and funded by the Society for Libyan Studies. The aims of the project were to extend the preliminary rock art survey work carried out under the aegis of the Fazzan Project by means of further survey; to construct a digital database of rock art sites; to pilot the use of 3-D laser scanning in the recording of rock art and to explore approaches to rock art conservation, in particular by training members of the Department of Antiquities in rock art recording techniques and by raising local awareness of rock art in the region.

 

Post excavation work on the Fazzan Project has continued, in particular on the preparation of specialist reports on  figurines, architectural elements, glass and other small finds.

 

The society awarded grants to Mr Luca Cherstich to complete a survey of the southern Necropolis of Cyrene and to Mr Philip Ciantar to continuer his research on music, meaning and change in the Libyan Ma’luf musical tradition.

 

The society has published Travellers in Libya. The book, selected and edited by Dr John Wright is aimed at the non-specialist reader. It contains colourful accounts from almost fifty contributors of their travels in Libya between 1550 and 1911.

 

Mr Bennett’s talk was followed by a lecture on the society’s excavations at the Greek city of  Euesperides by Professor Andrew Wilson.

Euesperides lies on a silted salt-marsh on the outskirts of Libya’s second largest city  Benghazi, the ancient Berenice. The ancient cemeteries of the city were explored by George Dennis ('Dennis of Etruria') in the nineteenth century. Modern exploration of the site took place after the Second World War following a brief survey. The initial excavations (1952-54) were sponsored by the Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford. The Society for Libyan Studies sponsored a short exploration (1968-69).  It has worked  in partnership with colleagues from Libya to in a more substantial exploration of the city in the face of the expansion of the modern city of Benghazi  and will be completing its  fieldwork next  year.

The Society for Libyan Studies, founded in 1969, is established as a British Institute Abroad, sponsored by The British Academy. Its aims are to encourage and co-ordinate the activities of scholars working on Libya, in Britain and elsewhere, covering as wide a range of interests as possible including archaeology, history, linguistics and the natural sciences, and to foster and develop relations between Libyan scholars and those working outside Libya on Libyan subjects.

Since its foundation the Society has sponsored many differing projects in Libya within the subject areas of archaeology, education, geography, geology, history and Islamic law. Its resources to date have been concentrated on supporting long-term archaeological projects and their subsequent publication, including excavations and surveys in Cyrenaica, Tripolitania and Fezzan, notably at present Euesperides, Cyrene, Lepcis Magna and Fezzan.

In recent years projects have included (among many others) the multi-disciplinary survey in the pre-desert valleys of Tripolitania, the Islamic excavations at Barca (El Merj) and Medinet Sultan, and the preparation for publication of the post-war excavations at Sabratha and Lepcis Magna.

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Swiss Airline: Libya Grounds Flight To Tripoli
Swiss Airline: Libya Grounds Flight To Tripoli

Libyan officials said the weekly flight was grounded for 'technical reasons'. (21/01/2009)

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Libya

The news that published in Islamic Tourism Trade Media

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The articles which appeared in Islamic Tourism magazine

Interiew: Tremendous potential for the development of Libyan tourism

  Issue 72

Benghazi: Venice of North Africa

  Issue 69

Code to ensure preservation of Tripoli’s old city

  Issue 68

Libya’s Green Mountain Project
Ambitious Plan for a sustainable future
  Issue 67

Tripoli and Benghazi: A New Future for the Past

  Issue 66

Libya's heritags under threat

  Issue 48

Libya
Optimism about the future of tourism
  Issue 11

Libya:
A Non-Western Syle Tourism
  Issue 10

World Travel Market
Libya polishes image and Central Asian Republics are optimistic
  Issue 9




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