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Naveta d'Es Tudons

The Naveta d'Es Tudons, or Naveta of Es Tudons (in Menorquí, naveta, or naueta, a diminutive form of nau, means nave,[3] and Es Tudons, lit. the woodpigeons, is the name of the place),[4] is the most remarkable megalithic chamber tomb in the Balearic island of Menorca, Spain.

Naveta of Es Tudons
Naveta d'Es Tudons
Façade and side wall of the Naveta d'Es Tudons
Shown within Minorca
Alternative nameNaveta des Tudons
LocationMenorca, Balearic Islands, Spain
Coordinates40°00′11″N 3°53′30″E / 40.003128°N 3.891558°E / 40.003128; 3.891558
TypeBurial site
Length13.60 metres (44.6 ft)[1]
Width6.40 metres (21.0 ft)[1]
Height4.50 metres (14.8 ft)[1]
History
Materiallimestone
Founded2000–1000 BC[2]
Abandoned750 BC
Culturespre-Talaiotic age
Site notes
Excavation dates1959
Conditionrestored
Public accessyes

It is located in the Western part of the island, on the Ciutadella de Menorca-Mahón road, approximately 3 miles out from Ciutadella, and 200 m south of the road. It stands on slightly rising ground in a sloping valley.[5] Currently the Naveta d'Es Tudons is open to the public for visits (except for its interior as a measure of protection). It is one of the main tourist attractions of Menorca.

History edit

In Menorca and Majorca there are several dozen habitational and funerary naveta complexes, some of which similarly comprise two storeys.[4][6][7] Navetas (navetes in Menorquí) are chronologically pre-Talaiotic (i.e. prior to the Talaiotic age) constructions.[7][8] Navetas were described in the early 19th century but not excavated until the 20th, notably during the 1960s and 1970s.[6] Navetas were first given their name by the rather imaginative Dr Juan Ramis in his book Celtic antiques on the island of Menorca (1818), from their resemblance to upturned boats.[9][10]

The Naveta d'Es Tudons is the largest and best preserved funerary naveta in Menorca. The Naveta d'Es Tudons served as collective ossuary between 1200 and 750 BC.[11] The lower chamber was for stashing the disarticulated bones of the dead after the flesh had been removed[12] while the upper chamber was probably used for the drying of recently placed corpses.[13] Radiocarbon dating of the bones found in the different funerary navetas in Menorca indicate a usage period between about 1130–820 BC,[14] but the navetas like the Naveta d'Es Tudons are probably older. Pre-Talaiotic constructions are dated using an uncalibrated radiocarbon chronology from 1640 to 1400 BC.[7] The navetas used for communal burial rituals are dated to the late second millennium and early first millennium BC.[1][2]

Although listed in the Spanish heritage register on 3 June 1931 (RI-51-0003442), the naveta d'Es Tudons was excavated and restored by archaeologist Lluís Pericot García in 1959–1960. It was found to contain the remains of at least 100 skeletons (one with trepanned skull). Various recovered objects like bronze bracelets or bone and ceramic buttons [4][15] are today on display in the Museu de Menorca in Mahón. Restoration works were carried out and the two or three missing courses at the top were put back in place.[4] For protection, it was surrounded at a distance by a recently restored modern dry stone field wall.[16]

Architecture edit

 
Plan and section of the unrestored naveta (1912): (a) low door, (b) narrow slab-roofed passage, (c) long rectangular chamber.[17][18]

The shape of the Naveta d'Es Tudons is that of a boat upside down, with the stern as its trapezoidal façade and the bow as its rounded apse. Its groundplan is an elongated semicircle. Externally, the edifice is 14.5 m long by 6.5 m wide and 4.55 m high but it would originally have been 6 m high.[4] It is orientated SWS/ENE, the entrance being at the SWS, in the centre of the slightly slanted (or battered) façade.

The front, side walls and apse of the edifice consist of successive horizontal corbelled courses of huge rectangular or square limestone blocks dressed with a hammer[19] and fitted together without mortar, with an all-round foundation course of blocks of even greater size laid on edge.[20]

The narrow, low entrance doorway (0.57 m x 0.75 m) is rebated to receive a closing slab. The once sealed-off entrance leads by a short, flag-roofed passage to an antechamber 1.3 m long and then another short passage to the main or lower chamber (7.45 m x 2.45 m), the ceiling of which is made of giant horizontal slabs inserted into the side walls, with an average span of 1.5 m c. 2.25 m above the floor. Above this is an upper chamber which is accessible from the upper part of the antechamber. It is slightly shorter (7.10 m) and narrower (1.90 m) than the lower chamber, with a similar although much lower (0.85 m) ceiling of horizontal slabs.[4] These have holes in them, presumably for ventilation.[21]

 
The edifice at dawn, behind its modern wall

Folklore edit

According to Phil Lee, the author of The Rough Guide to Menorca, folkloric memories of the navetas' original purpose may have survived into modern times, for the Menorcans were loath to go near these odd-looking and solitary monuments until well into the 19th century.[12]

A modern tragic lore tells that two giants were competing for the love of a girl. They agreed that one would build a naveta and the other would dig a water well and the first to finish would marry the girl. As the giant who was building the naveta was about to lay the last stone, the other struck water. Mad with jealousy, the first giant threw the last stone (the one that is missing from the top of the façade) into the well, killing the other giant. Then, feeling remorse, he killed himself. It is said that the girl died a spinster and was buried in the naveta.[citation needed]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ a b c d Lagarda i Mata, Ferran. "Es Tudons". Menorcaweb.net. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b Chapman & Grant 1997, pp. 71
  3. ^ The monument is sometimes also called Nau d'Es Tudons
  4. ^ a b c d e f Grinsell 1975, p. 194
  5. ^ James 1957, p. 67 [1]
  6. ^ a b Gerster 2007, p. 250 (Es Tudons in Menorca, Spain)
  7. ^ a b c Fernández Miranda 1997, pp. 60–61
  8. ^ "Navetas, Menorca, Baleares Islands". The History Of The Spanish Architecture.
  9. ^ Grinsell 1975, p. 193
  10. ^ Hoskin & Morales Núñez 1991, p. 25
  11. ^ Chapman & Grant 1997, pp. 69–71
  12. ^ a b Phil Lee, The Rough Guide to Menorca, Rough Guides, 2001, 288 p. 187.
  13. ^ Blake & Knapp 2005, p. 170
  14. ^ Micó, Rafael (2006). "Radiocarbon dating and balearic prehistory: reviewing the periodization of the prehistoric sequence". Radiocarbon. 48 (3): 421–434. doi:10.1017/S0033822200038856. ISSN 0033-8222. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  15. ^ "Naveta des Tudons". MenorcaWeb.com.
  16. ^ Dominique Auzias, Jean-Paul Labourdette, Baléares, Ibiza — Minorque — Majorque, Le Petit Fûté, 2012, 336 p., p. 281 : "Inutile de vous extasier sur le mur de pierre sèche qui entoure la Naveta, il est de construction récente" ("There is no need for one to enthuse about the dry stone wall surrounding the Naveta, its construction is recent.")
  17. ^ Peet 1912, p. 73
  18. ^ Cartailhac 1892
  19. ^ Guillemard 1907, pp. 465–467
  20. ^ "Naveta dels Tudons (Ciutadella, Menorca)]". artehistoria. Toda la construcción se ejecutó mediante sillares de buen tamaño dispuestos en hiladas regulares, excepto el zócalo hecho a base de bloques de mayor tamaño que sirven de cimentación.
  21. ^ "Tektonika, a photo gallery - an exhibit of photographs of the stonework of the Balearic Islands & the Catalan mainland". Stonefoundation.org.
Bibliography
  • Blake, Emma; Knapp, Arthur Bernard, eds. (2005). The archaeology of Mediterranean prehistory. Oxford: John Wiley & Sons- Blackwell. ISBN 978-0631232674.
  • Cartailhac, Émile (1892). Monuments primitifs des îles Baléares (in French). Toulouse: É. Privat. (Public domain)
  • Chapman, Robert; Grant, Annie (1997). "Prehistoric subsistence and monuments in Mallorca". In Balmuth, Miriam S. (ed.). Encounters and transformations : the archaeology of Iberia in transition. Sheffield: Sheffield Academy Press. ISBN 978-1850755937.
  • Fernández Miranda, Manuel (1997). "Aspect of Talayotic culture". In Balmuth, Miriam S. (ed.). Encounters and transformations : the archaeology of Iberia in transition. Sheffield: Sheffield Academy Press. ISBN 978-1850755937.
  • Gerster, Georg (2007). Trümpler, Charlotte (ed.). The Past from Above: Aerial Photographs of Archaeological Sites. Los Angeles, California: Getty Publications. pp. 416. ISBN 978-0892368174.
  • Grinsell, Leslie V. (1975). Barrow, pyramid, and tomb : ancient burial customs in Egypt, the Mediterranean, and the British Isles. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 0891585044.
  • Guillemard, F.H.H. (1907). "The Balearic Islands and their Antiquities". Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society. George Bells & Sons. 11 (3): 465–467.
  • Hoskin, Michael; Morales Núñez, Juan José (1991). "The Orientations of the Burial Monuments of Menorca". Journal for the History of Astronomy. Archaeoastronomy Supplement. 22 (16): 15–41. Bibcode:1991JHAS...22...15H. doi:10.1177/002182869102201603. S2CID 117178792. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  • James, Edwin Oliver (1957). Prehistoric religion: a study in prehistoric archaeology. New York: Barnes & Noble. ISBN 978-1111767211.
  • Lagarda Mata, Ferran (2010). Menorca Arqueológica II: La Naveta des Tudons y otros monumentos cercanos (Ciutadella de Menorca) (in Spanish). Sobradiel: FLM-Editor. ISBN 978-8496810150.
  • Peet, T. Eric (1912). "France, Spain and Portugal". Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders. London: Harper & Brothers. (Public domain)
  • Veny, C. (1987). "Las navetas de Menorca". Proceedings of the Conference "Un Millennio di Relazioni Fra la Sardegna e I Paesi del Mediterraneo (in Spanish). Cagliari: Edizioni Della Torre: 443–72.
  • Grinsell, Leslie V. (1981). "The Naveta of Els Tudons (Menorca)". Antiquity. 55 (215): 196–199. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00044239. S2CID 163217955.

Further reading edit

  • Borlase, William Copeland (1897). The dolmens of Ireland, their distribution, structural characteristics, and affinities in other countries. Vol. II. London: Chapman & Hall. pp. 699–700. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  • Mascaró Pasarius, Josep (1968). Prehistoria de las Balears. Palma de Mallorca: Gráficas Miramar. OCLC 758477734.
  • Serra Belabre, María Luisa; Orfila León, Juan Antonio (1977). Historia de Menorca (in Spanish). Vol. Tomo I, de los origenes al final de la Edad Media. ISBN 844003881X.
  • Pérez, Rafael Micó (2005). Cronología absoluta y periodización de la prehistoria de las Islas Baleares (in Spanish). Vol. BAR international series 1373. Oxford: Archaeopress. ISBN 1841718157.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Naveta des Tudons at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official Website of Tourism in Spain - Naveta des Tudons in Menorca, Spain

naveta, tudons, naveta, tudons, menorquí, naveta, naueta, diminutive, form, means, nave, tudons, woodpigeons, name, place, most, remarkable, megalithic, chamber, tomb, balearic, island, menorca, spain, naveta, tudonsfaçade, side, wall, shown, within, minorcaal. The Naveta d Es Tudons or Naveta of Es Tudons in Menorqui naveta or naueta a diminutive form of nau means nave 3 and Es Tudons lit the woodpigeons is the name of the place 4 is the most remarkable megalithic chamber tomb in the Balearic island of Menorca Spain Naveta of Es TudonsNaveta d Es TudonsFacade and side wall of the Naveta d Es TudonsShown within MinorcaAlternative nameNaveta des TudonsLocationMenorca Balearic Islands SpainCoordinates40 00 11 N 3 53 30 E 40 003128 N 3 891558 E 40 003128 3 891558TypeBurial siteLength13 60 metres 44 6 ft 1 Width6 40 metres 21 0 ft 1 Height4 50 metres 14 8 ft 1 HistoryMateriallimestoneFounded2000 1000 BC 2 Abandoned750 BCCulturespre Talaiotic ageSite notesExcavation dates1959ConditionrestoredPublic accessyesIt is located in the Western part of the island on the Ciutadella de Menorca Mahon road approximately 3 miles out from Ciutadella and 200 m south of the road It stands on slightly rising ground in a sloping valley 5 Currently the Naveta d Es Tudons is open to the public for visits except for its interior as a measure of protection It is one of the main tourist attractions of Menorca Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Folklore 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editIn Menorca and Majorca there are several dozen habitational and funerary naveta complexes some of which similarly comprise two storeys 4 6 7 Navetas navetes in Menorqui are chronologically pre Talaiotic i e prior to the Talaiotic age constructions 7 8 Navetas were described in the early 19th century but not excavated until the 20th notably during the 1960s and 1970s 6 Navetas were first given their name by the rather imaginative Dr Juan Ramis in his book Celtic antiques on the island of Menorca 1818 from their resemblance to upturned boats 9 10 The Naveta d Es Tudons is the largest and best preserved funerary naveta in Menorca The Naveta d Es Tudons served as collective ossuary between 1200 and 750 BC 11 The lower chamber was for stashing the disarticulated bones of the dead after the flesh had been removed 12 while the upper chamber was probably used for the drying of recently placed corpses 13 Radiocarbon dating of the bones found in the different funerary navetas in Menorca indicate a usage period between about 1130 820 BC 14 but the navetas like the Naveta d Es Tudons are probably older Pre Talaiotic constructions are dated using an uncalibrated radiocarbon chronology from 1640 to 1400 BC 7 The navetas used for communal burial rituals are dated to the late second millennium and early first millennium BC 1 2 Although listed in the Spanish heritage register on 3 June 1931 RI 51 0003442 the naveta d Es Tudons was excavated and restored by archaeologist Lluis Pericot Garcia in 1959 1960 It was found to contain the remains of at least 100 skeletons one with trepanned skull Various recovered objects like bronze bracelets or bone and ceramic buttons 4 15 are today on display in the Museu de Menorca in Mahon Restoration works were carried out and the two or three missing courses at the top were put back in place 4 For protection it was surrounded at a distance by a recently restored modern dry stone field wall 16 Architecture edit nbsp Plan and section of the unrestored naveta 1912 a low door b narrow slab roofed passage c long rectangular chamber 17 18 The shape of the Naveta d Es Tudons is that of a boat upside down with the stern as its trapezoidal facade and the bow as its rounded apse Its groundplan is an elongated semicircle Externally the edifice is 14 5 m long by 6 5 m wide and 4 55 m high but it would originally have been 6 m high 4 It is orientated SWS ENE the entrance being at the SWS in the centre of the slightly slanted or battered facade The front side walls and apse of the edifice consist of successive horizontal corbelled courses of huge rectangular or square limestone blocks dressed with a hammer 19 and fitted together without mortar with an all round foundation course of blocks of even greater size laid on edge 20 The narrow low entrance doorway 0 57 m x 0 75 m is rebated to receive a closing slab The once sealed off entrance leads by a short flag roofed passage to an antechamber 1 3 m long and then another short passage to the main or lower chamber 7 45 m x 2 45 m the ceiling of which is made of giant horizontal slabs inserted into the side walls with an average span of 1 5 m c 2 25 m above the floor Above this is an upper chamber which is accessible from the upper part of the antechamber It is slightly shorter 7 10 m and narrower 1 90 m than the lower chamber with a similar although much lower 0 85 m ceiling of horizontal slabs 4 These have holes in them presumably for ventilation 21 nbsp The edifice at dawn behind its modern wallFolklore editAccording to Phil Lee the author of The Rough Guide to Menorca folkloric memories of the navetas original purpose may have survived into modern times for the Menorcans were loath to go near these odd looking and solitary monuments until well into the 19th century 12 A modern tragic lore tells that two giants were competing for the love of a girl They agreed that one would build a naveta and the other would dig a water well and the first to finish would marry the girl As the giant who was building the naveta was about to lay the last stone the other struck water Mad with jealousy the first giant threw the last stone the one that is missing from the top of the facade into the well killing the other giant Then feeling remorse he killed himself It is said that the girl died a spinster and was buried in the naveta citation needed Gallery edit nbsp West South West front end 2008 nbsp South South East side wall 2007 nbsp North North West side wall 2004 nbsp Apse 2006 See also editMegalith Stone brickReferences editCitations a b c d Lagarda i Mata Ferran Es Tudons Menorcaweb net Retrieved 8 May 2012 a b Chapman amp Grant 1997 pp 71 The monument is sometimes also called Nau d Es Tudons a b c d e f Grinsell 1975 p 194 James 1957 p 67 1 a b Gerster 2007 p 250 Es Tudons in Menorca Spain a b c Fernandez Miranda 1997 pp 60 61 Navetas Menorca Baleares Islands The History Of The Spanish Architecture Grinsell 1975 p 193 Hoskin amp Morales Nunez 1991 p 25 Chapman amp Grant 1997 pp 69 71 a b Phil Lee The Rough Guide to Menorca Rough Guides 2001 288 p 187 Blake amp Knapp 2005 p 170 Mico Rafael 2006 Radiocarbon dating and balearic prehistory reviewing the periodization of the prehistoric sequence Radiocarbon 48 3 421 434 doi 10 1017 S0033822200038856 ISSN 0033 8222 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Naveta des Tudons MenorcaWeb com Dominique Auzias Jean Paul Labourdette Baleares Ibiza Minorque Majorque Le Petit Fute 2012 336 p p 281 Inutile de vous extasier sur le mur de pierre seche qui entoure la Naveta il est de construction recente There is no need for one to enthuse about the dry stone wall surrounding the Naveta its construction is recent Peet 1912 p 73 Cartailhac 1892 Guillemard 1907 pp 465 467 Naveta dels Tudons Ciutadella Menorca artehistoria Toda la construccion se ejecuto mediante sillares de buen tamano dispuestos en hiladas regulares excepto el zocalo hecho a base de bloques de mayor tamano que sirven de cimentacion Tektonika a photo gallery an exhibit of photographs of the stonework of the Balearic Islands amp the Catalan mainland Stonefoundation org BibliographyBlake Emma Knapp Arthur Bernard eds 2005 The archaeology of Mediterranean prehistory Oxford John Wiley amp Sons Blackwell ISBN 978 0631232674 Cartailhac Emile 1892 Monuments primitifs des iles Baleares in French Toulouse E Privat Public domain Chapman Robert Grant Annie 1997 Prehistoric subsistence and monuments in Mallorca In Balmuth Miriam S ed Encounters and transformations the archaeology of Iberia in transition Sheffield Sheffield Academy Press ISBN 978 1850755937 Fernandez Miranda Manuel 1997 Aspect of Talayotic culture In Balmuth Miriam S ed Encounters and transformations the archaeology of Iberia in transition Sheffield Sheffield Academy Press ISBN 978 1850755937 Gerster Georg 2007 Trumpler Charlotte ed The Past from Above Aerial Photographs of Archaeological Sites Los Angeles California Getty Publications pp 416 ISBN 978 0892368174 Grinsell Leslie V 1975 Barrow pyramid and tomb ancient burial customs in Egypt the Mediterranean and the British Isles Boulder Colorado Westview Press ISBN 0891585044 Guillemard F H H 1907 The Balearic Islands and their Antiquities Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society George Bells amp Sons 11 3 465 467 Hoskin Michael Morales Nunez Juan Jose 1991 The Orientations of the Burial Monuments of Menorca Journal for the History of Astronomy Archaeoastronomy Supplement 22 16 15 41 Bibcode 1991JHAS 22 15H doi 10 1177 002182869102201603 S2CID 117178792 Retrieved 3 May 2012 James Edwin Oliver 1957 Prehistoric religion a study in prehistoric archaeology New York Barnes amp Noble ISBN 978 1111767211 Lagarda Mata Ferran 2010 Menorca Arqueologica II La Naveta des Tudons y otros monumentos cercanos Ciutadella de Menorca in Spanish Sobradiel FLM Editor ISBN 978 8496810150 Peet T Eric 1912 France Spain and Portugal Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders London Harper amp Brothers Public domain Veny C 1987 Las navetas de Menorca Proceedings of the Conference Un Millennio di Relazioni Fra la Sardegna e I Paesi del Mediterraneo in Spanish Cagliari Edizioni Della Torre 443 72 Grinsell Leslie V 1981 The Naveta of Els Tudons Menorca Antiquity 55 215 196 199 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00044239 S2CID 163217955 Further reading editBorlase William Copeland 1897 The dolmens of Ireland their distribution structural characteristics and affinities in other countries Vol II London Chapman amp Hall pp 699 700 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Mascaro Pasarius Josep 1968 Prehistoria de las Balears Palma de Mallorca Graficas Miramar OCLC 758477734 Serra Belabre Maria Luisa Orfila Leon Juan Antonio 1977 Historia de Menorca in Spanish Vol Tomo I de los origenes al final de la Edad Media ISBN 844003881X Perez Rafael Mico 2005 Cronologia absoluta y periodizacion de la prehistoria de las Islas Baleares in Spanish Vol BAR international series 1373 Oxford Archaeopress ISBN 1841718157 External links edit nbsp Media related to Naveta des Tudons at Wikimedia Commons Official Website of Tourism in Spain Naveta des Tudons in Menorca Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Naveta d 27Es Tudons amp oldid 1163086155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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