Oynatıcıya atlaAna içeriğe atlaAltbilgiye atla
  • evvelsi gün
Qatar 365, ülkenin arkeolojik alanlarının tozunu alıyor, karada ve denizde hazineler arıyor

Kumlar altında unutulmuş dünyalardan denizdeki definelere Qatar 365, Katar'ın geçmişini araştırıyor. Laila Humairah, Erken İslami dönemin izlerini bulmak için Ain Mohamed arkeolojik alanında. Johanna Hoes, Katar'ın su altındaki mirasını ortaya çıkarmak için Al Zubarah'ta ayaklarını ıslatıyor.

Ortaklığı ile Media City

İLGILI HABERLER : http://tr.euronews.com/2025/07/09/qatar-365-ulkenin-arkeolojik-alanlarinin-tozunu-aliyor-karada-ve-denizde-hazineler-ariyor

Üye ol: Euronews şimdi 12 ayrı dilde

Kategori

🗞
Haberler
Döküm
00:00İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:29İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
00:59Dr. Robert Katar is leading the research at Ain Muhammad Excavation Site.
01:05What he and his team have found tells a fascinating story about the area in Qatar's history.
01:11Well, there were definitely people living here, so they were not only undertaking production activities,
01:17they were also living around the factory as well, because we have their food remains in little hearths, you know, cooking places.
01:24In fact, we have evidence from the site that they were growing crops.
01:27So we have a settled population, and they're farming, and they're making textiles.
01:32And they're in Qatar.
01:34In the last 15 years, Ain Muhammad has been one of more than 30 sites identified by Qatar Museum's archaeologists,
01:40giving a glimpse of how life was like in the 19th century.
01:44But more recent findings have indicated that these sites existed way before then,
01:49between the 7th and the 9th century, which was also the time period that witnessed the birth of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula.
01:57Qatar Museums launched the Landscapes of Faith project to trace the intersection of when Christianity and Islam first overlapped.
02:05So far, we haven't found any good evidence either way for whether the people at the sites that were excavating are Christian or Muslim.
02:13But what we have found is some very interesting facts about the activities they were performing,
02:18the lives that they were leading, and the connections they had with the outside world.
02:22After two excavation seasons, Dr. Carter and his team have collected a few pieces that make up the human history puzzle.
02:31We have a complete grinding stone, two halves of a rotary quern, we call it, still together in position, which is very unusual.
02:40We have several finds relating to textile production.
02:43We have spindle whorls, which are weights, and we have spindles, brass rods, which are used to spin.
02:49So we believe they were producing wool on this site.
02:52Here we've got a very nicely made basin with a nice lip, gypsum plaster,
02:56and a drainage hole going through into a pit on the other side.
03:00And the pits where these basins empty out tend to be filled with this ashy, ashy sediment,
03:07which is one of the reasons we believe that they were washing something, probably a fleece, in ashy water to clean it.
03:12Among the finds was also this, the skeletal remains of a small dog in one of the rooms.
03:19While it's yet to be dated, it could indicate domestication of pets or perhaps the owning of sheepdogs.
03:25Every year, the museum holds an open day.
03:29It's a chance for the public to experience, explore, and learn about the excavation site.
03:35We have a group of people that can excavate with us.
03:38They can sieve the finds and the spoil that we find.
03:42They can wash pottery.
03:44They can take some photography.
03:46So it's a very hands-on day.
03:49Connecting with archaeology provides you a sense of identity and connects Qatar to the rest of the world.
03:55Angie Altam grew up watching Indiana Jones movies, so signing up to such an opportunity was a no-brainer.
04:02It was my first time here and I found it fascinating, just digging, finding, and all these.
04:09And there is a very ancient and vibrant history in Qatar.
04:13Beginner's luck was on her side as Angie found a piece of broken pottery that looks like what the archaeologists are looking for.
04:21The team thinks they've only scratched the surface at Ain Mohamed
04:24and are hopeful that future digs will bring them more artifacts to help solve the mystery of Qatar's earliest dwellers.
04:32Preserving ancient sites is one important aspect of making sure past civilizations don't get lost through the ages.
04:46But so is spreading the knowledge to future generations.
04:50I'm here at Masharib Museums in the heart of Doha to meet General Manager Abdullah Al-Nama,
04:57who gives us an insight to the museum's role in keeping Qatar's heritage alive.
05:02Mr. Abdullah, thank you so much for having us here today.
05:07I wanted to start first with where we are.
05:11This is the Mohamed bin Jassim House.
05:13What is the historical and cultural significance of this building?
05:17Mohamed bin Jassim is one of our four museums here at Masharib Museums.
05:22Mohamed bin Jassim is very significant to the downtown Masharib.
05:26It covers the history of Masharib as an area.
05:29Plus, it explains the seven steps that the new architecture language that the city was built upon,
05:37how it was established.
05:38And it's also a testimonial of the education that here in downtown Masharib properties,
05:45we are trying to spread the knowledge of building a smart and sustainable city to the younger generation.
05:50And there are a few other historical houses that make up Masharib Museums.
05:55Can you tell us more about those buildings?
05:57We have as well Beit bin Julmut, which is the first and only museum in the world
06:03that talks about the story of slavery in the Indian Ocean world.
06:06And also we have the Company House, which is a museum that focuses on the Qatari pioneers
06:11who were working in the oil industry.
06:13The fourth museum is Ravwani House.
06:16Ravwani House is a prototype of the old Qatari houses, pre-oil and post-oil.
06:21The four museums, the four stories, actually it's a social and economical study
06:26of the history of Qatari the past 100, 120 years.
06:30So what are the ongoing outreach programs that you have at the museum right now?
06:37When Masharib museums, maybe it's not your traditional kind of museum.
06:41You focus a lot on the narrative.
06:42It's a narrative storytelling museum, more than artifact-based museum.
06:47For example, we have a bimonthly, very active program, which is the Science Cafe,
06:54in collaboration with Cedra, for example.
06:56We have a research program with Hamad bin Khalifa University.
06:59So we try to diverse our offering because lots of initiatives happening here in Kabul.
07:06And finally, how do you see Masharib museums continuing to stay relevant as the world modernizes?
07:12I think it's very important, especially through programming, to be relevant within the community.
07:20As long as the programs and the initiatives that we keep organizing are part of what interests people,
07:28I think this will make museums relevant to the evolving and changing communities.
07:33At the end of the day, our role is not only to showcase history, but also to be part of history.
07:45From forgotten worlds under Qatar's sands to treasure troughs in its coastal waters,
07:50Joanna Hoos gets her hands and feet wet at the Al-Zubara archaeological site
07:54to explore Qatari history submerged in the Arabian Gulf.
07:59At first glance, this beach on Qatar's northwestern coast might not seem all that remarkable.
08:06But dig a little deeper, literally and figuratively, and hidden under the glistening waters,
08:11you will find traces of a bygone era, remnants of the ancient coastal town of Al-Zubara,
08:16a settlement that was once at the heart of Qatar's pearl trade.
08:20Today's dive in Al-Zubara's past is organized by Qatar museums and UNESCO in collaboration with Seashore and the Poseidon Dive Center.
08:45The open day offers curious minds from Qatar's diving community a rare chance to get hands-on
08:52and learn how to uncover, document and preserve the country's underwater cultural heritage.
08:57We are at a day of the day of the island in the Al-Zubara, but with a research on the coastal coastal waters,
09:04and the coastal coastal waters in the village of the river in the recent recent season.
09:08One of the things we do is to show us that the water-accessed waters,
09:15the sea-tube, the sea-tube, the sea-tube, the sea-tube, which is a commonplace,
09:19whether the sea-tube or the sea-tube, or the sea-tube.
09:22Bu yalışanına geçti.
09:25Bu yalışanla geliştirilmiştir.
09:30Bugün her zamanlarca göre bir şey sebeştirmek için
09:33ve nasıl ufasın dağımızın nabariy ile bir şey var.
09:37Bu yalışanla ilgili bir şey,
09:39de pozisyonlumında...
09:41yalışıkta bir konusu ile işaret ve katır üretimlerimizin
09:44schonaktağımızla pewne bir bir şeyde girebiliy Bowranın.
09:48Azubarra'a da
09:55korumaklar ve kültürlük
09:58kültürlük
10:00Azubarra'a ilk arkeologi
10:03arkaosulukaların
10:05ve UNESCO World Heritage
10:072020.
10:09Bu sayede
10:10heritede
10:11buta sadece
10:12tüm tüm
10:13ülke
10:13sınırt
10:16İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
10:46İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
11:16It's about understanding human behaviour and the valuable lessons the past can teach us for the future.
11:23İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
11:53And we'll see you next time on Kata 365.

Önerilen