Additional info and links, notes:
- Archeological Museum, Lisbon, Portugal is at : https://www.lisbon.net/archaeology-museum and wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Archaeology_Museum,_Portugal
- a beautiful ancient map of Iberia : https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/68/Atlas_Van_der_Hagen-KW1049B12_017-PORTUGALLIAE_et_ALGARBIAE_REGNA.jpeg
- the city of Loulé region on Bing maps : https://binged.it/2RqlQz2
- Amphorae page at Wiki with many examples : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphora
- Lusitania, Roman period Iberia : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lusitania
- Roman Empire map, 3rd Century : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Spain#/media/File:Prima_tetrarchia_Diocletianus.PNG
- Baetica information : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hispania_Baetica
- Al Andalus : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Andalus
- Moorish Period : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Portugal#Moorish_rule_and_the_Reconquista_(711%E2%80%931249)
- And finally, Wikipedia's full series on History of Portugal : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Portugal
The original thread mentioned as inspiring this writing was created by @anarchiv and can be found here : https://todon.nl/@anarchiv/103260707759534544
With my thanks for the inspiration for this! :smile:
I should point out that I am not a Historian, but a curious man, fascinated by glimpsing the past and being able to understand a bit of how they lived, by seeing such a nice exposition and the numerous Historical buildings, sites and ancient settlements commonly found in Europe. So, my writing probably has factual errors, which I apologize for, the intent being to jot down those and share with others who might find them intriguing, hopefully.
The collection on display was all dug on sites around the modern city of Loulé. Besides these wonderful Roman and pre-Roman era artifacts, they also had later, Moorish period ones, with beautiful ceramics and metal work.
After visiting Europe for the first time a few years ago, I was so impressed and pleased by all these cultural artifacts and History around everywhere that traveling here in my home region, in North America pales in comparison.
I hope you enjoyed this narrative, and welcome your comments and follow ups. Thank you.
Roman estates in the Andalucia region, then called Baetica, produced fine Olive Oil, another staple of the Mediterranean diet. They sold and exported this widely, quality bringing in demand and profits to traders, farmers and landholders. Baetica was 'next door' to the Algarvians, so trade flowed easily between them.
As documented by the various amphorae, either whole or in fragments, on display at this Museum exhibit. The notes pointed out how many Baetican amphorae had been found in the Algarve, testimony of vigorous trade. Algarvians had income and could purchase finer goods - their own region produces olive oil and wines to this day, but the Museum had fragments which had been manufactured in Baetica, and even in mainland Italy, Rome's homelands.
Algarvian amphorae fragments had cruder handles and rougher surface texture. The Baetican ones were finer and prettier ceramics. Past contents of these vessels could still be determined by analysis of residues in some of them.
The Museum showed photos of the larger artifacts, like these stone vaults, carved into natural rock. They showed site maps with pointers of what each part was intended to do. Once you have a product, and an eager market, things will work to get it supplied.
How do we carry this out? The Museum showed many Amphorae, large earthenware/ceramic vessels which were built to store and carry various products around, locally, regionally and along longer routes to Rome and Beyond.
During the Roman era, there were thriving colonies not only in Lusitania, today's Portugal, but also in the Southern region of today's Spain now called Andalucia, which came from the Moorish era name - Al Andalus.
In the Algarve, Phoenicians, Romans set up colonies. The Romans saw the abundance of fish and built an industry of processing then into a preserve, the "Garum" fish sauce which was popular in their cuisine. Garum produced in the region was high quality, and had a demand from various regions of the Empire, including the Capital, Rome itself.
Garum was created by cutting up the fish and placing them into stone vaults cut into the local bedrock. Salt was added as a condiment but primarily as a preservative agent. The salty fish mix was left on the stone vats to cure for some time, months possibly. And once finished, it provided a concentrated sauce with protein and a flavour judged exquisite by the people.
Quality brings demand, and demand attracts traders; there's money to be made and livelihoods could focus on supplying it.
The Algarve is the most Southern part of Portugal, the warmest and sunniest. Trees, fruit, grapes grow well there. Fish in the seas are plenty. It was good land for settlements.
And they came, different peoples over different eras. Phoenicians, traders at heart, created outposts to explore the land and it's products, while also supporting passing seafarers going to farther places. Some of their mariners came from the homeland in modern day Middle East, traversed the whole Mediterranean, and went past the Columns of Hercules, now Gibraltar, into the open Atlantic.
Wild ocean waters, for people with small ships, but brave they were; and the profits from trading moved them. From home, via this route, into the Bay of Biscay, always a dangerous passage, and on to Cornwall for the Tin metal so demanded by the Bronze Age technology. Tin was plentiful there, and provided profitable mining for thousands of years. Traders came from far an apart to purchase the ore and bring it home for resale.
Reminiscing of a visit to the Archeology Museum, in Lisbon, Portugal.
It started this morning, the thread. And over short posts, someone told a story. Of a Greek man, who lived in antiquity, by the Mediterranean side; in a city whose name is still preserved, and today is written "Marseille".
This series of posts was interesting, I caught one flying by the Local feed, about halfway down his sequence, liked it and went to the top to find the rest.
Enjoying his post, I remembered similar thoughts, of History, and how things worked, how small bits and pieces came to me as I visited an exposition, at the Archeological Museum, in Lisbon.
Stopping at each display, I would read and examine the artifacts. All of them had came from the same region, countryside around today's city of Loulé, in the Algarve, Southern Portugal.
The region has been inhabited for thousands of years, and the exhibit had pieces from pre-historic, Phoenician, Roman, Moorish and more modern times.
@maison_faim When I posted the ManyBooks.net search results for Cory Doctorow above, the link shows broken - by a space in the name not taken as part of the URL.
Retry -- https://manybooks.net/search-book?search=%22Cory%20Doctorow%22
@crackurbones Interesting, thank you for the post.
Jotting down a see also URL as posted in the video's description.
@anarchiv Ah, wonderful that you are a writer!
A smaller job like a short story must be much easier than a long project like a full novel.
A Blog post, easier yet, and the shorter posting like you did are the least inhibiting if you do have perfectionist tendency (which I do too).
Comparing that based on my similar experiences with woodwork and home little projects. A full renovation is a scary thought for me, a small project, done in one day, much easier and nice to complete without all the angst of a long process.
@freemo The best part of Star Wars is long done. A lot of franchise milking, and they are abusing even that, sadly.
Found the last few films repetitive and boring, all special effects and whizbang, fast action for the ADHD afflicted.
/me liked the Jedi story better.
You must live on the warmer climates. Us up on the Northern quarters, no sneaking around naked in Fall or winter times.
Ok under blankets, in bed, chilly out.
@freemo
@maison_faim It's a Trap. You got it. LOL...
@maison_faim Yuo are welcome. 😄
@nothingtosay Hello NTS, and welcome to Qoto.
Enjoy the network and all it has to offer. If you are new to using Mastodon, there's a good guide here: https://lifehacker.com/a-beginner-s-guide-to-mastodon-1828503235
Any question, just ask, and someone will try and help out.
Have a good day!
@sptnkmmnt "Marx or Strike" on my interpretation.
@maison_faim It does exist, there's a place in Settings you can select only certain languages to be displayed.
In the Federated feed, it's a tremendous life saver.
See my post here: https://qoto.org/@design_RG/103161778896393842
@maison_faim I will mention great sci-fi authors that I like, then.
1- Cory Doctorow, he's got many of his books out under a CC license, even can be dloaded from his own site.
Easiest source if you want an epub to read: manybooks.net
https://manybooks.net/search-book?search=Cory Doctorow
Maybe start with one of his short stories collections? it would give you a taste of what it's like without committing to a full book.
His personal site is always easy to remember for me: https://craphound.com
Here is one page, for a good novel if you like cyberpunk. https://craphound.com/overclocked/2014/01/14/when-sysadmins-ruled-the-earth-mobi-and-epub-2/
2- Neal Stephenson is one of my favourite writers ever.
I was trying to load https://bookfrom.net/ to see if they have any of his books, but the site is not responding atm (could have been taken down, or just a glitch)
3- If not si-fi, how about Siddhartha, by Herman Hesse? https://manybooks.net/titles/hesseheretext01siddh10.html
Manybooks.net has man, mny good books. All of them are legal and free downloads.
I use a couple of ebook readers, like FBreader and BlueFire Reader, which have direct links to Manybooks and Feedbooks in their Library section. It's wonderful when you just want something new; find and download, instantly available.
@anarchiv Yeah, I noticed the content warning right at the head of your profile, but found that someone who thought and posted what you did here was worth following. No worries, you can proceed as usual and I will respond to interesting bits if I see them.
A sad thing here is that it's pure chance, and sometimes we hit into great things, sometimes we have a conversation and it goes haywire due to some odd person jumping in. But, it's stil much better to have it all.
More accounts are a good idea. I have a couple more, just started on fedi a month ago and still learning. Some topics you might want to do on a lower profile, more discrete account.
Hard part is keeping active in various places, but it might be easier as I get more used to it.
Just started trying out Write.freely learning yesterday, which was interesting. A good thing is that it could be a place to collect ideas and info from various posts, like when I am trying something out, and post impressions, screenshots, notes.
These could be valuable as references to other users, but I am afraid they would be buried into the huge amount of data we have here, without bookmarking for the most part.
I did sequential posts like that when trying out mastodon clients, like Fedilab and Pinafore. They helped me understand the working of these apps and remember it, by explaining and documenting in writing.
I would like to bring these into one or two blog posts for each of them, and have a more permanent URL to point to when needed.
@maison_faim I just posted a status here yesterday - found a site with LOTS of full books you can read online.
No download or epubs, but he's not worried about copyright either.
Books, Bicycles & Cats, Life is Good. Books, hardcover. Bikes, Classic sport and Touring ones. Cats, any colour or size. Aquarius with Virgo rising. INTJ.
STEM Lord, House of Ravenclaw.
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