Summary
The project aims at writing an urban biography of Tungul (Old Dongola, Sudan). The use of the native Nubian designation of the city underscores its medieval African heritage, while the “biographical” approach aids in conceptualizing the city as a complex, living organism. Tungul was originally the capital of the kingdom of Makuria which transformed into a city-state under the patronage of Funj sultans (16th–19th cent.). Makuria was a medieval African kingdom that thrived in the Middle Nile Valley from the end of the 4th cent. to the late 15th cent. CE. This project is a multidisciplinary attempt at gaining a profound understanding of settlement persistence in riverine Africa and it intends to amass extensive documentation of a medieval and pre-modern city. The biography will be based on analyses of Tungul’s urban design and planning, built structures, material culture, bioarchaeology, as well as micromorphology and geochemistry. The results will significantly contribute to the Nubian datasets and offer new perspectives for broader archaeological and theoretical studies on urbanism and complex societies. The proposed biography will focus on three entangled and mutually inclusive research themes: the capital’s cityscape, its design and planning; the city’s inhabitants; climate and environment. The project intends to venture beyond the traditional narratives, steeped in either ecological or political determinism, to create a balanced narrative devoting equal attention to climatic, environmental, socioeconomic and political factors. The majority of work will focus on the collection and analysis of data on Tungul in the Makurian period (4th–15th centuries). However, the research objectives require combining this material with data for the Funj period (16th–19th centuries), which constitutes an outcome of the ERC Starting Grant UMMA, and with other information obtained through decades of excavations, to consolidate the results of all research conducted at Tungul.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101089151 |
Start date: | 01-06-2024 |
End date: | 31-12-2029 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 1 999 950,00 Euro - 1 999 950,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
The project aims at writing an urban biography of Tungul (Old Dongola, Sudan). The use of the native Nubian designation of the city underscores its medieval African heritage, while the “biographical” approach aids in conceptualizing the city as a complex, living organism. Tungul was originally the capital of the kingdom of Makuria which transformed into a city-state under the patronage of Funj sultans (16th–19th cent.). Makuria was a medieval African kingdom that thrived in the Middle Nile Valley from the end of the 4th cent. to the late 15th cent. CE. This project is a multidisciplinary attempt at gaining a profound understanding of settlement persistence in riverine Africa and it intends to amass extensive documentation of a medieval and pre-modern city. The biography will be based on analyses of Tungul’s urban design and planning, built structures, material culture, bioarchaeology, as well as micromorphology and geochemistry. The results will significantly contribute to the Nubian datasets and offer new perspectives for broader archaeological and theoretical studies on urbanism and complex societies. The proposed biography will focus on three entangled and mutually inclusive research themes: the capital’s cityscape, its design and planning; the city’s inhabitants; climate and environment. The project intends to venture beyond the traditional narratives, steeped in either ecological or political determinism, to create a balanced narrative devoting equal attention to climatic, environmental, socioeconomic and political factors. The majority of work will focus on the collection and analysis of data on Tungul in the Makurian period (4th–15th centuries). However, the research objectives require combining this material with data for the Funj period (16th–19th centuries), which constitutes an outcome of the ERC Starting Grant UMMA, and with other information obtained through decades of excavations, to consolidate the results of all research conducted at Tungul.Status
SIGNEDCall topic
ERC-2022-COGUpdate Date
31-07-2023
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