New chapter in ancient jar mystery
Nancy Beavan is on the verge of a discovery. A set of ancient
burial jars, a subject on which the archaeologist is something of an
expert, has been sighted deep in the jungle. If she and her team can
only find them, they will have another piece of a puzzle they have
grappled with for more than 10 years.
On Saturday morning, Beavan set out on a days-long trek in the
eastern Cardamom mountain range, where she hopes to find the 11th in a
series of sites where ceramic jars were used for burials between the
14th and 17th centuries. It’s a project she has worked on since 2003.
“The local people will probably know if they’ve been destroyed, but
I’m hoping that’s not the news that we have before we can go in October
or November,” Beavan said in an interview last week.
“But if I run out of time, or the sites are destroyed, at least we have the most basic recording of what was there.
“I still think that what we’ve been able to do has already changed
the perception of what is the history of the people during this 14th to
17th century period.”
One of the most intriguing aspects of the burials is that the period
in which they occurred coincides with the decline of the Angkorian
civilisation in the north of the country and the shift of power to
Mekong trading ports.
While most of the jars found in the Cardamoms have been storage jars,
believed to have been made in Thai kilns, several were made in an
Angkorian style, hinting at intriguing connections between the people
who lived in the highland areas and those in the lowlands.
There’s no guarantee that the new site, which fits into a linear
pattern of sites along a ridge line in the Cardamoms, will be
accessible, or found intact. The area is mountainous and jars are often
found precariously balanced on elevated ledges, according to Beavan. One
of the other jar burials was found in an already damaged condition.
“When we find broken jars we don’t necessarily blame people,” said Beavan.
“It can be rock flaking, pigs trying to find shelter or wanting to
eat the bone, rats gnaw the bone, termites eat the bone and there’s a
lot of natural degradation.”
Villagers living near to some of the remains have a strong connection
with the jars and have carried out pilgrimages. It took months of
delicate negotiations with local people in the area, near to the Areng
Valley, to arrange this weekend’s visit to Cedi.
Alejandro Gonzalez-Davidson, an environmental activist who has worked
with the community for more than 10 years, said: “They know of other
sites but they don’t want to take people.
“Once the secret is out, they’re afraid of people taking [the jars] away.”
In 2002, a group associated with the making of a National Geographic
documentary took jars and placed them in a museum. Local people have
been wary of foreign visitors ever since. But a big threat to the jars
has been the ongoing development projects in the Cardamoms, according to
Beavan.
In 2011, the decision to cancel a planned titanium mine in the region
which was “snack-dab over most of the jar burials”, was a saving grace
for the project, she said.
“I thought, wait, my sites are on rock, and they’re going to be prospecting the rock – that’s not a good thing!”
As a result, the archaeologist is anxious about leaving the jars
alone for more than a few months. Other academic obligations will take
Beavan to Europe in the summer but she wants to return to Cedi as soon
as she returns.
“Why? Because as conservations have reported, there is a danger to
the forest with clear-cutting and such. But along with the clear-cutting
and bulldozing of access roads and such there comes a danger to the
sites.”
One solution is heritage protection zones, which have already been
put in place at archaeological sites including Preah Vihear. These
usually consist of little more than stakes and signs marking out the
area.
“You could put markers around the spot but in a place like the
Cardamoms, if anything, that is drawing attention to them,” Beavan said.
“Sometimes, announcing it is not a good idea: ‘this is really
valuable, and you’re in the middle of the jungle, and nobody’s watching
you.’ It’s like a free buffet.”
In the case of the jars, markers have been put well away from the
location. Their fate, however, is tied to that of the Cardamoms, a place
Beavan believes still has much to reveal.
“It’s enormous and it’s complex and it still has so many secrets. I hope we discover some of them before it’s all gone.”
Got any pictures of those jars
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