Discovered in 1936, it was excavated in different
times, by different people. After the (methodologically poor) excavations of
Afonso do Paço (between 1941 and 1967) the site became a reference and would be
marking the Portuguese (and non Portuguese) archaeologist’s fantasies for decades. Excavate there
became a sort of “alternativa” (the ritual consecration to became a
bullfighter). Several felt compelled to put their tools into the ground there,
but few published the results. Savory’s section still provides the best
information. VNSP didn’t have the best of timings. It suffered at the hands of archaeologist
because it became a “star” too soon. Scientifically, it is almost irrelevant
nowadays. And when debate occurs, other more reliable contexts are called to
the dispute. Just the Cultural Historical culture of VNSP (together with Los
Millares) survives from those times, in the discourses of some, as a memory.
And that irrelevance to the discipline may be (part
of) the explanation to the fact that this site, classified as National Monument
since 1971, has been completely abandoned. Today this is the image: an amount
of stones covered by vegetation, where a wall, frequently in ruin, can be perceived
here and there. No local information, no notion of the plant, chronology or notice
of the fact that the site is considered an important one for the National
Heritage (and why).
VNSP, being famous abroad, was a victim of the processes of Portuguese archaeology until the late nineties of the last century. Now, it is a monument, not to the chalcolithic people that built it but to the way modern society deals with heritage.
No comments:
Post a Comment