Farmer turns up Roman trophy
MINISTRY OF CULTURE
The base of Sulla’s trophy stands among fallen pieces of the monument’s upper section. The 86 BC Battle of Orchomenos was fought close to the site of the March of 1311 Battle of the Copaic Plain, in which a Catalan mercenary army destroyed the might of Frankish Athens.
A farmer plowing his fields near the central Greek town of Orchomenos has stumbled across the marble trophy set up by a victorious Roman general following the defeat of a rebel army over 2,000 years ago, the Ministry of Culture announced yesterday.
A careful excavation turned up a large number of pieces from the monument set up on the 86 BC battlefield by Lucius Cornelius Sulla to celebrate his second victory in quick succession over Archelaos, a general of King Mithridates of Asia Minor. The fragments are in good condition, and experts believe the entire trophy — which originally stood up to 4 meters high — can be restored in situ.
http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_politics_100012_08/12/2004_50471Hope to hear more and more about this new site at Orchomenos. The war-loving butthead Sulla sounds exactly like a criminal. Setting up a huge monument to boast of a military victory is crude and ugly. Of course he would have been an early Republican.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Great reading Bleacher's comment. You'd think the curiosity would drive the Greek people crazy, wondering just what the heck ELSE is still there to be discovered!
For anyone who's interested, the National Geographic Channel has been showing a WONDERFUL program on a new finding, some pyramids in Peru, at Caral, which have been claimed to be 5,000 years old, actually a little older than that.
Here's a small article about this fascinating discovery:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2001/caral.shtml