Corinth Report: Nezi Field 2007 by Lydia Herring, Josh Langseth, Kris Lorenzo (2007-04-09 to 2007-05-18)
Collection:   Corinth
Type:   Report
Name:   Nezi Field 2007 by Lydia Herring, Josh Langseth, Kris Lorenzo (2007-04-09 to 2007-05-18)
Title:   Frankish to Modern Strata in the Southern End of Nezi Field
Context:   Nezi Field, context 129
    Nezi Field, context 103
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    Nezi Field, context 121
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    Nezi Field, context 141
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    Nezi Field, context 127
    Nezi Field, context 128
    Nezi Field, context 142
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    Nezi Field, context 90
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    Nezi Field, context 120
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    Nezi Field, context 123
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    Nezi Field, context 88
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Area:   Nezi Field
Site:   Corinth
City:   Ancient Corinth
Country:   Greece
References:   Baskets (145)
EXCAVATION SUMMARY

Six weeks ago, on April 10, 2007, we, Lydia Herring, Josh Langseth, and Kris Lorenzo, opened an excavation area at the extreme north of the Nezi field under the supervision of Guy Sanders, James Herbst, and Alicia Carter. Nezi field is an orchard south of the area excavated by H. Robinson in the 1960s, which is itself south of the South Stoa in the Forum. We worked with a crew of workmen including Kleomenis Didaskalou (pickman), Billy Papanikolaou (pickman), Andreas Oikonomou (pickman), Vassilis Kollias (shovel/barrowman), Iannis Oikonomou (shovel/barrowman), Andreas Didaskalou (shovel/barrowman), Vangelis Kollias (shovel/barrowman), Sotiris Raftopoulos (shovel/barrowman), and Thanasis Notis, the foreman.

The original area of excavation covered ca. 160 m² between 263E to 279E and 1002N to 1008N (minimum) / 1013.85N (maximum). The northern edge of the excavation area is an escarpment left by the excavations of 1936 and 1961, and thus irregular. On Wednesday, April 18, 2007, we extended the excavation area in order to find the limit of an orange-clay and stone feature at the southern boundary of the excavation area. The addition covers 266E to 271E and 1002N to 1001N, thus bringing the total excavation area to ca. 165 m².

Our objective was to investigate Turkish, Frankish, and Byzantine remains and connect them to what was excavated in the area called Agora SW section E (NB 227, 228, and 237) and Agora SW section J (NB 254, 262, 267, 294) in 1961, along with the exploratory trench dug by Amyx and Morgan in 1936 at the southern extreme of the Giambourani field (the field just north of the Nezi field). This essay will describe the activity in our area in chronological order based upon our interpretation of the stratigraphy.

FRANKISH (1210-1458 CE)

The earliest contexts in our excavation area are two walls whose top courses have just been uncovered. The first, revealed with B65, B115, B117, B131, B137 (the fill of a possible robbing trench), and B139, runs north-south, and is preserved between 1003N and 1006N. At its southern terminus, there are two flat squared blocks, each of which has a pivot hole, and have been tentatively identified as a threshold. The closest date for the wall so far, based on the pottery date for the fill (B115) covering the wall, is the Frankish period. The second wall, revealed with B129 and B138, also runs north-south, between 1003N and 1007N, but forms a corner with a wall running east-west between 268E and 269.80E. The closest date for this wall so far is the date of a coin (2007-189) in the fill coving the wall (B129), issued by William Villehardouin between 1246 and 1267 CE. The two walls appear to be parallel—their southern extents are only approximately 20 cm different—so we hypothesize that they are from the same structure. It is possible that these walls may be earlier than the Frankish period, but only continuing excavation will determine their date of construction.

Above the second wall, the next activities in our excavation area are represented by a stone and clay feature (B26=B86, B88, B90, B123) which may be an oven or furnace, and an associated series of clay floors (B94, B99, B100, B102=B105=B106=B108, B110, B113=B118, B119, B120, B121, B122, B124) laid down over time in the third quarter of the 13th century CE and before the early 14th century CE. This chronology is based on a reading of the pottery and coins in significant contexts that pre- and post-date the clay floors (B129, B86). The hypothesis that the stone and clay feature is an oven is supported by the absence of bone inside it, the high percentage of cookware among the pottery recovered from the clay floors, its shape and construction, the burnt stones of the flooring (B90), and the ash outside the oven on one of the clay floors (B100=B102=B105=B106=B108).

Before the construction of either the oven or the floors, however, the ground was leveled to prepare the area (B125, B126, B129) in the late 13th century CE, sometime after 1246–1267; this date is based on pottery in a deposit underneath the leveling fill (B128) and the presence in the fill (B129) of a coin issued by William Villehardouin (2007-189). The first layer of flooring (B122), which was well-preserved, was then laid and the wall of the oven (B123) built on a clay bedding (B124). The wall is comprised of two lengths (E-W: 96 x 35 cm; N-S: 152 x 35 cm) that meet at a right angle. Only one course of squared limestone blocks over a layer of tiles is preserved.

A poorly preserved second layer of clay floors (B110, B113=B118=B119, B120, B121) soon followed, prior to a third, again well-preserved, layer of floor (B100=B102=B105=B106=B108). After the construction of this third phase of flooring, the area inside the oven was leveled (B89, B92, B93) for the oven’s floor which was constructed with stone packing and clay (B90), and several layers of clay were deposited in the oven (B26=B86, B88). It is possible that the clay is one single thick deposit that eroded from the walls of the oven after it went of out of use. We know that the floor of the oven was constructed after the third phase of flooring because the third phase is cut by the leveling for the floor of the oven. Since the wall of the oven itself predates the third phase of clay floors – this third phase was built up around the wall - it is likely that there was also an earlier floor in the oven, most likely associated with the first phase of clay floor (B122). The removal of the original flooring and clay in the oven may be related to a deposit of black ash over the third phase of clay floors (B100 et al.).

There is also a rubbish pit cut into this third phase of floors (cut = B76). This pit is oval-shaped, with a maximum diameter of 1.20 m and minimum diameter of 0.90 m. The density of inclusions, especially cookware and coarse pottery sherds, supports the suggestion that this is a rubbish pit. The clay floor (B100=B102=B105=B106=B108) is also disturbed by a large stony pile of rubble (B77) that reinforces the interpretation that the oven and floors are situated in a space that is unenclosed by walls. We found no evidence of either walls or robbing trenches around the clay floors.

The primary indicator of roofing over the area is a destruction collapse in the form of a concentrated scatter of roof tiles (B51=B58=B59) that do not extend beyond the rectilinear extent of the clay floors. This tile scatter also contains worked marble fragments. The deposit of scattered tiles contains pottery dating to ca. 1260-1280, but the collapse must date to the early 14th century CE because the tiles postdate the deposits in the clay oven, the latest of which contained a coin (2007-113) of Isabelle Villehardouin dating between 1297 and 1301 CE.

Other early 14th century CE Frankish activities are the creation of a possible irrigation canal and the robbing out of an earlier wall. The possible irrigation canal, to the east of the oven and clay floors, takes the form of a roughly north-west/south-east trench (cut=B70) with two east-west subsidiary trenches. All three trenches are linear, with parallel sides, and the main canal was filled with large amounts of pottery and intact bone after it went out of use. The presence of an irrigation canal would suggest that the eastern portion of the excavation area is outdoor space and that the levels of fill in this area (B45, B47, B48, B60, B63, B66, B69, B84=B85, B98, B101, B104, B111) were for agricultural or horticultural purposes. This is in contrast to the western half of the excavation area, where the architectural contexts are located (note: there is also dumping or leveling fill [agricultural?] in this western area: B56, B95, B103, B109, B115=B130, B116=B143, B135, B136, B139).

The robbing trench (cut = B54) removed the top of a wall projecting from the northern scarp into the area excavated in 1961. At the bottom of this trench are the remains of the wall constructed with stones and tiles, running roughly north-south. The wall appears to bound a space demarcated by the roof tiles and floor surface visible—though as yet unexcavated—in the northern escarpment because the roof tiles end at the eastern face of the wall.

[Addendum 6/14/07: It is now believed that B129 and B131 in fact date to the Ottoman II period and thus some of the Frankish material discussed in this summary has been re-evaluated. It is now thought that the oven and its associated floors all date to the Turkish period because of their stratigraphic relationship to B129. Some of the fills (B129 and B131) that covered the N-S walls mentioned at the beginning of the Frankish section of this summary also must be associated with Turkish activity in the area. For additional details, see the relevant baskets and the summary by Angela Ziskowski and Lina Kokkinou.]


OTTOMAN II (1715-1831 CE)

We have uncovered a series of lenses of fill, and, based on the make-up of these contexts, some appear to be dumped, perhaps for leveling purposes (B28, B42, B53, B55, B65=B78=B80, B79, B87, B114). A large pit or well cuts these deposits (B36, B37, B39, B41, B43, B46; 1008.08N to 1005.96N, and 268.40E to 266.40E). This pit contained three lenses of fill with pottery dating to the second Ottoman period. This pit also cuts the Frankish destruction debris discussed above. We have temporarily ceased excavating this pit because it is 1.41 m deep and difficult for the workmen to climb in and out of; excavation will resume once the surrounding deposits have been excavated to a more manageable height. The date of the construction of this pit (or well) is clear because it cuts deposits of the Ottoman II period (B65, B49), so the pit had to have been both dug and then mostly filled in during the Ottoman II period.

It is interesting to note that the Ottoman II deposits are located solely in the western and northern portions of the excavation area. This perhaps suggests that they are all associated with a structure or structures outside the excavation area.

EARLY MODERN (1831-1949 CE)

In the Early Modern period, a property boundary wall (B64, B67, B73), running roughly E-W, was constructed. Within our excavation area, the wall is 16.28 m long, 0.57 m wide, and preserved to a maximum height of 0.55 m above ground. Its maximum northing is 1011.70N, and its minimum northing is approx. 1009.20N, where it joins the northern scarp of the excavation area. This wall continues past our excavation area both east and west, but is not preserved to the same height from 275.80 E to beyond the eastern edge of our excavation area, where it has collapsed (B72), thus revealing the north scarp to the eye. It is constructed of field stones arranged in random courses with mud as a bonding agent. This wall was presumably excavated in part by Amyx and Morgan in 1936 (NB 153, 154). It cuts an Early Modern deposit (B40), and has a pottery date of the 19th – early 20th century CE.

The Early Modern activity in the excavation area is agricultural in nature and consists primarily of two layers of plow zone. The first, B2=B24, lies above a series of plow furrows (B22) in the southern portion of the excavation area and has an average depth of 0.5 m.

At the bottom of the first layer of plow zone, plow furrows were defined which cut into the soil below (furrows = B22). The furrows vary in length and width and run from the eastern extreme of the excavation area to the western extreme. They first appear approximately one meter south of the E-W boundary wall. The plow furrows cut into the walls and uppermost clay deposit of the Frankish oven.

The second layer of plowzone (B23=B27=B30=B33=B34=B50=B58=B62), into which the plow furrows were cut, has an average depth of 21 cm. Perhaps the difference in depth between the first and second plowzones reflects a change in plowing technology.

The layers of soil (B14, B38, B44, B57, B61) below the second layer of plow zone (B23 et al.)—perhaps some form of ground leveling—also show signs of Early Modern human activity in the eastern half of the excavation area in the form of an ash pit (B44), probably from a fire. The top of the pit (discussed above; cut = B71) to the west, which dates to the second Ottoman period, was topped of with one layer of fill (B36) in the Early Modern period, probably to correct for the settling in of the rest of the fill below).

Also associated with Early Modern agricultural activities is a linear pile of stones (B4). This layer abuts the south face of the E-W boundary wall and is most likely a pile of field cobbles which farmers cleared from the field. These cobbles predate the later phases of fencing (see below for B16, B17) between Nezi field and Giambourani field.

MODERN (post-1950 CE)

Along both sides of the E-W wall in the Modern period are several fill deposits. The uppermost fill on the north side of the wall (B3) contains worked marble fragments that may be the result of dumping from the 1936 excavation, or also (in this case) from the later 1960’s excavations under Robinson in sections E and J, north of the Nezi field. South of the E-W wall are two fill deposits (B5, B14) that may perhaps be the result of terracing for agricultural activity. However, the uppermost fill (B5) also included marble fragments, some of which were worked. Because similar fragments also occur in the fill north of the E-W wall (B3)—which, along with B5, also directly borders Amyx and Morgan’s 1936 excavation trench in what was later called section E—we hypothesize that this fill is most likely fill dumped by the 1936 excavators. Worked marble fragments have been found at this level of elevation only in these two contexts in the area along the north scarp.

South of the E-W wall, in the Modern orchard, a series of tree pits and irrigation trenches were cut into the most recent plow zone (B2 = B24). The irrigation trenches (B18 = B32, B19) comprise two linear cuts running north-south up to the south-west side of individual tree pits, but not joining it (B18 ran up to B7 (cut = B10), B19 ran up to B11 (cut = B15). Each trench contained a black plastic irrigation hose. The irrigation trenches continue south out of the excavation area, and probably are connected with other tree pits within the presently growing orange orchard south of the excavation area. They also cut into the uppermost clay deposit and walls of the Frankish oven.

The five tree pits in the excavation area are arranged in three north-south rows, ca. five meters apart. Each of the tree pits (B6 [cut = B9], B7 [cut = B10], B8 [cut = B12], B11 [cut = B15], B21 [cut = B25]) contained an orange tree and root system, all of which the workmen cleared; the workman, most of whom have extensive agricultural experience, estimate the age of the trees to be no more than forty years old. Each pit cuts into the surface cut by plow furrows (furrows = B22) and the soil into which the furrows were cut (B23=B27=B30=B33=B34=B50).

Tree pit B6 (cut = B9) contained very dark black specially fertilized soil with small white polystyrene inclusions and small areas of yellowish white clay. Both the specially fertilized soil and yellowish white clay would have been part of a mix of soil and other matter that surrounded the orange sapling when it was put in the pit. The clay and the polystyrene most likely functioned to retain moisture for the sapling.

The latest activity in our excavation area is the construction of two phases of cement foundations used to anchor a series of posts supporting chain-link fencing. This fencing runs along the northern boundary of Nezi field. Both phases of cement foundations were cemented in part onto the E-W wall (ca. 1011.70N). Parts of the wall were removed to lay the cement foundations after the wall had gone out of use.

The first phase (B17) is a series of small, whitish gray cement foundations. The second phase of fencing (B16) is comprised of a series of noticeably larger concrete slabs spaced at regular intervals. We know this phase is later because the metal posts were still intact as a functional fence at the beginning of the 2007 excavation season.

CONCLUSION

The past six weeks of excavation in Nezi field have produced a stratigraphic sequence and grouping of associated finds to indicate four phases of activity—Modern, Early Modern, Ottoman II, and Frankish.

In the Frankish period, there is a distinction between indoor and outdoor space, as seen in the existence of built structures, including what we interpret as an oven, in the western half of the excavation area and agricultural activity in the eastern half.

In the Ottoman II period, there is leveling, perhaps for agricultural activity, and the creation of a possible pit or well.

In the Early Modern period, there is more agricultural activity (plowing) and the creation of a new division of property, at least since the Frankish period (the boundary wall at the north of Nezi field cuts through the middle of single Frankish deposits).

In the Modern period, there is a different type of agricultural activity—the planting of an orchard rather than plow zone—but also archaeological activity at the northern extreme of the excavation area.

There remain a number of questions that we hope will be addressed in future excavation:

--Are the squared blocks in the southern scarp, between 269E and 271E, part of a wall? Are they associated with the structure enclosed by the two north-south walls currently being excavated?

--Does the large cut stone block revealed in the western scarp of the robbing trench (cut = B54) in the northern third of the excavation area indicate the presence of a wall running perpendicular to the wall at the bottom of the robbing trench (B54)?

--What is the Ottoman II pit (cut = B71) that we have not finished excavating, a pit or a well?

--The removal of several contexts (B40, B56, B116=B143, B135, B136) in the northern quarter of the excavation area has revealed a deposit of clay with a flat-bottomed linear depression and a flat surface cut by the Early Modern boundary wall’s construction trench (cut = B73). Is this clay deposit indoor space or outdoor space? Is the flat-bottomed linear depression the bedding for a wall similar to the clay oven’s (cf. B124)?

--Is the tile scatter revealed under B135 and B136—its northern edge was always visible in the north escarpment—a destruction horizon? What is its full extent and relationship, if any, to the wall at the bottom of the northern robbing trench (cut=B54)?

--Since we have begun to uncover several contexts that suggest the presence of interior space, in addition to numerous exterior contexts, what is the sequence of changes in outside vs. inside space in Nezi field?

And finally, one brief observation and a caveat. Several baskets (B86, B105, B129) in closely-dated contexts within our excavation area have had their pottery dates raised significantly by coins found in the deposits—this is unusual for archaeology at Corinth. And the caveat: a portion of a number of deposits—primarily the clay floors and their related contexts—was set aside for water sieving, which has not yet been performed. The data provided may alter some of our pottery readings and interpretation of the activities associated with the floors.