Tag: Canada

Terracotta Warriors tour curtailed – won’t be stopping in Victoria and Calgary

Bad news today for ancient history fans in Western Canada.

The Terracotta Warriors show now on at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) will not be coming to Victoria and Calgary. It had previously been announced that the Terracotta Warriors would visit the RoyalBC and Glenbow Museums, respectively,in 2011/2012. The ROM is the lead partner in organizing the exhibit.

A release says that out-of-country loan of Terracotta artefacts from China is unable to be extended beyond one year to Canada. As a result, the museums that planned to exhibit the artifacts during the second year of the tour, Calgary’s Glenbow Museum and the Royal BC Museum will be unable to do so. The exhibition will travel as planned to Montreals Museum of Fine Arts to a highly-anticipated opening in February 2011, as this scheduled stop is within the one-year time frame.

Concerns aboutartefact preservationwere given asthe main reason.

The Shaanxi Cultural Heritage Promotion Centre, Peoples Republic of China, however has confirmed a one-year limit on the travel of these artifacts to all future exhibitions around the world due to an increased focus on their long term preservation, said the release.

Thisbrings upthe question – whyweren’t the organizers aware of these concerns before the tour was launched?The release doesn’t say but no doubt theanswers will come outover the next week.

Ancient Stone Monument to Napi Discovered on Canadian Prairies

A stone effigy monument, in the shape of a Blackfoot creator god named Napi, has been discovered in southern Alberta south of the Red Deer River near the hamlet of Finnegan.

One day Old Man determined that he would make a woman and a child; so he formed them both the woman and the child, her son of clay. After he had moulded the clay in human shape, he said to the clay, “You must be people …

They walked down to the river with their Maker, and then he told them that his name was Na’pi, – Old Man.

-From Blackfoot Lodge Tales, George Grinnell, 1892

The Blackfoot are a people that have inhabited the prairies since ancient times. The effigy dates to somewhere between AD 1000 and AD 1500. It would have been constructed before the time of European contact.

Napi is a deity credited with creating the Blackfoot people and the landscape they inhabit. According to Blackfoot tradition hes like the creator, said archaeologist Meaghan Porter, who investigated the site.

She said that the imageis made out of rocks and its in the outline of a man it has arms and a torso, head and legs as well as genitalia. Itsroughly five meters by five meters long. Therocks are about the size of a fist, they have a mix of black, grey and tan colours. Porter doesn’t think these colours were chosen deliberately I think thats just the rocks that were available,shesaid.

Some of the rocks have been fire-broken. This means that they have a red color and are fractured apart and jagged. They look like this because someone, back in antiquity, exposed them to heat whether this was done for religious reasons is unknown. Im not entirely sure, said Porter, again, it could just be that those were the rocks available.

Only nine stone effigies like this have been documented in all of Alberta.

Why was it created?

Archaeologists have found other sites near the area. One of them is a camp, located about one kilometre away, which is about 400 meters by 400 meters in size. Archaeologists found bone remains, hearths, more fire broken rock and even obsidian material that comes from a volcano.

“As he lay on his back, stretched out on the ground, with arms extended, he marked himself out with stones”

My hypothesis currently is that this Napi effigy (is) kind of a central focal point for other sites the area is significant, said Porter.

Blackfoot stories mention effigies like this. In 1892 anthropologist George Grinnell published a story about Napi, that he –

Made the Milk River (the Teton) and crossed it, and, being tired, went up on a little hill and lay down to rest. As he lay on his back, stretched out on the ground, with arms extended, he marked himself out with stones,–the shape of his body, head, legs, arms, and everything. There you can see those rocks today.

A vulnerable site

The site is quite vulnerable. Sadly some of the rocks had already been moved from their original location by thetime the effigy was documented.

Themonument could easily be destroyed if more of the rocks were moved. As such the team has been cautious about not releasing information or pictures that will give away its precise location. They did release a diagram that shows what the site looks like its pictured here. Porter also published an article about the find in the journal Alberta Archaeological Review and discussed the work at the 2010 Canadian Archaeological Association annual meeting.

The person who reported this find, a rancher, is also very protective of the site. He was concerned that energy development in the area might affect it. The ranchers grandparents, who homesteaded in the area told him to watch over the effigy, wrote Porter in her journal article. The energy company, EnCana, decided to stop development and even agreed to finance the mapping and study of the site. It is now protected under Alberta heritage law.

Chinese president Hu Jintao may kick-off Terracotta Warriors show in Toronto

A Toronto newspaper is reporting that Chinese President Hu Jintao may kick-off the Terracotta Warriors exhibit, at the Royal Ontario Museum, on June 26.

It will be the largest Terracotta Warriors show ever displayed in North America featuring 250 artefacts in total including 16 human terracotta figures. It’s opening day coincides with the start of the G20 summit in Toronto, which the president will be attending.

The Toronto Starreports that the president and his wife Liu Yongqing have been formally invited by the museum. Were hoping, but we know there are lots of things on their agenda, exhibit curator Dr. Chen Shen, told the newspaper.

There is no reason in the world to close. Its perfectly safe up here for our public and our staff

In the same article museum officials defended their decision to open the exhibit while the summit is running. Other venues in Toronto have decided to shut down. These include the Art Gallery of Ontario, the CN Tower and the University of Torontos St. George campus (which practically surrounds the museum).

There is no reason in the world to close. Its perfectly safe up here for our public and our staff, the Toronto Star quotes Dr. Dan Rahimi as saying. He is the vice-president of gallery development. The city is going to be a ghost town, so let people come to the ROM.

When contacted by Heritage Key several weeks ago the museum declined to comment on what special security precautions they will be taking.

4600-year-old Skeleton Discovered in Northern Ontario

A team of archaeologists, working with the Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug First Nation, has discovered a 4,600-year-old burial at the mouth of the Bug River, on the south side of Big Trout Lake in Canada.

Big Trout Lake is located in the far northwest of the province of Ontario. Even today its difficult to access. The provinces road system stops nearly 400 kilometres south of the area, making planes the most practical way to get in and out.

The lake is located on the same latitude as Manchester, but the climate is far colder. In the winter the temperature can go down below -30 degrees Celsius. The area around the lake is heavily forested with evergreen trees. The population encompassed by the Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug First Nation community is estimated to be around 1,200.

Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug chief Donny Morris told me in an interview that a group of fishermen were the first to come across the bones. Water levels were high on the lake last fall causing the shoreline to erode, exposing the burial.

Chief Morris called in local police to investigate. He also contacted Lakehead University archaeology Professor Scott Hamilton. The police determined that the bones were ancient and Professor Hamilton took over the task of determining who this fellow was.

The burial

Hamilton said that its very unusual for aboriginal burials to be studied in Canada as laws and ethics generally prohibit excavation. In Canada, certainly in Ontario, human burial excavations simply dont happen except in salvage circumstances, he said.

This is one of those circumstances.

So what did they find?

The skeleton is of a fully grown adult male, likely in his late 30s or early 40s. Its pretty much intact from the knees and forearms upward, said Hamilton. He was roughly five and a half feet tall with a very, very robust muscular build. Investigators could determine this because parts of the bone, which attach to the muscles, were well developed.

It is not known why he died, however he appears to have been given a formal burial. Theres a flat slab of granite thats associated directly with the bones, said Hamilton. It looks very much like a purposeful grave.

The team is not certain why this slab was buried with him, well be taking a closer look at the stone as part of our analysis to see if we can see any evidence of function, said Hamilton. He added that the team also found red ochre covering the bones. (Its) a very faint red ochre staining in the sediments and on the bones. It would have been applied to the mans body before he was buried.

The use of red ochre is seen in burials all over the world, including prehistoric North America. The color may have held religious significance to the people who buried the man.

Radiocarbon dates indicate that he lived around 4,600 years ago although that number may change slightly as the date is calibrated. To put this in context, the man would have lived in Big Trout Lake at roughly the same time that the Great Pyramids were being built in Egypt.

What did he eat?

The team is performing oxygen and nitrogen isotope tests on the skeleton to determine what kind of diet he consumed. So far tests indicate that in addition to hunting land animals the man loved fish!

Fish is clearly an important part of the diet, we can see that in the nitrogen numbers, said Professor Hamilton. The team also examined the calculus around the teeth and found starch. Clearly plant food was also an important part of his diet, said Hamilton adding, we havent been able to figure out what plants contributed that starch.

How did he live?

This man’s lifestyle would have been very different to those of people living in Ancient Egypt or the Near East at that time. The -30 degree temperature calls for an approach that doesnt involve building pyramids.

These folks are very much adapted to the kinds of resources that one finds in the boreal forest, said Hamilton. These resources are highly seasonal in their availability and the season of comparative plenty is often spring, summer and perhaps early fall.

These seasonal resources include fish spawns, migratory water fowl, caribou migration and even wild rice.

This results in very, very low population density (and) very high population mobility as people are moving over very large territories over the course of the year. This means that the man would have been part of a family-based band. That is a small number of related people who travel together.

The hardest part of the year was, of course, winter. The winter seasons are generally a time of some scarcity and hardship as spatially concentrated food disappears, said Hamilton.

That means that sub-arctic people, in order to survive year in, year out through generations, have to have a seasonal cycle thats highly mobile, he said. They can place themselves on the landscape where they can predict resources will be available and follow the seasonal cycles of availability.

The past is very recent…

Hamiltons research indicates that this lifestyle continued for an exceptionally long period of time. The past is very recent in the far north, he said.

“Back in the 20s and before, people at that time were nomadic living in the bush and not staying in one place….”

When Europeans appeared in the 17th century the people continued to live this lifestyle. These northern hunters, trappers and fishers (continued) to supply themselves with food predominately from the land from the product of their hunt from the product of their gathering of wild produce, said Hamilton.

They may be gathering and harvesting those resources with European technology but theyre (still using a) fairly significant amount of traditional technology canoes, snowshoes, footwear, clothing, he said. What we see is this really interesting mix, an admixture, of traditional technology and the incorporation of new technology to practice a traditional life.

This continues into the 20th century. In fact a fascinating story, described on the Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug First Nation website, talks about encountering a hairy being out in the forest:

Back in the 20s and before, people at that time were nomadic living in the bush and not staying in one place. During rainy and snowy weathers, they said there is a being covered with some hair and was mostly constructed with skeleton. (It) used to fly and made (an) awful horrible scream/sound. If you saw it, you would go insane.

Canada didnt really have much of a presence in far northern Ontario until very recently, said Hamilton. In fact many communities, including Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug, did not sign a treaty with Canada until 1929.

In this rather technical treaty they were forced to cede land to the crown:

NOW THEREFORE we, the said Ojibeway, Cree and other Indian inhabitants, in consideration of the provisions of the said foregoing Treaty being extended to us, do hereby cede, release, surrender and yield up to the Government of the Dominion of Canada for His Majesty the King and His Successors forever, all our rights, titles and privileges whatsoever in all that tract of land, and land covered by water in the Province of Ontario, comprising part of the District of Kenora (Patricia Portion) containing one hundred and twenty-eight thousand three hundred and twenty square miles, more or less, being bounded on the South by the Northerly limit of Treaty Number Nine; on the West by Easterly limits of Treaties Numbers Three and Five, and the boundary between the Provinces of Ontario and Manitoba; on the North by the waters of Hudson Bay, and on the East by the waters of James Bay and including all islands, islets and rocks, waters and land covered by water within the said limits, and also all the said Indian rights, titles and privileges whatsoever to all other lands and lands covered by water, wherever situated in the Dominion of Canada.

The crown did, however, promise that a reserve would be set aside for them:

AND HIS MAJESTY through His said Commissioners agrees and undertakes to set side reserves for each band as provided by the said aforementioned Treaty, at such places or locations as may be arranged between the said Commissioners and the Chiefs and headmen of each Band.

Change comes to an ancient lifestyle

Major changes started to occur in Ontarios Far North at around the time the treaty was signed. The ancient practice of people living in small bands declined and communities became larger and less mobile.

The really big changes come about surprisingly recently perhaps as late as the end of the Second World War in many cases, said Professor Hamilton. Despite these changes important elements of this ancient lifestyle live on, including the language. If you go to many of the communities of the far north now, the elders still predominately speak Cree or Ojibway.

Today the Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug First Nation has a nursing station, restaurant, band office, airport and ice skating rink. They even have a website. But despite all the modern conveniences, the people still practice hunting, fishing and trapping.

Old legends also live on, heres another interesting one, available on the Kitchenuhmaykoosik Inninuwug website:

A weird, odd looking foot-long animal (a cross breed of an otter & beaver or muskrat) with a rat tail with white almost a human face was discovered floating on the mainland shore of Kitchenuhmaykoosib drowned. No one knows what it is but our ancestors used to call it the Ugly One. It is rarely seen but when seen especially if it is dead, it’s bad omen and something bad will happen according to our elders and ancestors.

Chief Morris said that soon, after all the archaeological analysis is complete, the 4,600-year-old man will be laid to rest again. Although the world has changed this fellow will, once again, receive the dignity of a proper burial in the land of his descendents.

I asked the chief to describe the ceremony how do you honor a 4,600-year-old man who was buried very simply, with red ochre and a granite slab? Do you buck history and have an elaborate gathering? The chief replied simply, it will probably just be a memorial service.

Australian Museum Curator Janet Carding New CEO of Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum

Canadas largest museum has picked a curator from down under to lead them into the next decade.

Janet Carding has been Assistant Director, Public Programs & Operations at the Australian Museum inSydney, since 2004. She also teaches the Museums and Galleries administration segment of the University of Sydneys Museum Studies program.

She will be taking over as CEO and Director of the Royal Ontario Museum after William Thorsell, the museums current leader, retires in August.

Like the ROM the Australian Museum has a collection that stretches into ancient times. In particular it has a large collection devoted to the aboriginalcultures of Australia.

She started her career at the Science Museum in London, UK. The museum said in a press release that, Cardings scope of work includes managing projects during construction of the Science Museum’s Welcome Wing extension, leading exhibition development teams, and coordination of a review of the National Museum of Science and Industry, London (NMSI), resulting in new strategic direction and organizational changes.”

In a statement Carding said that, Im delighted to accept this important position with the Royal Ontario Museum, and am looking forward to building on the momentum of Renaissance ROM, ensuring that its success endures and the Museum thrives, adding, I intend to strengthen and deepen the ROMs relationship with its many audiences, and its place at the heart of the community.

She holds a Masters degree from the University of London in the History of Science and Medicine.

Challenges

As discussed in a blog earlier this week, Carding will take over a museum that has been physically transformed. William Thorsell presided over a $270 million expansion that saw its Bloor Street frontage turned into a giant crystal. The expansion project was called Renaissance ROM.

An immediate challenge for Carding will be to finish the final elements of the expansion. The ROM has plans to build new galleries dedicated to Nubia and the Eastern Roman Empire however they need to get the funds first.

She is also going to be leading the museum at a time when governments are looking at cutting their spending. Canadas federal government is running a deficit of $50 billion a year and the Province of Ontario is dealing with a $20 billion annual shortfall.

ROM set to announce new CEO… but what should his or her goal be?

In a matter of weeks, or even days, the Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto Canada,will be announcing who their next CEO is going to be.

I dont have any knowledge as to who it is, but, can certainly say that the new leader has an almost impossible act to follow.

William Thorsell, the museums current leader, will be retiring in August. His ten year termat the museum was one of unprecedented growth. Under his leadership the ROM built an expansion that saw its Bloor Street frontage turned quite literally into a giant crystal.

Collections that had been in storage from the Middle East, South Asia, South America, the American Southwest and Oceania are now on display inside the crystal. The museum is also in the process of building new galleries dedicated to Ancient Rome and Byzantium.

Over the past decade the museum has managed to land some major special exhibits. Last summer it played host to a Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit. This summer it will open the largest Terracotta Warriors show ever to come to North America.

It even got the opportunity to display the (second) oldest copy of the Ten Commandments – albeit for one week only. The line to see the scroll tailed off for nearly a kilometre.

Of course Thorsells rule was no pax ROMana there was plenty of controversy to go around. The Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit attracted street protests, and a request from Jordan that the scrolls themselves be seized. The museum also made an error in showing the James Ossuary in 2002. It blew up on them when an Israel Antiquities Authority investigation determined the inscription on it to be fake. There is also an active, indeed never-ending, architectural debate going on about the merits of designing the expansion in the shape of a crystal.

But whats a museum without some controversy? Its common now for major museums and galleries to take some tough headlines. Take a look at the Elgin Marbles and the British Museum, the Louvre andallegedlystolen artefactsor the Met and naked art stunts … Ok maybe that last one doesnt count.

So what challenges will the ROMs new CEO face? And more importantly – what great project should Canada’s largest museum now embark on?

CHALLENGE ONE – Nubia and Eastern Rome

One of the ROMs strengths is that it has a comprehensive collection of Nubian antiquities. Archaeologist Pamela Rose, who recently discovered a 1st millennium BC dark age settlement at Qasr Ibrim, stopped by Toronto specifically to examine pottery samples at the museum.

Last January museum officials told Heritage Key that theyare hopeful that funding would emerge to build a new Nubian gallery, along with one dedicated to the Eastern Roman Empire. However since that time no announcement about these galleries has been made. It seems that one of the top priorities for the new CEO is to turnhopes into financial reality.

CHALLENGE TWO – Government funding

Thorsell enjoyed strong support from all levels of government during his term. The federal government and the province both helped fund the museums projects.

When the Dead Sea Scrolls came to the museum the premier himself was there to announce support. When the museum needed money to kick-start its Rome and Byzantine galleries, the federal minister for infrastructure, John Baird, showed up in January 2010 to cut a check.

The new CEO will probably find financial support for major projects harder to come by. Restraint is the operative word used by politicians in Canada when describing the future.

The Ontario government is running a budget deficit of nearly $20 billion CDN and has already announced delays in building new light rail transit in Toronto. The federal government is facing a deficit in the neighbourhood of $50 billion and their stimulus program, which is funding construction of the new Rome and Byzantine galleries, will be ending in the spring of 2011.

The ROM, of course, is not captive to the government when it comes to funding. It charges fees for admission and museum membership.It also has an active fundraising program. In fact the ROMs crystal expansion is named after Michael Lee-Chin, one of its biggest contributors.

If government goes to ground with fundingthenmoney fromadmission/membership and private donations will be all the more important for the ROM and a top priority for the new CEO.

CHALLENGE THREE – The next big project

What do you do after galleries for Nubia and Eastern Rome have been built? Do you plan another large expansion?

That seems unlikely.

In order to do that, you need two things space and money. The museum is bordered by the University of Toronto on the west Bloor on the north and Queens Park crescentto the east. To the south lies the defunct McLaughlin Planetarium which has recently been sold tothe University of Toronto(which has its own need for space).

So even if the cash were readily available it would be pretty hard to do a major spurt of growth without knocking down a building somewhere.

No, the next big project needs to be one that doesnt involve construction cranes. One avenue the museum should look at is building up its research capabilities by hiring more archaeologists, geologists and life scientists, and fully funding their research.

The next big project needs to be one that doesnt involve construction cranes.

Its a worthy goal and one that is already being pursued to some extent.

Just a year ago the museum hired Dr. Clemens Reichel, the director of the Hamoukar project in Syria. The work his team is doing is amazing, to say the least. We now know that Hamoukar is one of the oldest cities in the world and also experienced the first known war in human history. It pitted the sites local residents against Uruk, no less! As Im writing this his team is in the field continuing their investigation of the site.

Dr. Robert Masons work is another example of headline grabbing research at the museum. Last summer his team found a Neolithic era landscape that has stone circles, alignments and, what appears to be, burial cairns. They will be back in the field this summer trying to learn more about it.

So what other reasons are there to hire more archaeologists and do more research?

For one thing archaeological research is not anywhere near as expensive as building an expansion. To doresearch you need good lab facilities (already available at ROM/U of T), a large research library (again readily available at ROM/U of T), an annual salary (60/70 K a year for an entry levelcurator). After that you need funds for travel, conservation, equipment, some field assistants… and thats about it. In comparison the costsfor the ROM’s expansion were estimatedto be$270 million dollars.

Another point to consider -right now is an excellent time to hire archaeologists.

The financial crisis has hit academia hard, leaving many recent grads looking for institutions willing to fund their research. If the ROM were put five ads up, right now, advertising $60,000 a year jobs for recent grads withresearch programs ready to go they would have some excellent proposals.

Finally, think of the positive benefits this would have for students and Toronto residents. Researchers not only research but lecture at local universities and public events. Dr. Reichel, for instance, teaches Near Eastern archaeology at U of T. He also talked about his research at a free public colloquium, at the museum, in February.

New archaeologists would not just be bringing their research projects to the museum but to the city at large.

Toronto G20 Summit: Terracotta Warriors to Guard ROM

Its confirmed the Terracotta Warriors show will be opening on June 26at the RoyalOntario Museum, inToronto rightat the startof a G20 summit.

It will be the largest Terracotta Warriors show ever to hit North America. Featuring 250 artefacts, including 16 human terracotta figures.

While the Terracotta Warriors show will be opening many other venues will be closing.

The CN Tower will be closed, the University of Toronto campus (which surrounds the museum) will be shut down and even the Toronto Blue Jays baseball team have moved their weekend home games to Philadelphia. A security cordon will also be in place around the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, preventing visitors from accessing much of the downtown area.

Making matters more interesting is that the official protest site, for the G20, will be at Queens Park, about 100 meters south of the museum. Protest groups say they will not remain in that zone.

But, nevertheless, the museum just released a statement saying that the show shall go on.

The ROM will be open for business as usual during this period and is looking forward to a successful exhibition launch,” the statement reads. The museumdeclined to comment on what extra security precautions willbe inplace.

Terracotta Army Stays Until 2011

One other piece of news regarding the warriors – and one which is definitely in the good news category – is that the warriors will be staying in Toronto until the New Year. January 2, 2011 is now confirmed as the exhibition’s closing date, said senior publicist Marilynne Friedman in an email. I’m so pleased that we have it through the holiday season!

Terracotta Warriors coming to Calgary’s Glenbow Museum

Terracotta Warriors

Fresh from shows in Washington D.C.and Toronto, 18 Terracotta Warriors will make their debut at Calgary’s Glenbow Museum next summer. The 18 statues, the afterlife bodyguards of China’s First Qin Emperor – of which 8,000 have been excavated so far – will be joined by some brand new archaeological relics from the emperor’s giant tomb including two horses and a painting, as well and hundreds of other artefacts associated with the warriors.

It’s a big coup for the museum, who will expect blockbuster attendances akin to those seen at D.C.’s National Geographic Museum and the Royal Ontario Museum. The First Qin Emperor’s mausoleum is one of ancient history’s enduring enigmas, and is still being excavated 36 years after its discovery by farmers in 1974. Just last week another 114 warriors were discovered, hitting headlines worldwide.

Qin Shi Huang was the first emperor to successfully unite China 2,200 years ago. His monumental mausoleum, near the ancient capital city of Xi’an, took 700,000 conscripts around 36 years to complete, just in time for his death.

Further reading:

Top 10 Terracotta Warriors facts

Beardless warriors evident of teenage conscripts?

Video of the Qin Mausoleum excavations

Terracotta Army Exhibit in Toronto Could be Affected by G20 Protests

The opening weekend for the The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army, is shaping up to be one filled with, well, warriors. The Royal Ontario Museumannounced recently that the exhibit, the largest Terracotta Warriors show ever to hit North America, will be opening on June 26.

That day coincides with the opening of the G20 summit which runs from June 26-27 in Toronto. The leaders of the worlds 20 largest economies, including US President Barack Obama, will be attending meetings at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

News is just breaking that the main protest zone islikely to be just steps away from the museum. Torontos Deputy Mayor Joe Panatalone just told The Toronto Star that Queen’s Park willlikely bethemain protestarea for demonstraters.

A lot of protests are normally held there and that is a more ideal location, he said. Its close to government, which is the legislature, and secondly, its surrounded by roads on all sides except for the south side. Its self-contained.

Originally the protest area was going to be at Trinity Bellwoods Park, quite far away. During the G20, sections of downtown Toronto near the convention centre will be shut down, with access being restricted to guests, nearby residents, and security. The protest zone is a place, near the shut-down areas, where protesters can demonstrate freely. There is no guarantee that all the protesters will stay in that area.

News is just breaking that the main protest zone is likely to be just steps away from the museum

While Queens Park is surrounded by roads, it is only about 100 meters south ofthe Royal Ontario Museum. The subway line to the museum has a stop at Queen’s Park.

It should be noted that there will be no shortage of modern day warriors in the area. Thousands of police will be on hand in the city and the Canadian Forces recently launched aerial drills over Toronto using helicopters and jet fighters.

This news is just breaking, late in the day, so we will have to wait to hear the museums officialresponse to this development.

It won’t be the first time that a major Toronto exhibition has been affected by political protests. The wonderful Afghanistan exhibit was marred by strike action, and last summer there were protests at the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibition,

The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army runs from 26th June to December, 2010, at the ROM.

The ROM expands: Roman and Byzantine Galleries to open in Toronto – Nubia gallery is likely

Yesterday was an exciting day for those in Toronto who are interested in archaeology.

Heritage Key learned that the Terracotta Warriors exhibit, coming to Toronto in June, will be the largestwarriors exhibitever to hit North America. No terracotta spectacle on this scale has ever come to these shores!

But thats not all. Earlier in the day there was an announcement made by Canadas infrastructure minister John Baird.

He said that the Canadian government will commit $2.75 million towards the construction of new Roman and Byzantine galleries at the Royal Ontario Museum.It will also be usedinrevamping thebat cave,” – a facsimile of a bat cave that is geared towards children.

The Roman and Byzantine galleries went off-line when the museum was expanded around the year 2005. Plans have been in place to build new and expanded ones but the money hasnt been there.

That is until now.

The federal governments pledge, combined with the museums fundraising, means that construction can begin on these two galleries with an opening expected next year.

Heritage Key has also learned that the museum is pushing hard for construction to start on a new Nubia gallery. They also hope to start work on a gallery dedicated to the Eastern Roman Empire.

The museums vice-president for gallery development, Dr. Dan Rahimi, said that he wants both Eastern Rome and Nubia to open up at the same time as Rome and Byzantine. I hope to open both those galleries at the same time that we open the Roman galleries… I cant commit to that yet but the museum is really trying to do that and well see if we can make them (the galleries) on the same schedule.

Dr. Marie Bountrogianni, president and executive director of the museums board of directors, said that the museums fundraising is strong and she is very optimistic that galleries for Nubia and the Eastern Roman Empire will eventually be built. She isnt sure, however, when that will be.

Paul Denis was also gun-ho on this. He has curatorial responsibility for the Eastern Roman Empire exhibit. Im sure we can bridge it because it would be great to build them all at once, be he added that he cant make any promises.

What will be on display?

In short, wonderful things the new gallery space will let the museum take artefacts out that were previously in storage. It will also let them put back old favourites that were on displaybefore the renovations. It’s estimated that only 5 percent of the museum’s artefactsare being viewed by the publicright now.

The centrepiece of the Roman gallery will be the museums collection of 19 Roman marble portraits. They are, absolutely fabulous portraits of living Romans at the time – fabulous marbles, said Denis. One of them is of the emperor Lucius Verus (AD 130-169) seen in a pictureat the top ofthis article.

The Byzantine gallery will have a 12 feet by 20 feet, mosaic Denis said – that will be a key part of the Byzantine gallery.

Its got geometric patterns around the border and then it has baskets and fruit and then in the centre it has a Rooster surrounded by a vine scroll.

It was created around AD 325-350, around the time that the emperor Constantine founded Constantinople.

Unfortunately I dont a picture of it yet. The museum is searching for one that we can use on Heritage Key. As soon as one is available Ill post it.

The Eastern Roman Empire exhibit will feature artefacts east of Italy that date to before Byzantine times. These will include jewellery and ceramics. Its the first time the museum has had a gallery dedicated especially to this element of Roman history.

A Nubia Gallery at the ROM

The Nubian gallery will have its own treats – once it gets the go-ahead.

The museumis only two or three galleries in North America that has Nubian material, said Dr. Rahimi. Readers may remember Heritage Keys story about Dr. Pamela Rose and her discovery of an ancient dark age settlement at Qasr Ibrim. She flew into Toronto specifically to examine the museums collection – which is how I got the interview.

Only two or three galleries in North America (have) Nubian material

Dr. Rahimi said that the Nubian gallery will cover the full stretch of the regions history, from prehistory onwards. This will includesthe timeperiod of Taharqa a 25th dynasty pharaoh of Egypt whose one ton statue was found recently deep in Sudan.

Artefacts from the kingdom of Meroe (3rd century BC 3rd century AD) will also be presented. Epigraphers studying the language used at this time (Meroitic) often go to the ROM to study its collection. We have a lot of inscribed rocks and things that people come here to study, said Rahimi.

As Nubia entered medieval times the people converted to Christianity in large numbers. Nubia was a very early Christian empire, said Rahimi. We show that with artefacts that are from church contexts.