Tag: Toronto

‘Unique’ astronomical object reveals Ancient Egyptians kept close tabs on the Big Dipper

New research on a 2,400 year old star table shows that the Ancient Egyptians kept close tabs on the Big Dipper, monitoring changes in the constellations orientation throughout the course of an entire year.

The Big Dipper is composed of seven stars and is easily viewable in the northern hemisphere. Its shape looks like a ladle with a scoop attached. Ancient Egyptians represented it as an oxs foreleg.

If a personwere to observethe constellationat the exactsame time every night they would see it gradually move counter-clockwise each time they saw it.

Professor Sarah Symons, of McMaster University in Hamilton Canada, carried out the new research. She presented her results on Sunday at an Egyptology symposium in Toronto. The star table she analyzed is located inside the lid of a 2,400 year old granite sarcophagus, constructed in the shape of a bull, which is now in the Egyptian Museum. The table is, unique, though interesting, a very provocative astronomical object, she said.

Indeed the sarcophagus dates to the 30th dynasty, an important period in Egyptian history. It is the last point of time in antiquity where Egypt would be ruled by native born rulers. In 343 BC the Persians took over Egypt, defeating a pharaoh named Nectanebo II and forcing him to flee south into Nubia. The country would remain under Persian control until Alexander the Great captured it in 332 BC, inaugurating a long line of Greek, followed by Roman, rulers.

Monitoring the Big Dipper

Inside the sarcophagus there is an astronomical table, a section of which has rows that show the foreleg of an ox in a wide range of different positions. Its quite a jumble, Professor Symons said.

This section, although confusing to read, includes notation for the three Egyptian seasons, Akhet, Peret and Shemu. Each season is broken down into four months. It also has symbols representing the beginning, middle and end of the night although it isnt knownat what exact time thesepoints would have been set.

(Its) location throughout the course of the night, across the course of the year, was important for them to report.

Symons decided to focus on the orientation of the forelegs, re-drawing them as arrows. When she did this a pattern started to appear.In general the motion that it follows is the counter-clockwise motion that we would expect.

But there were problems. Over the course of a year the forelegs sometimes went the wrong way as if the stars had stopped obeying the rules of astronomy. She believes that this was a scribal error, caused by someone writing down the information in the wrong format.

When the observations were first made they were written on papyrus and the monthswereprobablyorganized intocolumns. On the other hand they were written in as rows on the sarcophagus.

What happens to our table if we just keep all the months together?And work with them as columns, she wondered.She found that the table hadfewer errorsand the information fell into place. Overall the motion is counter-clockwise throughout the year in general, she said.

An ancient record

This table, she said in an interview, it not made up of casual observations of the Big Dipper but looks more like a record of it. The Big Dipper’s location throughout the course of the night, across the course of the year, was important for them to report.

She added that this practice, of recording the orientation of the constellation, may have been going on for some time. We have only a fraction of the original astronomical documents, created by the Egyptians, she pointed out.

Why they created this year-long record is another matter. Although it would have been of help in timekeeping, Symons thinks that the main reason is probably ceremonial perhaps something to do with the bull shaped sarcophagus that it is found in. The star record would be bound up with temple ritual (and) mortuary ritual,” she said.

King Tut suffered ‘massive’ chest injury, new research reveals

A new study shows that Tutankhamun, Egypts famous boy-king who died around the age of 18, suffered a massive crushing tearing injury to his chest that likely would have killed him.

X-rays and CT scans have previouslyshown that the pharaohs heart, chest wall, the front part of his sternum and adjacent ribs, are missing. In Ancient Egypt the heart was like the brain and removing it was something that was not done.

The heart, considered the seat of reason, emotion, memory and personality, was the only major organ intentionally left in the body, writes Dr. Robert Ritner in the book Ancient Egypt.

The new research was done by Dr. Benson Harer, a medical doctor with an Egyptology background, who was given access to nearly 1700 CT scan images of Tut that were taken by a team of Egyptian scientists in 2005. Dr. Zahi Hawass, head of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, gave permission for the work.

Zahi was very kind he let me get access to the entire database of all the CT scans, said Dr. Harer.

It has been suggested that tomb robbers, operating sometime between 1925 and 1968, may have stolen the heart and chest bones. The new research shows that while robbers stole some of Tuts jewellery they didnt take the body parts. Instead they were lost due to a massive chest injury Tut sustained while he was still alive.

This isnt the only medical problem Tut had. In 2005 a team of researchers reported that he had a broken leg and earlier this year an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association revealed that Tut suffered from malaria, something that may have contributed to his death.

Harers work was published in the journal Bulletin of the Egyptian Museum. It was also presented last spring at a conference organized by the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE). This Thursday Harer was in Canada, giving his findings at the University of Toronto.

Harer specializes in Obstetrics and Gynecology, but also taught Egyptology as an adjunct professor at California State University at San Bernardino, up until his retirement.

1968 – The first X-rays

To understand what happened to Tuts chest we need to go back to 1968. In that year the first x-rays were done revealing that many of Tuts chest bones were missing. They also showed that jewellery, which had been on King Tut when an autopsy was done in 1925, were also gone. This means that robbers got to him sometime between those years.

Harers research indicates that while Tuts jewellery was certainly stolen, the chest bones were already long gone.

The CT scans show, in high-resolution, the edge of what is left of Tuts rib bones. Dr. Harer said that the ribs are very neatly cut and could not have been chopped off by modern day thieves. The ribs were cut by embalmers and not by robbers.

He added that if you try to cut through a 3,500 year old bone it is brittle, before you can saw up through it the pressure on the bone would crack a vast part and you would have jagged edges of the bone, he said.

These are neatly trimmed and the robbers are not going to take the time to try and do a tidy job.

King Tut's mummy, as photographed by Harry Burton, the photographer that for Howard Carter documented the opening of Tutankhamun's tomb. - Image copyright the Griffith InstituteMore proof that Tut suffered a major chest injury is found in the technique that Tuts embalmers used to take out his intestines, liver and stomach.

In Ancient Egypt those organs were removed after death and put into canopic jars (video: King Tut’s canopic shrine and jars introduced).

Harer said that the embalmers used a transverse incision which was cut into Tut and went from his umbilicus (his navel), towards the spine. They took out the organs below the diaphragm, he said. However they did not go through the diaphragm to extract the lungs – the chest was gaping open, they could just lift them out directly.

Harer says he has never seen another royal mummy cutinto this way. Tut is the only upscale mummy I know that had a transverse incision.

Normally, for religious reasons, there would be a special amulet, an embalming plate, over the incision that the embalmer made.

However, in this case, there is none. Since the body already had a huge opening it would be pointless to suture the abdominal incision and protect, Harer wrote in his journal article.

Also Tut’s arms were crossed at his hips, not at his chest, as would normally be befitting a pharaoh.

Stuffing up Tut

Theres more evidence that Tut’s chest, including the skin, had been gouged away while he was still alive.

When the first autopsy on Tut was done in 1925, it revealed that he had been stuffed like a turkey, filled with what Howard Carter called a mass of linen and resin, now of rock-like hardness.

Harer says that the CT scans show that this material would have been packed from the chest down.

The chest was packed first, and as they did so, they pushed the flaccid diaphragm down they inverted it, said Dr. Harer. However the packing improved the appearance of Tuts chest, the packing restored the normal contour of the chest and then the beaded bib (with Tuts jewellery) was placed on top of it.

When Carter examined the bib he was impressed with how adherent it was. “It was so adherent that he couldnt successfully remove it, said Harer. Carter didn’t hesitate to remove other parts of Tut’s body, he actually hacked off the limbs in order to aid the autopsy.

Harer pointed out that if the bib had been put over Tut’s skin (rather than the packing material) he should have had no trouble with it. If that beaded bib had been placed over skin over the clavicle, the skin would have provided a plane in which the bib could have been easily removed.

Chased by Hippos – Watch towards the end of the video, where you’ll see a hippo ferociously attacking a boat.

What caused this injury?

One possibility that Dr. Harer ruled out is that of a chariot accident. If he fell from a speeding chariot going at top speed you would have what we call a tumbling injury hed go head over heels. He would break his neck. His back. His arms, legs. It wouldnt gouge a chunk out of his chest.

Instead, at his Toronto lecture, Harer brought up another, more exotic possibility – that Tut was killed by a hippo.

Its not as far out an idea as it sounds, hippos are aggressive, quick and territorial animals, and there is an artefact in Tuts tomb which appears to show him hunting one of them.

It would also explain why there is no account of Tuts death since being killed by a hippo would be a pretty embarrassing way for a pharaoh to die.

Hippos kill more people than any other animal, they are the most lethal animal in Africa (if not) the world, said Harer. The victim suffers massive tearing injury and can actually be cut in half. Medical reports indicate that even though they are running away from the hippo they typically suffer a frontal wound.

In Tuts case, if the hippo charged, his entourage may not have been able to get to him in time. If he did have a club foot (as a recent medical report suggests) it would make him the slowest person getting out of the way the easiest person for the hippo to get.

Tut may not have even been hunting a hippo. It may have been that he was fowling in the marsh, just got in the wrong area, and the hippo attacked him.

Still, it’s tempting to imagineTut trying to hunt a hippo. Despite his club foot and malaria, it’s enticing to believe that the teenage pharaoh decided to hunt one of the most dangerous animals in the world. If his goal was to increase his fame then he succeeded far beyond expectations, in death becoming the most famous Egyptian ruler who ever lived.

Accessing the Terracotta Warriors by Touch – ROM Creates Braille Replica Warriors

The Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto Canada, has brought ina number offeatures to make theirTerracotta Warriors show more accessible.

They have installed four replica artefacts, along with Braille markings, that peoplecan touch. These include a ding ritual vessel, a kneeling archer, a cavalry soldier and horse, and a dancer.

The kneeling archer is of particular interest. The example on display at the ROM has some surviving color – information that will presumably be included in Braille. His armor is also quite detailed as seen in this close-up shot.

Each of the warriors has a unique look (scholars believe they were modeled on real Qin Dynasty soldiers). Being able to touch the face of the replicas will give viewers a chance to better take in the details.

These touchable replicas are not the only accessibility features being used in this exhibit.

For those who are blind or with vision loss, tactile booklets are available for loan at no charge at the admission desk, as are large-print exhibition booklets. These publications feature Braille and large print, a tactile exhibition map and tactile graphics of numerous highlighted exhibition objects. Many graphics in the exhibition feature prominent, large font, the museum said in a press release.

For those who are deaf, hard of hearing and deafened, the exhibitions two mini-theatres are equipped with Acoustical containment. Neck loops are available for special paid-tours upon request. Further, the exhibitions numerous videos that include narration are captioned in both English and French.

Also, Podcasts pertaining to the exhibition or its series of lectures can be found on the ROMs website and are captioned in English.

The exhibition area itself is wheelchair accessible, with elevators, automatic doors and two accessible restrooms. Wheelchairs are also available for borrowing at the coast check on a first come first serve basis.The Terracotta Warriorshow at the Royal Ontario Museumuntil January 2, 2011.

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.

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!

ROM Lecture Series to Accompany Terracotta Warriors Exhibition

On June 26the Terracotta Warriors will be coming to the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada.

Curated by the museums own Dr. Chen Shen,the showincludes 16 human terracotta figures, a terracotta horse and, yes, a terracotta dog (albeit from the Han period). In total there are about 250 artefacts -making it the largest warriors show ever to come to North America.

Accompanyingtheexhibitionwill be a lecture series, the details of which the museum has just announced.

Therewill be14 lectures in total, allof whichstart at7pm in the Eaton theatre, inside the museum itself.

The price for one lecture is $28, going down to $25 for members and students. Package deals are also available – $84 for four lectures (going down to $75 for members and students). You can even purchase tickets for all 14 lectures.If you want to see them all it costs $252 for non-members and $225 for members and students.

If you want to buy a package I would suggest getting a ROM membership first. An individual membership costs $90 a year and you get free admission, to the museum, year round. Also the museum has said that members can see the Terracotta Warriors show as often as they wish – for free!

Schedule

Lets look at some of the lecture highlights:

For nearly 20 years Dr. Duan Qingbo has been the chief archaeologist in charge of the First Emperors mausoleum leading the excavation work. His archaeological team has been responsible for the recent major archaeological discoveries at this site, including the stone armour pit, the civil official pit, the acrobat pit, and many others, said the museum in a release. On October 21 Dr. Qingbo will come to Torontoto talk abouthis work. The lecture is in Mandarin but an English translation will be provided.

One lecture Im particularly interested in will be given by Professor Robin Yates of McGill University, who has been studying the laws used in the time of the first emperor. In 1975 legal documents were found buried with a low-ranking Qin official.The museum said in their release thatthese fascinating legal documents are only known by specialists.

Dr. Roberto Ciarla will be talking about Chinese Philosopher Han Fei, who lived 280-233 BC. He lived in the first emperors lifetime but died before the unification of China in 221 BC. Dr. Ciarla will be discussing how his ideas influenced Qin Shi Huang.

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.

Life in the Afterlife: Four Day Symposium During Toronto’s Terracotta Warriors Exhibit

The Royal Ontario Museum will host afour day symposium called Life in the Afterlife at the same time that a giant Terracotta Warriors show will be on display at the museum.

Life in the Afterlife will explore ideas on life after death across different cultures. Speakers will be talking about the afterlife in numerous places, including Ancient China, Egyptand the Near East. The symposium also examines China during the rule of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor.

The event is aimed at a popular audience. The keynote lecture will be given by journalist Simon Winchester who will be discussing Joseph Needham, an English chemist who studied ancient Chinese science and published several volumes on the topic. Needham died in 1995 and Winchester wrote a book on him called The Man who Loved China. That lecture takes place on Thursday October 14 at 7 pm.

Professor Edward (Ted) Banning gave an interesting interview with Heritage Key about the discovery of a Neolithic landscape in Syria that has stone circles, alignments and (what appears to be) burial cairns. At the museum symposium hes going to be talking about the use of skulls during the Pre Pottery Neolithic Period in the Near East (ca. 8500 5500 BC).

Xiuzhen Janice Li is Senior Curator of the Museum of Emperor Qin Shi Huang’s Terracotta Army in Xian.She is also adoctoral candidate at University College London. She will be discussing the weapons shown on the Terracotta Warriors and how they were created and standardized – after all, arming a terracotta army of this size is no mean feat!

Also archaeologist Roberto Ciarla will be travelling to Toronto from the Museo Nazionale dArte Orientale in Rome, to talk about the lives of the common people of China during the rule of Qin Shi Huang and what their view of the afterlife was. In 2005 he published the book Eternal Army: The Terracotta Soldiers of the First Emperor.

Registration and Full Schedule

If you register before May 1 you get the early bird fee of $300 for members and $325 for non-members. After that it goes up to $325 and $350 respectively. It may sound a bit expensive but there are numerous lectures and the fee does include some meals. To register, and find out more information, visit the symposium website.

There is more news to come about the Terracotta Warriors show. The Museum will be announcing a series of lectures and debates that will accompany the event.They have also just announced thatthe exhibitwillopenonJune 26.

Schedule of lectures courtesy of the ROM

Thursday October 14

OPENING NIGHT, COCKTAIL RECEPTION & KEYNOTE ADDRESS
3:00 5:00pm SYMPOSIUM REGISTRATION

3:30 5:00pm DOCENT TOURS OF WORLD GALLERIES

5:00 7:00pm COCKTAIL RECEPTION
All Level 2 Bronfman Hall

7:00pm KEYNOTE ADDRESS – SIMON WINCHESTER

Followed by book signing
Joint presentation with ROM Director’s Signature Lecture Series

Samuel Hall Currelly Gallery

Friday October 15

THE AFTERLIFE AROUND THE WORLD

8:00am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Level 2 Bronfman Hall

9:30am OPENING REMARKS

9:45am Archaeological Perspectives
of the Afterlife in Ancient China
Chen Shen | ROM

10:30am Going Forth by Day: The Afterlife in Ancient Egypt
Gayle Gibson | ROM

11:00am Death as Life’s Ambition: Funerary Rites in Madagascar
Sarah Fee | ROM

11:30am Afterlife in South Asian Art and Architecture, From Past to Present
Deepali Dewan | ROM

12:00pm BUFFET LUNCH
Level 2 Bronfman Hall

1:00pm Images of Life, Death, and Resurrection in Late Medival Art
Corey Keeble | ROM

1:30pm The Onkwehonweh Ganohsesgehono Longhouse Civilization and its View of the Afterlife
Amos Key Jr. |

2:00pm The Afterlife of Skulls in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of the Near East
Ted Banning | University of Toronto

2:30pm The Most Important Journey: Burial traditions Among the Ga of Ghana
Silvia Forni | ROM

3:00pm CLOSING REMARKS

3:30pm ROM Docent Tour of The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army (included with buffet dinner)
OPTIONAL

5:00pm BUFFET DINNER (requires separate registration)
Level 2 Bronfman Hall
Menu inspired by The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army exhibition

7:30pm Departures, An Academy Award winning Japanese film, is a “delightful and sensitive journey” into perceptions of the afterlife. (included with buffet dinner)

Saturday October 16

QIN SHIHUANGDIS CHINA

8:00am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Level 2 Bronfman Hall

9:30am OPENING REMARKS

9:45am Faith and Thought in the Time of China’s First Emperor
Vincent Shen | University of Toronto

11:00am Life and Afterlife of the Common People at the time of Qin Shihuangdi
Roberto Ciarla | Archologist, Museo Nazionale dArte Orientale, Rome.

12:00pm BUFFET LUNCH
Level 2 Bronfman Hall

1:00pm Standardisation and Labour Organisation in the Qin. Bronze Weapons of the Terracotta Army
Xiuzhen Janice LI | Senior Curator
of the Museum of Emperor Qin Shihuang’s
Terracotta Army, Xian, China;

2:00 pm Art in the time of China’s First Emperor
Klaas Ruitenbeek | Director of
Museum fr Asiatische Kunst, Berlin.

3:00 pm CLOSING REMARKS
OPTIONAL

3:15 pm Afternoon Tea with speakers, c5
(requires separate registration)

Sunday October 17
OPTIONAL

2:00 pm ROMwalk guided tour of Mount Pleasant Cemetery (2 hours; requires separate registration)
Meet at Southwest entrance,
Yonge Street, north of St. Clair Ave.

All symposium lectures will be held in the
Signy and Clophe Eaton Theatre, on Level B1.
please note: No recording devices are permitted.

Life in the Afterlife runs from October 14-17 at the Royal Ontario Museum. Click here for more details.