Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

The mythical temple of Melkart discovered

Researchers from the University of Seville may have managed to locate the long-sought ruins of the temple of the Phoenician god Melkart, whom locals call Hercules Gaditano.

It is a monumental structure in the Gulf of Cadiz off the southwest coast of the Iberian Peninsula, which served as a place of worship in ancient times and was later lost for centuries. The discovery was made thanks to a system of laser rangefinders – leaders – and digital modeling of the area, writes the Spanish newspaper El País.

Melkart is one of the most revered gods in Phoenician mythology as the patron saint of navigation and the city of Tire and the kingdom of Tire. From the ancient Greeks he was identified with Heracles. It is believed that Heracles of Tire, as Herodotus called him, was buried in Spain, and the temple in his honor was built by King Hiram. In other chronicles one can find references to the visit to this temple by Julius Caesar, who wept bitterly at the image of Alexander the Great, and by the Carthaginian conqueror Hannibal, who came to celebrate the success of his military campaign. Ricardo Belison of the University of Seville believes that the ruins of this monumental structure should be sought at the mouth of the shallow Sancti Petri Canal, located between the cities of Chiclana de la Frontera and San Fernando in Andalusia. A small island now rises above the swampy canal, and for more than two centuries divers have made important archeological finds that can now be seen in the Cadiz Museum, such as marble and bronze sculptures of Roman emperors and various Phoenician statuettes. The temple was to be sought somewhere nearby. Thanks to free software that allows digital modeling of the area, Belison was able to identify the exact rectangular area measuring 300 x 150 m, where he believes the ruins of the temple itself should be located.

This rectangular structure, as well as the island on which it once stood, correspond to ancient descriptions, but now they are 3-5 meters underwater. According to the chronicles, this complex could be reached by passing two columns, the frontispiece of the building itself depicted the exploits of Hercules, and inside burned eternal fire. The temple area was separated from the current Cape Boqueron by a small canal, and there was also an inland port and dock south of the temple, which were also identified by modeling the ancient coast of Cadiz. The new hypothesis about the location of the temple is in line with various findings and assumptions made in the twentieth century, but there are several alternative hypotheses indicating other possible locations. In the course of the forthcoming archeological researches and underwater researches it is envisaged that these conclusions will be confirmed or refuted.

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Madrid Popular Party doubles strenght and wins elections

Isabel Díaz Ayuso, a complete unknown without much trajectory only two years ago, is consolidating her position as a political phenomenon. The Madrid president and PP candidate is the big winner of the elections in the Community of Madrid, where she has swept to the point of winning more seats than the three left-wing parties combined, which will allow her to govern comfortably and without needing Vox for every law. The right-wing bloc has clearly strengthened and won 78 seats (65 for the PP and 13 for Vox) compared to 58 for the left (24 for Más Madrid, 24 for the PSOE and 10 for Podemos). Just two years ago, the difference between the two blocs was four MPs. Madrid thus swings even further to the right, but thanks to the spectacular increase of the PP, because Vox is left with a result very similar to that of two years ago.

The hard blow to the left has an immediate consequence: Pablo Iglesias leaves all his positions in Podemos and will not stay in the regional Assembly: “I will not be a stopper for a new leadership. I don’t know what destiny is, walking I was what I was”, he said as a farewell quoting Silvio Rodríguez after pointing to Yolanda Díaz as his successor.

A historic turnout, 11 points higher than in 2019, has not only not lifted the left, but has sunk it much further, especially due to the collapse of the PSOE, which has just won the elections in Catalonia, but has hit a bump in Madrid with a fall of more than 10 points that lead it to have the worst result in its history, and to tie in seats with a formation with hardly any means such as Más Madrid, which at the last moment of the count achieved a historic first place on the left by just over 4,000 votes.

Díaz Ayuso has not achieved an absolute majority – she is just four seats short – but the abstention of Vox would be enough for her to be invested. It now remains to be seen whether or not this group will want to enter the Madrid government, although the results make that possibility unlikely.

The left has failed in its attempt to seek a turnaround by mobilising the southern vote. The key to this fiasco is the PSOE’s collapse, which in less than two years has lost a good part of its support, despite having the same candidate who in 2019 amply won the elections in the community, Ángel Gabilondo, although he was unable to govern because the right-wing bloc had more seats than the left-wing bloc.

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