MURFREESBORO
— MTSU provost Dr. Brad Bartel will discuss Celtic culture and historic
discoveries made during archaeological excavations Thursday, Oct. 15, as the
special guest of the Rutherford County Archaeological Society.
The free public discussion will begin at 6:30 p.m. Oct.
15 at the Heritage Center of Murfreesboro, located just off the Public Square
at 225 W. College St.
Bartel, who is MTSU’s senior academic administrator
as university provost, also is a respected archaeologist and professor of
anthropology. He’ll speak on “The Celts: A View from Ireland.”
MTSU provost since 2010, Bartel has participated in
archaeological digs throughout Europe and the United States during his 45-year
career, specializing in colonialism, mortuary practice and early human
symbolism.
His international projects include the excavation
of the Roman city of Sirmium and Roman metallurgical site of Kraku'lu Yordan in
Serbia, the Celtic ceremonial site of Dún
Ailline in eastern Ireland, and Early Bronze Age cemeteries in western Turkey.
Stateside, Bartel excavated the San Diego Presidio, the first permanent European
settlement on the West coast; the Moravian settlement of Old Salem in North
Carolina; and the winter home sites of Thomas Edison and Henry Ford in Florida.
Bartel’s Oct. 15 talk will highlight the Dún Ailline site, where the royal
chiefs of Leinster were inaugurated. He and a team from the University of
Pennsylvania excavated the site in the 1970s.
“The Celts are one of the most misunderstood
cultures in Europe and are currently found only as remnant languages in Western
Europe,” Bartel said. “At the time of the Roman Empire, they inhabited the
largest amount of territory in Europe. They had a distinct art style, were
technologically sophisticated in metallurgy and had an expansive trade network.”
Bartel also plans to take a look at Halloween, the
longest celebrated ritual in the Western world after more than 4,000 years of
observance in some form.
The Rutherford County Archaeological Society meets
monthly at the Heritage Center and welcomes guest speakers, the community and
professional archaeologists to discuss the county's past and how to document
and learn from it.
For more information on the Rutherford County
Archaeological Society, visit http://facebook.com/groups/RCAS.TN
or contact Laura Bartel at lbanthro@gmail.com.
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