Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean — 16.2004(2005)
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Please cite this page by using the following URL/DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.42090#0350
DOI issue:
Sudan
DOI article:Godlewski, Włodzimierz; Obłuski, Artur; Zielińska, Dobrochna: Uli island: preliminary report
DOI Page / Citation link:https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.42090#0350
FOURTH CATARACT - ULI ISLAND
SUDAN
The burials were typical of Christian
funerary practices: body laid in extended
position with the head to the west. The
narrow grave pits were rather deep and once
the body was placed in them they were
half-filled with sand and closed with roughly
broken irregular slabs of stone laid flat.
The rest of the shaft was then filled with
sand and a stone marker of carefully posi-
tioned stones was erected on top. The sand
between the stones was likely put there in-
tentionally, although later penetration
through the cracks between the stones can-
not be excluded.
In the times of the Makuria kingdom,
Uli Island seems to have been much more
densely populated than in earlier periods,
most probably approaching modern popu-
lation figures.
MODERN PERIOD
Two vast Muslim cemeteries situated in
the northern and southern ends of the
Fig. 9■ Site Uli 29. The superstructure of grave
T.10 (Photo W. Godlewski)
Fig. 10. Site Uli 26. Children's tombs
(Photo W. Godlewski)
348
SUDAN
The burials were typical of Christian
funerary practices: body laid in extended
position with the head to the west. The
narrow grave pits were rather deep and once
the body was placed in them they were
half-filled with sand and closed with roughly
broken irregular slabs of stone laid flat.
The rest of the shaft was then filled with
sand and a stone marker of carefully posi-
tioned stones was erected on top. The sand
between the stones was likely put there in-
tentionally, although later penetration
through the cracks between the stones can-
not be excluded.
In the times of the Makuria kingdom,
Uli Island seems to have been much more
densely populated than in earlier periods,
most probably approaching modern popu-
lation figures.
MODERN PERIOD
Two vast Muslim cemeteries situated in
the northern and southern ends of the
Fig. 9■ Site Uli 29. The superstructure of grave
T.10 (Photo W. Godlewski)
Fig. 10. Site Uli 26. Children's tombs
(Photo W. Godlewski)
348