logo
#

Latest news with #GTRES

Princess Leonor of Spain arrives in New York after five months at sea
Princess Leonor of Spain arrives in New York after five months at sea

New York Post

time3 days ago

  • General
  • New York Post

Princess Leonor of Spain arrives in New York after five months at sea

Princess Leonor of Spain has touched down in the Big Apple! The 19-year-old royal arrived aboard a Spanish Navy training ship in New York City on Wednesday, dressed in a crisp white uniform adorned with black insignia. The Crown Princess — who is the heir to the Spanish throne, followed by her younger sister, Sofia — appeared in good spirits alongside fellow cadets as she saluted onlookers aboard the Juan Sebastián de Elcano. 6 Princess Leonor of Spain arrived aboard a Spanish Navy training ship in New York City on Wednesday. Stephen Lovekin/GTRES/Shutterstock Leonor, who had kick-started her military training in 2023, will not be returning to Spain via the ship. Instead, she will fly back and rejoin her peers in Gijón on July 7, EDATV News reports. The princess will join the Spanish Navy's guided missile frigate Blas de Lezo there, where she is set to undertake a key segment of her naval training. Over the past two years, Leonor has been undergoing training at the General Military Academy in Zaragoza. Later this year, she will begin Air Force training at the General Air Academy in Santiago de la Ribera to round out her military education. 6 The royal, 19, was dressed in a crisp white uniform adorned with black insignia. GTRES/Shutterstock In March 2023, the Spanish royal house announced that Leonor was set to undergo three years of military training. 'As in all parliamentary monarchies (the heir) has to have a military background and a military career,' Defense Minister Margarita Robles said at the time. Leonor completed her high school degree at UWC Atlantic College in Wales, UK that year. 6 The Crown Princess appeared in good spirits alongside fellow cadets while saluting onlookers. 'In due course, the commander-in-chief of the armed forces will be a woman, and in recent years we have been making a very important effort to incorporate women into the armed forces,' Robles added. The government and the Royal House have agreed that her 'very intense' military training will precede university studies, following in the footsteps of her father in the 1980s. The Spanish monarchy has been struggling to repair its image after a series of scandals over the past decade, mainly linked to the former king Juan Carlos, who abdicated in 2014 in favor of his son, King Felipe. 6 Over the past two years, Leonor has been undergoing training at the General Military Academy in Zaragoza. GTRES/Shutterstock Juan Carlos abdicated amid a tax fraud case involving members of the royal family and following a scandal over his elephant-hunting trip in Africa at a time when Spain was going through a deep recession. The former monarch has been living in Abu Dhabi since August 2020, when he left Spain after several investigations were opened in Spain and Switzerland into alleged fraud. The investigations have subsequently been dropped. Meanwhile, Leonor's parents King Felipe and Queen Letizia have also been rocked by drama after veteran journalist Jaime Peñafiel made a slew of shocking claims about the pair's marriage. 6 The princess and her fellow cadets arrived via the Juan Sebastián de Elcano. Getty Images Peñafiel, who has covered the royals for decades, claimed that Felipe was 'crushed and destroyed' over his wife's alleged infidelity with her ex-brother-in-law Jaime del Burgo. In his book 'Letizia's Silences,' released in May, Peñafiel claimed the king of Spain was 'aware that Letizia was cheating on him in real time' as her bodyguards must report on her whereabouts. The royal author alleges that bodyguards joined the queen on a trip to New York back in 2011, during which she was accompanied by her rumored 'lover' del Burgo. Letizia, 52, reportedly dated del Burgo before meeting King Felipe in 2002. Peñafiel alleged that the pair, who have been married since 2004, had a rocky relationship in the years before the alleged affair began. 6 Queen Letizia and King Felipe with their two daughters in Mallorca on July 31, 2023. AFP via Getty Images Del Burgo — who was married to Letizia's sister from 2012 to 2014 — has since claimed that he is still in touch with the Queen in an interview with Argentinian newspaper Clarín. 'We have shared many years of our lives together,' he told the outlet. 'We have been a family. As I have always said, ours was not a relationship of lovers. The lover would be him, in any case. I mean Felipe.'

How archaeologists found one of the oldest cities on earth
How archaeologists found one of the oldest cities on earth

National Geographic

time24-04-2025

  • Science
  • National Geographic

How archaeologists found one of the oldest cities on earth

Excavations on unpromising mounds in the Iraqi desert revealed Sumer's earliest city. Surviving relics and a rebuilt temple have given experts more clues about the ancient metropolis of Eridu. Archaeologists excavate the site of the ancient Sumerian city of Eridu, near Basra in southern Iraq, in 2022. Alla Al-Marjani/Reuters/GTRES Buried in the Mesopotamian desert, undisturbed for over two millennia lay a hidden key to understanding one of the world's oldest known civilizations. In 1854 British official John George Taylor was sent on an excavation mission to the desert of southern Iraq by the British consul general in Baghdad. Taylor, an agent of the East India Company and British vice-consul at Basra, was commissioned with investigating a remote site called Tell Abu Shahrain, where there was a series of tells, or mounds, made up of debris left by human settlements. At first, Taylor was unimpressed. In the excavation report published in 1855, he wrote: 'My visit this year to Abu Shahrein [sic] has been unproductive of any very important results.' He even questioned whether it had been worth transcribing his field notes. Taylor had been hoping to uncover something impressive: statues, inscriptions, evidence of palaces and temples. What he found instead, in the short time he had available, were walls, drainage systems, stone platforms, and the remains of limestone columns decorated with mosaic cones. In his journal, Taylor highlighted finding a statue of a black granite lion lying on the surface. Even counting the lion, however, Taylor must have thought this too meager a haul to justify a second expedition. Only later would it be revealed how these unpromising mounds were the remnants of one of the oldest cities on Earth: Eridu. Architectural structures at Eridu shown in a 1854-55 engraving by Taylor Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland John George Taylor had a deep interest in Near Eastern antiquities. From 1851 to 1861 he traveled around southern Iraq investigating sites including Tell el Muqayyar, which includes remains of the ancient Sumerian city of Ur. Before the flood Eridu was a foundational city in Sumerian culture, the world's earliest known civilization, which flourished from around the fourth to second millennia B.C. in what is now Iraq. (This ancient society helped build the modern world.) Model of a skiff from Eridu, first half of the fourth millennium B.C. Eridu's significance is evidenced by the Sumerian King List, various versions of which were inscribed in cuneiform toward the end of the third millennium B.C. The latter part of the list includes cities with royal dynasties that can be verified from historical records. The early part of the list is more legendary, recording the original royal cities that existed before 'the Flood' (an event that may reflect a regional catastrophe or may be related to the biblical story in Genesis where the whole Earth was flooded). The first of these antediluvian royal cities was Eridu: 'After the kingship descended from heaven, the kingship was in Eridu ... In five cities, eight kings ... Then the flood swept over.' Of immense symbolic importance, Eridu was also home to the largest temple dedicated to Enki, the god of water and wisdom, a key deity of the Sumerian pantheon. For centuries, this shrine attracted pilgrims from all over Mesopotamia to Eridu. An interest in Eden Despite Taylor's disappointment, his initial findings piqued the interest of scholars. Although no large-scale excavations were carried out in the decades that followed Taylor's visit, officials at the British Museum remained interested in the site. In 1918, just before the end of World War I, museum officials commissioned Assyriologist Reginald Campbell Thompson to carry out excavations at the site. For a month, Campbell made archaeological surveys, using Ottoman prisoners of war as laborers. The following year, British Egyptologist Harry R.H. Hall arrived with the aim of identifying the site's monumental buildings. This idealized reconstruction imagines what Eridu may have looked like at the height of its power in 3300 B.C. The city was centered around the temple of Enki. This likely comprised an elevated platform that incorporated the remains of previous temple buildings. The sanctuary itself appears to have been quite a large rectangular structure (approximately 65 feet by 40 feet) with an elongated central chamber, called a cella. There would also have been an access staircase. Balage Balogh/Scala, Florence It was not until 1946, however, that the first large-scale excavations began. Iraq had gained independence from Britain in 1932, and the Iraqi government was keen to fund archaeological projects that might lend prestige to their nation-building narratives. At the end of World War II, the Department of Antiquities of Iraq relaunched research at the site of Eridu under the direction of Iraqi archaeologist Fuad Safar, assisted by British archaeologist Seton Lloyd. Safar and Lloyd knew each other well, having worked together at Tell Uqair, near Baghdad. They believed that fully excavating Eridu could byield important data on the earliest phases of Mesopotamian history. Excavations at Eridu have uncovered a large number of objects spanning a wide period of Mesopotamian history. These votive cones, inscribed with details of the king and left in the foundations of monuments, date to the reign of Lipit-Ishtar in the 20th century B.C. They concentrated their efforts on Mound 1, an 82-foot-high tell covering an area of some 1,900 by 1,770 feet. Before long, they uncovered the remains of an unfinished ziggurat, or step pyramid, built at the end of the third millennium B.C. by a ruler of the 3rd dynasty of Ur, a late, short-lived Sumerian state. But what really intrigued Safar and Lloyd was what lay hidden beneath the remains of that ziggurat. (They were scouting for oil in Iran. They found an ancient temple instead.) City upon city They were not disappointed. Beneath remains dating to the Ur III (21st century B.C.) period were more levels of human occupation. As they dug further, they hit a stratum dating to the Uruk period (4500–3200 B.C.). Below that were remains from as far back as the protohistoric, pre-Sumerian Ubaid period (5300–3800 B.C.) As they worked, they found multiple reconstructions of the temple of Enki, made over the course of two millennia, along with other places of worship. Italian Mesopotamian historian Mario Liverani writes that Eridu's temples were 'reconstructed and expanded after each collapse, and their remains formed a raised platform on which new temples were constructed.' As the temple of Enki was repeatedly rebuilt on the same site, its structure evolved. According to Liverani, new iterations of the temple became progressively larger from the middle of the fourth millennium B.C.: 'These imposing buildings ... by far superseded anything ever built until then.' Their emergence marks a transition from worshiping at home to worshiping at specially built places. In parallel with this process, there is evidence of more complex social hierarchies emerging in the city. The reconstructions of the temple stopped around 3200 B.C. A millennium later, with the brief return of Sumerian power under Ur III, the ziggurat would be erected on the ruins of all that had gone before. (The ancient empire that civilization forgot.) Excavations at Eridu, led by Safar, in a photograph from September 1948. In 1946 the Department of Antiquities of Iraq began work at Tell Abu Shahrain. After a preliminary investigation, archaeologists Fuad Safar and Seton Lloyd focused on Mound 1, which, given its dimensions and based on previous excavation reports, they thought likely contained the most evidence of buildings. They opened up some trenches on the top of the mound and, as they dug further and further down, uncovered various strata containing the remains of successively older buildings. Their goal was to get down to virgin soil and on the way document all the strata. In total, they identified 18 strata and the remains of six successive temples. More secrets Although Eridu declined, it continued to have relevance, probably as a place of pilgrimage. Excavation of surrounding tells provided more clues to the timeline. Mound 2 contained the remains of a palace complex dating to the first half of the third millennium B.C. Mounds 3, 4, and 5 contain pottery dating to the second and first centuries B.C. but no remains from residential buildings. The city was only sparsely populated by that time. Safar and Lloyd's research was finally published in 1981. Despite the political instability of the region, Italian and French archaeologists seek to resume excavations at Eridu, the first city of the earliest civilization, and reveal more secrets. (This ancient Silk Road town was almost lost to time.) This story appeared in the March/April 2025 issue of National Geographic History magazine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store