Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914

Greek archaeology at the turn of the twentieth century existed at the intersection of a modern positivistic practice of scientific study and a longer-standing European fascination with the ancient world. As the continent’s masses increasingly engaged with popular fin-de-siècle nationalisms, they als...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Malcolm Cavanagh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2024-03-01
Series:Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.archaeologybulletin.org/index.php/up-j-bha/article/view/665
_version_ 1827278953421733888
author Malcolm Cavanagh
author_facet Malcolm Cavanagh
author_sort Malcolm Cavanagh
collection DOAJ
description Greek archaeology at the turn of the twentieth century existed at the intersection of a modern positivistic practice of scientific study and a longer-standing European fascination with the ancient world. As the continent’s masses increasingly engaged with popular fin-de-siècle nationalisms, they also sought knowledge of the cultured refinement historically associated with the ancient world through empirically supported studies of the ancient past’s material remnants. This paper assesses the extent to which popular national identities conditioned European public perceptions of Greek archaeology in the decades the leading up to the First World War (1890–1914). Examining news-media coverage of the French excavation of Delphi and the British excavation of Knossos from nationally-prominent publications, this article identifies the influence which paradigms of national identity exerted over public perceptions of Europe’s ancient past. Concluding that these two excavations were exalted as evidential of national genius, this also posits that the particular finds associated with these sites were strongly coloured by the lens of national identity in popular periodical publications. Diffuse understandings of national heritage stretching back to the distant reaches of Europe’s ancient past thereby influenced popular perceptions of Greek archaeology as a discipline inherently linked to turn-of-the-century nationalist projects, with the archaeologist being increasingly relied upon to empirically entrench and legitimize the modern nation-state in a civilizational pedigree, coinciding with the national institutionalization of archaeological study.
first_indexed 2024-04-24T08:10:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-cb0e8d6b1287408a9761276de53c42c7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2047-6930
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-24T08:10:58Z
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher Ubiquity Press
record_format Article
series Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
spelling doaj.art-cb0e8d6b1287408a9761276de53c42c72024-04-17T06:36:55ZengUbiquity PressBulletin of the History of Archaeology2047-69302024-03-013411110.5334/bha-66532Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914Malcolm Cavanagh0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6140-2113Brock UniversityGreek archaeology at the turn of the twentieth century existed at the intersection of a modern positivistic practice of scientific study and a longer-standing European fascination with the ancient world. As the continent’s masses increasingly engaged with popular fin-de-siècle nationalisms, they also sought knowledge of the cultured refinement historically associated with the ancient world through empirically supported studies of the ancient past’s material remnants. This paper assesses the extent to which popular national identities conditioned European public perceptions of Greek archaeology in the decades the leading up to the First World War (1890–1914). Examining news-media coverage of the French excavation of Delphi and the British excavation of Knossos from nationally-prominent publications, this article identifies the influence which paradigms of national identity exerted over public perceptions of Europe’s ancient past. Concluding that these two excavations were exalted as evidential of national genius, this also posits that the particular finds associated with these sites were strongly coloured by the lens of national identity in popular periodical publications. Diffuse understandings of national heritage stretching back to the distant reaches of Europe’s ancient past thereby influenced popular perceptions of Greek archaeology as a discipline inherently linked to turn-of-the-century nationalist projects, with the archaeologist being increasingly relied upon to empirically entrench and legitimize the modern nation-state in a civilizational pedigree, coinciding with the national institutionalization of archaeological study.https://account.archaeologybulletin.org/index.php/up-j-bha/article/view/665national archaeologypopular archaeologyarchaeology in the pressknossosarthur evansla grande fouillethéophile homolle
spellingShingle Malcolm Cavanagh
Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
national archaeology
popular archaeology
archaeology in the press
knossos
arthur evans
la grande fouille
théophile homolle
title Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
title_full Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
title_fullStr Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
title_full_unstemmed Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
title_short Excavating the Nation: European Popular Nationalism and the Excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890–1914
title_sort excavating the nation european popular nationalism and the excavations of delphi and knossos 1890 1914
topic national archaeology
popular archaeology
archaeology in the press
knossos
arthur evans
la grande fouille
théophile homolle
url https://account.archaeologybulletin.org/index.php/up-j-bha/article/view/665
work_keys_str_mv AT malcolmcavanagh excavatingthenationeuropeanpopularnationalismandtheexcavationsofdelphiandknossos18901914