A scientist has discovered a secret in a 3,500-year-old fresco of frolicking monkeys in Greece
The unlikely tail of Indian monkeys drawn on 3,500-year-old Santorini fresco that 'reveal the Silk Road was trading with Europe 1,500 years earlier than thought'
Author: Tim Stickings
A scientist has discovered a secret in a 3,500-year-old fresco of frolicking monkeys in Greece: that the animals in the drawing came from 3,000 miles away in what is now Pakistan.
Marie Nicole Pareja says the monkeys' tails are pointing upwards, meaning they were native to the Indus Valley rather than nearby North Africa or the Middle East.
Therefore, she argues, trade between east and west along the Silk Road must have been happening 1,500 years earlier than was thought.
Speaking to The Times, the University of Pennsylvania researcher said her discovery showed how the ancient world was 'interconnected'.
'This is showing us that what people later consider the Silk Roads are working even then, at least indirectly,' she told the newspaper.
'We talk about the Minoans, about the Egyptians, about the Indus peoples, all as if they are separate. But they are interconnected.'
Dr Pareja said she had spoken to biologists to establish that the monkeys in the Santorini fresco were in fact langurs native to the Indian subcontinent.
Experts told her that the upward-pointing tail was the giveaway which showed the animals originated a long way from Santorini.
Her research has not yet shown how the artist might have come across one of the animals.
It is possible that the artist might have seen a langur while travelling in Asia, or that one of the monkeys could have been brought to south-eastern Europe.
The frescoes date back to the Minoan civilisation, which was based in Crete but spread across Greek islands such as Santorini.
The blue monkeys are among numerous pieces of Minoan art preserved in the Bronze Age settlement of Akrotiri.
Known as the 'Pompeii of the Aegean', the prehistoric town was buried under thick layers of volcanic ash during an eruption 3,700 years ago.
At the time, the Indus Valley civilisation was a powerful presence on the subcontinent, a rival of Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Some Indus Valley towns, which first appeared around 5,000 years ago, were home to tens of thousands of people.
The civilisation used standardized weights and measures, built major roads and traded with places as far away as East Africa.
It was largely forgotten in the West until the 19th century, when explorers began discovering its ruins on the subcontinent.
Even today, knowledge about the civilisation is limited by the fact that its Harappan language is yet to be deciphered.
Researchers at the University of Nottingham say the Silk Road was a network of long-distance trade routes between ancient Europe and China.
'It was a conduit for humans, languages, objects and diseases and is a fascinating example of international cross-boundary interaction that has mutually enriched the cultures of Eurasia and Africa for at least 2000 years,' they say.
'This led to the exchange of ideas that triggered new scientific and technological developments, and modified languages.'
Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk