Program

Wednesday July 6, 2022

  • 10:00–10:30   Welcome and introduction to the themes of the conference

10:30–12:00  THE MARITIME EXPERIENCE

Chair: Chiara Zazzaro

  • Julian Jansen Van Rensburg, A Sea of Islands: Rediscovering Red Sea maritime space
  • Dionisius Agius, Water availability and accessibility: Red Sea voyages in the early modern period
  • John Cooper, Decorative schemas on Yemen’s wooden watercraft—a unique tradition

12:00–12:20   Coffee break

12:20–13:50  MAPPING THE RED SEA

Chair: Steven E. Sidebotham

  • Pablo Gutiérrez de León, From Adulis to Guardafui: Remapping and understanding the southern Red Sea and Horn of Africa trading ports
  • Irene Rossi and Jérémie Schiettecatte, Mapping and synthesizing ancient Arabia: The Maparabia project
  • Arthur de Graauw, Location of ancient harbours in the Red Sea—an attempt

13:50-14:50   Buffet lunch

14:50–16:50  RELIGION AND THE SEA I

Chair: Roxani Margariti

  • Pierre Schneider, Why was the Garden of Eden located at the edge of the Indian Ocean?
  • Andreu Martínez, A Roman Catholic Red Sea? A Portuguese quest
  • Carolina Cornax Gómez, The meeting ground: Mosques in Somaliland during the medieval period
  • Scott Kugle, God’s favor is a heavenly rain, God’s saints are like the seas: Sufi networks from Gujarat to the Red Sea

18:30    Opening reception at the Institute for Mediterranean Studies

Thursday July 7, 2022

9:00–9:45   POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Chair: Pierre Schneider

  • Iwona Zych, The fading of Berenike: the last days of the Red Sea harbor
  • Marta Bajtler and Szymon Popławski, In the heart of late Antique Berenike—who could have built monumental crossroads?
  • Troy Wilkinson, The Roman military and the distribution of potable water in the Eastern Desert
  • Shahista Refaat, Ethiopian eunuchs in Medina (Hijaz) in the Mamluk era
  • Roxani Margariti, From sponges to pearls: Aegean mariners in the Red Sea (19th–20th century)

9:50–11:20    ARCHAEOLOGY OF CONTACT ZONES I

Chair: Iwona Zych

  • Solène Marion De Procé, Al-Qusar: Excavating a Roman military settlement in the Red Sea?
  • Joachim Le Bomin and Julie Marchand, Late Roman Deir el-Atrash fort: Daily life in a late 4th-early 5th c. fort in the Eastern Desert of Egypt
  • Ahmed Adam, The archaeology of the islands and hinterland of the Red Sea region of Sudan: Erih Island, Erkawit and Khor Nubt, as a case study

11:20–11:40   Coffee break

11:40-13:10    APPROACHES TO BORDERS AND BORDERLANDS

Chair: Antonis Anastasopoulos

  • Thomas Kuehn, Rethinking late Ottoman rule in Yemen from the Red Sea coast: Hudayda elites and the governance of southwest Arabia, 1871–1914
  • Mohamed Gamal-Eldin, Lessepsian migration, the Red Sea and the Israeli military and scientific occupation of the Sinai and eastern seaboard of the Suez Canal, 1967–1972
  • Noura Salem, Aya Bseiso, and Khalid Odeh, Fruits of Barzakh in Aqaba

13:10-14:10   Buffet lunch

14:10-15:40    LIVES ACROSS THE RED SEA

Chair: John Cooper

  • Magdalena Moorthy-Kloss, Slave trading across the Red Sea in the Rasulid era (626–858 AH / 1229–1454 CE)
  • Craig Perry, News from Qus, Aswan, and ʿAydhab: Evidence from the Cairo Geniza
  • Marina Rustow, Geniza letters about the rigors of Red Sea travel

15:40-16:00    Coffee break

16:00-18:00   CHANGES AND TRANSITIONS IN THE PREMODERN RED SEA

Chair: Solène Marion de Procé

  • Luisa Sernicola, Transitions and cultural transmissions between the two shores of the Southern Red Sea in the early 1st millennium BCE: A view from highland Ethiopia
  • Matthew Cobb, The Imperial to the Late Antique Red Sea: Reconsidering the third century CE as phase of decline, break or transition
  • Joan Oller-Guzmán, Changes, continuities and transitions in the Smaragdos: Emerald mining in the Egyptian Eastern Desert between the Early and Late Roman period
  • Simon Dorso and Julien Loiseau, Tell Kwiha Cherqos (Tigray, Ethiopia): from an Aksumite site to a modern village. Occupation sequence and overview of the settlement over the past two millennia.

Free evening

Friday July 8, 2022

  • 9:00-9:15   Tribute to Roberta Tomber

9:15-10:45    THE RED SEA AND THE INDIAN OCEAN

Chair: Scott Kugle

  • Steven E. Sidebotham, Marianne Bergmann, Martina Stoye, Shailendra Bhandare, Joanna K, Rądkowska, Szymon Popławski, and Mariana Castro, South Asian sculptures, a terracotta and an inscription from Berenike (Red Sea coast, Egypt)
  • PJ Cherian, P. Deepak, and Siddhartha Saha, The She Sphinx that flew over the Red Sea: Artefact, author, agency and audience
  • Jerzy M. Oleksiak, Nicholas Bartos, Roderick C.A. Geerts, Crossroads of the Red Sea: New ceramic data from the port of Berenike

10:45-11:05   Coffee break

11:05-12:35   ARCHAEOLOGY OF CONTACT ZONES II

Chair: Dionisius Agius

  • Marek Woźniak and Joanna Rądkowska, Discovering Hellenistic Berenike: Answers, questions and perspectives
  • Noran Hamed, Interpreting the Red Sea: Challenges and strategies for a better future for the heritage sites
  • Jacke Phillips, “… fashioned in the local manner”

12:35–13:35   Buffet lunch

13:35-15:05   FROM MEDIEVAL TO EARLY MODERN

Chair: Marina Rustow

  • Amélie Chekroun, The African ports of the Gulf of Aden at the end of the Middle Ages
  • Jorge de Torres Rodríguez, Nomads, towns and states: The archaeology of Somaliland during the medieval period
  • Dejanirah Couto, Gregório da Quadra’s journey into Arabia (1516–1517) and the 16th-century Portuguese representations of the Red Sea

15:05-15:25   Coffee break

15:25–17:25   THE OTTOMAN RED SEA

Chair: Thomas Kuehn

  • Fatih Yücel, Ottoman governors-general of Egypt and trade in the Red Sea during the last quarter of the sixteenth century
  • Abdulmennan M. Altıntaş, A dilemma between security and trade: The maritime boundaries of the Ottoman-dominated Red Sea (16th and 18th centuries)
  • Chiara Zazzaro, Chiara Visconti, Romolo Loreto, Nicola Melis, and Luisa Terminillo, Further developments in the study of the Umm Lajj shipwreck and other 18th-century shipwrecks in the Red Sea
  • Muhammet Habib Saçmalı, Rebuilding the Hejaz: The Red Sea and the Hejaz in the Münşeat of Ebubekir Paşa, the governor of Jiddah between 1725 and 1728

17:25–17:45   Concluding remarks and farewell

19:30    Closing dinner

Saturday July 9, 2022

Group excursion (optional) – The island and heritage site of Spinalonga