Face of medieval knight reconstructed

London, May 19 (ANI): A medieval knight”s skeleton, which was discovered at Stirling Castle, has had its face reconstructed, and now experts are attempting to discover the identity of the warrior.

The skeleton is one of 10 excavated from the site of a lost royal chapel at the castle, and it is believed the knight could have been killed during Scotland”s Wars of Independence with England in the 13th or 14th Century.

The skeleton of a woman was also found near the knight.

The castle changed hands several times and scientific tests have been used to work out whether the knight might have been a Scot, an Englishman or even French.

Efforts by Forensic anthropologist Professor Sue Black, of Dundee University, who is leading the investigation, to find out more about the warrior”s life and death will be featured in BBC Two”s History Cold Case series on May 20.

Richard Strachan, senior archaeologist with Historic Scotland, said the facial reconstruction gives a “powerful impression” of what the knight may have looked like.

“He was a very strong and fit nobleman, with the physique of a professional rugby player, who would have been trained since boyhood to handle heavy swords and other weapons and who would have spent a great deal of time on horseback,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

Historic Scotland, which cares for the castle, has announced it is commissioning further research to find out more about the 10 skeletons, which includes two infants.

They date from the 13th to 15th Centuries and were found during preparatory work for a 12million pounds refurbishment of the castle”s Renaissance royal palace.

Biological anthropologist Dr Jo Buckberry, of the University of Bradford, is part of the team, which will carry out the research.

“Techniques have advanced a long way since the skeletons were discovered in 1997 and we can now tell much more about where people came from, their lifestyles and causes of death,” she said.

“This group is highly unusual, because of where and when the people were buried, suggesting that they might have been socially important and have died during extreme events such as sieges,” she added.

The facial reconstruction and other research results, will feature in a permanent exhibition due to open at Stirling Castle next spring. (ANI)

Muslim scholars recast jihadists’ favourite fatwa

Prominent Muslim scholars have recast a famous medieval fatwa on jihad, arguing the religious edict radical Islamists often cite to justify killing cannot be used in a globalised world that respects faith and civil rights.

A conference in Mardin in southeastern Turkey declared the fatwa by 14th century scholar Ibn Taymiyya rules out militant violence and the medieval Muslim division of the world into a “house of Islam” and “house of unbelief” no longer applies.

Osama bin Laden has quoted Ibn Taymiyya’s “Mardin fatwa” repeatedly in his calls for Muslims to overthrow the Saudi monarchy and wage jihad against the United States.

Referring to that historic document, the weekend conference said: “Anyone who seeks support from this fatwa for killing Muslims or non-Muslims has erred in his interpretation.

“It is not for a Muslim individual or a Muslim group to announce and declare war or engage in combative jihad … on their own,” said the declaration issued on Sunday in Arabic and later provided to Reuters in English.

The declaration is the latest bid by mainstream scholars to use age-old Muslim texts to refute current-day religious arguments by Islamist groups. A leading Pakistani scholar issued a 600-page fatwa against terrorism in London early this month.

Another declaration in Dubai this month concerned peace in Somalia. Such fatwas may not convince militants, but could help keep undecided Muslims from supporting them, the scholars say.

The Mardin conference gathered 15 leading scholars from countries including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, India, Senegal, Kuwait, Iran, Morocco and Indonesia. Among them were Bosnian Grand Mufti Mustafa Ceric, Sheikh Abdullah bin Bayyah of Mauritania and Yemeni Sheikh Habib Ali al-Jifri.

RULE FOR MUSLIM RADICALS

Ibn Taymiyya’s Mardin fatwa is a classic text for militants who say it allows Muslims to declare other Muslims infidels and wage war on them. The scholars said this view had to be seen in its historic context of medieval Mongol raids on Muslim lands.

But the scholars said it was actually about overcoming the old view of a world divided into Muslim and non-Muslim spheres and reinterpreting Islam in changing political situations.

The emergence of civil states that guard religious, ethnic and national rights “has necessitated declaring the entire world a place of tolerance and peaceful co-existence between all religious, groups and factions,” their declaration said.

Aref Ali Nayed, a Libyan who heads the Dubai theological think-tank Kalam Research and Media, told the conference the great Muslim empires of the past were not a model for a globalised world where borders were increasingly irrelevant.

“We must not be obsessed with an Islam conceived of only geographically and politically,” he said.

“Living in the diaspora is often more conducive to healthy and sincere Muslim living. Empires and carved-out ‘Islamic states’ often make us complacent.”

Nayed said Muslims must also understand that “not all types of secularisms are anti-religious.” The United States has stayed religious despite its separation of church and state, but some “French Revolution-like secularisms” were anti-religious.

The declaration ended with a call to Muslim scholars for more research to explain the context of medieval fatwas on public issues and show “what is hoped to be gained from a sound and correct understanding of their respective legacies.”

(Editing by Jon Boyle)

Clarke’s best yet to come, says Ponting

Hamilton, Mar 27(ANI): Australian skipper Ricky Ponting reckons that vice-captain Michael Clarke’s best is yet to come, as there is room for him to keep improving.

Ponting’s remark came after Clarke leapt four places in the ICC’s batting rankings to No.2 spot after scoring his 14th century in Australia’s 10-wicket win over New Zealand in Wellington last week.

The 28-year-old is 17 points behind Indian batsman Virender Sehwag (863 points), and another big game would give him the chance to regain the top spot, which he previously attained during the 2009 Ashes series in England.

“We don’t know if he’s starting to peak because his consistency over the last couple of years has been great. He’s probably been our leading run-scorer and he’d probably been our most consistent player. Whether that means he’s peaked or not is a different thing,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Ponting, as saying.

“There has been a lot of talk over the years about batsmen peaking in their early thirties and he’s not 30 yet, so maybe, there is room for him to keep improving,” he added.

Talking about Clarke’s performance in Wellington, where he put a messy personal life behind to score a career-best 168, Ponting said the innings was terrific.

“Let’s hope he continues to improve, as has been a trend in Australian cricket for the last ten years. Michael is heading in the same direction as that,” he added.

Clarke’s decision to quit the one-day series against the Kiwis and return home with three games remaining had attracted heavy criticism from ex-players.

He later announced that his engagement to fiancée Lara Bingle was off, and returned to Wellington to prepare for the first Test.

Despite massive media interest, the batsman was able to focus on his game and play a brilliant knock. (ANI)

Archaeologists uncover remains of ancient empire in Jharkhand

Bero (Jharkhand), May 11 (ANI): A team of archaeologists unearthed the remains of an ancient empire in Bero region of Jharkhand.

It was for the first time that concrete evidence of erstwhile Nagvanshi rulers, who once used to rule in the region, has been found by the archaeology department of the Jharkhand Government.

The department is excavating the site of ‘Khukhragarh’, which is about 50 kilometres from Ranchi. Khukhragarh used to be the capital of the Nagvanshi rulers.

The department has successfully excavated the remains of the dynasty’s Khukhragarh Fort dating back to 12th century. The walls of the fort and other things are still intact giving hope to the archaeologists that they can explore further.

According to the archaeologists working on the site, they have discovered an ancient temple while excavating.

“We have found a temple complex, which was twice destroyed and was constructed again. We have found evidence for that. As far the date is concerned, it was reconstructed in the 14th century and in that favour we have coins of ancient ‘Sultanate’ period dating back to 14th century,” said Harendra Prasad Sinha, Deputy Director, Department of Archaeology, Jharkhand.

Efforts are also being made to trace the history of the place and information about Nagvanshi rulers.

The information gathered from the nearby villagers, has also helped the archaeologists gain some insight into the history of the Nagvanshi rulers.

“18 emperors of Nagvanshi ruled from Khukhragarh and the 18th ruler was King ‘Bhim Karna’ who shifted his capital from here,” said Shiv Nath Sahu, a resident.

The experts are excavating every part of the site meticulously and are confident of discovering the history of the whole region.

Several precious coins, pottery and other remains have also been found which are a reminder of rich art and culture prevailing at that time. By Girija Shankar Ojha (ANI)

Pope Benedict XVI creates five new saints

Rome – Pope Benedict XVI has canonized five new saints – including the heroic 14th century Portuguese General Nuno de Santa Maria Alvares Pereira. Thousands of Portuguese faithful travelled to Rome to hear the pontiff’s announcement at St Peter’s Square on the military man turned friar and four others Sunday.

During the ceremony, Benedict renewed his appeal for a just society and solidary in the struggle against economic inequality affecting the better part of the world.

The latest canonization also included Italy’s Arcangelo Tadini (1846-1912), who founded the Benedictine order of Monte Oliveto, the 14th century monk, Bernhard Tolomei
(1272-1348) and nuns Gertrude Comensoli (1847-1903) and Caterina Volpicelli (1839-1894). (dpa)

Italy quake destroys four ancient churches

Rome, Apr.7 (ANI): The 6.3-magnitude earthquake that struck central Italy on Monday morning has damaged at least four old churches.

The Italian Culture Ministry said the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio, a striking pink-and-white stone-faced structure, was among the buildings severely damaged.

It is known for its architecture and for an annual pilgrimage to honor 13th-century Pope Celestine V, a former hermit who was both crowned and buried there.

One nave wall in the church, which is also celebrated for its 14th-century frescoes and lavish Gothic interior, collapsed in the quake, while the bell tower of another church, the lavish Renaissance-era Basilica of San Bernardino, collapsed, reports The Guardian.

Also damaged was a castle renowned as one of Italy’s best-preserved 16th-century fortresses.

The Forte Spagnolo, or Spanish Fort, is so called because it was built under the orders of Spain’s then king, Charles V, whose forces had defeated local rebels.

The quake was powerful enough to be felt in Rome, around 60 miles from the epicentre.

Heritage officials in the capital said the tremor had been strong enough to damage the third-century Baths of Caracalla, the Roman public baths popular with tourists. (ANI)

Major portion of inscriptions on 650-yr-old Spanish fortress deciphered

London, April 6 (ANI): Scientists have deciphered a major portion of the inscriptions on the 650-year-old Alhambra fortress-palace in Granada, Spain.

Visitors to the Alhambra have for centuries been mystified by the Arabic inscriptions that adorn its intricately carved medieval walls.

The script that winds round the filigree arches and pillared courtyards is so stylised that it’s often difficult to disentangle words from images, and few can decipher the classical Arabic in which they are written.

Now, according to a report in The Independent, the carvings have been logged and translated, finally answering the question that what do these inscriptions mean.

Researchers have produced an interactive DVD that decodes, dates and identifies 3,116 of some 10,000 inscriptions carved on the building that symbolizes centuries of Muslim rule in Spain and is today the country’s top tourist landmark.

Arabic artisans, supervised by poets employed in the 14th-century court of King Yusuf I, drew up the decorative plans and planned the spaces where verses – original, or copied – were to be engraved.

Inscriptions of poetry and verses from the Koran that have inspired generations represent only a minimum percentage of the texts that adorn the Alhambra’s walls, despite the mistaken belief that they are smothered in writings of this kind.

The researchers built upon studies begun 500 years ago by the conquerors of the Nazrid dynasty, who ruled the kingdom of Al Andalus and created this fabulous pile.

The prominent inscription, which is repeated hundreds of times on walls, arches and columns, is the motto of the Nazrid dynasty – “There is no victor but Allah.”
Isolated words like “happiness” or “blessing” recur, seen as divine expressions protecting the monarch or governor honoured in each palace or courtyard.

Then, there are aphorisms like, “Rejoice in good fortune, because Allah helps you,” and “Be sparse in words and you will go in peace.”

There are also verses by the acclaimed Islamic poets Ibn al-Khatib and Ibn Zamrak, some of which describe the place where they appear, such as the Hall of the Two Sisters, which represents a garden.

Until now, efforts to transcribe such verses have revealed only a fraction of the material.

With modern technology, including a 3D laser scanner, “we have achieved not so much a discovery as an exhaustive labour that seeks to register all the inscriptions,” said Juan Castilla, from the School of Arabic Studies at Spain’s Higher Scientific Research Council, whose team produced this still-incomplete guide. (ANI)

Spooky figure at Scottish castle leaves ghosts experts baffled

London, Mar 27 (ANI): The eerie image of a figure captured in a photograph at a Scottish castle is said to have left ghost experts baffled.

The picture clicked in May last year shows a spectral figure in fifteenth century dress peering out of a barred window at Tantallon Castle in Fife.

As the castle does not use any mannequins or costumed guides, experts are puzzled with the picture, which experts have confirmed did not use digital trickery.

“It is certainly very curious,” the Sun quoted ghost sceptic Professor Richard Wiseman as saying.

“We ran it by three photographic experts and they said it hadn’t been Photoshopped at all.

“The figure appears to be in period costume, but we know 100 per cent that Tantallon Castle is not the sort of place that has dummies or costumed guides; they just don’t go in for that sort of thing.

“I suppose it could be a visitor looking a little bit strange. Perhaps someone will come forward. Another possibility is an odd reflection of sunlight, but it does look very like a person. The explanation is not obvious,” he added.

Tantallon Castle, a ruined fortress dating back to the 14th century, stands on a remote rocky headland near North Berwick on the East coast of Scotland. It was badly damaged in an attack by Oliver Cromwell’s forces in 1651.

“I was not aware of anyone, or anything, being present in my picture,” said Christopher Aitchison, who took the photo. (ANI)

Cricket not quintessentially English after all

London, Mar.1 (ANI): Cricket is not quintessentially English after all, a new Australian research has claimed.

According to the research, north European immigrants imported the game to England in the 14th century, and that it was first resisted by the local population.
The claim challenges the traditional theory that the sport evolved from children’s games played in England since Anglo-Saxon times.

The Telegraph quotes Paul Campbell, of the department of English and theatre at the Australian National University, in Canberra, as saying that he has uncovered a reference to the sport in a 1533 poem, attributed to John Skelton, a popular poet and playwright of the day, in which he links it to immigrants from Flanders, in modern day Belgium, France and Holland.

In the work, “The Image of Ipocrisie” – much of which is a diatribe against parts of the Church – Skelton also appears to rail against the Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England from the 14th century, labelling them dismissively as “kings of crekettes”.

In what appears to be a call for the weavers to be driven out of England, Skelton writes:

“O lorde of Ipocrites/Nowe shut vpp your wickettes/And clape to your clickettes!/A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!”

The poem is the earliest known reference to the sport and adds weight to claims that the weavers brought the game over with them and played it on fields close to where they tended their sheep, using shepherd’s crooks – or curved sticks – as bats to strike a ball.

It was uncovered by Campbell following a search of historical archives, in which he looked for variations of the early ways in which the word cricket was spelt.

A German academic, who first established that the word has its linguistic origins in Flemish, guided Campbell.

Dr Heiner Gillmeister, of the department of English at the University of Bonn, suggests the term cricket has its roots in the Flemish phrase “met de krik ketsen”, or “to chase with a curved stick”.

He goes on to suggest that the origins of hockey goals and the wickets in cricket were in imitation of chivalric games, in which a knight on horseback guarded a narrow passage or opening.

It had previously been thought that the first written reference to cricket was in 1589, when it was mentioned during a court case in Guildford, Surrey, in which a certain John Derick – possible from the Flemish name Hendrik – recalled that as a young man at the Royal Grammar School “he and diverse of his fellowes did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies”.

But the new finding is the most conclusive proof that the sport – as well as the word itself – was foreign in origin.

Skelton’s poem is contained in a collection published by The Ballad Society in 1868. (ANI)

Cricket not quintessentially English after all

London, Mar.1 (ANI): Cricket is not quintessentially English after all, a new Australian research has claimed.

According to the research, north European immigrants imported the game to England in the 14th century, and that it was first resisted by the local population.
The claim challenges the traditional theory that the sport evolved from children’s games played in England since Anglo-Saxon times.

The Telegraph quotes Paul Campbell, of the department of English and theatre at the Australian National University, in Canberra, as saying that he has uncovered a reference to the sport in a 1533 poem, attributed to John Skelton, a popular poet and playwright of the day, in which he links it to immigrants from Flanders, in modern day Belgium, France and Holland.

In the work, “The Image of Ipocrisie” – much of which is a diatribe against parts of the Church – Skelton also appears to rail against the Flemish weavers who settled in southern and eastern England from the 14th century, labelling them dismissively as “kings of crekettes”.

In what appears to be a call for the weavers to be driven out of England, Skelton writes:

“O lorde of Ipocrites/Nowe shut vpp your wickettes/And clape to your clickettes!/A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!”

The poem is the earliest known reference to the sport and adds weight to claims that the weavers brought the game over with them and played it on fields close to where they tended their sheep, using shepherd’s crooks – or curved sticks – as bats to strike a ball.

It was uncovered by Campbell following a search of historical archives, in which he looked for variations of the early ways in which the word cricket was spelt.

A German academic, who first established that the word has its linguistic origins in Flemish, guided Campbell.

Dr Heiner Gillmeister, of the department of English at the University of Bonn, suggests the term cricket has its roots in the Flemish phrase “met de krik ketsen”, or “to chase with a curved stick”.

He goes on to suggest that the origins of hockey goals and the wickets in cricket were in imitation of chivalric games, in which a knight on horseback guarded a narrow passage or opening.

It had previously been thought that the first written reference to cricket was in 1589, when it was mentioned during a court case in Guildford, Surrey, in which a certain John Derick – possible from the Flemish name Hendrik – recalled that as a young man at the Royal Grammar School “he and diverse of his fellowes did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies”.

But the new finding is the most conclusive proof that the sport – as well as the word itself – was foreign in origin.

Skelton’s poem is contained in a collection published by The Ballad Society in 1868. (ANI)