The Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports announced the completion of the second phase of interdisciplinary underwater research on the east coast of Salamis. Research has evolved, at an intensive pace, in a marine area of major historical importance: a) The Ambelakia bay, a port of the Classical city of Salamis controlled by the Athenian state and primary meeting point of the united Greek fleet on the eve of the naval battle of 480 BC and (b) the area north and off the Kynosoura peninsula, on which the most important monuments of the Greek victory are located.
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| Submerged square tower on the west side of the Cove: part of the fortification system of the port of Salamis of the Classical and Hellenistic period [Credit: G. Lolos] |
The underwater archaeological research
As part of the underwater archaeological research, the exploration of submerged architectural remains continued on the west and particularly the north side of the bay’s inner section, which was the commercial and military port of Salamis during Classical, Hellenistic and Roman times.
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| Submerged section of base, possibly part of a large public building (left) adjacent to the port of the ancient city of Salamis, on the bay’s north side [Credit: Chr. Marabea] |
This year, the north side of the bay was explored, in an area where a later, 48 meter long pier stands out, built, before 1900, with ancient construction material from one or more buildings. Just a short distance from the pier to the west, a large, sturdy, 13 meter long construction, carefully made of stone plinths, now submerged, has been revealed. It is most probably the base (with strong foundations located on its southern flank) of some public building.
The base’s form, along with the other architectural elements and movable finds, combined with the earlier discovery in 1882, in a directly adjacent spot, of a marble pedestal with a votive inscription (I.G. II2 1955), leads to a preliminary interpretation of the building as a temple or stoa, functioning during the Late Roman period and probably founded in earlier, Late Classical to Hellenistic times
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| Marble finds of Roman times, from the research of the large building on the north side of the bay: fragments of a small altar (left) and of statues [Credit: Chr. Marabea] |
Based on the findings so far, it is estimated that the building brought to light must be one of the last ancient public buildings in the port of the city of Salamis, perhaps one of those seen by Pausanias and reported in his Description of Greece (1.35.3, 1.36. 1), during the late 2nd c. AD.
Marine geophysical research
Systematic marine geophysical surveys were carried out in the Ambelakia bay as well as north and east of Kynosoura. The purpose of the research was twofold: on the one hand, to locate the coastline of the Classical era and reconstruct the area’s coastal paleogeography and on the other, to locate targets of possible archaeological significance “resting” on the surface of the seabed or buried beneath it.
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| 3D representation of locating a target buried under the bay’s seabed [Credit: P. Karantzas, composition: N. Georgiou] |
A very large number of targets have been found buried under the loose sand dunes on the seabed of the Ambelakia bay. A subset of these targets (a few dozen) was located at some depth under the seabed, which probably corresponds to the layer of the Classical Period and the Naval Battle of Salamis itself.
Assessing the size, shape and material of these buried targets makes them very significant and candidates for control over the next research period.
Source: Archaiologia Online [August 31, 2017]









