6533b7defe1ef96bd1275b54

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Durbi Takusheyi: a high-status burial site in the western Centralbilād al-sūdān

James AmejeClaus-peter HaaseYusuf Abdallah UsmanThomas R. FennDetlef GronenbornW. Paul AdderleyGerhard LiesegangStephan PatscherArun Banerjee

subject

GermanArcheologyHistorylanguageExcavationNorthern nigeriaAncient historyNational commissionArchaeologylanguage.human_language

description

Durbi Takusheyi is a burial site composed of at least eight mounds located between the modern towns of Katsina and Daura in northern Nigeria. Parts of the mounds were first excavated in 1907 by Herbert Richmond Palmer in cooperation with the Emir of Katsina and later again in 1992 in the course of a German research project under the lead of Dierk Lange, Bayreuth. After the 1992 excavation, the retained blocks were stored in the Jos Museum, Nigeria, for further analyses. In 2007 the Romisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum (RGZM) and the National Commission for Museums and Monuments in Nigeria (NCMM) started a project with the objective of completely restoring and analyzing the excavated artefacts. While the remains of the first excavation appear to be lost with only minimal information preserved, the three mounds excavated in 1992 each contained a single interment in the centre of the mound, all three with various burial goods produced from inorganic (metal, glass, stone, cowries) and organic material (cloth, w...

https://doi.org/10.1080/0067270x.2012.707470