Location of Nan Madol in Federated States of Micronesia
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Nan Madol (Pacific Ocean)
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Nan Madol complex map.
Nan Madol is anarchaeological site adjacent to the eastern shore of the island ofPohnpei, now part of theMadolenihmw district of Pohnpei state in theFederated States of Micronesia in the westernPacific Ocean. Nan Madol was the capital of theSaudeleur dynasty until about 1628.[3][note 1] The city, constructed in a lagoon, consists of a series of smallartificial islands linked by a network of canals.[3] The site core with its stone walls encloses an area approximately 1.5 by 0.5 kilometres (0.93 mi × 0.31 mi) and it contains 92 artificial islets—stone and coral fill platforms—bordered by tidal canals.[11]
The nameNan Madol means "within the intervals" and is a reference to the canals that crisscross the ruins.[12] The original name wasSoun Nan-leng, "Reef of Heaven", according to Gene Ashby in his bookPohnpei, An Island Argosy.[13] It is often called the "eighth wonder of the world", or the"Venice of the Pacific".[14]
Nan Madol was the ceremonial and political seat of theSaudeleur dynasty, which united Pohnpei's estimated population of 25,000 people until about 1628.[3] Set apart between the main island of Pohnpei andTemwen Island, it was a scene of human activity as early as the first or second century AD. By the 8th or 9th century, islet construction had started, with construction of the distinctivemegalithic architecture beginning 1180–1200 AD.[15]
Polish ethnographer and oceanographerJohn Stanislaw Kubary made the first detailed description of Nan Madol in 1874.[16]
Little can be verified about the megalithic construction. Pohnpeian tradition claims that the builders of theLeluh archaeological site onKosrae (likewise composed of huge stone buildings) migrated to Pohnpei, where they used their skills and experience to build the even more impressive Nan Madol complex.Radiocarbon dating indicates that Nan Madol predates Leluh; thus, it is more likely that Nan Madol influenced Leluh.[15]
According to Pohnpeian legend, Nan Madol was constructed by twin sorcerers Olisihpa and Olosohpa from the mythical Western Katau, or Kanamwayso. The brothers arrived in a large canoe seeking a place to build an altar so that they could worship Nahnisohn Sahpw, the god of agriculture. After several false starts, the two brothers successfully built an altar off Temwen Island, where they performed their rituals. In legend, these brothers levitated the huge stones with the aid of a flyingdragon. When Olisihpa died of old age, Olosohpa became the first Saudeleur. Olosohpa married a local woman and sired twelve generations, producing sixteen other Saudeleur rulers of the Dipwilap ("Great") clan.[note 2]
The founders of the dynasty ruled kindly, though their successors placed ever increasing demands on their subjects. Their reign ended with the invasion byIsokelekel, who also resided at Nan Madol, though his successors abandoned the site.[7][17][18]
The elite centre was a special place of residence for the nobility and of mortuary activities presided over by priests. Its population almost certainly did not exceed 1,000, and may have been less than half that. Although many of the residents were chiefs, the majority were commoners. Nan Madol served, in part, as a way for the ruling Saudeleur chiefs to organize and control potential rivals by requiring them to live in the city rather than in their home districts, where their activities were difficult to monitor.
Madol Powe, the mortuary sector, contains 58 islets in the northeastern area of Nan Madol. Most islets were once occupied by the dwellings of priests. Some islets served a special purpose: food preparation, canoe construction on Dapahu, and coconut oil preparation on Peinering. High walls surrounding tombs are located on Peinkitel, Karian, and Lemenkou, but the most prominent is the royal mortuary islet of Nandauwas, where walls 5.5–7.5 metres (18–25 ft) high surround a central tomb enclosure within the main courtyard. This was built for the first Saudeleur.[15]
On Nan Madol, there is no fresh water or food; water must be collected and food grown inland. During Saudeleur rule,Pohnpeians brought essential food and water by boat.[4][6][19] The Saudeleur received food at a particular islet: first Peiniot, and later the closer Usennamw.[6][7]
Around 1628, when Isokelekel overthrew the Saudeleurs and began the Nahnmwarki Era, theNahnmwarkis lived at Nan Madol, but had to gather their own water and grow their own food. This is thought[who?] to have caused them eventually to abandon Nan Madol and move back to their own districts, although there are other explanations for the desertion of the complex, such as a sharp population decline.
Today Nan Madol forms an archaeological district covering more than 18 square kilometres (6.9 sq mi) and includes the stone architecture built up on a coral reef flat along the shore ofTemwen Island, several other artificial islets, and the adjacent Pohnpei main island coastline. The site core with its stone walls encloses an area approximately 1.5 by 0.5 kilometres (0.93 mi × 0.31 mi) containing 92 artificial islets—stone and coral fill platforms—bordered by tidal canals.
Carbon dating indicates that megalithic construction at Nan Madol began around AD 1180 when large basalt stones were taken from avolcanic plug on the opposite side of Pohnpei. The earliest settlement on Pohnpei was probably around AD 1 althoughradiocarbon dating shows human activity starting around AD 80–200.[15]
In 1985, the ruins of Nan Madol were declared a National Historical Landmark.[20]
Until its closure in 2012, objects from the site were displayed atLidorkini Museum.[21]
Offshore underwater archaeological surveys at Nan Madol
In 1978 and 1979, Arthur Saxe[22] conducted underwater archaeological surveys to investigate reports of submerged basalt columns just offshore of Nan Madol and to search for two legendary submerged prehistoric cities known asKahnihmw Namkhet andKahnihmweiso. These surveys reported finding several tall stone pillars covered in coral growth and as tall as 6 metres (20 ft) tall, 0.9–1.2 metres (3.0–3.9 ft) wide, at depths of over 25 metres (82 ft). Neither Kahnihmw Namkhet nor Kahnihmweiso was found. However, it was hypothesized that the city of Kahnihmweiso might have been built over a cavern, which collapsed and formed ablue hole that swallowed the city.[22][23]
In 1988 and 1989, a team of archaeologists[24] from the University of Oregon conducted underwater archaeological surveys around Nan Madol. They found a number of prone basalt columns on the sea floor seaward of Nan Madol. They concluded that these columns consisted of lost, discarded or fallen building materials. They also examined underwater pillars reported by Saxe. They located two randomly spaced clusters of columns. They drove a steel rod into two of them and found only coral. One of them was raised and carefully dissected. This column was found to consist entirely of coral and clearly is not a "purposely positioned stone column".[23][24]
In 2013, Ishimura and others used multi-beam sonar, ROVs, and scuba diving to examine submerged block-shaped features and columnar objects and the blue hole. They found neither evidence of anthropogenic pillars composed of basalt columns nor any evidence that the underwater columns are man-made structures. They also concluded that the blue hole is a sinkhole that developed in reef limestones during sea level lowstands of glacial maximums.[23]
Nan Madol has been interpreted by some as the remains of one of the "lost continents" ofLemuria orMu. Nan Madol was one of the sitesJames Churchward identified as being part of the lost continent of Mu, starting in his 1926 bookThe Lost Continent of Mu Motherland of Man.[25]
The ruins of Nan Madol were used as the setting for alost race story byA. Merritt,The Moon Pool (1918), in which the islands are called Nan-Tauach and the ruins are called the Nan-Matal.[26][27][28]
Nan Madol was featured in episode two of the pseudoarchaeological workAncient Apocalypse byGraham Hancock which aired on Netflix, in which false claims were made about the age of the site. Experts in Pacific geography and archaeology have characterised Hancock's claims about Nan Madol as "incredibly insulting to the ancestors of the Pohnpeian [islanders] that did create these structures", linking them to 19th century "racist" and "white supremacist" ideologies.[29]
There is no scientific basis for the claims of Churchward, whose writings on Mu are considered to bepseudoscience.[30][31][32][33]
^The Saudeleur era lasted around 500 years.[4] Legend generally dates their downfall to the 1500s,[5] however archaeologists date Saudeleur ruins to ca. 1628.[6][7][8]: 92 [9]: 203 [10]: 277
^Hanlon (1988) notes differing accounts of the number of Saudeleur rulers, ranging from eight to seventeen, concluding that it is impossible to know this number for certain.[4]: 234
^"Nan Madol".National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived fromthe original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved28 June 2007.
^abcAyres, William."Nan Madol, Madolenihmw, Pohnpei".Professor William Ayres: Pacific Islands Research and Teaching. University of Oregon. Archived fromthe original on 13 June 2010. Retrieved26 September 2007.
^Riesenberg, Saul H (1968).The Native Polity of Ponape. Contributions to Anthropology. Vol. 10. Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 38, 51.ISBN9780598442437. Retrieved1 January 2012.
^abSaxe, A.A.; Allenson, R.A.; Loughridge, S.R.L (1980).The Nan Mada Area of Ponape: Researches into Bounding and Stabilizing an Ancient Administrative Center. Saipan: The Trust Territory Historic Preservation Office. pp. 1–145.
^abcIshimura, Tomo; Asada, Akira; Maeda, Fumitaka; Sugimoto, Ken’ichi; Ogawa, Toshihiro; Hikoyama, Akio; Matsumoto, Yoshinori; Sugimoto, Yusuke; Brennan, Charles; Haramoto, Tomomi; Kohler, Augustine (2014)."Underwater Survey at the Ruins of Nan Madol, Pohnpei State, Federated States of Micronesia"(PDF).Proceedings of the 2nd Asia-Pacific Regional Conference on Underwater Cultural Heritage. Honolulu. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 13 April 2015.
^abAyers, W.S. (1993).Mada Archaeological Fieldwork. Final Report. A Research and Historic Preservation Project 1987–1990. The Trust Territory Historic Preservation Office, Saipan. pp. 1–108.
^Merritt, Abraham (1919).The Moon Pool. New York and London: G.P. Putnam's Sons. Retrieved18 April 2023. p. 3:... they had set forth for the Nan-Matal, that extraordinary group of island ruins clustered along the eastern shore of Ponape in the Carolines.
^Craib, John L. (1983). "Micronesian prehistory: an archeological overview".Science.219 (4587):922–927.Bibcode:1983Sci...219..922C.doi:10.1126/science.219.4587.922.JSTOR1690707.PMID17817916.S2CID38457399. p. 925:Nan Madol Island is the best known archeological site in Micronesia. Its unique structures of immense proportions, and their apparent abandonment before European contact in 1595 have made Nan Madol the focus of fanciful conjecture ([citation of Merritt'sThe Moon Pool, among others]).
Ayres, William S. (January 1990). "Mystery Islets of Micronesia".Archaeology.43 (1):58–63.JSTOR41740393.
Ratzel, Friedrich (1896). "Races of the Pacific and their migrations".The History of Mankind. Vol. 1. London: Macmillan and Company, Limited. Includes a drawing entitled: "Sepulchral monument in Ponapé, Caroline Islands. (From a photograph in the Godeffroy Album.)"