The Phoenician world in Sa Caleta

ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING

 The Phoenician world in Sa Caleta

Architecture Phoenician World – Sa Caleta Ibiza

Fragment of decorative element in sandstone.
Documented in Sa Caleta. H.H. VIII-VII a. C. XXXI.83.

ARCHITECTURE

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Virtual reconstruction of the XVII building group (Barrio Sur) at Sa Caleta.

Virtual reconstruction

Virtual reconstruction of the XVII building group (Barrio Sur) at Sa Caleta. It presents a zigzag route with opposing access points.

 

Fragment of decorative element in sandstone. Documented in Sa Caleta

Decorative fragment in sandstone

Fragment of decorative element in sandstone. Documented in Sa Caleta.H.H. VIII-VII a. C. XXXI.83.

 

View of the South District in Sa Caleta

View of the South Neighborhood

View of the South District in Sa Caleta

 

Communal oven in the Central District of Sa Caleta. Oven 2.

Communal Oven

Communal oven in the Central District of Sa Caleta. Oven 2.

ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING

The implementation of a colony in a territory entailed the creation of a new urban planning with the buildings necessary for public and private life. The materials, construction techniques and distribution of buildings are some of the elements that archaeology uses to better understand the organization of these enclaves.

Single-beak lamp. Documented in Sa Caleta. Piece A.18th century. 8th century BC.

Single-beak lamp. Documented in Sa Caleta. Piece A.18th century. 8th century BC.

Double-spouted lamp. Documented in Sa Caleta. Piece 18th century. 8th century BC.

Double-spouted lamp. Documented in Sa Caleta. Piece 18th century. 8th century BC.

PUBLIC AND PRIVATE BUILDINGS

Among the public buildings, the temple stands out as the most significant, used to deposit figurines, incense burners in order to worship the gods.

In Sa Caleta, a structure has been identified in the South neighbourhood that suggests a possible sacred character. It is a three-room space with alternate entrances. In the central room, a hearth and lamps were documented in each corner. It should also be noted that two large collective ovens have been found in open “public” spaces that we can define as squares.

The lack of a necropolis suggests burials outside the settlement, as was common in Phoenician cities. Regarding defence, no important defensive structures were found, although the natural geography provided some protection.

On the other hand, private architecture is represented mainly through homes. These buildings in Sa Caleta usually had a quadrangular or rectangular plan and were built with stone walls at the base (plinth) and adobe upper walls, flat roofs with logs covered in clay and floors of beaten earth and pebbles.

From Sa Caleta on architecture

From
Sa Caleta on
architecture

URBAN PLANNING

The Phoenician settlement of Sa Caleta initially occupied a larger area than today, but marine erosion and other factors reduced it significantly. The buildings were distributed irregularly throughout the peninsula, without following a defined pattern, organized in neighbourhoods.

The homes can be individual units or form groups or neighbourhoods, separated in several rooms. These groupings are arranged in various ways, either isolated or forming squares or common open spaces, connected by small transit paths. From the beginning, the houses were built with little separation from each other, forming a dense and uneven urban framework.

The excavations directed by Joan Ramon Torres identified four well-defined sectors, called neighbourhoods.