In 1909–1912, research on the site was conducted by a British expedition from the
University of Oxford headed by
F.Ll. Griffith. Meroitic and Christian cemeteries, as well as Egyptian temples, were uncovered. At the turn of the 1960s,
UNESCO organized the Nubian Salvage Campaign to preserve monuments from the area, which was to be flooded by
Lake Nasser. Work in Faras, entrusted to
Professor Kazimierz Michałowski, was carried out from 1960 to 1964 by the
Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology of the University of Warsaw in Cairo, which he had founded (now
Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology University of Warsaw). It turned out that the hill where the mission began excavations concealed a Christian
cathedral with magnificent wall paintings. The researchers distinguished three main phases of its functioning. The cathedral was founded by bishop Aetios in 620 and then twice rebuilt: by Paulos at the beginning of the 8th century and Petros I at the end of the 10th century. The subsequent buildings were called after these bishops. These paintings are the best surviving examples of Christian Nubian art and depict portraits of archangels, mainly
Michael, various monarchs and bishops of Faras, Christian saints,
Virgin Mary and a number of Biblical scenes. They were executed in tempera on dry plaster, on several layers dated from the 8th to the 14th century. Of the 169 uncovered paintings, 120 were taken down from the walls. Sixty-six of them were transported to Poland and are today on display in the Polish
National Museum in Warsaw, and in
Sudan National Museum in
Khartoum. In addition, a major pottery workshop was found. Thanks to the discovery of the List of Bishops of Faras, it was possible to date each episcopate and thus to establish the date of some of the wall paintings. In the turbulent later years of Christian Nubia, Faras seems to have declined and the administrative centre moved to the more easily defended area of
Qasr Ibrim. File:Pottery of the C-Group people, 2300-1600 BCE, Faras, British Museum EA51244.jpg|Pottery of the
C-Group people, 2300-1600 BCE, Faras. File:SNMSetau.jpg|Stela, now in the
National Museum of Sudan, with
Setau, viceroy of Nubia, and his wife Nefro-mut worshipping Rameses II, whose
Cartouche appears on the left side. File:Aegyptisches Museum Berlin InvNr20856 20080313 merotische Keramik aus Faras.jpg|
Meroitic pottery, now in
Ägyptisches Museum Berlin Image:Faras Frieze with birds.jpg|Fragment of the frieze with birds (
National Museum in Warsaw) Image:Sudan Farras fresco of cathedral 22dez2005.jpg|The Birth of Jesus - fresco in the Cathedral (
Sudan National Museum in Khartoum) ==See also==