(Press Release) The Council of Jimena is asking that of San Roque to  return the Lucerna de Ojeda that was donated to the Historical  Museum of the Campo de Gibraltar in 1955. The oil lamp was found at an  ancient burial ground in San Pablo (on Cerro de los Zarzales, also known  as Cerro de Vargas) by Antonio Ojeda -thus its name- and is thought to  be of Egyptian-Byzantine origin of the 6th or 7th Century AD. The small  bronze lamp (about a hand in size) in the shape of a peacock is used as a  symbol for San Pablo, which is where it will be exhibited at the  Council offices. According to historian Carlos Gómez de Avellaneda at a  conference within Jimena’s annual Historical and Archaeological  Workshops, the peacock was used in the paleo-Christian and Muslim era as  representative of the incorruptibility of the flesh and of resurrection  and the Ojeda Lamp was probably used in religious ceremonies for a long  time before being placed in the tomb in which it was found.
 

 
 
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