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Roman-era bath revealed in İzmir

İzmir’s ancient Greek city of Metropolis has reentered the archaeological spotlight with the discovery of a Roman bath, which is covered with mosaics and is rectangular and sculptures of Zeus and Thyke. Archeologists also find gladiator figures at Metropolis Ancietn City, which is located between the villages of Yeniköy and Özbek in İzmir.

The Roman-era baths found at the ancient Greek city of Metropolis [Credit: AA]
Recent archaeological excavations in İzmir’s ancient city of Metropolis have led to the discovery of a Roman bath featuring a sculpture of the goddess of luck Thyke and a sculpture of Zeus. The excavations also revealed gladiator figures. 

Metropolis, which is located between the villages of Yeniköy and Özbek, is the site of many excavations because of its ancient ruins. 

Excavation work has been continuing for 20 years with the support of the Culture and Tourism Ministry, the Sabancı Foundation, the Metropolis Foundation and Torbalı Municipality, Serdar Aybek, a scholar at Trakya University’s Archaeology Department and the Metropolis excavation president, told Anatolia news agency. 

Aybek said there were many cultural aspects in Metropolis that belong to the Geometric period and Hellenistic times. Metropolis was a city of art, according to Aybek. 

“Metropolis has a 5,000-year-old history, and it was situated during the early Bronze Age,” Aybek said, and excavations have revealed some ceramic pieces from the early Bronze Age and middle Bronze Age. 

During the excavations, archaeologists also found accessories from the Hittite era. Metropolis was situated near the ancient city of Ephesus and all the buildings and sculptures in the city were made with perfection, Aybek said. “Metropolis is a Hellenistic ancient city.” 

Ancient Greeks believed Artemis protected the city, he said. “This is something that we have never seen in the Anatolian ancient cities and this makes the Metropolis ancient city even more mysterious,” Aybek said. 

During four months of excavations archaeologists unearthed a Roman bath in Metropolis. 

“This year we have discovered new buildings in Metropolis,” said Aybek, adding that one of these structures was a 100-square-meter Roman bath. 

The bath is covered with mosaics and is rectangular, Aybek said, adding that it included a sports area. 

“The new Roman bath unearthed this year is smaller than the other baths in Metropolis,” Aybek said. “Next year, we will focus on these areas.” 

The sculptures of Zeus and Thyke were discovered in the bath, which is thought to have been built in the second century B.C. by the Emperor Antininus Pius, Aybek said. 

The ancient city of Metropolis was first investigated through archaeological field work in 1972 by Professor Recep Meriç from the Dokuz Eylül University, Izmir. Excavations on the site, which feature Classical, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman traces, began in 1989. The earliest known settlement at the site is from the Neolithic Age, showing evidence of contact and influence with the Troy I littoral culture. 

A still-undeciphered seal written in hieroglyphics similar to those of the Hittites has also been found Metropolis’ acropolis. The Hittite kingdom of Arzawa had its capital Apasas (later Ephesus) roughly 30 kilometers to the southwest. 

Metropolis was a part of the Hellenistic kingdom of Pergamum, and during this period the city reached a zenith of cultural and economic life. A temple dedicated to the war god Ares, one of only two known such temples, was also located here. 

Source: Hurriyet Daily News [November 16, 2011]

Underground Cities: 3500 years of Cappadocian cave homes

Cities, empires and religions have risen and fallen around these unique underground havens once used by early Christians to hide from Roman armies, yet they remains occupied to this day – 100 square miles with 200+ underground villages and tunnel towns complete with hidden passages, secret rooms and ancient temples and a remarkably storied history of each new civilization building on the work of the last. 


The fields of architecture and urban design would do well to center their sustainable sights on this unique site – few structures outside of this area in Cappadocia have survived for so long. Some of these buildings go up to five full stories underground and date back to Roman times or beyond, though many caves were carved out by human hands long before their empire arrived.  


The fantastic rock formations used as shells for these dwellings date back millions of years, and much of the more recent architecture has survived for hundreds or even thousands of years – despite being laid siege to many times over and housing everything from armies to explosive weapons factories. 


Centered in modern day Turkey, this region has passed between hands many times. The contemporary residents speak a hybrid of Greek and Turkish and, unsurprisingly, bus tours, hotels and other visitor-oriented services comprise much of their current economic system.


Built up over time for defense as much as shelter, narrow passageways have made it notoriously difficult for invaders to penetrate the perimeters of many of these underground cave complexes. 


In part due to their secret locations and the naturally temperature-controlled nature of the cave interiors, many religious artifacts and artworks have survived for over a thousand years. All the while, surface structures have been erected and destroyed while modern architecture mixes in strange hybrids with historic temples and above-ground houses. 


While many buildings remain occupied, many more are now deserted – from homes to entire churches and underground cathedrals. For all we know, some rooms and structures are forever lost and buried, hidden so well they will never be found again.  

Source: Dornob | Images via AlaskanDude/flickr [November 16, 2011]

Excavation and restoration work at Germenicia

Intensive digging, exploration and restoration activities at the ancient site of Germenicia, found by accident during illegal digs in the city of Kahramanmaraş, have ended for the year, with the focus now being placed on local expropriation of land. 


The discovery of the Germenicia site, as a result of illegal digging and home repairs that occurred in Kahramanmaraş in 2007, caused great excitement, especially as some of the floor mosaics decorating villas on the site have entered world archaeology literature. As far as tourism expectations are concerned, the Germenicia discovery has also filled area residents with great hope. Effort has been put into protecting the site, now that the first section of digging has been completed for this year. 

Efforts to expropriate land have picked up speed, as digs in four different districts of the city have brought to light mosaics at 23 different locations. Culture and Tourism director Seydi Küçükdağlı has noted that in the first stages of these efforts, 22 different parcels of land will be expropriated using funds from the Culture and Tourism Ministry. 

Recalling that in 2010, the Council of Monuments in Adana expropriated 146 acres of land, Küçükdağlı said: “This is a very large area of land. So we know our work is going to be difficult. These floor mosaics are spread over a wide residential area. This is why the public expropriation part of this project is very important to us. We will start with the areas that the ministry sees as being particularly urgent.” 

Küçükdağlı said the ministry believes that Germenicia as a site will act as a locomotive for tourism in the region and although work was going slowly, the mosaics being uncovered would be revealed for the entire world to see. 

He noted that the greatest aim at this point was to see the construction of some sort of “archaeological park” that would allow visitors to see and admire the mosaics where they were found, rather than in a museum. 

The ancient site of Germenicia 

The mosaics of Germanicia are of the quality and level of iconography that allow them to be compared to those found at Turkey’s Zeugma site. Germenicia is spread out over a wide area that encompasses 146 acres of land. The districts of Kahramanmaraş where the sites are found are Dulkadiroğlu, Bağlarbaşı, Namık Kemal and Şeyhadil, all of which have been declared third-degree protected areas or protected zones. 

Germenecia is thought to have been a fourth or fifth century Roman city, with residents who were generally comparatively quite wealthy and aristocratic. Its discovery is expected to turn Kahramanmaraş into one of the world’s most important centers for mosaics. The ancient site is thought to have around 100 villas, each with around 15-20 rooms. The floor mosaics found at the site are believed by experts to contain many significant clues as to life -- both social and cultural -- at the time. The floor mosaics of Germenecia depict human, animal and floral figures very realistically. 

Source: Todays Zaman [November 13, 2011]

Turkey pushes for return of Sion Treasure

The Antalya Museum in southern Turkey is hoping to get back the rest of Sion Treasure from the Dumbarton Oaks Institute in Washington, D.C. 

Turkey is hoping to get back the rest of Sion Treasure from Washington. The reasure is currently at the Dumbarton Oaks Institute in Washington, D.C. [Credit: AA]
The museum’s director, Mustafa Demirel, told Anatolia news agency on Wednesday that Dumbarton Oaks had a part of the Sion Treasure, adding that the Antalya Museum owned the main part of the treasure. 

Recently, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts returned the top half of the Weary Heracles, Greek for Hercules, to the Antalya Museum. Turkey said the top piece was stolen from an archaeological site in Turkey in 1980 and smuggled to the U.S. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan flew the 1,900-year-old statue back with him at the end of a trip to the U.S. in September. 

The Sion Treasure was found by a villager by accident in Kumluca town in Antalya province in 1963. The treasure, which was later smuggled abroad, was named from an inscription on an oblong “polycandelon” (multiple-lamp holder) mentioning 

“Holy Sion,” possibly the church or the monastery for which the objects were intended. The monastery of Holy Sion was near present-day Kumluca. The museum director said that the Antalya Museum was located on an area of 30,000 square meters, and 60,000 artifacts were registered in the museum. 

The Elmalı coins, which were returned to Turkey in 1999 after being smuggled abroad in 1984 and top half of 1,800-year-old Roman sculpture Weary Herakles, which was returned from the U.S. Sept. 25 , are on display at the Antalya Archaeology Museum. 

Source: Hurriyet Daily News [November 09, 2011]

Bodrum Underwater Archaeology Museum breaks tourist record

Bodrum Underwater Archaeology Museum, known as the only underwater museum in Europe, attracts great attention from tourists even at the end of the tourist season. 

The Bodrum Underwater Archaeology Museum has 13 display rooms where the world’s oldest sunken wrecks are displayed. “It has become the focus of interest for world-famous documentary channels,” says the museum’s deputy director Erhan Özcan [Credit: Hurriyet]
The museum, visited by more than 300,000 people a year, has 13 display rooms where the world’s oldest sunken wrecks are exhibited. Two more display rooms will be added to the existing ones this year. 

Featuring thousands of historical works of art, ship wrecks and artifacts including the treasures of Queen Nefertiti, the museum is a very important one for Turkey’s culture tourism industry. 

Located in the harbor of the Aegean province of Muğla’s popular holiday resort town of Bodrum, the Bodrum Underwater Archaeology Museum was visited by 300,000 tourists in the first 10 months of the year, spending nearly 2 million Turkish liras. 

The 2,400-year-old Carian Princess room and the room of 3,500-year-old Uluburun sunken ship, which is the world’s oldest surviving sunken ship, draws the greatest amount of interest from visitors. Among the other popular specimens are the Eastern Rome sunken room, Glass sunken room, Early Bronze Age sunken room, English Tower, German Tower, Turkish Bath, dungeon and amphorae. 

The removal of the wrecks and artifacts from the water and their conservation are explained to visitors by experts via slide shows. 

The museum is flooded with people in summer and even winter from Greek Kos, Leros, Kalimnos, Patmos and Rhodes islands. It was reported that nearly 30,000 tourists came to Bodrum by boat to visit the museum. 

Visitors of the museum are welcomed by warriors and janissaries carrying axes, swords and shields in the entrance of the Bodrum Castle. It is said that this is highly surprising for tourists. 

The museum’s deputy director, Erhan Özcan, said interest in the museum increased every year. He said it was a very important historical area not only for tourists but also for Turkish and foreign archaeology students. 

“The museum has become the focus of interest for world-famous documentary channels,” Özcan said. “Forty television channels from 35 countries including National Geographic, Japon NHK, Discovery and the History Channel have filmed the museum over the last three years. Thanks to this, millions of people have the chance to closely know Bodrum and the museum. We also earn money thanks to tourists visiting the museum and make our promotion that is worth millions of dollars. This is why we will open the Miken Room and Knidos Frescos Room to the benefit of cultural tourism in the next few months.” 

Source: Hurriyet Daily News [November 08, 2011]
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