Thursday, June 27, 2019

The distinct remains of Blaundus

A few years ago, Turkish TV ran a very interesting program, Zor Yollar (difficult roads) in which a group of adventurers crisscrossed Turkey’s backcountry in their 4x4 vehicles in search of little-known and/or near-hidden sites.

The image of one of these sites stayed with me because it was so out of common, and the name attached to it was Blaundus. The overall remains were poor, a sturdy arch that was part of the city wall, a few rows of columns of a temple of some kind, and the most striking ruins of “an unknown building”. Well, so much to satisfy my curiosity.

Just recently, the Turkish newspaper, Daily Sabah, published an article about Blaundus and the top picture was that of the building that had intrigued me from the onset.



It appears that Blaundus emerged as a Macedonian city and when Alexander the Great occupied Phrygia (to which Blaundus belonged) in 333 BC, he appointed Antigonus Monophthalmus as governor.

The city stands on a well-defendable high plateau. Although Blaundus had been located and analyzed by British and German archaeologists from the late 19th to the early 21st century, the first serious excavations started in the last decennium or so.

Blaundus was built according to the Hippodamian plan and it is thought that the monumental structure that caught my eye stood right on the Agora. So far, a temple dedicated to Ceres / Demeter, the fertility goddess, has been located. Other remains that have been documented are the stadium (140m x 37m) from the 1st century AD, a few steps of the theater, the gymnasium, and one arch of the five-kilometer-long aqueduct (three arches were still standing in the 19th century). On the slopes northeast of the city, several tombs have been found with their frescoed wall painted in vivid shades of blue, green, and red.

Local authorities now state that the site of Blaundus is open to the public but I wonder whether the access roads have been signposted since the search of the Zor Yollar group. The impressive remains are situated north of the line Aydin – Isparta, meaning that it is not entirely out of reach to the more adventurous traveler.

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Bathing in beauty in ancient Gerasa

Excavations carried out between 2016 and 2018 by teams of German, French and Jordanian archaeologists have exposed a large number of statues from the Great Eastern Roman Baths in Gerasa (modern Jerash in Jordan). Apparently they toppled down after a severe earthquake.


This monumental complex – apparently one of the largest and best preserved in the East – dates from the second half of the 2nd century AD. Amazingly, some of the vaults of these baths still stand to a height of 12 meters. The construction was enlarged under the Severan Emperors, who added a connecting pillared hall with exedra on the north side. Scholars estimate that this hall is a reminder of the “imperial halls” that were common in Asia Minor at the time.

Several of the 27 statues are said to be intact and represent Zeus and Aphrodite, as well as the muses from Graeco-Roman mythology sitting on a throne. Based on the picture included in the article in Albawaba, and if it does indeed belong to the baths, the artwork is of a very high level.

The statue of Aphrodite in the company of Eros, is made of Pentelic marble quarried around Athens and according to the inscription on the plinth, it was donated by a priest named Demetrius around March 153/154 AD.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The new Archaeological Museum of Troy

Despite the many centuries of excavations in Troy, the time has come (at last!) to build its own museum on the site. It is located some 800 meters outside the ancient city, and from the pictures, it looks very promising.


Beyond Troy, about 40,000 artifacts have been transferred from the Archaeology Museum in Istanbul, the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara, and the Archaeological Museum of Çanakkale. It is nice to have the finds concentrated in one single building.

Besides Troy, artifacts from the greater area are being exhibited here also. Those archaeological remains include finds from cities like Assos, Tenedos, Parium, Alexandria Troas, Smintheion, Lampsacus, Thymbra, Tavolia, and Imbros.

It is a wonderful idea to have this collection together in one place, more so since that corner of Northwestern Turkey is often overlooked by tourists.

Friday, June 14, 2019

More restorations at the Royal Palace in Pella

The Royal Palace of Pella has been off limits for many years now, in spite of the earlier announcement that it would open to the public in 2011.

Such a monumental construction not only needed to be excavated but also required some kind of restoration to stabilize the structure and to help the future visitor to get a better picture of this complex. It now seems that work to that effect will soon be started.


As explained in my earlier blog, “Pella, the birthplace of Alexander the Great,” the palace covers an area of 6 ha with a maze of rooms, stoas, corridors, and staircases set on different levels. In the first stage, three stoas of the palace’s Propylaea and four columns in the peristyle of the courtyard of Building I will be treated.

The Propylaea, as its name indicates, was the very entrance to the palace. It was framed on either side by a not further identified construction, called Building I on the east and Building II on the west, which were enhanced with a Doric colonnade.

The palace survived until Byzantine times, after which it served as construction material for the settlers in the nearby villages. All that remains today are the foundations of the palace complex, as well as several columns and some mosaics all across the site.

Nonetheless, it will be extremely rewarding to have a closer look inside those walls where Alexander spent his youth and to visualize the entire organization of the premises.

Monday, June 10, 2019

Preservation of the Roman Aqueduct at Gadara

Roman aqueducts are a constant marvel of engineering as each and every aqueduct is unique. Their remains are still clearly visible in many landscapes around the wide Mediterranean area.

The latest news on the subject comes from Umm Qais, the modern name for ancient Gadara in Jordan. It has been established that Gadara had the largest Roman water system in the world, running over a distance of 170 kilometers all the way into modern Syria.



In an earlier blog (see: Another legacy of Alexander in Gadara), I casually mentioned the discovery of a network of water tunnels, including a number of Hellenistic ones but at present, the entire system has been traced and mapped.

Scholars speak of a twin-aqueduct as two systems running parallel, the upper and the lower tunnels. On their way to Gadara, water from other sources was added coming from springs, and channels that were cut in the rock surface to collect the rainwater. It also has been established that the aqueducts were combined with karezes or qanats which automatically provided underground access to the channels in order to carry out the maintenance works.


Since most of Gadara is built on top of the ancient city, the exact course of these aqueducts cannot always be followed exactly but they appear in the section that has been excavated near the Baths, the Byzantine Church, and a number of private houses. Around the many Nymphaeums that survived, for instance, those along the Decumanus, it is still possible to find traces of the connecting aqueducts.

A detailed study on the Roman aqueducts in Jordan can be found on the site Roman Aqueducts.

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Air pollution in antiquity

We are inclined to believe that air pollution is a modern phenomenon that started with the Industrial Revolution in the 1800s, but recent research has shown that the problem existed already in Greek and Roman antiquity.

The first mining of metals started in the 6th millennium BC but mass production was a Roman invention as they intensively used lead for the production of water pipes, household items, and to mint their silver coins. The smelting of lead releases toxic heavy metals into the air.


It has never been established, for instance, to what extend King Philip’s mines in Crenides, Stratonici, Skouries, and Olympiade on the east side of the Chalcidice peninsula, and Potidaea contributed to the air pollution (see: Macedonia's gold and silver mines today) .

Until now, scientists relied on the traces of metal trapped in Greenland’s ice but that is far away from the actual mine sites. At present, the concentrations have been measured in the deepest layers of ice on the Mont Blanc, which is geographically much closer to the source.

The study of alpine ice has revealed that lead emissions in antiquity increased the natural level by a factor of 10. By comparison, the use of leaded gasoline in Europe matched up to a factor of 50 to 100. The impact may not seem so important were it not that the Roman pollution spread over many centuries, while our leaded gasoline damaged our air quality for "only" 30 years or so.

Although the Roman smelting and mining activities went on for almost 500 years, it appears that they knew two peaks in atmospheric lead pollution, i.e., during the 2nd century BC and again during the 2nd century AD. The Romans mined lead all over Europe, from Iberia to Great Britain, and the production eventually declined gradually after the fall of the Empire in the 5th century.

We look at the Roman Empire with its grand monuments and great works of art but never consider that all that wealth came at a very high price.

Today we aim to bring our air pollution back to standards from before the Industrial Revolution, but it is clear that it existed for a long time. To take the values from before the Industrial Revolution as a “clean” standard does no longer stand either. There were many ups and downs, like noted in the Middle Ages when mining activities almost became nil, particularly when the Black Death pandemic hit this part of the world in the mid-14th century.

Beside the lead pollution, quantities of antimony were also released into the atmosphere. It is important to know that lead ores also contain elements like arsenic, copper, silver, and gold.

Sunday, June 2, 2019

What did the citizens of ancient Sagalassos look like?

Talking about Sagalassos or any city from antiquity, it merely comes down to buildings and stones. So, it is gratifying to find archaeologists trying to give the people who lived so many centuries ago a face.

We owe it to the Belgian researchers Jeroen Poblome (director of the Sagalassos ArchaeologicalResearch Project) and Sam Cleymans (postdoctoral researcher), who – together with the University of Burdur in Turkey – managed to reconstruct two human faces from that remote past.


To that purpose, they used a female skeleton that was retrieved from a graveyard in 1995 and dated to the Middle-Byzantine era (11th-13th century AD), which they called Eirènè, as well as the remains of a Roman man who lived early 3rd century AD found in 2016 and which they baptized Rhodon. Both skeletons were in a good state of conservation and almost complete. Of course, their real names are unknown, but putting a name on a face makes them indeed come alive.

Rhodon is estimated to be older than fifty and must have belonged to the middle class. He was interred with beautiful gifts, among which they found an epistomion (a golden leaf covering the mouth of the deceased) that carried the picture of a bee and a gilded bronze ring. It has been established that Rhodon led a hard life full of physical labor in this challenging landscape surrounding Sagalassos even today.

Eirènè has been estimated to have been between 30 and 50 years old at the time of her death, and her burial was more sober, following the traditions of her time.

As usual with facial reconstructions, the research team started making a 3D scan of the skulls, and layer after layer, the face was created, calculating the shape of the nose, the ears, and the eyes. To determine the color of the eyes and the hair, they observed today’s people of nearby Ağlasun, who have relatively light skin but brown eyes and hair.

Since Rhodon lived in the 2nd century AD, they sought inspiration from the portraits of Emperor Hadrian and gave him short hair and a carefully trimmed beard. The appearance of Eirènè is more austere, as was customary In Byzantine times, and, as a result, she got loose hair with a thin braid.

This is a very rewarding tentative to give us a look into the past. One thing is sure, these are people we easily could encounter today!