Friday, May 27, 2022

Head of Alexander found in Italy

 The news, apparently, did not make headlines.

As I watched a documentary on National Geographic, I was introduced to the city of Terracina, where archaeologists are tracing the rise and coming to power of Rome

After a detour about the Roman conquest of Carthage, illustrated by the discovery of a ship’s ram near the Egadi Islands, I was taken to the site of Terracina, which was unknown to me. It is located about halfway between Rome and Naples on the ancient Via Appia. 

The modern city steadily stands among and on top of the ancient one. An excellent example to this effect is the old Forum, with its exposed, near-intact pavement. The marble slabs are being trodden by the feet of the tourists, often unaware of the imprint of the bronze inscription left by the local Roman magistrate, Aulus Aemilius. He rebuilt and paved the Forum, enhancing the place with porches and new civil and religious buildings. Amazingly, the Via Appia runs right alongside the Forum. 

On the cliff high above the city proper stood a most remarkable small Hellenistic temple from the 2nd century BC. It is considered to be the oldest Hellenistic structure of its kind and the first terraced temple in the region. Archaeologists have not yet been able to define to which god it was dedicated. 

Its presence proves that Terracina was in close contact with other Hellenistic cities around the Mediterranean at a time when the Romans had not yet conquered all of Italy. 

The hill is nowadays known as Monte Sant’Angelo, maybe in memory of the religious ceremonies that were held here. 

In 2021, the surprise find was a terracotta head that shared the familiar traits of Alexander the Great. It is not clear whether it was unearthed in the little temple or the larger area of the sanctuary. 

We may safely assume that the presence of Alexander makes sense. After its victory over Carthage, Rome conquered Alexander’s homeland in the 2nd century BC. In the process, it established itself as the new military power of the ancient Mediterranean world. Alexander’s deeds and conquests had served as Rome’s role model.

Unfortunately, I have not been able to get hold of a picture of this newly discovered Alexander head – maybe later?

[First picture from Following Hadrian; third picture from Archaeologywiki]

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Weather conditions during Alexander’s march East

As I so often stated, the weather conditions are not important for historians. We find only a few examples in Alexander's campaigns, like the Monsoon in India and the flash flood in the Gedrosian Desert. Still, in reality, the weather did play a vital role in his campaign East.

Throughout their march from Greece to India, the Macedonians must have been plagued by recurrent earthquakes that disturbed their advance or campsite. Alexander could sacrifice to the gods, but he could not prevent or control these natural disasters. 

Speaking to one of the locals in Turkey, I remember him pointing out that he preferred to be “in the open” rather than inside any building when an earthquake occurred. Being outside, he would witness boulders rolling downhill and trees being shaken, but none of the rattlings would be as frightening as when sitting inside a house or shack.

It is easy to imagine how, in Alexander’s campsites, the army tents would collapse, banging up the occupants. Frightened horses and pack animals would try to run if they were not adequately secured by their attendants. When an earthquake hit the troops on the march, they could immediately react accordingly.

Another natural threat is the wind, which may not sound so dangerous, but the situation could be life-threatening when it creates a storm.

This idea occurred to me during my trip to Iran when I skirted the Zagros Mountains. In the winter of 330 BC, Alexander marched south using approximately the same route I was following a little later in the year, i.e., in April (see: The Zagros Mountains and the Persian Gates in Alexander’s footsteps).

I was plagued by a severe sandstorm that blew relentlessly during my three-day journey. Visibility was very low as the sands from the Mesopotamian Valley in modern Iraq were carried through the air. My clothes flapped around me as if they were to be torn away any moment while the sand was stinging my face and hurting my body. The wind whistled through the lunch place and the sand battered against the windows.

Inevitably my mind drifted back to Alexander as he must have known days like this. Traveling in the comfort of my air-conditioned vehicle was hard enough. However, when I stepped outside of this protective shell, I had a taste of what he experienced – if not here, certainly in other locations.

Curtius seems to be the only one to write about Alexander’s expeditions into the interior of Persia some time in Spring 330 BC, where he was troubled by heavy rain and “almost intolerable weather.” He even was stopped by heavy snow that had frozen solid; not for long, though, as he immediately started making his way, breaking the ice with a mattock, an example that his men promptly followed (see: Alexander amidst the pomp and circumstance of Persepolis).

While we take bad weather as a mere inconvenience, we cannot underestimate its far-reaching impact. That became clear after reading The Road to Oxiana by Robert Byron. Byron traveled to Iran and Afghanistan in 1933, using whatever means of transportation available. The weather conditions commanded his advance to a degree I did not expect. The Macedonian army must have faced similar conditions that hampered their progress to the same extent.

Byron is hit by what he calls a burning dust-storm, a good one hundred miles east of Hamadan, ancient Ecbatana. Near Bisutun, he witnessed great spirals of dust, “dancing like demons over the desert,” stopping his car and choking the passengers. 

Wind, rain, and ice are Byron’s main challenges. He attempted to drive south from Tehran to Isfahan in early February but was stopped some ten miles out. The road turned into a sheet of ice that partly thawed and had frozen again. The scene must have been spectacular, for he writes, “At this moment the sun rose, a twinkle of fire lit the snowy plain, the white range of the Elbruz was suffused with blue and gold,” A beautiful picture but a horrible travel condition.

A few days later, it rained for twenty-four hours. Byron was still stopped in Tehran by a “deluge of rain” in the last days of April. As he traveled further East via Damghan to Mashed, a route that approximately matches Alexander’s, “the rain fell like a bath-waste. For miles at a time the road was a river, the desert a flood, and every mountain a cataract.” The roads turned into fast-flowing rivers.

In Spring, Byron eventually reached Herat and continued due East to Kunduz. On his road to Balkh, where Alexander made camp and wintered in 328 BC (see: A view of the Karakum and Kyzylkum Deserts and Afrasiab, ancient Samarkand), Byron describes how “the rain came down in sheets. … every angle of the mountains was occupied by a cataract. … along that narrow ledge whence the red pinnacles rose into the clouds above, and whole ranges could be seen emerging from the clouds below…” A little further, he continues by saying that “the color of the landscape changed from lead to aluminum… The clumps of green trees, the fountain-shaped tufts of coarse cutting grass, stood out almost black against this mortal tint”.

Mazar-i-Sharif fared much better in his last days of May. He described how the clouds gathered on the mountains each afternoon, although summer should have set in six weeks before. People said they had never witnessed such conditions. The weather one hundred years ago was as unpredictable as today. The rain that fell before Byron’s arrival in the city was enough to close the road to Kabul for a whole month! An entire village had fallen down in a nearby gorge. Just picture Alexander having to cope with such extremes!

After Kunduz, Byron turned West, following the river of the same name to the plain of Bamyan, crossing the stream nine or ten times over wooden bridges. I doubt these bridges existed in Alexander’s days when the army had to find a way through the water. In June, Byron heard that a landslide blocked the other side of the Shibar Pass. In fact, “heaps of liquid mud and pebbles concealing large rocks.” The travel conditions became increasingly drastic. “The crops below the road, already half destroyed by the rivers of mud, were now menaced by a further spate.”

Alexander probably took this same road in the fall of 327 BC when he left Bactria for India by the Shibar Pass (see: Alexander crosses the Hindu Kush a second time). Nobody mentions any landslides occurring, but they were undoubtedly recurrent because further down Byron’s road to Kabul, another dozen landslides prevented him from reaching the city. Was Alexander just lucky and under the protection of the gods, one wonders?

The crossings of the Hindu Kush, in turn, have been pictured very well by Steven Pressfield in his book The Afghan Campaign. He describes the pure horror and misery the army endured in their daily lives of survival (see: From Afghanistan into Bactria across the Hindu Kush). Arrian, of course, gives us the facts but Pressfield, with his skills as a military writer, adds the human experience to the expedition.

Picking up Byron again, we read how on the road from Kabul to Ghazni – which Alexander traveled in the opposite direction to cross the Hindu Kush into Bactria – “two lorries were completely wrecked by the stream … the Kunduz ferry has overturned and sunk, drowning five women.”

Reading our history books, we are far from realizing that traveling or leading an army was a dangerous enterprise. Not only because of the enemies that had to be subdued but also because of the terrain and the weather conditions, which, as I said above, were seldom mentioned or recorded.

Monday, May 2, 2022

Vague updates on the excavations at Euromos

There are times I wonder what message the papers wish to convey. This is the case for the present article, originally published by Anadolu Agency and reproduced by Archaeology News Network in 2018. 

It is all about the excavation and restoration of seven tombs from Hellenistic and Roman times in Euromos. Period. No more details of any kind. 


Euromos is best-known for its temple of Zeus from the 2nd century BC, which is still catching the eye of the casual passer-by and the fanatic tourist (see: Euromos, just a bowshot away).  

In 2011, the plan was to clean the 17 still standing columns and find more of the missing elements among the rubble. Also, further clearance of the Agora, the Baths, and the city walls was projected, but no information has transpired. 

My latest update is from 2021 and was centered around two Kouros statues holding a lion found in Euromos. These were labeled as being an essential link to ancient Caria (see: Two statues of a Kouros unearthed at Euromos). What happened to them? Were they moved to a museum? If so, which one? 


A picture in the present article illustrates further excavation of the temple of Zeus. This puzzles me because the steps seem to pertain to a circular or semi-circular building?

I’m looking forward to more news, more substantiated – if that is at all possible?

[Pictures from Anadolu Agency]