Antakya and Harbiye Archaeological Museum
- Written by Portal Editor
Long before the Turkish colonization of Anatolia and the two-stream country came about, there were successive high cultures that ruled the country. The earliest traces of human settlement in the region were discovered southwest of Antakya:
Stone tools and machined snail shells that are around 40,000 years old; they have been recovered in the Üçağızlı Cave since the early 1990s.
At this point, Alexander the Great and, as a consequence, the Diadochi and, above all, the Seleucids should be mentioned. And so there have not just been significant archaeological finds since the Roman settlement, but much older artifacts from the region. The first scientifically significant excavations in Antakya and the surrounding area began in 1932. At the suggestion of the participating French archaeologist Claude Prost, the construction of a museum was already decided and started in 1934 under the architectural direction of Michel Ecocherde.
Today the Archaeological Museum Antakya (officially it is called "Archaeological Museum Hatay", Turkish Hatay Arkeoloji Müzesi) includes archaeological finds from the vicinity of Antakya (ancient Antioch on the Orontes), the Turkish province of Hatay and from Tarsus one of the world's most extensive collections of Roman mosaics. In Turkey, the collection of mosaics is only surpassed by the Zeugma Mosaic Museum, which opened in 2011.
International teams continuously expanded the findings
The Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago
From excavations of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago in the Amik Plain from 1933 to 1938, exhibits come from prehistoric, Assyrian and Hittite times as well as from the reign of Mittani. The sites are Tell Cüdeyde, Tell Tayinat, Dehep and Çatal Höyük (not identical to Çatalhöyük near Konya). These include a relief with Assyrian soldiers marching over the corpses of their decapitated enemies and carrying their heads in their hands from Tell Tayinat (7th century BC) as well as pillars with lion figures from Tell Tayinat (8th century BC). More than 150 other settlement mounds are known in the Amik Plain, but these have only been partially investigated.
Leonard Woolley for the British Museum
Mosaic finds by Princeton University and the Musées Nationaux de France
The majority of the mosaics exhibited in the museum come from excavations carried out by Princeton University in collaboration with the Musées Nationaux de France between 1935 and 1939 in Antakya itself, ancient Antioch on the Orontes, and the surrounding area, in Sa-mandağ ( Seleukia Pieria), İskenderun (Alexandrette) and the grove of Daphne, today's recreation area Harbiye south of Antakya. Among the numerous works up to 25 m² in size are particularly noteworthy:
Okeanos and Thetis, 4th century, found at Daphne. The sea god and goddess are represented with the animals of the sea and Eros riding a whale. Two more mosaics from Okeanos and Thetis can be seen, one from Iskenderun and one from Antakya.
The Yakto mosaic, from the 5th century, found in Yakto near Harbiye (Daphne). Megalopsychia can be seen in a medallion in the middle, the side borders show hunting scenes from mythology, the actors are each named: Adonis hunts a boar, Narkissus fights a lion, Teiresias with a panther, Acto with a bear, Hippolytos with mythical animals and Melagros with a tigress. Scenes from everyday life are depicted on the outer borders.
The coat of arms-shaped buffet mosaic, from the 3rd century, found in Daphne. In the lower, semicircular part, Ganymede is shown handing water to an eagle, framed by plates with food, in the upper part various birds are depicted.
The octagonal Soteria mosaic, from the 5th century, found in the floor of a bath in Narlıca near Antakya. It shows Soteria as an elegant woman with a wreath on her head and a necklace.
Numerous small, sometimes curious pictures such as the happy hunchback, the fisherman's ear, Herakles, who as a plump six-month-old infant fights with two snakes, as well as several depictions of the drunken Dionysus.
A statue of the Roman emperor Lucius Verus from the 2nd century AD was found in the area of Samandağ.
Please also read:
Passau - The Roman Museum Kastell Boiotro
Museum Quintana - Romans and Archeology in Künzing