The Istanbul Archaeological Museum
houses over one million
objects, the most
extraordinary of which are the sarcophagi that
date back as far as the 4th century
BC. The museum excels, however, in
its rich chronological collection of
locally found artifacts that shed
light on the origins and history of
the city.
Near the
entrance is a statue of a lion
representing the only piece saved
from the clutches of British
archaeologists from the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus,
one of the Seven Wonders of the
Ancient World.
On
the upper floor of the building
there are small stone works, pots
and pans, small terracotta statues,
800,000 Ottoman coins,
seals, decorations, and medals, and
a library with 70,000 books.
In
the halls to the left is a
collection of sarcophagi found at Sidon (ancient Syria)
representing various architectural
styles influenced by outside
cultures including Egypt, Phoenicia,
and Lycia. The most famous is the Alexander Sarcophagus,
covered with astonishingly advanced
carvings of battles and the life of Alexander the Great, discovered in
1887 and once believed to have been
that of the emperor himself (it was
actually Sidonian King Abdalonymos).
Found
in the same necropolis at Sidon is
the stunningly preserved Sarcophagus of the Crying Women,
with 18 intricately carved panels
showing figures of women in extreme
states of mourning.
On
the mezzanine level is the exhibit "Istanbul
Through the Ages," a rich
and well-presented exhibit that won
the museum the Council of Europe
Museum Award in 1993. To put the
exhibit into perspective, the
curators have provided maps, plans,
and drawings to illustrate the
archaeological findings, displayed
thematically, which range from
prehistoric artifacts found west of Istanbul to 15th-century Byzantine works of art.
The
recovered snake's head from the
Serpentine Column in the Hippodrome is on display, as is the
14th-century bell from the Galata
Tower. The upper two levels house
the Troy exhibit and displays on the evolution of
Anatolia over the centuries, as well
as sculptures from Cyprus, Syria,
and Palestine.
The
newly renovated and reopened Museum of the Ancient Orient is an exceptionally rich collection
of artifacts from the earliest
civilizations of Anatolia,
Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Arab
continent. The tour begins with pre-Islamic divinities and idols taken from the courtyard
of the Al-Ula temple, along with
artifacts showing ancient Aramaic
inscriptions and a small collection
of Egyptian antiquities.
Uncovered in the region of
Mesopotamia and on display is an obelisk of Adad-Nirari III inscribed with cuneiform characters.
Of particular significance is a
series of colored mosaic panels
showing animal reliefs of bulls and
dragons with serpents' heads from
the monumental Gate of Ishtar, built by Nebuchadnezzar,
King of Babylonia.
A
pictorial representation on a Sumerian devotional basin of girls carrying pitchers of water
whose contents are filling an
underground source relates to the
ancient Mesopotamian belief that the
world was surrounded by water, a
belief that has provoked questions
over the origins of the biblical Great Flood.
With
nothing dating more recent than the
1st century AD, pretty much
everything here has enormous
significance. But two of the
highlights are easily the fragments
of the 13-century BC sphinx from the Yarkapi Gate at Hattusas
and one of the three known tablets
of the Treaty of Kadesh,
the oldest recorded peace treaty
signed between Ramses II and the
Hittites in the 13th-century BC
inscribed in Akkadian, the
international language of the era.
(Another tablet is in the Staatliche
Museum in Berlin.)