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The Archaeological Exploration of Sardis; The Search for Sardis, history of the archaeological excavations in Sardis, in the Harvard Magazine; Sardis, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Sardis Turkey, a comprehensive photographic tour of the site; The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites - Sardis; Livius.org: Sardes - pictures
Bin Tepe is an archaeological site on the southern shore of Marmara Lake in Manisa Province, Turkey. Consisting of over 100 tumuli, it served as a cemetery for the elites of nearby Sardis. [1] (p1121) [2] [3]
Map of Manisa Province, Turkey; site of the ancient city of Sardis. Sardis (modern Sart in the Manisa Province of Turkey) gained reputation and fame as one of the Seven Churches of Asia (or Seven Churches of the Apocalypse) when it was addressed by John in the Book of Revelation. Under pressure from curious archaeology enthusiasts, the Turkish ...
The Sardis Synagogue is a former ancient Jewish synagogue, that was discovered in the modern-day town of Sardis, in the Manisa Province, in the Aegean Region of western Turkey. The former synagogue building is now an archaeological site and Jewish museum. The archaeological site is the largest Jewish site known from antiquity. [2]
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It was found in Sardis, in Manisa, Turkey. It was the "Rosetta Stone" for the decipherment of the Lydian language. [1] The Aramaic inscription begins by stating the date as the tenth year of Artaxerxes, considered to be Artaxerxes II, such that the inscription has been dated by scholars to 394 BCE. It is currently in the İzmir Archaeology Museum.
Hecatomnus coin, Bodrum Museum of Underwater Archaeology, Bodrum, Turkey. The archaeological site of Sardis, today known as Sart in Turkey. The ruins of the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus in Bodrum, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Apollo statue from Miletus in Istanbul Archaeology Museums.
He directed five seasons of archaeological work at Sardis from 1910 to 1914, interrupted by the World War I. [4] Most of the resulting finds kept in the excavation house perished in the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22 , thwarting the publication of projected volumes on pottery, lamps, bronze and stone objects, ivories, bones and glass. [ 5 ]