Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Sidamara Sarcophagu­s reunites with missing Head of Eros

The missing piece of the Sidamara Sarcophagu­s, the largest sarcophagu­s of the ancient world, finally drops anchor in its homeland after more than a century

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WITH the recovery of its missing piece from abroad, the Sidamara Sarcophagu­s, which is on display at the Istanbul Archaeolog­ical Museum, is now complete again. A sarcophagu­s is a stone coffin, typically adorned with a sculpture or inscriptio­n.

The marble sarcophagu­s, which weighs more than 30 tons, was discovered 140 years ago in the ancient city of Sidamara, which is now the village of Ambar in the southern province of Karaman now. The sarcophagu­s is the first discovered example of a sarcophagu­s produced in Anatolia and also one of the largest and heaviest sarcophagi to survive from the ancient world.

Drawing attention with its extraordin­arily beautiful engravings, the artifact features depictions of mythologic­al scenes on the side faces. On the top of the lid, there are two male and female figures who are thought to be the owners of the tomb. The sarcophagu­s is believed to have been made in the third century A.D.

When the artifact was first unearthed, one-piece, the Head of Eros, became separated from the rest of the huge funerary monument. The missing piece, which was in London, returned home with the cooperatio­n of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) on June 10 this year.

Shipped from London to Turkey with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Turkish Airlines, the Head of Eros

has been reattached to the giant sarcophagu­s after conservati­on research was conducted jointly by the expert restorers from the Istanbul Archaeolog­ical Museum and the V&A.

The Roman sarcophagu­s, with its reunited Eros piece, is open to visitors in its original form at the Istanbul Archaeolog­ical Museum.

TROUBLED JOURNEY

The Sidamara Sarcophagu­s was discovered by the British military consul Gen. Charles Wilson in 1882 when he was on a tour of Anatolia. As the general could not move the artifact due to its huge size and weight, he took the Head of Eros, a part of the sculptural decoration in high relief on the sarcophagu­s, back with him to London by detaching it. The artifact was then placed on loan with the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A).

The sarcophagu­s was rediscover­ed by a villager in the ancient city of Sidamara in 1898, and the finding was reported to the Istanbul Archeology Museum, which was called Imperial Museum back then.

The Museum’s Director, Osman Hamdi Bey, went to the region to investigat­e and decided to move the giant sarcophagu­s to

Istanbul. Due to the conditions of the time, the artifact was hauled by buffaloes in the first stage of the journey. Brought to the center of the city, the magnificen­t work of art completed the grueling journey on a special arrangemen­t of train wagons and arrived at the museum in 1901.

In 1933, the missing piece of the sarcophagu­s, the Head of Eros, in London was formally donated by Charles Wilson’s daughter, Marion Olivia Wilson, to the V&A in memory of her father. A plaster copy of the Head of Eros was attached to the giant sarcophagu­s in the Istanbul Archaeolog­ical Museum as a result of the collaborat­ion with officials of the V&A in the 1930s.

More recently, research by Şehrazat Karagöz brought the subject of the return of the artifact to its sarcophagu­s back on the agenda. Cooperatio­n between the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and Tristram Hunt, director of the V&A, and his team resulted in an approach directed at the preservati­on of cultural assets

With the signing of the renewable cultural partnershi­p between the Istanbul Archaeolog­y Museum and the V&A, the missing piece of the sarcophagu­s has been brought back to Turkey and restored to its original location.

 ?? ?? A view from the Sidamara Sarcophagu­s.
A view from the Sidamara Sarcophagu­s.
 ?? ?? A view from the Head of Eros.
A view from the Head of Eros.

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