Posted on 08/03/2007 11:26:56 AM PDT by blam
Major Find at Sagalassos
August 2, 2007
Colossal statue of the emperor Hadrian discovered
A huge, exquisitely carved marble statue of the Roman emperor Hadrian is the latest find from Sagalassos, an ancient Greco-Roman city in south-central Turkey. Archaeologists estimate that the figure was originally between 13 and 16 feet in height (four to five meters). It is, says excavation director Marc Waelkens, one of the most beautiful portraits of Hadrian ever found.
The discovery was made by archaeologists from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium), who, under Waelkens' direction, have been investigating the site since 1990. Last month a new excavation campaign started, and the Belgians resumed work at the Roman Bath, focusing on the southeastern corner of the complex.
On Sunday the first fragments of a over life-size statue, a foot and part of a leg, were unearthed. The foot is 31.5 inches (0.80 meters) long; the leg, from just above the knee to the ankle, is nearly five feet (1.5 meters). The elaborate sandal depicted on the footed indicated to the archaeologists that the fragments were from the statue of an emperor. On Monday, the almost intact head of the statue was discovered, revealing that the statue was of Hadrian, who ruled from A.D. 117 to 138. The head measures more than 27 inches (0.70 meters).
Construction of the bath complex in Sagalassos was started during Hadrian's reign, though the building was finished only several decades later. The bath complex is one of several major building projects at Sagalassos that can be dated to the time of Hadrian and the city had a sanctuary of the imperial cult dedicated to Hadrian and his successor Antoninus Pius.
The statue probably dates from the beginning of Hadrian's rule. For updates on the current excavation campaign, including any additional finds related to the Hadrian statue, see the Interactive Dig, City in the Clouds.
GGG Ping.
Very cool.
Wow...classical art of that caliber is really ping-worthy!
I wanted to be an archeologist when I was a kid. Have always thought doing one of those vacation/archeological digs would be fun.
Interesting!
Very cool. It’s painful to imagine how much of this stuff has been destroyed. I would love to know what the Great Pyramid complex looked like when it was intact and being maintained.
Gorgeous art work.
Many of his engineering projects are still standing. He wouldn't have build a bridge to fall down in 40 years. He is probably the greatest civil engineer ever at least in terms of output.
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Stunning!
Yeah, but he had to go and name a frontier province Palestine, just to piss off the Jews.
Just the thing for that pizza restaurant in downtown Paramus...
Or the Library of Alexandria.
He is missing part of his nose... kinda sad.
University of Texas used to run those vacation digs down in Maya country.
I guess you could say he went overboard in his grief?
thanks.
whatta day of good articles.
Wow, very cool! Beautiful job. Now, someone explain to me again why the ancients didn’t include pupils and iris’ in their otherwise perfect sculptures?
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