PathLessTraveled

 

Click photo to enlarge

library3.jpg (44158 bytes)

library.jpg (44110 bytes)    Library of Celsus and Gate of Augustus (to the right)

librarycolumns.jpg (47306 bytes)    Column detail

librarystatue.jpg (51008 bytes)    Statue representing the Virtues; above is Sophia for wisdom.

toilet2.jpg (52116 bytes)    Public toilets (quiet perhaps, but not much privacy)

stadium.jpg (54354 bytes)    The Great Theatre

stadiumseats.jpg (56906 bytes)    Dave checking the acoustics

couples.jpg (44332 bytes)    Hanging with Ben and Vija

davekelly.jpg (49311 bytes)    Kelly and Dave trying not to knock over the column

May 23, 1999 - Ephesus, near Selcuk, Turkey

Ephesus is likely the best-preserved Roman city outside the Roman Forum itself, and it is undoubtedly the best to imagine what life in those times was like. Why? The barriers were few enough that one could get close to everything, and so much of the city was left. And it was probably the largest in the Roman empire's eastern edge.

Ephesus was the Roman capital of Asia Minor and attracted lots of religious figures. St. John came here (it is said) with the Virgin Mary, and then St. Paul whose Letter to the Ephesians was written to people he had known from his three-year stay here.

The facade of the Library of Celsus was most intact and unabashedly amazing. Hands-down our favorite part of the "city." It was constructed in 110 A.D. and held 12,000 scrolls in innovative weather-and-time preserving niches around its walls. Remnants of the statues of the four Virtues were in front, Sophia for Wisdom was our favorite.

Our second favorite place was the Great Theatre, a huge amphitheater of Hellenistic design. It had amazing acoustics and had seats for over 25,000 people. We tested it out (the acoustics, not the people) and when we stood at the very top row we could distinctly hear Vija's operatic impressions being sung below. The smaller Odeum Theatre only held 1,400 seats, dated from 150 A.D.

The Brothel was fairly interesting too; many small rooms scattered about the main area, and a centralized water pump certainly must have induced cleanliness and personal hygiene of the clients and employees.

The public toilets were also quite amusing. As so many men could use them simultaneously, the Romans ingeniously added running water below, so as to drain the area fast. But what about the noise, you ask? They comissioned musicians to play nearby to help drown out the sound.

Ephesus contained the typical stales of Roman life: a commercial agora, connecting roads, temples, and fountains. The Temple of Hadrian featured a head of Medusa to keep out evil spirits. There were so few barriers and gates that it was definitely a great way to get up close and see what city life was like in Roman times.

 

 

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