Bergama Museum Explained

Bergama Museum
Native Name:Bergama Müzesi
Native Name Lang:Turkish
Map Type:Turkey
Coordinates:39.1167°N 27.1758°W
Location:Cumhuriyet Caddesi, Bergama, İzmir, Turkey
Type:Archaeology museum, Ethnographic museum
Collections:Hellenistic period, Roman Empire, Byzantine Empire, Ottoman Empire
Owner:Ministry of Culture and Tourism
Website:Bergama Museum

Bergama Museum is a museum in Bergama district of İzmir Province, Turkey.

Location

The museum is in Bergama city . It is to the south of Cumhuriyet street at 39.1167°N 27.1758°W. Its distance to İzmir is about 110km (70miles).

History

Bergama (ancient Pergamon) is a historically important city. Although the most important ancient monument of Bergama, namely the Pergamon Altar had been transported to Pergamon Museum in Berlin, Germany in 1870, there are still enough items to be displayed in Bergama. The museum was established upon the suggestion of Marshal Fevzi Çakmak in 1932. It was opened on 30 October 1936.[1]

Displays

Both the archaeological and ethnographical items are exhibited. The archaeological items are from the excavations around Bergama. Most notable among these are sculptures of Pergamon school, items from Pitane and Gryneion and terra-cotta from Myrina. These ancient greek settlements are between Bergama and İzmir. In the ethnographical section the most important items are carpets and rugs from Bergama, Yuntdağ, Yağcıbekir etc.

References

  1. Web site: Bergama Museum page . tr . 2016-10-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161031155922/https://www.kultur.gov.tr/TR,72368/bergama-muzesi.html . 2016-10-31 . dead .