WWW.THEHISTORYBLOG.COM
Illegally excavated mosaic seized in Zile
A mosaic discovered in an illegal excavation in the garden of a home in the Zile district of Tokat in the mid-Black Sea region of Turkey has been seized by authorities. The mosaic has yet to be studied in detail, but the decorative motifs (guilloche knots, wave patterns) and style dates it to the Roman imperial era.The mosaic features the figure of a woman wearing fine clothing and gemstone jewelry. She is labelled , aka Tryphe, the personification of luxury or indulgence. For historians and philosophers of imperial Rome, the concept had a negative connotation of opulent excess that leads to moral corrosion, with the downfall of the Sicilian Greek colony of Sybaris, the source of the term sybaritic to describe pleasure-seeking decadence, as the cautionary tale.In the culturally Greek areas during the Hellenistic (3rd-1st century B.C.) and Roman periods, however, the concept was viewed as pleasure dovetailing with Bios, (life) to create an enjoyable, soft existence. With the Ptolemaic rulers of Egypt, it evolved into a governance philosophy. Public opulence and indulgence of every whim or appetite underscored their immense wealth and godlike power. The mosaic is a reference to the pleasurable easy life, not the moral corrosion that destroyed Sybaris or the Ptolemaic flex.Provincial Gendarmerie Command raided the vineyard house last week after getting a tip that one of the looters had posted video of themselves actively breaking the law on social media. Because you can never underestimate the stupidity of looters, the guy literally livestreamed the looting and held up a note with the location, date and his first name (Tokat 08.04.2025 Memet) in the video. They had already reached out to contacts abroad to arrange a black market sale of the mosaic, and they hadnt even finished digging it up. When the gendarmes raided the place, the suspects had tried to cover up the hole they dug with a bunch of bags, but what with the whole thing captured on film, this cunning ruse failed. All four of the individuals involved, identified publicly only by their initials right now, were arrested, three of them at the scene. Two of them, father (F.S.) and son (A.S.), are currently in prison; two (M.S. and S.S.) were released on probation.Zile, known as Zela in antiquity, was the backdrop for an iconic moment in Western cultural vernacular. It was here where Gaius Julius Caesar defeated the army of Pharnaces II, King of Pontus, so swiftly and decisively that he famously claimed Veni, vidi, vici, generally translated as I came, I saw, I conquered.Caesar was literally fresh off the boat from his defeat of Ptolemy XIII in the siege of Alexandria (47 B.C.) when he confronted Pharnaces. The king had taken advantage of Caesars entanglement in the Egyptian Civil War to expand his kingdom, invading parts of Lesser Armenia, Cappadocia, and encroaching on the Roman province of Bithynia and Pontus. As soon as Caesar finished the job in Alexandria, he went directly to Armenia to deal with Pharnaces. The king sent envoys to make a deal with Caesar, but they were rebuffed and the two armies clashed at Zela. It was a total route, and it had only taken five days from Caesars landing in Lesser Armenia to the destruction of Pharnaces army. Veni, vidi, vici, which according to Plutarch, Caesar wrote in a letter to a friend, went viral, if youll forgive the anachronism. According to Suetonius, Caesar had a tablet inscribed with the phrase carried before his chariot in the triumphal parade celebrating his defeat of Pontus.The vineyard house where the mosaic was found is 200 meters (656 feet) from the Zile Castle fortress where recent excavations found that a set of three marble steps were actually part of a Roman amphitheater that stood at the site. The dig revealed additional staircases and the first rows of seating reserved for the citys highest-ranking dignitaries.The ancient theater, a prominent structure in Ziles historical landscape, is a testament to the towns once-thriving status as a cultural and social hub during Roman times. The excavations continue to deepen our understanding of this critical site, and ongoing research may soon uncover more about the citys public spaces, entertainment, and daily life. []The discovery of the mosaic and the ongoing excavation work at the ancient theater are expected to significantly enhance Ziles visibility in both academic and tourism circles. [Murat Tekin, head of the excavation team at Zile Castle Ancient Theater,] expressed that expanding the excavation to include the area of the mosaic could offer valuable insights into Ziles ancient urban planning, lifestyle and cultural practices.
0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 45 Visualizações