Archaeology Odyssey 6:2, March/April 2003

Editors’ Page: Looting by Bulldozer

Is this really “the best we can do?”

By Hershel Shanks

Archaeology Odyssey

Brian Rose of the classics department at the University of Cincinnati and I are more than cordial: We’re downright friendly when we see each other at scholarly conferences, even though he would never think of writing for Archaeology Odyssey. It would violate his deepest principles to write for a magazine that accepts ads from dealers in antiquities. Nonetheless, I went to hear Brian’s paper at the annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) in New Orleans last January. He’s a fine scholar. I knew I would learn a good deal from his presentation—and I did.

Brian spoke about evidence for life around Troy in the classical period. We know about the Troad (northwestern Turkey) in earlier periods, including the time of the Trojan War (late second millennium B.C.), but almost nothing about the fifth century B.C. (specialists in the field call it the “classical gap”). Until now, that is.

Brian reported that recently some extraordinary marble sarcophagi from this period have been recovered in a rescue dig by the Canakki Museum in Turkey. The sarcophagi were left behind by looters who had only partially excavated the tombs.

The most beautiful of the sarcophagi was engraved in high relief and portrayed scenes from the legend of Polyxena, the daughter of the Trojan king Priam and his wife Hecuba, who was killed when Troy was conquered by the Greeks.

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