ÇANAKKALE, TURKEY—Hurriyet Daily News reports that archaeologists led by Nurettin Arslan of Çanakkale University discovered a second-century B.C. lion sculpture carved from stone at the site of the ancient city of Assos in northwestern Turkey. Arslan said the Hellenistic sculpture was found in a complex of buildings that may have functioned as an inn. The statue is thought to belong to one of the graves near the western entrance of the city's necropolis. The excavation team also uncovered a 1,500-year old oven with three pots in the city’s agora. To read about a lush first-century A.D. public park at Aphrodisias, go to "The Archaeology of Gardens: Urban Gardens."
2,200-Year-Old Lion Statue Unearthed in Turkey
News September 20, 2019
Recommended Articles
Features November/December 2024
Let the Games Begin
How gladiators in ancient Anatolia lived to entertain the masses
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2024
Neolithic Piercings
Artifacts November/December 2023
Sculpture of a Fist
-
Features July/August 2019
Place of the Loyal Samurai
On the beaches and in the caves of a small Micronesian island, archaeologists have identified evocative evidence of one of WWII’s most brutal battles
-
Letter from England July/August 2019
Building a Road Through History
6,000 years of life on the Cambridgeshire landscape has been revealed by a massive infrastructure project
(Highways England, courtesy of MOLA Headland Infrastructure) -
Artifacts July/August 2019
Bronze Age Beads
(Courtesy Carlos Odriozola) -
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2019
You Say What You Eat
(Courtesy David Frayer, University of Kansas; Karin Wiltschke-Schrotta, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien)