Medusa to gaze once more from mosaic
A mosaic of Medusa, the terrible creature of Greek mythology who turned all those who looked her to stone, is being restored in the southern province of Burdur She may no longer turn people into stone, but Medusa continues to arrest onlookers; now, even more people will have a chance to glimpse at mythologyâs most famous gorgon with completion nearing on the restoration of a mosaic at the ancient city of Kibyra in southern Turkey.
The mosaic of Medusa, the female mythological creature with snake hair and sharp teeth who turned all that gazed upon her to stone, was discovered in 2009 in Kibyra in the southern province of Burdurâs Gölhisar district. About 95 percent of the mosaic remains despite being around 1,800 years old.
Düzgün Tarkan, an academic from Mehmet Akif Ersoy University Archaeology Department, who is member of the archaeology team in the region, said the Medusa mosaic covered the orchestra ground of a 3,600-person capacity Odeon structure in the ancient city.
He said the mosaic had been covered upon advice from Culture and Tourism Ministry experts so as to protect the artifact from winter conditions.
âThis year, after getting the necessary allocation from the ministry, we decided to work on the mosaic so as not to lose more time,â Tarkan said, adding that an Istanbul-based company had been working on the restoration of the mosaic for two months, with one month remaining.
He said they believed that the mosaic had suffered from a large fire in the ancient era. âIn its original, it was covered with a wooden roof. This is why we believe that the timbers that fell during the fire burned the mosaic for days. The marble pieces that form the mosaic received great damage. Now...
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