Museum of Ancient Eleutherna

Museum of Ancient Eleutherna
Μουσείο Αρχαίας Ελεύθερνας
Established 2016
Location Eleutherna, Rethymno, Greece
Type Archaeological museum
Website http://www.mae.com.gr/

The Museum of Ancient Eleutherna (Greek: Μουσείο Αρχαίας Ελεύθερνας) is an on-site museum of Greece in the archaeological park of Eleutherna, Rethymno, and houses artifacts found in the nearby archaeological site of Eleutherna and the necropolis of Orthi Petra.[1]

History of the museum

The archaeological site of Eleutherna

The Museum of Ancient Eleutherna displays exhibits from the site of Eleutherna (Greek: Ἐλεύθερνα), a city-state in Crete, Greece which flourished from the Greek Dark Ages until Byzantine times. The site lies 25 km southeast of Rethymno, on a narrow northern spur of Mount Ida, the highest mountain in Crete.

The Museum of Ancient Eleutherna was inaugurated on 19 June 2016[2] and is the fourth museum in Greece exclusively focusing on a single archaeological site, after the museums of Olympia, Delphi and Vergina. The exhibits span a period of three and a half millennia (3000 BC to 1300 AD) and include objects of art and everyday life from Prehistoric, Geometric, Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine years. The excavations at the site of Eleutherna begun in the mid 1980s under the supervision of the University of Crete and continue to the present day headed by Prof. Nikolaos Stampolidis.

Collections

Room A

Room A displays artefacts imported from regions outside Crete such as Attica, Peloponnese, Cyclades, east Aegean islands, Asia Minor, Cyprus, Phoenicia and Egypt, which showcase aspects of the public, political, religious, social and private life in Eleutherna. Some digital installations are also present.[3]

Room B

Room B is devoted to the religious and worship life in Eleutherna from the early Iron Age till the Byzantine era. It also includes the archaic sculpture of the Lady of Eleutherna, which relates to the Lady of Auxerre displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris.[3]

Room C

Room C focuses on the finds from the necropolis of Orthi Petra and illustrates burial customs from Homeric Greece, such as the funeral pyre of Patroclus as described in the Iliad. The excavations have unearthed treasures such as fine jewelry, weapons, grave objects from glass and faience, bronze and ceramic vessels, and figurines.[4][5] A prominent exhibit is a bronze shield.[3]

Notable exhibits

See also

References

Coordinates: 35°19′26.8″N 24°40′13.8″E / 35.324111°N 24.670500°E / 35.324111; 24.670500

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