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THE
GREAT PALACE MOSAIC MUSEUM
In ancient times, the palatial hill from
the Sea of Marmara to the Hippodrome. The
palatial district extended from Hagia Sophia
and the Hippodrome to the cost line, where
the sea wall acted as a mighty boundry of
great military value. Its basic layout,
first determined by Emperor Constantine,
soon housed a collection of state buildings
with courtvards, throne rooms and auidience
rooms, churces and chappels
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gardens and
fountains, libraries, assembly
buildings, thermal baths and
stadiums. Throughout the centuries
palaces decayed due to fires,
earthquakes, and other reasons.
Finally, whatever remained were
covered by earth.
British scientists from the
University of St. Andrews in
Edinburg made extensive excavations
at the Arasta Bazaar in Sultan
Ahmet square (1935-38) and (1951-54).
Which partly opened up one of
the south-western buildings,
so called "Great Palace".
The Great Palace had got a big
courtyart with perisyle (1872
m²). It was decorated with mosaics.
It was at this point that the
Austrian Academy of Sciences
undertook to rescue. (Supervised
by Prof. Dr. Werner Jobst) study
ane preserve the famous palace
mosaic and to carry out additional
archeological examinations (1983-1997)
within the scape of a cooperation
project with the Directorate
General of Monuments and Museums
in Turkey.
When the peristylle of The Great
Palace was redone under Justinian
I. (527-565). The Great Palace
mosaic was the largest and the
most beautiful landscape in
antiqity (VI. century A.D).
No where in the world of late
antiquity can we find a building
with a tessellated pavement
of similar size and perfection
of workmanship. It was probably
made by an imperial workshop
that surely have employed the
best craftmen gathered from
all corners of the Empire, guided
by a master artist. It is this
circumstance which makes it
difficult to compare the piece
with creations, and thus to
date it by means of typological
and stilistic methods. Composing
the tessalated pavement, with
its many coloured lime, terracotta
and glass cubes of 5 mm. One
square metre of floor space
consumed about 40.000 cubes,
which makes for 80.000.000 tesserae
for entire area. The mosaic
was brought to light only in
fragmenta and sections, which
together make-up about one seventy
the original expance, but these
suffice to convice us that it
is one of the most magnificent
compositions known to us from
antique mosaic art.
In The Great Palace Mosaic the
main field of the composition
was 6 metres in width. On either
side of its edge it is accompained
by an exquisitely arranged border
of folliage each 1.50 metres
wide, sufficient to cover the
entire hall depth of 9 metres
with a tesselleted pavement.
The frame is dominated by a
highly naturalistic acantus
scroll. Acantus are filled with
masked heads, exotic fruit and
animals. The frame, which sembolises
a garden of eden. After frame
when looking at the scenes we
find a movement from left to
right in the notheastern hall.
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The pictures
describe open-air scenes, the
life of herdsmen the labour
of peasants and the prowess
of huntsmen. Scenes of children
playing of wilde beast and grazing
animals alternate with mythological
motifs animal fables and fabulous
creatures from exotic countries,
animals, hunting, games, bucolic
scenes nature and myths are
the leading themes in the succession
of pictures. On surviving parts
of the mosaic
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we still count
90 different themes populated
by some 150 human and animal
figures.
Open days to visit: Everyday
except Tuesday
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