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This area allows you to search for and learn about artifacts published by the Sardis Expedition. Currently (2020) the database consists of artifacts in the exhibition and catalog “The Lydians and Their World” (Yapı Kredi Vedat Nedim Tör Museum, Istanbul, 2010); Judith Schaeffer, Nancy Hirschland Ramage, and Crawford H. Greenewalt, jr., Sardis M10: Corinthian, Attic, and Lakonian Pottery; Jane Evans, Sardis M13: Coins from the Excavations at Sardis: Their Archaeological and Economic Contexts; Georg Petzl, Sardis M14: Greek and Latin Inscriptions, Part II: Finds from 1958 to 2017; G.M.A. Hanfmann ve N.H. Ramage, Sardis R2: Sculpture from Sardis: The Finds through 1975; and A. Ramage, N.H. Ramage, ve Gül Gürtekin-Demir, Sardis R8: Ordinary Lydians at Home: The Lydian Trenches of the House of Bronzes and Pactolus Cliff at Sardis. In coming years we intend to add objects from other Sardis Reports and Monographs.

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Select an object type from the list below. Certain object types (including architectural terracottas, coins, pottery, sculpture) include subtypes (shape and ware of pottery, denomination and mint of coins) to refine your search.

Refine Coin

Refine Inscription

Select the language of inscribed texts from the list below.

Refine Metalwork

Refine Pottery

Refine Sculpture

Refine Architectural Terracotta

Select a material from the list below.

Select a museum from the list below.

Select a Sardis CATNUM from the list below. CATNUM is made up from object type, year, and sequential number. BI = Bone Implement; G = Glass; J = Jewelry; L = Lamp; M = Metal; NoEx = not excavated; Org = Organic; P = Pottery; S = Sculpture. Coins are numbered with the year of discovery and a running number, or year, C, and a running number. Currently (Feb. 2020) this doesn't give a complete list, only the first 99 entries; to find a specific CATNUM, please use the full-text search at the top of the page.

Select a historical period from the (alphabetical) list below. Note that periods are defined culturally rather than politically, so Lydian (rather than Archaic) refers to the period ca. 800 BC - ca. 547 BC; Late Lydian or Persian (rather than Late Archaic or Classical) from ca. 547 until ca. 330 BC; Hellenistic until the earthquake of 17 AD; Roman and Late Roman continue until the early 7th century AD, except for coins where, as traditional, Prof. Evans begins the Byzantine period in the 6th century.

Select a publication name from the list below. LATW = Lydians and Their World (2010). R2 = Hanfmann and Ramage, Sculpture from Sardis (1978). R8 = A. Ramage, N.H. Ramage, ve Gül Gürtekin-Demir, Sardis R8: Ordinary Lydians at Home: The Lydian Trenches of the House of Bronzes and Pactolus Cliff at Sardis (2021). M10 = Schaeffer, Ramage, and Greenewalt, The Corinthian, Attic, and Pottery from Sardis (1997). M13 = Evans, Coins from the Excavations at Sardis, 1973-2013 (2018). M14 = Petzl, Sardis: Greek and Latin Inscriptions, Part II (2019).

Select a site from the list below.

The stratigraphic contexts (findspots) of artifacts from Sardis are recorded at different levels of specificity. Sector is the most general, referring to a broad area of the city. Trenches are yearly excavation areas (in current usage) or more specific areas of sectors (in early records which used a different excavation system). A Locus is a single stratigraphic unit, i.e. a single deposit of soil, a destruction level, a grave, a dump or other deposit. For instance, MMS-I 84.1 Locus 34 is the destruction level from one room of a Lydian house just inside the fortification wall in sector MMS, containing a rich deposit of Lydian pottery and other artifacts. Note that loci can be continued over a number of years, and so belong to different trenches, if the same stratigraphic unit is excavated over a number of years. For a list of sectors see Hanfmann and Waldbaum, A Survey of Sardis and the Major Monuments Outside the City Walls (Sardis R1, 1975), 13-16. Currently (2020) in order to search for a specific locus, you must search for Trench first to narrow the results, and then search within that for the locus. Sorry.

The stratigraphic contexts (findspots) of artifacts from Sardis are recorded at different levels of specificity. Sector is the most general, referring to a broad area of the city. Trenches are yearly excavation areas (in current usage) or more specific areas of sectors (in early records which used a different excavation system). A Locus is a single stratigraphic unit, i.e. a single deposit of soil, a destruction level, a grave, a dump or other deposit. For instance, MMS-I 84.1 Locus 34 is the destruction level from one room of a Lydian house just inside the fortification wall in sector MMS, containing a rich deposit of Lydian pottery and other artifacts. Note that loci can be continued over a number of years, and so belong to different trenches, if the same stratigraphic unit is excavated over a number of years. For a list of sectors see Hanfmann and Waldbaum, A Survey of Sardis and the Major Monuments Outside the City Walls (Sardis R1, 1975), 13-16. Currently (2020) in order to search for a specific locus, you must search for Trench first to narrow the results, and then search within that for the locus. Sorry.

The stratigraphic contexts (findspots) of artifacts from Sardis are recorded at different levels of specificity. Sector is the most general, referring to a broad area of the city. Trenches are yearly excavation areas (in current usage) or more specific areas of sectors (in early records which used a different excavation system). A Locus is a single stratigraphic unit, i.e. a single deposit of soil, a destruction level, a grave, a dump or other deposit. For instance, MMS-I 84.1 Locus 34 is the destruction level from one room of a Lydian house just inside the fortification wall in sector MMS, containing a rich deposit of Lydian pottery and other artifacts. Note that loci can be continued over a number of years, and so belong to different trenches, if the same stratigraphic unit is excavated over a number of years. For a list of sectors see Hanfmann and Waldbaum, A Survey of Sardis and the Major Monuments Outside the City Walls (Sardis R1, 1975), 13-16. Currently (2020) in order to search for a specific locus, you must search for Trench first to narrow the results, and then search within that for the locus. Sorry.

Showing 10632 results for:  
  • Inscribed Plaque Fragment
    Inscribed Plaque Fragment

    M14 Cat. 770

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Imperial period. (Roman)

    Fragment of a plaque of white marble, front and rear face smooth, broken on the other sides. Letters with apices; squared lunate sigma.

  • Inscribed Plaque Fragment
    Inscribed Plaque Fragment

    M14 Cat. 771

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Imperial period. (Roman)

    Fragment of a plaque of reddish marble; the front and rear faces are smooth, broken on the other sides. Letters with apices; squared lunate sigma.

  • Impression in mortar left by inscription used as revetment
    Impression in mortar left by inscription used as revetment

    M14 Cat. 772

    Inscription

    Mortar

    Roman Imperial period. (Roman)

    Impression in mortar left by an inscription used as revetment.

  • Inscribed Block Fragment (from Theater)
    Inscribed Block Fragment (from Theater)

    M14 Cat. 773

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Unknown. (Roman)

    Block of marble; broken at top and bottom. There is a slight outward curve at the top of the face, indicating that portion was probably under a molding. Thin and shaky script.

  • Inscribed Block Fragment (from Theater)
    Inscribed Block Fragment (from Theater)

    M14 Cat. 774

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Unknown. (Roman)

    Block of marble; broken on all sides. There is a slight outward curve at the top of the face, indicating that portion was probably under a molding.

  • Inscribed Fragment (from Theater)
    Inscribed Fragment (from Theater)

    M14 Cat. 775

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Unknown. (Roman)

    Fragment of marble; broken on all sides. “Letters inscribed onto flat plane which protrudes slightly from rounded molding below” (excavation record).

  • Inscribed Slab Fragment with relief: Votive for Hero?
    Inscribed Slab Fragment with relief: Votive for Hero?

    M14 Cat. 776

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Roman Imperial period. (Roman)

    Fragment of a slab of marble; broken on the right side and partly damaged below. Within a framed field is the crude relief of a man in profile with frontal face, holding an unknown object (an axe or pruning knife?, see below) in his hands. To the lef...

  • Inscribed Fragment
    Inscribed Fragment

    M14 Cat. 777

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Roman Imperial period. (Roman)

    Fragment of marble; broken on all sides. The fragment was reused as revetment.

  • Inscribed Plaque Fragment
    Inscribed Plaque Fragment

    M14 Cat. 778

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    Unknown. (Roman)

    Fragment of a plaque of white marble, broken on all sides.

  • Inscribed Fragments: Inscription mentioning Emperor Antoninus?
    Inscribed Fragments: Inscription mentioning Emperor Antoninus?

    M14 Cat. 779

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    2nd–3rd century AD? (letter shape). (Roman)

    Five non-joining fragments of white marble. The bilingual Latin and Greek inscription was surrounded by a quadrangular molding that consisted of two recessed borders of ca. 0.02 m in width each; portions of the molding are preserved from the upper, l...

  • Inscribed Fragment: Epigram
    Inscribed Fragment: Epigram

    M14 Cat. 780

    Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    2nd–3rd century AD? (letter shape). (Roman)

    Fragment of marble, broken on all sides.

  • Inscribed Stele Fragment
    Inscribed Stele Fragment

    M14 Cat. 781

    Stele, Inscription

    Marble, Stone

    2nd–3rd century AD? (Roman)

    Fragment of the left side of a stele of bluish marble; broken on all other sides.