Bergama Museum
As
the result of the archeological excavations that started
in Bergama in 1878 under the direction of Carl Humman and
Alexander Conze, a depot museum has been constructed near
the German Excavation House of today during the excavations
made in the acropolis between the years 1900 - 1913. This
depot is one of the two archeological opus depots that were
in Turkey at that time. The excavations in Bergama, which
were interrupted because of the 1st World War, were re -
started under the direction of Theodor Wiegand. In the same
year, with the start of the excavations in Asklepieion in
addition to the acropolis excavations, the number of opuses
has increased and a new museum building was needed.
Marshall Fevzi
Çakmak, who came to Bergama in 1932 has closely interested
with the issue and ordered the foundation of a new museum
after his visit. For the new building that was planned to
be constructed with Turkish - German cooperation, the location
of today which is an old cemetery has been found appropriate.
The
project that was prepared by the architects Bruno Meyer
and Harold Hanson was completed at the end of 1932 and the
works for base excavation were started in 1933 with the
formal request of the governor of İzmir, Kazım Dirik. Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk, who visited Asklepieion, which was a health
center, during his visit to Bergama on April 13th 1934,
has seen that the construction of the museum building was
continuing.
Bergama museum,
whose construction has been completed, was opened for visit
on October 30th 1936 by the governor of İzmir, Fazlı Güleç.
The museum building consisted of a large rectangular courtyard
surrounded with galleries, and a rectangular exhibition
hall behind this courtyard. Since the galleries of the courtyard
were suitable for open - air museum, the opuses were exhibited
there.
When Ethnography and Archeology Museum was taken into operation
in Bergama Public House building in 1924, the archeological
opuses were taken to the new museum building. The ethnographic
opuses were taken into the museum building of today in 1979
after the construction of the additional building. The additional
building has a rectangular plan placed beside the part,
in which the courtyard and exhibition hall exist, its entrance
is provided via a door opening from the courtyard to the
hall. Units such as depot, laboratory, photograph room,
archive have been added to the other side of the museum
which was left empty and to its rear part.
Most of the archeological
opuses in the museum, which belong to various periods from
early bronze era to the Byzantine Period have been found
in the excavations made in Bergama and its surrounding.
Among
the finds found in the archaic residences around, samples
belonging to Pergfamon sculpture school, Archaic Period
finds coming from Pitane and Gryneion, Myrina terracotta
draw attention. In the ethnography section, carpets, kilims
of the region (Yuntdağ, Yağcıbedir, Kozak, Bergama weavings),
cloth weaving samples, hand works and other hand made opuses
belonging to other regions of Anatolia are exhibited.
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