Fr. 53.50

The Octagon of Arsinoë IV in Ephesos - A Ptolemaic Queen's tomb at the transition from a Hellenistic to a Roman Imperial city

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 2 weeks

Description

Read more

The Greco-Roman metropolis of Ephesos served as the scenery for many historical episodes. Numerous welldocumented personalities walked the city's streets, including C. Julius Caesar, Marcus Antonius, and Arsinoë IV of Alexandria, who was a descendant of the Ptolemaic royal family that ruled the shores of the Nile for nearly three centuries. Arsinoë IV played a signi_ cant role during the decline of the Lagid dynasty and the concluding Roman Civil Wars. She acted as both an actual and potential rival Queen to her elder sister Kleopatra and was one of the trophies during Caesar's Alexandrian Triumph in Rome. While still in her youth, she sought refuge from Kleopatra in the Artemisian Temple sanctuary near Ephesos, where she was assassinated in 41 BC.Assuming that the sacrilegious death of a Ptolemaic Queen in Ephesos should have found an architectural echo, the burial site of Arsinoë IV has long been suspected in the so-called Octagon. This temple tomb, dating from the late Hellenistic period and being one of the oldest polygonal monuments, is situated along an important procession route in the heart of the city, known as Curetes Street.However, the connection of the grave to Arsinoë IV remained a subject of ongoing dispute. In light of this, the authors revisited ancient sources related to Arsinoë IV and conducted extensive research on the Octagon and its construction site. As a result, it is highly likely that the mausoleum indeed represents the only available Ptolemaic sepulchre containing, therefore, the skeletal remains of a Macedonian-Egyptian Queen. Since previous attempts to extract royal DNA of this sort from the postcranial skeleton have failed, the authors finally embarked on an ultimately successful quest to locate the skull of the Octagon, which has been considered lost for decades.

About the author

Dr. med. et phil. (Klassische Archäologie) Ernst Rudolf, geb. 1957, ist medizinischer Sachverständiger in Zivil- und Strafrechtsverfahren.Univ.-Prof. Dr. Peter Scherrer, geb. 1958, von 1997–2004 stellvertretender Grabungsleiter in Ephesos, 2005 Habilitation in Salzburg, 2008–2021 Vorstand des Instituts für Archäologie der Universität Graz und 2011–2019 Vizerektor für Forschung dieser Universität.

Summary

The Greco-Roman metropolis of Ephesos served as the scenery for many historical episodes. Numerous welldocumented personalities walked the city’s streets, including C. Julius Caesar, Marcus Antonius, and Arsinoë IV of Alexandria, who was a descendant of the Ptolemaic royal family that ruled the shores of the Nile for nearly three centuries. Arsinoë IV played a signi_ cant role during the decline of the Lagid dynasty and the concluding Roman Civil Wars. She acted as both an actual and potential rival Queen to her elder sister Kleopatra and was one of the trophies during Caesar's Alexandrian Triumph in Rome. While still in her youth, she sought refuge from Kleopatra in the Artemisian Temple sanctuary near Ephesos, where she was assassinated in 41 BC.

Assuming that the sacrilegious death of a Ptolemaic Queen in Ephesos should have found an architectural echo, the burial site of Arsinoë IV has long been suspected in the so-called Octagon. This temple tomb, dating from the late Hellenistic period and being one of the oldest polygonal monuments, is situated along an important procession route in the heart of the city, known as Curetes Street.

However, the connection of the grave to Arsinoë IV remained a subject of ongoing dispute. In light of this, the authors revisited ancient sources related to Arsinoë IV and conducted extensive research on the Octagon and its construction site. As a result, it is highly likely that the mausoleum indeed represents the only available Ptolemaic sepulchre containing, therefore, the skeletal remains of a Macedonian-Egyptian Queen. Since previous attempts to extract royal DNA of this sort from the postcranial skeleton have failed, the authors finally embarked on an ultimately successful quest to locate the skull of the Octagon, which has been considered lost for decades.

Product details

Authors Ernst Rudolf, Peter Scherrer
Publisher Nünnerich-Asmus Verlag & Media
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 22.01.2024
 
EAN 9783961762507
ISBN 978-3-96176-250-7
No. of pages 376
Dimensions 254 mm x 30 mm x 280 mm
Weight 1782 g
Illustrations und 9 Tabellen
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Pre and early history
Non-fiction book > History > Pre and early history, antiquity

Kleopatra, Archäologie, Architektur, Antike, Alte Geschichte, Archäologie, Geschichte: Ereignisse und Themen, Ephesos, Mord an Arsinoë IV.

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.