Up Turkey - Ephesus Prev Next Slideshow

 Previous image  Next image  Index page
Ephesus_9625.jpg


The Celsus Library was built by Gaius Julius Aquila to honor his father Julius Celsus Polemaenus, General Governor of the roman province of Asia, in 135 AD, designed by the architect Vitruoya. It was one of the largest libraries of the ancient world and it could host more than 12,000 scrolls. Celsus died when he was 70 years old and he was buried in a marble sarcophagus in a cellar under an arched ceiling under the ground floor of the Library. It can be accessed through some stairs and then a narrow corridor which leads to the sarcophagus that has been adorned with sculptures.

There were nine steps leading to the entrance of the library which consisted of three large doors. The thick columns between the doors had been adorned with statues depicting Wisdom, Knowledge, Intelligence and Fortune. Even though the façade of Celsus Library consisted of two levels, the reading area, inside it, was surrounded by three floors. There was a second wall inside the library which protected its atmosphere from humidity and temperature variations that could damage the manuscripts. [ephesus.ws]


Total images: 135