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Update (15.5.00)
There has been a tragedy and a second is in progress.

Location of Zeugma - Samosata lies 75 km away to
the north-east.
First the tragedy. A decade ago the waters building up behind
the massive wall of the Atatürk Dam on the Euphrates in
Turkey began to flood the streets of the little deserted village
of Samsat. A disaster for the poor villagers who had been
expropriated and obliged to leave ancestral homes in the interest
of a greater and wider good.
More important, the flood waters were lapping over the fields
beneath which lay the remains of the ancient city of Samosata.
The city had been the capital of allied kings of the Roman Empire
one of whom, Antiochus IV, was described as a man "who had
inherited great wealth and was the richest client-king of all"
(Tacitus Hist 2.81.1). In the first century AD, the
kingdom was annexed by Rome to the province of Syria, the city
flourished as a frontier town of the Roman Empire, and an entire
legion of 5000 soldiers was placed there. Written sources
provided occasional insights at various points during its
subsequent history but the flesh for these bones was to be found
within the town wall circuit of 5 km enclosing some 250 ha/ 600
acres, and beyond it in the remains of the ancient villages,
farms, aqueducts, quarries and roads of its hinterland.
A number of Turkish and foreign teams did carry out surveys
and excavations, but for so large an area it was modest. None of
the foreign institutes undertook any major project at Samosata
itself which was left to the valiant but limited resources of
Turkish archaeologists. Today it is all under a deep and vast
lake - readers might look at the superb aerial view by Ed Kashi
of the lake where once it stood (National Geographic May
1993) - and if, a century hence, the dam were to be drained the
traces of what was once one of the handful of second rank cities
of the Roman Empire will have been further eroded and
contaminated by not only the decades of waterlogging but now a
vast accumulation of silt too.
Nothing more can be done about Samosata but something could
yet be done about Zeugma.
During several centuries of first Greek then Roman rule,
Zeugma was the location of the first and only permanent bridge
over the Euphrates between the Taurus Mts and Babylonia several
hundred kilometres away. That in itself made the twin cities of
Seleucia and Apamea at either end of the bridge of signal
importance.

The majestic view from Belkis Tepe over Seleucia
(under the pistaccio trees) and Apamea on the far bank. In the
lower centre can be seen the outline of the buried theatre
identified by Algaze's survey. To its right probably lay the
agora. The hills around were covered with houses and the
legionary fortress may have been on the left
centre.
In the first century BC it too passed under Roman rule and
received a legion in garrison. There were only eight legions in
all of Rome's Asian provinces between the Black Sea and the Red
and two of them were located at Samosata and Zeugma within 70 km
of one another, an indicator of the military significance of
these places. For several centuries Zeugma ("the bridge", or, as
we might call it, Bridgetown), as the twin towns came to be
known, flourished as a fortress city, urban centre, trade centre,
garrison, nodal point of several key routes, and meeting point of
East and West. Here more than anywhere the Roman and Parthian
Empires met. Here too the Semitic cultures of Syria mingled with
those of Iran and Anatolia.
The existence of ruins of the Classical period around the
little Turcoman village of Belkis upstream from the modern bridge
of Birecik has been known to western scholars for over two
centuries. By the beginning of this century growing awareness of
the extent of the remains indicated a major city but there was no
consensus as to which since many scholars believed the ancient
bridge had lain at Birecik. Since the 1970s, however, it has been
indisputable that the ruins at Belkis and opposite, around
Tilmusa on the other bank, had to be those of Zeugma, a town at
least as large as Samosata, twice the size of Roman London and
three and half times that of Pompeii.
In the 19th century looters carried off superb mosaics and
works of art fine enough to be covetted by the world class
museums of imperial Britain, France, Germany and Russia. The
potential of the site was revealed further by the systematic
recording of visible features in the 1970s by Jörg Wagner.
And now looters have again been at work, this time leading to the
accidental discovery of a well-preserved villa with not just
stunning mosaics but with glass and bronze household items still
scattered across the floors from when the building was burned. In
a western country it would have attracted TV cameras and large
funds. Turkey, however, is like as a vast outdoor museum and,
although it attracted media attention, not least through the
efforts of Mrs Ayfer Ünsal of the Gaziantep newspaper, it
has received less than its due and the implications have been
given inadequate international concern. Turkey, nothwithstanding
its strong antiquities legislation and vigorous archaeologists,
lacks the resources to meet all of the many daily threats to its
material heritage.
More alarming still, however, the Turkish government is
building yet another dam to provide water for irrigation as part
of its vast South-east Anatolia Development Project to revitalise
the region. The dam is to be called the Birecik Dam but it is
located at Zeugma, 500 m downstream of the city, and is now in
progress. When it is complete all of Apamea on the east bank and
half of Seleucia on the west, as well as scores of other sites of
every period further up the valley will have disappeared under a
new lake. Worse still, because the dam is so close to the site,
it will suffer not just from emboldened looters and the effects
of water and silt but from the construction work itself as access
roads for plant are driven through and material is carried away
for building.

The extent of Seleucia and Apamea and the region
to be flooded.
There is no secret about this dam. The American archaeologist
Guillermo Algaze included it in the non-intensive survey he made
over the land to be flooded by five such dams. More recently and
much to his credit Rifat Ergeç of the Gaziantep Museum
stretched his slim budget to rescue the villa being looted by
treasure hunters. But there has been no major fieldwork project.
I undertook a brief preliminary season in 1993 and there are at
present limited projects being carried out by Catherine
Abadie-Reynal of the French Institute in Istanbul and some
further rescue excavation by the Gaziantep Museum.

A superb mosaic floor in a wealthy villa
overlooking the river. The central panel has been looted -
probably this century - but may now have been located in a
private collection. The walls of a neighbouring villa, when the
field soil had been stripped, still stood 4 m high in places and
contained even more such fine mosaics (see Kennedy
1994).
Major fieldwork seems unlikely. After more than two years I had
to admit defeat; publicity brought numerous offers of physical
assistance by people from a score of countries. Major
institutional funds were not forthcoming, however, and none of
the businesses approached was willing to offer support. A little
further work may well take place as construction inadevertently
discloses new long-buried features. The dam, however, is
scheduled for completion in 1998 but may be a little later -
millenial. There is - just - still time for a major programmeof
fieldwork but none is likely.
Samosata - and presumably now Zeugma - seem victims of two trends
in Classical Archaeology. First the continued excavation, decade
after decade at a handful of major city sites which are under no
threat but absorb substantial resources. Classical archaeology
has been criticised for devoting its energies for so long
overwhelmingly to the towns and to the monumental buildings at
that. The reaction to this may be behind the second trend, the
recent focus instead on the countryside of the Graeco-Roman world
and the unfashionableness of city excavation amongst younger
Classical archaeologists.
In 50 years our successors, with different philosophies and
objectives, will be aghast that we allowed either of these cities
to be inundated without major efforts at investigation.
Everything in archaeology may be significant but not everything
is of equal significance. This is not a matter of exposing yet
more theatres or temples; either would be interesting (after two
centuries of visits the theatre at Zeugma has only recently been
identified by Algaze's survey) and valuable (where are the pagan
shrines and Christian churches of Zeugma?) but could certainly
add greatly to what we already know about both types of structure
from the Classical of a Gerasa to the Syrian versions of a Dura
Europus. Zeugma, however, holds part of the key to several major
questions which should have drawn the attention of many different
and overlapping groups of scholars. A few will illustrate the
point:
- Zeugma was one of the second rank cities of Seleucid Syria.
Although not overbuilt since the Middle Ages, we have little
more idea of its overall shape much less of its layout than we
did 100 years ago. Not a single street is known and our
knowledge of hellenistic town-planning in Syria which might
have been signally enriched here remains slender.

Bronze scale armour uncovered by a bulldozer
improving a track across the site. Material like this is rare
from anywhere in the Roman Empire.
- In the late 1st c. BC, a Graeco-Syrian town of perhaps
25,000 inhabitants and a small garrison, was abruptly
transformed by the insertion of 5000 Roman citizen soldiers,
many perhaps Latin-speaking Europeans Thereafter, tens of
thousands of legionaries soldiered, married and died there for
generation after generation. Along with the soldiers came a
legionary legate and his tribunes; the former one of the 600
members of the Roman senatorial elite, the latter of the
imperial equestrian aristocracy. The presence of these men and
their families for a few years at a time for two centuries
could not but have altered the character of the place. The
evidence for this important element in urban life and of Roman
control and impact at this interface with the Parthian Empire
is a handful of inscriptions.
-
- Zeugma was on the major crossing of the Euphrates below the
Taurus Mts, on a great trade route, of the Mediterranean world
and of Mesopotamia, and a fortress city on a cultural and
political frontier. Yet we can say little about its economic
life or the nature of its society. To what extent was it Greek,
Roman, Aramaic, Iranian, Mesopotamian? What was its identity at
any point in its history; how and why did it change?
-
- The town had been founded at a bridge-crossing but was also
a military colony. The inhabitants were originally primarily
farmers and many probably remained so, but we have the merest
hints of the villages and farms which were always the basis of
the economy. The recent brief survey by Algaze has shown what
may yet be learned of the rural context but no intensive survey
has ever been carried out. As the present inhabitants are
obliged to move away the opportunity emerges for unrestricted
fieldwork of the kind carried out by Wilkinson downstream of
Samosata.
-
- Zeugma is well-known as the source of, literally, hundreds
of figured and plain tombstones, and as many mosaics and other
works of art, scattered now across a dozen countries. They have
generated scores of scholarly works analysing their quality and
place in scholarship. Three years ago, looters were disturbed
tunneling into a house in Zeugma and the site has now been
excavated. as has part of a second by my own team. What we have
revealed in these houses is a wealth of such works of art in
situ. Not only could scholarship be presented with more such
works of art but with many still in the locations intended
where they could be studied as part of the indigenous culture.
Instead, many continue to be torn out of context and sold off
illicitly to buyers probably ignorant even of the site from
which they came. Sadly too many would see funding aimed even in
part at excavating rich town houses as dangerously close to
treasure-hunting. Would it not be better done professionaly
than ripped out by looters and sold clandestinely? Where are
the outraged art historians and why have those who appreciate
the importance of well-preserved houses at Pompeii not been
agitating for those at Zeugma, some standing 2-4 m high beneath
the fields soil, to be investigated?
Examples of this sort could be multiplied: personally I would
be enormously interested in the rural economy, the water supply
of Seleucia, the impact of a generation of Commagenian rule,
analysis of skeletal evidence from the poorer and as yet
undiscovered cemeteries, the character of manufacture at the
town, the interaction of cultures, and the processes of
development and decline, .......
These and many other questions could transform Zeugma into the
late 20th century counterpart of the remarkable discoveries at
Dura Europus in the 1920s and 30s. But applying now the
techniques and approaches of a rather different subject. The
opportunity is still there but rapidly narrowing.
Postscript.Since writing the above two years
ago, Catherine Abadie-Reynal has cxontinued her work at Zeugma
and, since 1997, been joined by a team from the University of
Bern under Professor Michael A. Speidel. Now, too, my own work at
the site has been published together with related essays (Kennedy
1998).

This rutted Roman road -
discovered by Dr Christopher Lightfoot - runs up the side of a
steep hill upstream of Zeugma to one of several Roman quarries in
the region. The rock face on the left has a graffito in Greek
letters.
Reading
- Algaze, G., Breuninger, R. and Knudstad, J. (1994) The
Tigris-Euphrates Archaeological Reconnaissance Project:
Final report of the Birecik and Carchemish Dam survey
areas, Anatolica XX: 1-96
- Amalfi, C. (1993) Rescue mission, West Australian
(Earth 2000), December 27: 4-5.
- Cribb, J. (1993) The ancient digger, The Australian
Magazine, June 12-13: 18-20.
- Cumont, F. (1917) Etudes syriennes, Paris.
- Kennedy, D. L. (1992/93) Zeugma Archaeological Project,
in C. E. V. Nixon (ed.) Chronicle of Excavations,
Mediterranean Archaeology 5/6: 167-8; Pl 51.4
- ---- (1994) Zeugma. Une ville antique sur l'Euphrate,
Archéologia, 306: 26-35
- ---- (1994) Zeugma Archaeological Project, in C. E. V. Nixon
(ed.) Chronicle of Excavations, Mediterranean
Archaeology 7: 127-129; pl. 13.1-4.
- ---- (1995) Zeugma Archaeological Project: Preliminary
Season 1993. XVI Kazi Sonuclari Toplantisi, Ankara II,
207-215.
- ---- (1998) The Twin Towns of Zeugma on the Euphrates.
Rescue Work and Historical Studies, 1998. Portsmouth, RI
(JRA, Supplementary Series 27) (ISBN
1-887829-27-0; ISBN 1063-4304 (for the supplementary
series))
- Kennedy, D. L. and Freeman, P. W. M. (1994) Zeugma
Archaeological Project: Preliminary Season, September 1993.
Anatolian Studies 44: 18-20 = British Institute of
Archaeology at Ankara, Forty-Fifth Annual Report, 1993:
36-38
- Kennedy, D. L., Ergeç, R. and Freeman, P. (1995)
Mining the mosaics of Roman Zeugma, Archaeology ,
March/ April: 54-55.
- Stark, F. (1966) Rome on the Euphrates. The story of a
frontier, London.
- Wagner, J (1976) Seleukeia am Euphrat/ Zeugma ,
Wiesbaden (Reichert, Beihefte TAVO B10): 132-46
- Wagner, J. (1985) Die Römer an Euphrat und
Tigris, Jona (Antike Welt, Sondernummer 16)
- Wiltshire, T. (1993) UWA scholar mounts international
rescue, Uniview Magazine. The University of Western
Australia, 12.3: 10-11.
- Wiltshire, T. (1995) Time runs out for treasures,
Uniview Magazine. The University of Western
Australia, 14.1: 3

Coin struck by the city of Zeugma in the mid-3rd
c. AD. It depicts what is probably the temple on the acropolis
(Belkis Tepe - see photograph above) within which can be seen the
cult statue of the Tyche of the city. In front is a colonnaded
precinct, entered through a monumental gate. The features inside
may be the trees of a sacred grove. Today the summit of the hill
has only the shattered foundations of the temple visible and
several cisterns. The text reads:"Of the People of Zeugma".The
Capricorn below is the zodiacal sign of the Emperor Augustus and
may also have been that of the Legion IIII Scythica stationed at
Zeugma.
David Kennedy, M205, Classics and Ancient History, University of
Western Australia, Crawley, Perth, WA 6009, AUSTRALIA Contact:
Work phone: (0)8-6488-2150; fax: (0)8-6488-1009; e-mail: dkennedy@cyllene.uwa.edu.au
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