General view of Cyzicus looking S.
Department | Archive |
---|---|
Collection | BSA SPHS Image Collection |
Reference No. | BSA SPHS 02/1/3699.4121 |
Level | Item |
Description | Small print photograph pasted onto an index card, originally part of the SPHS image library catalogue. Written on the card: "Cyzicus looking South". Large label with a red "S" on the card denoting that a slide was made of this image. |
Dimensions | 16.5 x 11 cm (index card) |
Place |
Cyzicus |
Dates | 1902 |
Donor/Creator |
Hasluck, Dr Frederick William Henderson, Mr Arthur Edward FSA |
Project | Cyzicus, Mysia and Bithynia |
Scope and Content | Part of a series of images from the survey 1902-1906 carried out by F.W. Hasluck at Cyzicus and surrounding territory in Anatolia, under the auspices of the British School at Athens. The original description in the SPHS register reads: "Cyzicus: general view looking S". |
Notes | Date based on Hasluck's assistance to A.E. Henderson in the survey of Cyzicus, mentioned in his 1910 monograph (Cyzicus: Being Some Account of the History and Antiquities of that City, Cambridge: CUP). Although F.W. Hasluck and A.E. Henderson were both listed as donors in the SPHS Negative register, the photograph was most likely taken by A.E. Henderson. The image appears in the SPHS Slide Set: B.I. and I.A. Lawrence, ca. 1933. The Expedition of Cyrus & Xenophon's Anabasis. Slide number 49 |
Further information | The ancient town of Cyzicus was probably a Pelasgian foundation, but soon acquired considerable commercial significance and cut a particularly valuable staple coinage, the gold stater. It is located on the Propontis in the area of ancient Mysia, a region on the south coast of the Marmara sea northwest of Asia Minor. Pergamon and Cyzicus were the most important trade-centres in Mysia. The naval battle of Cyzicus was of key importance for the outcome of the Peloponnesian war while under Roman emperor Tiberius the city witnessed prosperity and wealth. The city was captured temporarily by the Arabs in 675 and, after a series of disastrous earthquakes, it began, as early as the 11th century, to be gradually deserted. Principal ruins in the nearby marsh land of Balkiz Serai are those of the fourth-century walls, an Andrian temple, a Roman aqueduct and a theatre. |
Related records |
[BSA SPHS 01/1646.4121], General view of Cyzicus looking S., 1902
[BSA SPHS 03/3629.4121], General view of Cyzicus looking S., 1902 |
Reference |
1904. Records of the past. III: 354 (top). 1904 JHS 24: Catalogue of Slides. lxxxviii.SPHS 4121. Link to article 1913 JHS 33: Catalogue of Slides. 17.SPHS 4121. Link to article |