Turkey
Fevzi Paşa

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    • Day 121

      Zeugma Museum

      April 9 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Der erste richtige Regentag unserer Reise! Ab ins Museum!
      In Gaziantep besuchen wir mit Massen an anderen Besuchern (um das Zuckerfest herum scheinen hier Ferien zu sein) das Mosaikmuseum mit Bodenmosaiken und Wandfresken aus der Stadt Zeugma, die im Stausee des Euphrat verschwunden ist. Jedenfalls mit den Kunstschätzen, die nicht nach Berlin gelangt sind…Read more

    • Day 44

      Kebab @ Halil Usta’s Place

      October 18, 2021 in Turkey ⋅ ⛅ 70 °F

      Gaziantep, long known for its gastronomic history, was inducted into the UNESCO Creative Cities Network in 2015. (More info here … https://en.unesco.org/creative-cities/gaziantep). As such food is an important element of any visit to the city.

      When we visited Gaziantep in 2018, our friend, Nilgün, took us to have lunch at Halil Usta, one of the city’s foremost kebab houses where the chef himself greets arrivals at the door. Located on a back street behind the Zeugma Museum, this is a restaurant patronized mostly by the locals … just the kind of place we try to seek out when we are traveling.

      Our early arrival around 11:30a meant that we pretty much had the place to ourselves and avoided the crowds that start to show up soon after noon. You can order specific dishes, but we just told the waiter to bring us small portions of several dishes to share … “acısız” (without hot spices) at our request, though there is no such thing as totally hot-spice-free in this region.

      We started with the famous “kaşık salatası” … a juicy tomato and lettuce salad eaten with a spoon (kaşık) and served with pide. Then came yağlı ekmek … buttered, slightly spicy pide. A variety of meats followed … each from a specific cut of lamb meat. Ordering small portions was the smart way to go about our meal as it left us with just enough room for sweets … all filled with pistachios … for which the city is known.

      Thus sated, it was time to proceed with the rest of our plans for the day.
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    • Day 44

      Zeugma: The Museum

      October 18, 2021 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

      After breakfast at the hotel, we hopped in a cab and went to the Zeugma Mosaic Museum … one of my favorite museums anywhere in the world. Operated under the auspices of the Turkish Ministry of Culture & Tourism, our MüzeKart covered the admission.

      We arrived just as the museum opened its doors at 9:00a. Our time there was sandwiched between two tour groups, one of which was practically out the door already, and neither of which spent much time at the museum. Thus leaving us to enjoy this great museum without the crowds with which we shared it in 2018.

      The museum was purpose-built to exhibit and preserve some of the archaeological treasures of Zeugma, a city of antiquity overlooking the Euphrates River … which we hope to visit on our way out of the city in a few days’ time. It is the largest museum of its kind in the world.

      There are amazingly well-preserved floor and wall mosaics of varying sizes throughout the museum. Each deserving of careful attention to the beautiful details. But the highlight is a small fragment known as the Gypsy Girl … though there is some question as to the actual gender of the figure since no other parts of the body were featured amongst the pieces found. It is the hauntingly beautiful eyes that draw those that behold the piece that has since become a symbol of the city. The fragment, which dates back to the 2nd-3rd centuries AD, is part of a much bigger mosaic, parts of which were smuggled out of Turkey in the 1960s … and some of which have since been returned.

      (Unless otherwise noted, all mosaics date back to the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD.)
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    • Day 6

      Mosaic Museum, Gaziantep

      October 31, 2020 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      A spectacular display of 2nd and 3rd century mosaics discovered in an old Roman city, unearthed during dam construction. As they would have been flooded, they were removed to this museum.
      The 1st picture is of "Gypsy Girl," the most famous piece in the museum, followed by 3 more random examples. I have too many pics to choose from.
      Besides the mosaics, the museum has a roman bath and frescoes from the town (pictures 5&6).
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Fevzi Paşa, Fevzi Pasa

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