Archaeological Museum of Milos

The Archaeological Museum of Milos is a museum in Plaka on the island of Milos, in Greece.[1][2] Its collections include exhibits dating from the late Neolithic to the Byzantine period. The unique is collection of ancient Cycladic art, especially numerous findings from Phylakopi on Milos, from early Bronze Age to the late Bronze Age. The best pieces from Phylakopi are in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford), in the British Museum, and in the National Museum of Athens and elsewhere around the world.

The museum is housed since 1985 in a neo-classical building dating from 1870 on the main square in Plaka.[1] In the porch of the building and on the courtyard is lapidary with torsos from the late antiquity.

Room 1

The first room hosts large pottery vessels since the late Bronze Age to the Greek archaic period, a modern copy of the statue of Venus de Milo and a collection of obsidian tools from Neolithic to early Bronze Age.

  • Pithos, late Bronze Age
    Pithos, late Bronze Age
  • Fragments of a Melian pithamphora, 650-600 BC
    Fragments of a Melian pithamphora, 650-600 BC
  • Large pithos, 6th century BC
    Large pithos, 6th century BC
  • Obsidian tools
    Obsidian tools
  • Obsidian blades
    Obsidian blades

Room 2

The main museum treasures: The Bronze Age on Milos: Early Cycladic, Minoan and Mycenaean artefacts from Phylakopi and from other places of the island.

  • Early Cyclydic pottery pyxides, ca 3200-2500 BC
    Early Cyclydic pottery pyxides, ca 3200-2500 BC
  • House model, tufa. Early Cycladic era, 3rd millennium BC
    House model, tufa. Early Cycladic era, 3rd millennium BC
  • House model, pottery, from Rivari, 2500-2000 BC
    House model, pottery, from Rivari, 2500-2000 BC
  • Pottery kernos, Rivari, 2500 to 2000 BC
    Pottery kernos, Rivari, 2500 to 2000 BC
  • Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I culture, ca 2200-2000 BC
    Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I culture, ca 2200-2000 BC
  • Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I-II culture, 20th century BC
    Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I-II culture, 20th century BC
  • Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I-II culture, 20th century BC
    Pottery from Phylakopi, Phylakopi I-II culture, 20th century BC
  • Red-painted goblet from Phylakopi, Phylakopi II culture, middle Bronze Age
    Red-painted goblet from Phylakopi, Phylakopi II culture, middle Bronze Age
  • Offering table fragment, Phylakopi III, Late Cycladic I, Minoan influence
    Offering table fragment, Phylakopi III, Late Cycladic I, Minoan influence
  • Bath-tub (asaminthos), Phylakopi III, Late Cycladic I, Minoan influence
    Bath-tub (asaminthos), Phylakopi III, Late Cycladic I, Minoan influence
  • Pithos, Phylakopi III, Minoan influence
    Pithos, Phylakopi III, Minoan influence
  • Late Bronze Age Melian pottery, Phylakopi III
    Late Bronze Age Melian pottery, Phylakopi III
  • Minoan pottery made in Crete, Phylakopi III
    Minoan pottery made in Crete, Phylakopi III
  • Lady of Phylakopi, from shrine in Phylakopi, Phylakopi III (IV ?), 14th century BC or later
    Lady of Phylakopi, from shrine in Phylakopi, Phylakopi III (IV ?), 14th century BC or later
  • Male figurine from West Shrine in Phylakopi, Phylakopi IV culture, 12th century BC
    Male figurine from West Shrine in Phylakopi, Phylakopi IV culture, 12th century BC
  • Bull, rom West Shrine in Phylakopi, Fylakopi IV culture, Mycenaean
    Bull, rom West Shrine in Phylakopi, Fylakopi IV culture, Mycenaean

Room 3

Ancient Greek pottery.

Room 4

Ancient Greek and Roman sculptures. Ancient Greek inscriptions in the local version of the alphabet.

  • Portrait herm of Marios Trofimos, priest of Dionysos, 2nd century AD
    Portrait herm of Marios Trofimos, priest of Dionysos, 2nd century AD
  • Roman portrait of a man, 3rd century AD
    Roman portrait of a man, 3rd century AD

References

  1. ^ a b "Archaeological Museum of Milos | Directorate of Archaeological Museums, Exhibitions and Educational Programs". Greek Archaeological Museums. Retrieved 2023-04-29.
  2. ^ "Renovated Milos Archaeological Museum Opens to the Public". GTP Headlines. 2022-07-06. Retrieved 2023-04-29.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Archaeological Museum of Milos.
  • Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism
  • Official website

36°44′38″N 24°25′25″E / 36.74384°N 24.42361°E / 36.74384; 24.42361

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