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The floor mosaic in the Necmi Asfuroğlu Archaeology Museum is the single largest in the world, covering more than 11,000 square feet. Courtesy of the Museum Hotel Antakya ...
Turkey’s Museum Hotel Antakya is an engineering marvel: A modern five-star hotel that “floats” on steel columns above a 2,300-year-old archaeological park.
Bringing a mosaic floor — one believed to have come from the home of a wealthy Roman living in the Eastern Roman Empire at about 300 CE — into the Penn Museum in Philadelphia, was not an easy ...
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Ancient Megiddo Mosaic on display at Museum of the Bible - MSNAn ancient Christian mosaic from Israel is on public display for the first time at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C. The sprawling Megiddo Mosaic was discovered in 2005 during a prison ...
Behold the Museum Hotel in Antakya, Turkey, a lodge that 'floats' above the ruins of over a dozen civilisations dating back to the third century BC, which were discovered in the foundations.
Antakya Museum Hotel: What happens when you find ancient ruins under your hotel. Architect Özge Ertoptamış explains what happens when modern meets ancient, how the Antakya Museum Hotel came to ...
Digging in the soil of Antakya, a small city near Turkey's Syrian border known to the Greeks as Antioch, Nehmi Asfuroğlu discovered one of the world's largest and best-preserved ancient mosaics ...
Located in Antakya city, Hatay, it is spread over 32,000 square metres and hence bigger in size, explained our guide Shehzat as he led us into the Zeugma Mosaic Museum.
Turkey’s Museum Hotel Antakya is an engineering marvel: A modern five-star hotel that “floats” on steel columns above a 2,300-year-old archaeological park. CNN values your feedback 1.
An ancient Christian mosaic from Israel is on public display for the first time at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C. The sprawling Megiddo Mosaic was discovered in 2005 during a prison ...
Turkey’s Museum Hotel Antakya is an engineering marvel: A modern five-star hotel that “floats” on steel columns above a 2,300-year-old archaeological park.
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