The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Palmyra in Syria is largely a field of rubble, destroyed by IS. It was once awarded the title due to its outstanding preservation. On 28 June 2017, Dr. Georg Plattner, Director of the Collection of Classical Antiquities/Ephesus Museum, KHM, will give a lecture in Vienna on the topic of “Palmyra concerns us all!”. In the recent past, the historic city of Palmyra has only been mentioned in the context of tragic […]
The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Palmyra in Syria is largely a field of rubble, destroyed by IS. It was once awarded the title due to its outstanding preservation. On 28.06.2017, Dr. Georg Plattner, Director of the Collection of Classical Antiquities/Ephesus Museum, KHM, will give a lecture in Vienna on the topic “Palmyra concerns us all!”.
In the recent past, the historic city of Palmyra has only been reported on in the context of tragic political and humanitarian developments. The barbaric destruction and the systematic, illegal trade in stolen cultural artefacts represent damage to our cultural heritage that can hardly be overestimated.
Since the Hellenistic period, the oasis city of Palmyra (today Tadmur) in Syria has benefited from its strategic position and the water-giving Efqa spring. The city owed its heyday in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD to the taxes on goods that were transported here via the Silk Roads.
Palmyra was shaped by cultural encounters: The local, semi-nomadic population received inspiration from the Greco-Roman Mediterranean as well as from distant India or China. Reflections of these influences can be seen more than almost anywhere else in the ancient world, especially in the architecture.
Due to the excellent preservation of its monuments and the importance of the contact zone between East and West, the historic city was one of the most important sites in the ancient world (UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1980).
The lecture will take place on 28.06.2017, 17:00h in the Ahnensaal of the Federal Monuments Office, 1010 Vienna, Hofburg, Säulenstiege, 2nd floor (entrance in the Schweizerhof). Registration is not required.
Further information can also be found at http://www.iic-austria.org/termine/












