4: Ruin Cities

  • Pompeii & Herculaneum: excavated cities, buried by volcano 79 BC
  • - Troy / Hissarlik, Turkey: The city was founded around 3000 BC, destroyed at the Trojan wars ca 1250 BC, re-settled later by Greek and Romans. Excavations were started by Heinrich Schliemann (1822-90) in 1870, who rediscovered the site described by Homer in the Iliad. The city ruins consist of 9 layers. Schliemann found e.g. the famous gold treasury, which is at the Pushkin museum in Moscow.
  • Selinunte, Sicily. Huge city ruined by Hannibal in 409 BC. Mostly, it's a vast field of rubble. The main street is about 1 km long. Walking along it, is like being at Ground Zero. And no other tourists in sight when I was there on a sunny day in January 2002.
  • Agrigento, Sicily. Large city sacked in 406 BC. Several beautiful temples remain.
  • Dougga, Tunisia: preserved Roman ruin city, photo
  • Karthage, Tunisia: Phoenician & Roman excavations with museum
  • - Leptis Magna, Libya: Well preserved ruin city
  • - Timgad: Roman ruin city in Algeria.
  • - Baalbek, Lebanon: classic ruin city, photo
  • - Persepolis, Iran: ruins of king Xerxes' city , 6th c BC. photo from The Oriental Institute of The University of Chicago.
  • - Petra, Jordania: rock city with carved-out temples inhabited by Nabateans, deserted since 7th c AD, photo
  • - Palmyra, Syria: preserved classic ruin city sacked in 634 AD, photo1, photo2
  • - Angkor, Cambodia: Khmer city, 11th c

Per Åkesson 1994, revised apr '10

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