Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Amasra Museum

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Visitors
  
over 50,000 annually

Phone
  
+90 378 315 10 06

Amasra Museum

Established
  
1982; 35 years ago (1982)

Location
  
Kum Mah. Çamlık Sok. 4 Amasra, Bartın, Turkey

Type
  
Archaeology, ethnography

Collections
  
Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Genoese, Ottoman periods

Collection size
  
901 (Archaeological) 744 (Ethnographic)

Address
  
Kum Mahallesi, Çamlık Sok. No:4, 74300 Amasra/Bartın, Turkey

Hours
  
Closed now Monday8AM–5PMTuesday8AM–5PMWednesday8AM–5PMThursday8AM–5PMFriday8AM–5PMSaturday8AM–5PMSunday8AM–5PM

Owner
  
Ministry of Culture and Tourism

Similar
  
Adıyaman Archaeological Museum, Bolu Museum, Afyonkarahisar Archaeological Museum, Konya Ereğli Museum, Kırklareli Museum

Amasra feneri ve tav an adas bart n turkey


Amasra Museum (Turkish: Amasra Müzesi) is a museum in Amasra district of Bartın Province, northwestern Turkey. Established in 1982, it exhibits archaeological artifacts and ethnographic items.

Contents

The museum is visited by more than 50,000 tourists yearly.

Location

Anasra Museum is situated on Çamlık Sok. 4 in Kum neighborhood of Amasra.

History

The foundation of Amasra Museum goes back to 1955 when the collected items, which were stored in a small hall in the municipality building, were opened to the public as an exhibition. In 1969, the museum moved to a former primary school building. On 30 January 1982, it was transferred to its current building. The construction of this building as a naval school began in 1884, it remained however unfinished. In 1975, the building was acquired by the Ministry of Culture and completed in 1976.

The museum building underwent a thorough restoration between 2014 and 2015.

Exhibits

The one-story building consists of four halls, two reserved for archaeological artifacts and two for ethnographic items. Most of the exhibits are collected from Amasra and around. The museum holds a total of 1,168 items, 901 archaeological and 744 ethnographic.

The museum yard contains stone artifacts from the Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Genoese periods.

A map of the Mediterranean Sea, dating back to 1884 and printed in the court printing shop, hangs on the wall of the museum's hallway.

Archaeology section

In the Hall #1, small-sized artifacts of the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods are exhibited. These are terracotta and glass teardrop and perfume bottles, golden and bronze jewelry found in graves as well as various amphoras and jugs extracted from undersea. There are bronze figurines, bracelets, fish hooks, Christian crosses, weapons, oil lamps, pots and also golden, silver and bronze coins on display.

The Hall #2 contains marble artifacts like statues, busts, steles and architectural elements with relief ornaments from Helenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Genoese periods.

Ethnogrphy section

Small-sized objects from the late Ottoman period are exhibited in the Hall #1 of the Ethnography section including copper kitchenware, weapons, writing tools, candelabra, seals, scales, earthenware and rings. In addition, wooden pots are on display reflecting the art of wood cutting unique to the Amasra region.

Hall #2 is reserved for apparel and silver jewelry of the region from the late Ottoman period. These are coverlets, pillow covers, Qurans, carpets, bath gloves and old wall clocks.

References

Amasra Museum Wikipedia