Archaeological Museum of Milos

The Archaeological Museum of Milos is a museum, in Plaka, Milos on Milos, in Greece. 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 indeed in Ashmolean Museum (Oford), in the British Museum and in the National Museum of Athens and elsewhere around the world, but also here to Milos remained enough nice things.

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

Room 1

The first room hosts a 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 sice Neolithic to early Bronze Age.

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.

Room 3

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

Room 4

Ancient Greek pottery.

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

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.