Theater at Ephesus

Title

Theater at Ephesus

Date

ca. 200 BCE

Identifier

1833

Work Type

Single Built Works

Work Location

Turkey (nation)
Ephesus (deserted settlement)

Style/Period

Hellenistic
Imperial (Roman)

Subject

amphitheaters (built works)

Description

View of the cavea and proscenium at the Great Theater at Ephesus, Turkey. "The magnificent theatre is set into the side of a steep hill at the center of the ancient city. Its design, location and conception may have benefited from Hellenistic influences but its size and ornamentations are the products of Empirical Rome. The theatre was built at the end of the Hellenistic period, but it was significantly altered and enlarged by the Romans during the following five centuries. The theatre remained in use until the 5th century AD ... A major Hellenistic construction phase in Ephesus at the end of the 3rd century BC most likely produced the initial theatre that featured a cavea with a single tier of seats, an orchestra with a drainage channel, and a simple one-story scaenae (stage house). Under the Romans, beginning about 40 AD, the theatre was expanded and renovated to become the massive structure that we see today,"--Department of Theatre, Whitman College website.

Material/Medium

marble (rock)

Measurements

Cavea width: 142 meters

Reproduction Type

jpeg

ID Number

A1GREPH7-11E2B2

Files

A1GREPH7-11E2B2.jpg
Date Added
August 29, 2013
Collection
LTU Digital Images
Item Type
VRA Core
Tags
Citation
“Theater at Ephesus,” LTU Digital Images, accessed May 16, 2024, https://ltuimagecollection.omeka.net/items/show/11482.