ANKARA: Municipal workers unexpectedly found an ancient sarcophagus during excavations in the Seyitgazi district of northwestern Turkey’s Eskişehir province, reports said. The marble sarcophagus, which is 1.5 meters (4.9 feet) tall and 33 centimeters (12.9 inches) wide, was found as the workers were excavating for a construction project in the Yazıdere neighborhood.
The district gendarmerie command immediately intervened and retrieved the sarcophagus as it was deemed a historical artifact, before being handed over to Eskişehir Museum officials for further analysis. Eskişehir has been a rich home to several archaeological discoveries and sarcophagi over the years, as the city hosts several official archaeological excavation sites, rather than relying on happy accidents. This has been the second exciting archaeological discovery made in the Seyitgazi district recently, as researchers had unearthed, a 5,000-year-old paint palette believed to be used for painting dishes in the Küllüoba settlement mound just last year.
Excavations at the Küllüoba site, which is believed to be 4,500 years old thus the oldest town of Eskişehir, have been ongoing since 1996 and so far fifteen burial sites have been discovered along with a 3,000-year-old sarcophagus and a 5,000-year-old sarcophagus which housed the remains of two possible relatives. – Agencies