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1,700-year-old Roman mosaics finally drops anchor in Israeli home

1,700-year-old Roman mosaics finally drops anchor in Israeli home

JERUSALEM (AP): A new Israeli museum is celebrating the homecoming of stunning 1,700-year-old Roman mosaics after more than a decade. The exceptional collection, which has previously toured the world, was put on public display for the first time Monday.

The mosaics were first discovered in the central city of Lod in 1996 but the Israel Antiquities Authority only fully unearthed the enormous, well-preserved artworks in 2009.

Workers clean the mosaic during the opening of the Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center in the city of Lod, Israel, June 27, 2022. (EPA)
Workers clean the mosaic during the opening of the Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center in the city of Lod, Israel, June 27, 2022. (EPA)

The collection stretches 17 meters by nine meters (56 feet by 30 feet). The mosaics feature a menagerie of animals, from fish and fowl to beasts that would have been exotic to ancient residents of Lod: an African elephant, rhinoceros and giraffe. Archaeologists believe the mosaics adorned an affluent villa in the third or fourth centuries, after Lod was rebuilt as the Roman city of Diospolis.

But for more than a decade, while Israeli authorities raised funds for a museum, the mosaics had no permanent home. They went on display at museums around the globe, including New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Louvre Museum in Paris and The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Workers clean a restored Roman-era mosaic ahead of its display in its hometown ahead of the inauguration of the Shelby White & Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center, in Lod, central Israel, Thursday, June 23, 2022. (AP)
A worker cleans a restored Roman-era mosaic ahead of its display in its hometown ahead of the inauguration of the Shelby White & Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center, in Lod, central Israel, Thursday, June 23, 2022. (AP)
A worker cleans a restored Roman-era mosaic ahead of its display in its hometown ahead of the inauguration of the Shelby White & Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center, in Lod, central Israel, Thursday, June 23, 2022. (AP)
A worker cleans the mosaic during the opening of the Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center in the city of Lod, Israel, June 27, 2022. (EPA)

The mosaics’ new home at the Shelby White and Leon Levy Mosaic Lod Archaeological Center features guided tours and interactive exhibits in Arabic, English and Hebrew. The museum is free for residents of Lod, a mixed Arab-Jewish city that saw bouts of sectarian violence in May 2021 during Israel’s war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

“Like a mosaic which brings many pieces together to be one wonderful picture … we are trying to bring all the local people – Jews and Arabs,” the museum’s project manager, Raanan Kislev, told The Associated Press (AP).

Shelby White, (C), Lod Mayor Yair Revivo and Israel Antiquities Authority Director Eli Eskosido look at a restored Roman-era mosaic during the inauguration of the Shelby White & Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center, in Lod, central Israel, Monday, June 27, 2022. (AP)
Shelby White, (C), Lod Mayor Yair Revivo and Israel Antiquities Authority Director Eli Eskosido look at a restored Roman-era mosaic during the inauguration of the Shelby White & Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Archaeological Center, in Lod, central Israel, Monday, June 27, 2022. (AP)

The museum hopes it will be a key attraction for tour groups, as Lod is strategically situated between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and next to the country’s main international airport. The museum is designed to recreate an ancient Roman villa like one that would have housed the mosaics.

“Our dream for this city – itself a mosaic of cultures – is being realized today right before of our eyes, as we dedicate this most important museum, placing Lod on the world tourism map,” said Mayor Yair Revivo.

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