One of the
fully-restored structures at Ephesus is the Celsus Library. Around 92 AD
Roman Consul
Tiberius Julius Polemaeanus was responsible for public buildings in the
city of Rome, and was from 105 to 107 Proconsul for the province of
Asia, the capital of which was Ephesus. When the man Celsus died in 114
at the age of 70, his son, Tiberius Julia Aquila built he library for a
monument to his father. The construction was finished in 117. The
sarcophagus, made of exquisite marble, was buried under the apsidal
wall. Garlands, figures of Eros, Nike, and rosettes decorate the
sarcophagus. In 1904 the sarcophagus was opened and a second lead casket
was found inside. The structure of the building reflects the period of
the emperor Hadrian with its emphasis on the front of the building. The
façade is two-storied. The lower floor had pairs of Corinthian columns
with nine steps leading up to the entrance level that had a 21 m
entrance porch. There were three richly ornamented doors between the
columns, with the center door being the widest and highest.
The statues in the niches between
the doors are copies of originals, which were taken to Vienna during the
time of excavation. The statues represented various virtues, as
inscribed on their pedestals. The virtues of Celsus symbolized here were
Sophia (wisdom), Episteme (science), Ennoia (intelligence), and Arete
(excellence). The columns on the second floor were smaller with
triangular and semicircular capitals.

| Sophia
(wisdom) |
Episteme
(science) |
Ennoia
(intelligence) |
Arete
(excellence) |
The interior of the
library, measuring 10.92m by 16.72m, is lined with decorative marble.
The section of the west wall over Celsus' remains is aspidal. A statue
of Celsus, or of his son, was found during excavation and is still on
exhibition in Istanbul at the Archeology Museum and was thought to have
rested in this niche. On the walls were niches for the scrolls of the
library. From the niches in the upper wall it is understood that the
interior was not two-floored but that there was a mezzanine balcony
instead. The space behind the walls was left open to guard the scrolls
from moisture.
The niches could have held as
many as 12,000 scrolls. Because the library was built after the
buildings on either side of it, it was a bit squeezed in. Thus, the
desired monumental effect was enhanced by certain tricks played with the
perspective. The podium on which the columns rest, for example, was
built with a raised center and lowered sides. The capitals and rafters
on the end columns were made smaller to appear to be farther from the
center than they are, giving the building the appearance of being wider
than it really is.

The interior of the
library was completely burned when the Goths invaded in 262 AD, leaving
the façade intact. The façade was restored along with other buildings
in the 4th century and a small fountain was placed next to the steps.
The façade itself came down in the 10th century because of an
earthquake.
During excavation frieze blocks
were found on either side of the fountain depicting scenes from the
Parthian wars. The thoery was put forward that the frieze belonged to an
altar found on the south of the courtyard of the library. With the steps
leading down from the library on one side and the steps leading from the
street on the other, the total appearance of the courtyard is that of a
small amphitheater.

The wall and gate in
the center of the square made in a slipshod way of plaster and debris
were part of the city wall when the population of Ephesus was low in the
6th or 7th century. The sarcophagus in one corner of the square was
found in 1968 during library excavation. According to the inscription on
the cover it once belonged to Tiberius Claudius Flavianus Dionysuis in
the 2nd century.
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