Lydia and Phrygia | Essay | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History (2024)

Located in western Anatolia and bordered by the kingdom of Phrygia to the east and Ionia to the west, the kingdom of Lydia flourished during the first millennium B.C. Much of what is known about Lydia derives from the Greek historian Herodotus (fifth century B.C.). He records that King Gyges founded a dynasty (in the late eighth to seventh century B.C.) that flourished until the Achaemenid Persian period. Herodotus also records information about the political relationship between Lydia and its eastern neighbor Phrygia. He reports that Midas, son of King Gordios of Phrygia, was the first Near Easterner to dedicate gifts to the Greek oracle at Delphi, and that the second was Gyges of Lydia. Midas’ dedication would have occurred in the late eighth century B.C., Gyges’ in the late eighth or seventh century, an event likely prompted by knowledge of Midas’ earlier dedication. The precise chronological relationship between Gyges and Midas remains under debate. To Herodotus, the two monarchs were in part contemporary, but from Assyrian texts we know that Gyges also ruled at the time of the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal (r. 668–627 B.C.). The first Assyrian reference to Gyges was in the 660s and concerned attacks by the Cimmerians, nomadic invaders from the Caucasus who had previously ravaged Urartu and Phrygia. The Assyrian texts state that Gyges defeated the Cimmerians, but that a decade later he was defeated and killed by them. Whether Gyges was an old man at his death and had been a contemporary of Midas, or was a later, seventh-century king, remains unresolved.

Herodotus also provides a moving description of the Lydian king Alyattes’ confrontation at Pteria in Central Anatolia with the Medes, who invaded from Iran, across the Zagros Mountains. In 585 B.C., following a surprise eclipse during a battle, a treaty was signed, and Alyattes’ sister married the Median king. Herodotus also records a later event that links Lydia to Phrygia: Adrastus, a son of the Phrygian king Gordios, son of Midas, sought sanctuary at the Lydian court of King Croesus. Both kingdoms eventually and simultaneously succumbed to the successors of the Medes, the Persians, whose king Cyrus captured Sardis in 546 B.C. Phrygia and Lydia ceased to be independent kingdoms and became provinces (satrapies) of the Persians.

The capital city Sardis is the prime source of Lydian cultural remains. It was first excavated in the early twentieth century and extensively from 1958 to the present. Given the massive overlay of post-Lydian settlements, little of the pre-seventh-century remains—and, indeed, relatively little of the kingdom’s architectural and cultural remains—have been uncovered, except for parts of a monumental fortification wall. A large group of burials each placed under a tumulus exist here, a few of which have been investigated, but they had been robbed in the past; one of them is the largest in Anatolia (198 feet high), and may have held the body of Alyattes; another is claimed for Gyges.

From limited inscriptions, scholars know that Lydian was an Indo-European, Anatolian language. Its culture was basically Anatolian, but by the sixth century B.C., the state maintained strong contacts with Greek cities to its west. Local examples of Phrygian fibulae (ancient safety pins), pottery and metal vessel shapes, decorated roof tiles, and probably the tumulus burial custom also attest to contact with Phrygia. Indeed, a rich tumulus burial containing many typical Phrygian artifacts was excavated in 1986 at Bayandir, not far from Lydian territory.

Lydia was reputed to have much gold. Herodotus records the wealth and variety of Lydian gold artifacts, and a gold refinery has been excavated at Sardis. Lydia has been credited asthe first state to have coinedmoney. Lydian pottery is easily identifiable. Especially characteristic is a distinctive shape called a lydion that probably contained a cosmetic, and also a typical form of wavy decoration called marbling; examples of both have been found at many sites, including Gordion—helping to date specific architectural features.

Citation

Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Lydia and Phrygia.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/lygo/hd_lygo.htm (October 2004)

Further Reading

Muscarella, Oscar W. "Phrygian or Lydian?" Journal of Near Eastern Studies 30, no. 1 (1971), pp. 49–63.

Ramage, Andrew, and Paul Craddock. King Croesus' Gold: Excavations at Sardis and the History of Gold Refining. Cambridge, Mass.: British Museum Press, 2000.

Additional Essays by Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art

  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Hittites.” (October 2002)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Halaf Period (6500–5500 B.C.).” (October 2003)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Ubaid Period (5500–4000 B.C.).” (October 2003)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Ur: The Royal Graves.” (October 2003)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Ur: The Ziggurat.” (October 2002)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Uruk: The First City.” (October 2003)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Ebla in the Third Millennium B.C..” (October 2002)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Ugarit.” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Animals in Ancient Near Eastern Art.” (February 2014)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Urartu.” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Trade between the Romans and the Empires of Asia.” (October 2000)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Parthian Empire (247 B.C.–224 A.D.).” (originally published October 2000, last updated November2016)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Nabataean Kingdom and Petra.” (October 2000)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Palmyra.” (October 2000)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Art of the First Cities in the Third Millennium B.C..” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Sasanian Empire (224–651 A.D.).” (originally published October 2003, last updatedApril 2016)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Colossal Temples of the Roman Near East.” (October 2003)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Assyria, 1365–609 B.C..” (originally published October 2004, last revised April 2010)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Achaemenid Persian Empire (550–330 B.C.).” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Akkadian Period (ca. 2350–2150 B.C.).” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Year One.” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Early Dynastic Sculpture, 2900–2350 B.C..” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Early Excavations in Assyria.” (October 2004; updated August 2021)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Trade Routes between Europe and Asia during Antiquity.” (October 2000)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Phrygia, Gordion, and King Midas in the Late Eighth Century B.C..” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “Trade between Arabia and the Empires of Rome and Asia.” (October 2000)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Nahal Mishmar Treasure.” (October 2004)
  • Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Phoenicians (1500–300 B.C.).” (October 2004)
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Lydia and Phrygia | Essay | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History (2024)
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