Turkey's Troy Museum poised to be Europe's best in 2020
A selection of artifacts on display at the Troy Museum. (AA Photo)


The Troy Museum, which showcases the 5,000-year history of Çanakkale province, has been nominated for the European Museum of the Year Award (EMYA) in 2020, organized by the European Museum Forum and known as the "Oscars" for museums. The museum, built at the entrance to the ancient city of Troy and containing priceless historical artifacts, is primed to be a new star in 2020.

The widespread interest of visitors and praise from institutions and organizations considered authorities in the world of arts have attested to the fact that the Troy Museum has added cultural value to Turkey since it opened in 2018. Inside the museum, the culture and archaeological history of Troy and its civilizations, which left their mark in the Troas region that was recorded in history with Homer's "Iliad," are told through 2,000 artifacts unearthed during excavations. With the project, Troy's treasures that were smuggled and made their way abroad were returned to the lands to which they belong. The museum has inspired hope that all of Troy's treasures on display at seven museums around the world will be returned.

Troy is significant as a reference point for several civilizations. One can see the influence of Troy from Greek mythology all the way to European culture. It has influenced peoples from the Caucasus, Persia and several Anatolian civilizations. We can see it in the foundations of Rome and Paris and many other places.

A key center of dialogue since 2,000 B.C., Troy has played a vital role between the east and west. Sometimes the city was the center for trade and dialogue, while sometimes it became the land of fire between the east and west.

The Troy Museum, located at the entrance of the ancient city in Çanakkale, was built on an indoor area of approximately 11,000 square meters on 100 acres of land. The museum, with its 3,000-square-meter exhibition hall, features sculptures, sarcophagi, inscriptions, altars, milestones, axes and cutters, terra cotta pottery, metal vessels, gold pieces, weapons, coins, bone objects and tools, glass bracelets, ornaments, figurines, glass and terra cotta scent bottles and tear bottles.

Visitors can explore seven distinct sections in the museum categorized as Troas Archaeology, Troy Bronze Age, Iliad and Trojan War, Troas and Ilion in the Ancient Times, Eastern Roman and Ottoman Period, Archaeological History and Troy's Traces.

On the ground floor, the Troas region is introduced with its archaeological remains. The exhibit also includes the history of the cities of Assos, Tenedos, Parion, Alexandria Troas, Smintheion, Lampsakos, Tyhmbria, Tavolia and Imbros, information about the archaeological remains of these cities and historical artifacts from these periods.

The Bronze Age of Troy is introduced on the first floor, with a ship-shaped showcase indicating the importance of this age in maritime commerce and a screen mirroring the effects of the story behind the city's war-induced abandonment at the end of the Late Bronze Age. The "Luvi Seal," which is the oldest written document from Troy, is also displayed on this floor.

On the second floor, the Trojan War – the subject of storybooks and films – and its heroes, events and locations, as well as coins, pottery and marble works of this period are introduced by means of drawings, models and digital programs.

The museum will be named the European Museum of the Year in May on the last day of the European Museum Forum's annual conference, which will be held at the Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales in Cardiff, the U.K., from April 29 to May 2. Turkey won its last European Museum of the Year Award in 1997 when the Ankara Museum of Anatolian Civilizations was named the winner.