April 2025 (129.2)

Archaeological Note

The Citadel of Gordion and the Dating of the Midas Monument at Midas City

By C. Brian Rose and Gareth Darbyshire

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The rock-cut Midas Monument at Midas City, about 150 km west of Gordion, appears to reproduce the kind of megarons that were in operation in Iron Age Phrygia. In a 2023 article in the AJA, Geoffrey Summers argued that the Midas Monument was carved in the early sixth century BCE, when the surrounding area was under Lydian control. In this note, we address his arguments in detail and maintain that the available evidence supports a late eighth-century BCE date for the carving of the Midas Monument, when Midas served as king of Phrygia.

The Midas Monument at Midas City (C.B. Rose; courtesy Penn Museum Gordion Project).

The Midas Monument at Midas City (C.B. Rose; courtesy Penn Museum Gordion Project).

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InscriptionsArchitectureIron AgeChronologyTurkey > Central Turkey
The Midas Monument at Midas City (C.B. Rose; courtesy Penn Museum Gordion Project).

The Midas Monument at Midas City (C.B. Rose; courtesy Penn Museum Gordion Project).