the Celsus Library at Ephesus

 



The Celsus Library has been completely rebuilt and restored since 1970 and is the most photographed building in Ancient Ephesus. It, like most of the best-known buildings on Ceretes Street, was not built when St Paul stayed there for two years (see Acts 18:18-20). This amazing library could house 12,000 scrolls but it was also a mausoleum, built by a son to bury, honour and memorialise his father, the Roman Senator Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus, between 117 and 120 AD.

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