The Museum of Islamic Art at the Pergamon Museum

The Pergamon Museum in Berlin is world-famous for its incredible collection of ancient artefacts, including the iconic Ishtar Gate, a breathtaking reconstruction of Babylon’s monumental entrance. However, on the upper floor we can visit the Museum of Islamic Art, which showcases over a millennium of Islamic artistic and cultural achievements. It contains a wide variety of artefacts, including intricately woven Persian carpets, ceramic tiles, manuscripts, and fine metalwork from various regions such as Iran, Turkey, and Egypt.

One of the highlights of the collection is the Aleppo Room, a remarkable example of 17th-century Syrian interior design. This beautifully preserved wooden panelling once furnished the reception hall of a wealthy Christian merchant’s home in Aleppo, then part of the Ottoman Empire. The room’s walls are adorned with vibrant floral motifs, geometric patterns, and inscriptions in Arabic, blending secular and religious imagery in a way that reflects the multicultural nature of life in Aleppo at the time. The panels were sold to a collector in 1912 and later donated to the Pergamon Museum, where they’ve been carefully displayed for over a century. You cannot however admire this room at close as it is hidden behind a glass.

Aleppo Rooom in Museum of Islamic Art at Pergamon Museum

While exploring the museum, my attention was particularly drawn to the collection of prayer niches, known as mihrabs. Several of these mihrabs are on display, each one intricately decorated with geometric designs, calligraphy, and floral motifs. A mihrab is a semicircular recess in the wall of a mosque that indicates the direction of prayer (qibla), which is the direction Muslims should face during prayer – towards Mecca. Mihrabs can be made from various materials, such as marble, ceramics, or wood, and their decorations often include geometric patterns, calligraphy featuring verses from the Qur’an, and plant motifs, characteristic of Islamic art. The mihrab serves both a practical and symbolic function – it is the central point of the prayer space in a mosque and helps worshippers unite in prayer towards the holy city of Islam.

Prayer niches in Museum of Islamic art at Pergamon Museum

The collection of the Museum of Islamic Art at Pergamon Museum was established at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, during a time when interest in Eastern art and culture was growing in Europe. During this period, German archaeologists and researchers conducted numerous expeditions to countries in the Middle East, such as Syria, Egypt, Iran, Turkey, and Iraq. From these expeditions, many Islamic art pieces, including ceramics, textiles, metalwork, and manuscripts, were brought to Berlin.

The Museum of Islamic Art at the Pergamon Museum

Trajan

Ancient statues and busts are the only surviving testimony to how people looked like in ancient times. Let us meet another great Roman figure – Emperor Trajan. The statue on the photo below was discovered in Rome in the XVIth century and was acquired by the Elector of Brandenburg in the XVIIth century. It has been in the collection of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin since 1907.

Trajan statue in Pergamon Museum, Berlin.

Trajan was a Roman emperor who ruled from 98 to 117 AD. He was born Marcus Ulpius Traianus in Spain in 53 AD and came from a family of modest means. However, he rose through the ranks of the Roman military and eventually became the first non-Italian to be appointed emperor.

Trajan is often considered one of Rome’s greatest emperors due to his successful military campaigns, his extensive public building programs, and his reputation for fairness and administrative efficiency. During his reign, he expanded the Roman Empire to its largest territorial extent, conquering territories in Dacia (modern-day Romania) and Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq), as well as undertaking significant building projects in Rome and throughout the empire. Trajan was also known for his social welfare policies, such as providing free grain to the poor in Rome and undertaking major public works projects to provide employment for the masses. He was also a patron of the arts, commissioning numerous public monuments and buildings, including Trajan’s Column in Rome and the Forum of Trajan.

Visiting Rome you can see a well preserved buiilding complex called the Markets of Trajan located adjacent to Trajan’s Forum. It was constructed by the architect Apollodorus of Damascus during the reign of Emperor Trajan. The complex consists of a series of multi-level buildings built into the hillside of the Quirinal Hill, with over 150 shops and offices located on several different levels. It was designed to serve as a center for commerce and trade in Rome and was likely also used for administrative and governmental purposes. The Markets of Trajan are considered to be one of the earliest examples of a modern shopping mall, with their multi-level design and numerous shops and services catering to a wide range of customers. The complex also featured a large public space, likely used for public gatherings and social events. Today, the Markets of Trajan are part of the larger Trajan’s Forum archaeological site. The buildings are home to the Museum of the Imperial Fora, which displays artifacts and exhibits related to ancient Rome and the city’s imperial history.

Markets of Trajan as of today (I made the photo in 2015)

Trajan died in 117 AD and was succeeded by his adopted son, Hadrian.

Hadrian’s adoption by Trajan is an important event in Roman history. Trajan, who did not have a biological heir, had been grooming his grandnephew Gaius Vibius Sabinus as his successor. However, Sabinus died unexpectedly while still young, and Trajan was left without a clear successor. At this point, he turned to Hadrian, who was a prominent military commander and political figure in Rome. He saw in Hadrian the qualities necessary to lead the Roman Empire, including military experience, administrative skills, and political savvy. While on his deathbed, Trajan officially adopted Hadrian as his son and heir, making him the new emperor. The adoption was later confirmed by the Roman Senate, and Hadrian became one of Rome’s most successful and influential emperors.

Trajan

The Ishtar Gate of Babylon

The Ishtar Gate, constructed in the 6th century BCE during the reign of King Nebuchadnezzar II, was one of the main entrances to the ancient city of Babylon (in present-day Iraq). Located on the northern side of the city, it was part of a grand complex of walls, gates, and palaces. Renowned for its striking design, the gate was dedicated to Ishtar, the Babylonian goddess of love, fertility, and war.

King Nebuchadnezzar II was a Babylonian king who ruled from 605–562 BCE. He is known for his military conquests, including the capture of Jerusalem and the destruction of the First Temple in 586 BCE. He is also remembered for his monumental building projects, such as the legendary Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

The Ishtar Gate was built using baked bricks in varying shades of blue, glazed to achieve a glossy finish, making it a visually striking structure. The intense blue color symbolized the divine realm, evoking the sky and the presence of the gods, and was meant to impress and overwhelm all who approached.

Constructed in the Babylonian architectural style, the gate featured a tall arched entrance flanked by towers, forming a monumental threshold to the inner city. Its surface was adorned with reliefs of dragons, lions, and bulls arranged in alternating rows. Each animal was molded separately and then affixed to the wall, showcasing the technical mastery of the artisans. These creatures were not decorative alone – they carried deep symbolic meaning: dragons represented Marduk, Babylon’s chief deity; lions were associated with Ishtar, the goddess to whom the gate was dedicated; and bulls symbolized Adad, the god of storms.

The construction process was highly complex, requiring skilled artisans proficient in brick-making and glazed tile-work. But beyond craftsmanship, the gate served as a political and religious statement – a bold declaration of royal power and divine favor. As people passed through it, often during ritual processions, they experienced not only the grandeur of architecture, but also the ideological core of the Babylonian empire: a world governed by gods, ruled by kings, and expressed in stone and fire-glazed brick.

The Ishtar Gate was rediscovered in the early 20th century by a team of German archaeologists led by Robert Koldewey. Koldewey had been excavating the site of Babylon since 1899, uncovering numerous significant structures and artifacts from the ancient city. In 1902, he began a targeted excavation to locate the Ishtar Gate, long known from ancient texts but yet to be identified.

After several months of work, his team uncovered part of the gate’s foundations, including fragments of its original blue-glazed bricks. Over the next few years, they carefully excavated and documented the remains, which proved to be in remarkably good condition, despite their age and centuries of exposure.

Eventually, the gate was dismantled and transported to Germany, where it was entrusted to a team of experts under the leadership of Wilhelm von Bode. The reconstruction process involved painstakingly fitting together thousands of pieces, including the glazed bricks and the intricately molded figures of animals and deities that once adorned the gate.

In 1930, the reconstructed Ishtar Gate was installed in the main hall of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin. Although the museum had not been built specifically for the gate, it provided an appropriately grand setting for this monumental artifact. The Pergamon Museum, originally established in the early 20th century to house the Prussian royal collections, had grown to include major archaeological finds from across the ancient world. The Ishtar Gate, acquired in the 1920s along with other treasures from Babylon, became one of its most iconic exhibits.

In the early 20th century, German archaeologists emerged as some of the most prominent and influential figures in the field. At the time, archaeology was still a developing discipline, and German scholars helped define the methodologies and techniques that continue to influence archaeological practice today.

Among the most notable figures was Heinrich Schliemann, known for his excavations at Troy and Mycenae, and Robert Koldewey, whose work in Babylon, particularly on the Ishtar Gate, became internationally recognized. Other influential archaeologists included Ernst Curtius, who excavated Olympia, and Hermann Thiersch, who worked at Pergamon. Their research was often state-supported, with backing from the German government, which viewed archaeology as a means to assert cultural and political influence abroad.

Central to these efforts was the German Oriental Society (Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft, or DOG), founded in 1898 in Berlin. Dedicated to the study of the Middle East and Central Asia, the DOG played a key role in organizing expeditions and publishing scholarly work that shaped the image of the ancient Near East in Europe. The Society also positioned Germany in direct competition with Britain and France, both of which were conducting their own large-scale excavations. This created an atmosphere in which archaeology became a form of soft power, used to reinforce national prestige through cultural discovery.

The work of German archaeologists in the early 20th century has been criticized for various reasons. One of the main criticisms is that they were motivated by nationalist and imperialist interests and used archaeology to support these agendas. For example, some archaeologists saw themselves as uncovering the roots of a supposed Aryan race and used their work to support Nazi ideology. Another criticism is that German archaeologists were often more interested in exporting artifacts back to Germany rather than preserving them in the country of origin. This led to the removal of many important artifacts from their original context, which made it difficult for subsequent generations of archaeologists to properly study and interpret them. Additionally, some scholars have criticized German archaeologists for practicing a top-down approach to archaeology, which prioritizes the study of elites and high culture rather than the experiences of ordinary people. This approach can result in a skewed understanding of the past, which ignores the perspectives and contributions of marginalized groups.

By the late 1970s, the Iraqi government expressed a desire to repatriate the Ishtar Gate and other artifacts from the Pergamon Museum. However, the request was not granted, due to concerns about the safety and preservation of the artifacts, as well as disputes over ownership and legal claims.

If you’re curious to see more from the Pergamon Museum, I’ve shared a photo gallery just below.

The Ishtar Gate of Babylon