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Mausoleum at Halicarnassus
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==Later history == [[File:TurkeyBodrumCastle.jpg|thumb|[[Bodrum Castle]]]] [[File:BodrumCastlesoutheast.jpg|thumb|The Castle from the south-east]] The Mausoleum overlooked the city of Halicarnassus for many years. It was untouched when the city fell to [[Alexander the Great]] in 334 BC and still undamaged after attacks by pirates in 62 and 58 BC. It stood above the city's ruins for sixteen centuries. Then a series of earthquakes shattered the columns and sent the bronze chariot crashing to the ground. By AD 1404, only the base of the Mausoleum was still recognizable. The [[Knights Hospitaller|Knights of St John of Rhodes]] invaded the region and built [[Bodrum Castle]] (''Castle of Saint Peter''). When they decided to fortify it in 1494, they used the stones of the Mausoleum. This is also about when "imaginative reconstructions" of the Mausoleum began to appear.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.sdu.dk/en/om_sdu/institutter_centre/ih/forskning/forskningsprojekter/halikarnassos/sites_and_places/mausolleion|title=The Maussolleion |website=SDU |language=da-DK |access-date=8 December 2017}}</ref> In 1522, rumours of a Turkish invasion caused the Crusaders to strengthen the castle at Halicarnassus (which was by then known as Bodrum) and much of the remaining portions of the tomb were broken up and used in the castle walls. Sections of polished marble from the tomb can still be seen there today. [[Suleiman the Magnificent]] conquered the base of the knights on the island of Rhodes, who then relocated first briefly to Sicily and later permanently to Malta, leaving the Castle and Bodrum to the [[Ottoman Empire]].{{Citation needed|date=October 2021}} During the fortification work, a party of knights entered the base of the monument and discovered the room containing a great coffin. In many histories of the Mausoleum one can find the following story of what happened: the party, deciding it was too late to open it that day, returned the next morning to find the tomb, and any treasure it may have contained, plundered. The bodies of Mausolus and Artemisia were missing too. The small museum building next to the site of the Mausoleum tells the story. Research done by archeologists in the 1960s shows that long before the knights came, grave robbers had dug a tunnel under the grave chamber, stealing its contents. Also, the museum states that it is most likely that Mausolus and Artemisia were cremated, so only an urn with their ashes was placed in the grave chamber. This explains why no bodies were found.{{Citation needed|date=October 2021}} Before grinding and burning much of the remaining sculpture of the Mausoleum into lime for plaster, the Knights removed several of the best works and mounted them in the Bodrum castle. There they stayed for three centuries.{{Citation needed|date=October 2021}}
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