Archaeological Museum of Drama


The Archaeological Museum of Drama is located in the city of Drama in East Macedonia and Thrace, Greece. It was built by the Municipality of Drama and inaugurated on 12 December 1999.
The exhibits record the cultural history of Drama prefecture from the Middle Palaeolithic to 1914. The oldest finds come from excavations in the cave at the source of the River Angitis, and the museum also displays tools, jewellery, and pots from the prehistoric settlements of Sitagra and Arkadikos from the Early Bronze Age, the Late Bronze Age, and from the Early Iron Age.
The museum also has examples of Attic pottery, a marble bust of Dionysos, which constitutes the earliest evidence of his cult in the wider area, a hoard of coins of Philip II from an excavation at Potami, and other finds from the ancient settlement of Drama. Most of the finds from the Roman period come from the city of Philippi, though some are from other areas.
The Early Christian period in the area is represented by coins and pottery from the settlement at Drama and from Philippi. The most characteristic of the few monuments of the Byzantine period are a stone sundial with engraved hours from the Palaiohori area, and pottery, coins, and jewellery from Drama, Adriani, and Ksiropotamos.
The museum also displays a hoard of Ottoman coins, icons and architectural members from post-Byzantine churches, and a number of photographs of Drama and the surrounding area prior to liberation in 1913. Sculptures from the ancient period to the time of Ottoman rule are displayed in the covered atrium.