Get Sleepy: Sleep meditation and stories - The Mausoleum of Halicarnassus (Seven Wonders #4)
Episode Date: August 20, 2025Narrator: Thomas Jones 🇬🇧Writer: Jo Steer ✍️Sound effects: sea waves 🌊 Welcome back, sleepyheads. Tonight, we continue our exploration of the Seven Ancient Wonders with a visit to the ...Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, a white stone building on a beautiful hilltop. 😴 Includes mentions of: Death, Marriage, Ancient History, Military History. Watch, listen and comment on this episode on the Get Sleepy YouTube channel. And hit subscribe while you're there! Enjoy various playlists of our stories and meditations on our Slumber Studios Spotify profile. Connect Stay up to date on all our news and even vote on upcoming episodes! Website: getsleepy.com/ Facebook: facebook.com/getsleepypod/ Instagram: instagram.com/getsleepypod/ Twitter: twitter.com/getsleepypod Our Apps Redeem exclusive unlimited access to Premium content for 1 month FREE in our mobile apps built by the Get Sleepy and Slumber Studios team: Deep Sleep Sounds: deepsleepsounds.com/getsleepy/ Slumber: slumber.fm/getsleepy/ FAQs Have a query for us or need help with something? You might find your answer here: Get Sleepy FAQs About Get Sleepy Get Sleepy is the #1 story-telling podcast designed to help you get a great night’s rest. By combining sleep meditations with a relaxing bedtime story, each episode will guide you gently towards sleep. Get Sleepy Premium Get instant access to ad-free episodes and Thursday night bonus episodes by subscribing to our premium feed. It's easy! Sign up in two taps! Get Sleepy Premium feed includes: Monday and Wednesday night episodes (with zero ads). An exclusive Thursday night bonus episode. Access to the entire back catalog (also ad-free). Extra-long episodes. Exclusive sleep meditation episodes. Discounts on merchandise. We’ll love you forever. Get your 7-day free trial: getsleepy.com/support. Thank you so much for listening! Feedback? Let us know your thoughts! getsleepy.com/contact-us/. Get Sleepy is a production of Slumber Studios. Check out our podcasts, apps, and more at slumberstudios.com. That’s all for now. Sweet dreams ❤️ 😴 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Get Sleepy, where we listen, we relax, and we get sleepy.
As always, my name's Thomas, and I'm your host.
Tonight we return to our Sleepy series exploring the seven wonders of the ancient world,
written by Joe and read by me
don't worry if you haven't heard the other stories yet
you can continue listening to this one now
and catch any that you've missed at another time
tonight we're travelling to what is today
to Kia to the mausoleum of Haliconassus
We'll learn all about this architectural masterpiece
and see it as it was in 350 BCE
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Simon will be reading a lovely laid-back story about a retired man who's putting the finishing touches to his garden
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Thank you so much for your support.
Now, my friends, let's take the time to relax and unwind, preparing for our story in the usual way.
Move into a position that feels easy and comfortable.
Take a deep breath and close your eyes.
In a moment, we'll begin a breathing space meditation,
briefly checking in with our thoughts and feelings
before using the breath to reset and refresh.
Let's begin now by observing the mind
in the same way that we might watch the weather from a window
see the mind in its current state
you can notice thoughts like passing clouds
then let them go
and return to watching
I'll leave you for a moment to try this
Now
shift your attention
and repeat this practice, but with feelings and sensations.
Simply notice what arises in your body.
Then let go of what you notice and return to observing.
Try this now.
And lastly, bring your attention to the breath, wherever you feel it most strongly in the body.
Inhale through the nose and exhale.
through the mouth, keeping your breathing deep and gentle.
Use the breath to let go of the day and to make the transition into rest and night time.
Now, allow the breath to fade into the background, and follow my voice as we travel to a place
that is known today as Bodrum on the southwest coast of modern-day Tekeye.
This is where our story begins.
Imagine that you're standing with your eyes shut.
Imagine that you're standing with your eyes shut, listening to the sounds of water lapping
against a shore.
You can smell the essence of salt water on the breeze.
It is sea air, refreshing and healing.
Opening your eyes, you look out at the sea.
The Aegean is the color of lapis lazuli.
It has to be one of the loveliest sights, stretching out majestically all the way to the horizon.
Not only is it beautiful, but it's blissfully tranquil,
especially today when the sea is so calm.
Rolling waves are little more than ripples,
and the breeze is so light,
it barely touches the water.
Rays of sunlight are reflected across its surface, appearing white and luminous against shades
of blue.
It's as if diamonds have been scattered across the water, visible only in moments when they
catch the daylight.
In between them, at the centre of your viewpoint, a carpet of white light runs across the water.
It highlights the mist that rises above its surface, creating an effect that seems otherworldly.
The morning sun is directly above, a ball of white light behind a thin cloak of clouds.
It outlines every curve, every shadow in the clouds, and the patches of blue sky that are
scattered amongst them.
It's the kind of scene that you might see in a painting.
The clouds textured as if they were formed in oil.
Though the colours are soft, muted and pastel, closer to what you'd see in a watercolour landscape.
You'd think it impossible to find a prettier view if it weren't for the one directly behind you.
Turning around, you gaze up a tall grassy hill to the silhouette of what looks like an ancient Greek temple.
Although you can't see it fully, you know what it is.
It's the mausoleum of Halicarnassus.
You've travelled back in time over two and a half thousand years to when this ancient wonder
has only recently been completed.
350 BCE in the region of Anatolia, which will later become Turkia.
Anatolia is part of the massive Persian Empire, which stretches from southeastern Europe to modern-day
Afghanistan.
Anacarnassus is at the empire's western end.
in the kingdom of Karea on the Aegean coastline.
Kariah is ruled by a Satrap or governor
who is ulcerable to the Persians
but allowed substantial autonomy.
Until 353 BCE, just a few years ago,
the region was ruled by King Morsolus.
You might recognize his name as the root of mausoleum,
a title given only to the most magnificent of tombs.
Morsolus was much more than a governor for the Persians.
He was a powerful king in his own right.
He kept the Persians happy with an annual tribute, whilst his armies conquered Carrier's
neighbours and continuously expanded his kingdom.
Ruling for a total of 24 years, the king earned a reputation as an ambitious builder.
He had newly founded cities built from scratch, laid out in the style of ancient Greek cities.
Morsolus was a fan of ancient Greek culture, from the language and customs to the style of architecture.
Nowhere was this more obvious than in the city of Halicarnassus, which he named his capital early in his reign.
Alongside his wife, Queen Artemisia II, the king spent huge amounts of tax money on the Greek metropolis.
The city was rebuilt on a new grid pattern, and the streets were lined with gorgeous buildings.
A grand royal palace was erected on an outcrop, overlooking the waves of the Aegean Sea.
It was a stone's throw from the Temple of Apollo, the Greek god of healing amongst his
titles.
Other temples were peppered about the capital, where visitors could go to worship the gods.
There was also an Agora for public meetings, and a Greek-style amphitheatre where audiences were entertained.
And of course there was also the grand mausoleum, the crown jewel of Halakarnassus.
You can see it now, above you on the hill.
It looks every bit like a grand Greek temple overlooking the city on one side and the sea
on the other. Seen as it is in 350 BCE, it will remain here and intact for 16 centuries.
The second longest survivor of all seven ancient wonders, only the Pyramid of Giza will last
any longer.
This is particularly impressive, considering what the city will endure, being sacked by pirates
on multiple occasions.
Less than two decades from our visit, Alexander the Great himself will take the city
by storm when fighting the Persians.
Halicarnassus will be consumed by flames when the Persians set fires as they evacuate the capital
and yet the mausoleum will remain untouched, one of the few buildings still standing
once the smoke has cleared.
Even when the building does eventually topple,
after a series of earthquakes in the 1400s,
the base of the mausoleum will remain standing,
while the rest of the capital is all but flattened.
The structure that we see now, in 350 BCE, is how the mausoleum would have most likely looked.
It's based on a blend of facts and assumptions, and the many artefacts later found in the region.
Also, the words of ancient writers, like the Roman historian Pliny the Alda, his description
of the tomb, alongside those of many others, help fill in the details of the building and its surroundings.
With this in mind, let's return to the hillside, where the Aegean Sea lapsed gently behind you.
You're gazing upwards to the distant mausoleum as you bask in the freshness of the salty air.
You begin walking, finding yourself drawn towards the hilltop.
It's as if you're being pulled up by some invisible thread, though your footsteps are
as slow and rhythmic as the waves.
The path you tread is one of loose gravel.
It runs up from the coastline between blankets of grass.
Your feet are dressed in elegant leather sandals.
They are snug and comfortable, a perfect fit.
Above them, you wear a toga-like tunic, similar to those made fashionable by the ancient
Greeks.
The salty breeze blows gently behind you, wafting through the lightweight material.
The sounds of the breeze and the flapping of your clothes blend with the rhythm of the rhythm
of the waves behind you.
This is further punctuated
by the crunching of gravel
underfoot
as you wander leisurely
up the hill.
Occasionally, you pass
by buildings on the grass,
their walls topped with roofs
of terracotta tiles.
Fields of corn swayed gently between them, bordered in places by trees and bushes.
Corn stalks rustle and crunch in the breeze, alongside the leaves on the branches of trees.
Songbirds chirp from their nests in the branches, adding,
more layers to the natural soundtrack.
These sounds wash over you as you wander slowly, as do the sights that surround you
on the path. The landscape seems blurred, beautiful but dreamy, and your attention keeps
keeps returning to the structure above.
The building is more visible with each passing moment, with each and every step upwards
along the path. Soon, it is revealed to be gleaming white marble and far larger than it looked
from below. More of the landscape is exposed where the path curves around near the top of
the hill. You pause for a moment before you continue, glancing over your shoulder. The view from
From above is simply marvelous, from the lush green grass to those fields of corn.
The sea looks enormous and the colors are so vivid, though you can still smell the salt
as if you're standing beside the shore.
You breathe it in, gently and deeply, as you continue your walk.
The path takes you to the other side of the hilltop, where the view looks out across the capital.
You see figures clad in outfits like your own, wandering through a city, latticed with pathways.
Streets are flanked with villas and temples.
Terracotta roof tiles appeared tiny from above.
Halicarnassus is a coastal metropolis that might easily be mistaken for a city in ancient Greece.
Buildings have the flair of Greek architecture.
Many are held up on sleek marble pillars.
The larger villas have gaps in the roofline, where open-air courtyards display fountains and statues.
Even more decorate the streets and roadsides beside fire pits, trees, bushes and flowers.
A massive stone amphitheatre shines white like a beacon on pea-green grass to the left of your view.
It's the last thing you see before turning on the pathway, where you walk the steps of a wide stone stairway.
the steps lead up to the mausoleum's entrance an enclosed ivory passage
you pass large marble statues on your left and right the figures of soldiers riding on horseback
The stone sparkles where it catches the sunlight
It gives the sculptures an otherworldly glow
Looking up to the sky
You see the clouds have dispersed
The golden sun has come out of hiding
The breeze is cooler at the top of the hill, and you're grateful for the feeling of sun on your skin.
The warmth is comforting as you pass by the statues, walking through the entrance to a walled-in courtyard.
The floor here is made of stone.
It's as large in scale as a town square or plaza.
Every inch of the courtyard is bathed in sunlight, from the patterned mosaics to the walls that surround
them.
The mausoleum is positioned at the center of the courtyard, though it doesn't
It doesn't look anything like a tomb.
It's far closer in appearance to a classical Greek temple, a building one might find on the
Acropolis in Athens.
At 50 meters tall, it towers high above you on a massive podium of polished white stone.
stone. The surface is lined with decorative strips where various figures have been sculpted across
the surface. On top of the podium, there's a smaller inner chamber, something that the Greeks referred to as a
cellar. This carries the weight of an enormous roof, which counts for a third of the
building's height. Onlookers might assume that the roof is held up by the massive pillars
that surround the cellar. There are 36 in total placed evenly along the podium,
with just as many statues positioned between them.
From where you are, at the entrance of the courtyard,
you can make out sculptures of toga-clad figures.
Their surfaces have been painted,
so they appear very lifelike,
and add a pop of colour,
contrasting with the white.
These colourful figures gaze out across the patio
at each of the four sides of the mausoleum.
Though they're ten feet tall,
they are dwarfed by the pillars
and the walls of the cellar that rise up behind them.
The pillars stop at the base of the roof, where a sculpted frieze forms a band of decoration.
Animals have been carved from the marble, left unpainted against a ruby red background.
of it, the roof is shaped like a pyramid, with 24 steps rising up to a platform.
This is topped with another painted sculpture, two figures on a chariot with four horses
before them.
You stand for some time at the edge of the courtyard, taking it.
in the beauty of this grand mausoleum. You wonder if this is what the king had imagined
when he began making plans for the tomb's construction. Morsalis had been inspired by what he'd
seen in Lysia, a neighboring territory that his armies had conquered.
particularly the tomb, known as the Nereid Monument, built around the year 390 BCE.
The monument had been designed to look like a classical Greek temple, with lined ionic pillars and a triangular roof.
Statues of sea nymphs known as Neerite.
were positioned on a podium between the pillars.
Archaeologists and experts in the 21st century have used evidence from both buildings
to make 3D reconstructions.
The parallels are obvious when looking at the models, though the mausoleum here
is far larger and more elaborate.
We can certainly assume that the king would have been delighted had he lived to see his resting place
completed.
Sadly, he passed away in 353 BCE, leaving his wife to oversee the project.
Queen Artemisia had loved her husband dearly, and was determined to honour him with the grandest tomb.
She took the king's plans and expanded on them greatly, sparing no expense in building the mausoleum.
It said that the Queen sent messengers into Greece with the task of recruiting the finest artists and sculptors.
They returned to Halicarnassus with an army of craftsmen, a sizable workforce needed for such a project.
Included amongst them was a sculptor.
named Scopus, who had supervised the rebuilding of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus.
Like the Mausoleum, the temple at Ephesus would later make its name as another ancient wonder.
Sadly, the Queen would also pass away just a couple of years.
after her husband. So she too would never see it complete it, the glorious structure that
would house her remains. It's thought to have been finished during the reign of her brother,
King Idraeus, who ruled Caria after her. And perhaps
that makes it all the more special, and speaks to the love and respect between siblings.
What's also rather lovely is that the craftsmen stayed on, after the passing of both of their patrons.
Pliny the Elder reported that the artisans saw the building as a memorial of his own fame.
Essentially, it was a matter of professional pride and wanting to finish what they had started.
All things considered, this seems understandable.
On average, it took a whole year to carve a statue from marble.
Knowing this only adds to the feelings of awe and wonder that surround the mausoleum.
You feel as if you're in the presence of something magical or holy as you begin walking.
across the courtyard.
You enjoy the patter of your footsteps in sandals.
The sounds echo delicately across the stone.
It forms a gentle backdrop below the sound of the breeze
and the crackling of fire pits on cast iron stands.
These are lined up beside the courtyard's thick walls, positioned evenly like the pillars
of the mausoleum.
Flames dance across mounds of charcoal, sheltered from the wind by the cover of the walls.
You are gazing at the flames on one particular stand
when you notice another person with you in the courtyard.
He is dressed in a toga of pristine white fabric.
Its creases catch the sunlight as he wanders between fire pits.
It's likely that his job is to keep the fires burning
as he carries an iron rod in his hand.
You watch as he pokes it into the charcoal of a fire pit
and reinvigorates flames that had previously been dimming.
The man's demeanour is one of care and concentration.
His movements are slow, seeming almost ritualistic.
The flames of each fire seem to absorb his attention.
You don't think you've ever seen a person so focused.
yet relaxed.
He looks happy too, you note as you pass him.
He smiles and nods as you catch his eye.
In his gaze, you sense a feeling of shared appreciation,
an unspoken gratitude at being in sight.
such a place.
And what a place the mausoleum is!
The floor alone is a work of art.
It must have taken years to complete the mosaics in the courtyard to create such an array
of intricate patterns.
The building is framed by a mosaic of flowers, their massive petals made pointy and star-like.
These are ruby in colour, like the circles that surround them, and they shine like gemstones
against an ivory background.
And the flowers, within their circles, there are thick borders of lapis-blue stone.
The stone is the same colour as the waves of the Aegean Sea, even more so as it twinkles in the glow
of daylight. Strips of blue match others in the courtyard, including a double border around
the outer edge. It's only when casting your eyes towards this that you note the statues
of lions on the walls.
As with all of the statues that you've seen so far, the marble carvings are exceptionally well made.
Large and realistic, they guard the mausoleum, made to look as if they're prowling along the walls.
Similar creatures are placed high upon the building.
at each corner of the pyramid-like roof.
Above them, a chariot is pulled by four horses,
and on it are the figures of a man and woman.
You noticed this structure when you first saw the building.
It draws the eye at the pyramid's peak.
Now that you're closer, you can see it more clearly.
You can better make out the king and queen.
It's a fitting tribute to Morsolus and Artemisia, the couple for whom the building was erected.
to life in colour, they look regal and magnificent, atop a horse-drawn gold chariot that glitters in the sun.
The sculpture is striking, not only because it's handsome, but because it's so unusual to see a queen beside her husband.
This kind of sculpture would be unheard of in ancient Greece.
Wives weren't allowed into the king's chariot.
They weren't given that level of power.
Anywhere, that is, but the kingdom of Caria.
Queens of Caria, like Artemisia II, enjoyed four.
far greater power than their counterparts across Greece.
Scaling down from the chariot beneath the ruby red frieze, your gaze drifts towards the white marble
pillars.
The surfaces are ridged with vertical lines, true to the style known as the Ionic
order.
Colourful statues are striking beside the pillars.
Their tunics are shade of reddish orange.
Morsolus and Artemisia are depicted in stone, alongside 34 members of their extended family.
This is something else that sets the tomb apart from similar monuments and Greek temples of the time.
There's very little reference to the gods and goddesses, which tended to dominate contemporary architecture.
Instead of paying tribute to the deities of Mount Olympus, Artemisia chose to our own.
a more earthly beings. The building is a love token from a grieving widow to her husband. It
celebrates their marriage and their shared royal family. The family of statues stand on the
podium, where a bass relief has been carved from the stone. It tells a story from Greek mythology,
one known locally as Amazonamaki. It depicts Greece's victory over the Amazons, an all-female army thought to be
brutal and barbaric. The story was a celebration of all Greece stood for. It was a win for
civilization and mankind's progress. Images of Greek soldiers are immortalized on marble,
with weapons raised, some fighting from horseback.
Some wear capes, which appear creased and wrinkled.
They look as if they are flowing behind the warriors who wear them.
The Amazonian women appear equally lifelike,
recognizable in tunics
which are gathered at the waist
here again
the fabric appears ruffled
almost wind-swept
while their hair is plaited
looking neat and elegant
also included
are carvings of centaurs
whom the Greeks defeated alongside the Amazons.
These mythological creatures have a male torso, rising above the body of a magnificent horse.
It's hard to imagine a better way to tell a story than this stunning image chiseled from the marble.
Just as impressive are the massive sculpted horses on raised stands at each corner of the base.
Soldiers hold up their swords as if ready for battle, and the horses are rearing with their
front legs in the air. You note the definition in the horse's muscles and the exquisite details
in the soldier's armour. Not only does it speak to the talent of its maker, but the love
and care that was given to the project.
In the centre of a wall, you see what would have been a doorway, though now the entrance
has been sealed off in stone.
Beyond the walls, there are stairs flanked with lions that lead up to the inner chamber
or Sala.
This houses the remains of Morsolus and Artemisia, their ashes placed within decorative urns.
It also contains the jar of Xerxes, an object considered to be extremely valuable.
The Persian ruler, Xerxes the Great, only gave these jars to people of high importance.
It was slightly given to Artemisia the first and passed down through the royal family.
before the doorway, you reach out and touch the stone.
It hums beneath your fingers as if it's somehow alive.
You feel that you're connecting with something magical.
The marble feels cool and also electric.
You pause for a while enjoying the sensations, from the touch of the marble to the breeze on your skin.
Then you take some more time to wander around the building, absorbing details as you go.
from top to bottom the mausoleum takes your breath away it's a vision of elegance and is uniquely handsome
it's also symbolic of what humankind can achieve even without the technology of the 21st century
It's easy to see why Antipater of Sidon included the tomb in his famous poem.
Though this won't happen until the second century BCE when he lists what became known as the Seven Ancient Wonders.
It's in part thanks to Antipater's poem that the building will later draw attention from the Romans.
It will inspire the creation of many Roman tombs, which they'll call mausoleums in honour of this one.
In fact, the great monument at Halakarnassus will continue to inspire architects for thousands of years.
It will inspire famed buildings, like the Tomb of Ulysses S. Grant, built in 1897 in New York City.
Many Art Deco buildings from the 1920s and 30s are modern interpretations of the ancient tomb
like the National Diet Building in Tokyo, Japan and the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne, Australia.
This spirit of the mausoleum will live on in these buildings, a millennia after the earthquakes
that destroyed it, just as the legacy of King Morsolus will endure, in the name still given
to similar buildings.
What's more, the original isn't entirely gone, even in the 21st century.
Medieval knights used the ruins to build a castle in the defence against the Ottomans
in the 14th century.
Petronium
as it's called, or the castle of St. Peter is open to visitors in modern-day Bodrum.
The ancient mausoleum is built into its foundations, along with the remains of Halicarnassus.
Elsewhere, artefacts will be housed in museums, including many found in the 19th.
century, British archaeologist Charles Thomas Newton used the accounts of ancient writers to
decide where to dig.
That's how he found pieces of wall and staircase, as well as statues from the podium and
the top of the building.
and the jar of Xerxes made of ancient calcite, with the Persian ruler's name etched on its surface.
The best reliefs, which shows Greece's battle against the Amazons, had been used to fortify the castle at Bodrum,
until the British ambassador gained permission to transport them to the British Museum, where they still remain.
You think of such things as you stroll across the courtyard, examining the mausoleum from different viewpoints and angles,
until you've taken all you can from the marvellous building, and you retrace your steps.
Once again, the sun is blanketed by clouds, its rays dimmed beneath their cover.
It gives the illusion of being later in the day than it is.
is. The early afternoon could just as well be evening. You exit to the courtyard walking around its
outer rim, where you can hear the pop and crackle of fire pits. The flames look even brighter
beneath the cloudy sky.
They are a yellow shade of gold, with hints of red and orange.
Again, you see the man in his bright white toga.
He is tending to a fire not far from the entrance.
You exchange another smile as you exit through the passageway, walking down the steps and around the hilltop.
You come to a tree that you hadn't noticed earlier.
It's at the top of the slope overlooking the path.
You sit down on the grass and lean against its trunk beneath the shelter of its rustling canopy.
Here you sit and look out at the sea, absorbing the beauty of the lapis-colored waves.
The Aegean is just as humbling as the
as the building behind you, and one of the few things in the world that seems timeless and enduring.
You close your eyes and inhale deeply. The sense of the tree blend with the salty sea air.
You drink in the aromas with every inhalation, feeling calmer and more rested with each and every breath.
Your last conscious thought is an image of the mausoleum when you first saw it glowing in sunlight.
Then the image fades and you fall into a state of blissful relaxation.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We're going to be able to be.
Thank you.
Thank you.