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Aspendos,
located beside the river Eurymedon (Kpray), is renowned throughout
the world for its magnificent ancient amphitheatre.
According to Greek legend, the city was founded by Argive
colonists who, under the leadership of the hero Mopsos, came to Pamphylia
after the Trojan War. Aspendos was one of the first cities in the region to strike coinage
under its own name. On these silver staters dated to the fifth and fourth century B.C.,
however, the name of the city is written es Estwediiys in the local script. A late eighth
century B.C. bilingual inscription carved in both Hittite hieroglyphs and the Phoenician
alphabet discovered in the 1947 excavation of Karatepe near Adana, states that Asitawada,
the king of Danunum (Adana), founded a city called Azitawadda, a derivation of his own
name, and that he was a member of the Muksas, or Mopsus, dynasty. The striking similarity
between the names "Estwediiys" and "azitawaddi" suggests the
possibility that Aspendos was the city this king founded.
Aspendos did not play an important role in antiquity as a
political force. Its political history during the colonization period corresponded to the
currents of the Pamphylian region. Within this trend, after the colonial period, it
remained for a time under Lycian hegemony. In 546 B.C. it came under Persian domination.
The face that the city continued to mint coins in its own name, however, indicates that it
had a great deal of freedom even under the Persians.
In 467 B.C. the statesman and military commander Cimon, and
his fleet of 200 ships, destroyed the Persian navy based at the mouth of the river
Eurymedon in a surprise attack. In order to crush to Persian land forces, he tricked the
Persians by sending his best fighters to shore wearing the garments of the hostages he had
seized earlier. When they saw these men, the Persians thought that they were compatriots
freed by the enemy and arranged festivities in celebration. Taking advantage of this,
Cimon landed and annihilated the Persians. Aspendos then became a member of the
Attic-Delos Maritime league.
The Persians captured the city again in 411 B.C. and used
it as a base. In 389 B.C. the commander of Athens, in an effort to regain some of the
prestige that city had lost in the Peloponnesian Wars, anchored off the coast of Aspendos
in an effort to secure its surrender. Hoping to avoid a new war, the people of Aspendos
collected money among themselves and gave it to the commander, entreating him to retreat
without causing any damage. Even though he took the money, he had his men trample all the
crops in the fields. Enraged, the Aspendians stabbed and killed the Athenian commander in
his tent.
When Alexander the Great marched into Aspendos in 333 B.C.
after capturing Perge, the citizens sent envoys to him to request that he would not
establish that he be given the taxes and horses that they had formerly paid as tribute to
the Persian king. After reaching this agreement. Alexander went to Side, leaving a
garrison there on the city's surrender. Going back through Sillyon, he learned that the
Aspendians had failed to ratify the agreement their envoys had proposed and were preparing
to defend themselves. Alexander marched to the city immediately. When they saw Alexander
returning with his troops, the Aspendians, who had retreated to their acropolis, again
sent envoys to sue for peace. This time, however, they had to agree to very harsh terms; a
Macedonian garrison would remain in the city and 100 gold talents as well as 4.000 horses
would be given in tax annually.
During the wars that followed the death of Alexander, the
city came alternately under the control of the Ptolemies and the Seleucids, later falling
into the hands of the Kingdom of Pergamum, to which it remained bound until 133 B.C.
From Cicero's presentation of the case before the Roman
senate, we know that in 79 B.C. Gaius Verres, the questor of Cilicia, pillaged Aspendos
just as he had Perge. Verres, right in front of the citizens, took statues from the
temples and squares and had them loaded into carts. He even had Aspendos famous statue of
a harpist set up in his own home.
Aspendos, like most of the other Pamphylian cities, reached
its height in the second and third centuries A.D. Most of the monumental architecture
still visible here today dates to this golden age. Although the city was not on the coast,
the river Eurymedon, on whose banks it was situated, allowed ships to reach it. This
accessibility, together with the productive plain and the thickly forested mountains that
lay behind Aspendos, were major factors in its development. Gold and silver embroidered
tapestries woven in the city, furniture and figurines made from the wood of lemon trees,
salt obtained from nearby Lake Capria, wine, and especially the famous horses
of Aspendos were its foremost exports. Although they were renowned as grape
growers and wine merchants, they did not offer wine to their gods in their religious
rites. They explained this omission by saying that if wine were reserved for the gods,
birds would not have the courage to eat grapes.
Few Aspendians made a name for themselves in history.
Andromachos was a famous military commander in his day and was also the governor of
Phoenicia and Syria. Little is known of the work of the native philosopher Diodorus, but
that he wore the long hair, dirty clothes, and bare feet of the Cynics, which suggests he
was influenced by Pythagorus.
At the beginning of the thirteenth century, Aspendos began
to bear the imprint of settlement by the Seljuk Turks, especially during the reign of
Alaeddin Keykubat I, when the theatre was thoroughly restored, embellished in Seljuk style
with elegant tiles, and used as a palace.
At the end of the road that turns off the Antalya-Alanya
highway, we come to the most magnificent, as well as functionally the best resolved and
most complete example of a Roman theatre. The building, faithful to the Greek tradition,
is partially built into the slope of a hill. Today visitors enter the stage building via a
door opened in the facade during a much later period. The original entrances, however, are
the vaulted paradoses at both ends of the stage building. The cavea is semicircular in
shape and divided in two by a large diazoma. There are 21 tiers of seats above and 20
below. To provide ease of circulation so that the spectators could reach their seats
without difficulty, radiating stairways were built, 10 in the lower level starting at the
orchestra and 21 in the upper beginning at the diazoma. A wide gallery consisting of 59
arches and thought to have been built at a later date, goes from one end of the upper
cavea to the other. From an architectural point of view, the diazoma's vaulted gallery
acts as a substructure supporting the upper cavea. As a general rule of protocol, the
private boxes above the entrances on both sides of the cavea were reserved for the
Imperial family and the vestal virgins. Beginning from the orchestra and going up, the
first row of seats belonged to senators, judges, and ambassadors, while the second was
reserved for other notables of the city. The remaining sections were open to all the
citizens. The women usually sat on the upper rows under the gallery. From the names carved
on certain seats in the upper cavea, it is clear that these too were reserved. Although it
is impossible to determine the exact seating capacity of the theatre, it is said to have
seated between 10,000 and 12,000 people. In recent years,
concerts given in the theatre as part of the Antalya Film and Art Festival, have shown
that as many as 20,000 spectators can be crowded into the
seating area.
Without doubt the Aspendos theatre's most striking
component is the stage building. On the lower floor of this two-storey structure, which is
built of conglomerate rock, were five doors providing the actors entrance to the stage.
The large door at the centre was known as the porta regia, and
the two smaller ones on either side as the porta hospitales. The
small doors at orchestra level belong to long corridors leading to the areas where the
wild animals were kept. From surviving fragments it appears that sculptural works were
placed in niches and aedicula under triangular and semicircular pediments.
In the pediment at the centre of the colonnaded upper floor
is a relief of Dionysos, the god of wine and the founder and patron of theatres. Red
zigzag motifs against white plaster, visible on some portions of the stage building, date
to the Seljuk period. The top of the stage building is covered with a highly ornamented
wooden roof.
The theatre at Aspendos is also famous for its magnificent
accoustics. Even the sligtest sound made at the centre of the orchestra can
be easily heard as far as the uppermost galleries. Anatolia's patricians, who lived in the
midst of a rich cultural heritage, created stories connected with the cities and monuments
around them. One of these tales which has been passed down from generation to generation
is about Aspendos' theatre. The king of Aspendos proclaimed that he would hold a
contest to see what man could render the greatest service to the city; the winner would
marry the king's daughter. Hearing this, the artisans of the city began to work at high
speed. At last, when the day of the decision came and the king had examined all their
efforts one by one, he designated two candidates. The first of them had succeeded in
setting up a system that enabled water to be brought to the city from great distances via
aqueducts. The second built the theatre. Just as the king was on the point of deciding in
favour of the first candidate, he was asked to have one more look at the theatre. While he
was wandering about in the upper galleries, a deep voice from an unknown source out saying
again and again, "The king's daughter must be given to me" . In astonishment the
king looked around for the owner of the voice but could find no one. It was, of course,
the architect himself, proud of the accoustical masterpiece he had created, who was
speaking in a low voice from the stage. In the end, it was the architect who won the
beautiful girl and the wedding ceremony took place in the theatre.
We know from an inscription in the southern parados that
the theatre was constructed during the reign of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius (161-180 A.D.)
by the architect Zeno, the son of an Aspendian named Theodoros. According to the
inscription, the people of Aspendos, out of admiration for Zeno, awarded him a large
garden beside the stadium. Greek and Latin inscriptions above the entrances on both sides
of the stage building tell us that, two brothers named Curtius Crispinus and Curtius
Auspicatus commissioned the building and dedicated it to the gods and the Imperial family.
No fee was charged for putting on a performance in the
theatre. A portion of the necessary production costs were covered by civic institutions,
but after the performance, part of the profits was turned over to these organizations.
Generally one had to pay a fee or buy tickets to gain entry to plays or competitions.
Tickets were made of metal, ivory, bone, or in most cases, fired clay, with a picture on
one side and a row and seat number on the other.
Aspendos' other principal remains are above the acropolis,
behind the theatre. The first building one comes to on the acropolis, which is reached via
a footpath starting alongside the theatre, is a basilica measuring 27x105 metres. The
basilica is an architectural from invented by the Romans. Roman basilicas were used for a
wide wariety of purposes, but these were all concerned with public affairs. Markets and
law courts were set up in buildings. The basilica plan consists of a large central hall
surrounded by smaller chambers. The central hall is separated from those at the sides by
columns and its roof is higher. nside the basilica is a tribunal. During the Byzantine
era the building underwent major alterations and lost much of its original character.
South of the basilica and bounded on three sides by houses,
is the agora, the centre of the city's commercial, social, and political activities. A
little further to the west are twelve shops of equal size all in a line at the rear of a
stoa.
North of the agora is a nymphaeum of which only the front
wall remains standing. Measuring 32.5 m. in width by 15 m. in height, this two-level
facade has five niches at each level. The middle niche in the lower level is larger than
the others and is thought have been used as a door. It is clear from the marble bases at
the foot of the wall that the building originally had a colonnaded facade.
Behind the nymphaeum is a building of unusual plan, either
an odeon or a bouleuterion where council members met.
Another of Aspendos' remains that should not be missed is
its aqueduct. This one kilometre-long series of arches which
brought water to the city from the mountains at the north, represents an extraordinary
feat of engineering and is one of the rare examples surviving antiquity. The water was
brought from ist source in a channel formed by hollowed stone blocks on top of 15
metre-high arches. Near both ends of the aqueduct the water was collected in towers some
30 metres high, which was distributed to the city.
An inscription found in Aspendos tells us that a certain
Tiberius Claudius Italicus had the aqueduct built, and presented it to the city. Its
architectural features and construction techniques date it to the middle of the second
century A.D.
PERGE
Perge, one of Pamphylia's foremost cities, was founded on a
wide plain between two hills 4 km. west of the Kestros (Aksu) river.
Skylax, who lived in the fourth century B.C. and was the
earliest of the ancient writers to mention Perge, states that the city was in Pamphylia.
In the New Testament book, Acts of the Apostles, the sentence "...when Paul and his
company loosed from Paphos, they came to Perge in Pamphylia" suggests that Perge could
be reached from the sea in ancient times. Just as the Kestros provides
convenient communication today, the diver also played an important role in antiquity,
making the land productive, and securing for Perge the possibility of sea trade. Despite
its being some 12 km. inland from the sea, Perge by means of the Kestros, was able to
benefit from the advantages of the sea as if it were a coastal city. Moreover, it was
removed from the attacks of pirates invading by sea.
In later copies of a third or fourth century map of the
world, Perge is shown beside the principal road starting at Pergamum and ending at Side.
According to Strabo, the city was founded after the Trojan
War by colonists from Argos under the leadership of heroes named Mopsos and Calchas.
Linguistic research confirms that Achaeans entered Pamphylia toward the end of the second
millennium B.C. in addition to these studies, inscriptions dating to 120-121 A.D.,
discovered in the 1953 excavations in the courtyard of Perge's Hellenistic city gate,
provide further testimony to this colonization; inscriptions on statue bases mention the
names of seven heroes-Mopsos, Calchas, Riksos, Labos, Machaon, Leonteus, and Minyasas, the
legendary founders of the city.
There is no further record of Perge in written sources
until the middle of the fourth century. There can be no doubt, however, that Perge was
also under Persian rule until the arrival of Alexander the Great.
In 333 B.C. Perge surrendered to Alexander without
resistance. Its submissive behaviour can be explained by, besides its favourable policy,
the fact that at this period the city was not yet surrounded by protective walls.
With the death of Alexander, Perge remained for a short
time within the boundaries of Antigonos domain and later fell under Seleucid sovereignty.
When the border dispute between the Seleucids and the king of Pergamum continued after the
treaty of Apamea, the Roman consul Manlius Vulso was sent from Rome in 188 A.D. in the
capacity of mediator. Learning that Antiochos III had a garrison in Perge, he surrounded
the city at the urging of Pergamum's king. At this point the garrison commander informed
the consul that he could not surrender the city before obtaining permission from
Antiochos; for this, he said he would need thirty days, at the end of which, Perge passed
to Pergamum.
Perge became totally independent when the kingdom of
Pergamum was turned over to Rome in about 133 B.C.
In 79 B.C. the Roman statesman Cicero described to the
senate, Cilician questor Gaius Verres' unlawful conduct in Perge, saying, "As you
know, there is a very old and sacred temple to Diana in Perge. I assert that this was also
robbed and looted by Verres and that the gold was stripped from the statue of Diana and
stolen".
Artemis occupied an important position among the gods and
gooddesses held sacred in Perge. This ancient Anatolian goddess appears on Hellenistic
coins under the name Vanassa Preiia, as she was called in the Pamphylian dialect; after
Greek colonization she became known as Artemis Pergaia. Besides being rendered on coinage
as a cult statue or as a huntress, the Artemis of Perge is the subject of a variety of
statues and reliefs found in excavations of the city. A relief in the from of a cult
statue on a square stone block is particularly interesting. The cult of Artemis Pergaia
also appears in many other cities, even in countries around the Mediterranean.
As famous as Artemis Pergaia was in the ancient world, no
trace of the temple has yet been found. For the present we must content ourselves with
what knowledge we can get from schematic representations of the temple on coins; of this
renowned monument that safeguarded the gold-adorned statue of Artemis, and whose scale,
beauty, and construction was marvelled at by ancient writers.
In 46 A.D., Perge became the setting of an event important
to the Christian world. The New Testament book, the Acts of the Apostles, writes that St.
Paul journeyed from Cyprus to Perge, from there continued on to Antiocheia in Pisidia,
then returned to Perge where he delivered a ser mon. Then he left the city and went to
Attaleia.
From the beginning of the Imperial era, work projects were
carried out in Perge, and in the second and third centuries A.D., the city grew into one
of the most beautiful, not just in Pamphylia, but in all of Anatolia.
In the first half of the fourth century, during the reign
of Constantine the Great (324-337), Perge became an important centre of Christianity once
this faith had became of official religion of the Roman Empire. The city retained its
status as a Christian centre in the fifth and sixth centuries. Due to frequent rebellions
and raids, the citizens retreated inside the city walls, able to defend themselves only
from within the acropolis. Perge lost its remaining power in the wake of the mid-seventh
century Arab raids. At this time some residents of the city migrated to Antalya.
The first building one encounters on entering the city is a
theatre of Greco-Roman type constructed on the southern slopes of the Kocabelen hill. The
cavea, slightly more than a semicircle, is divided in two by a wide diazoma passing
through it. It contains 19 seating levels below and 23 above, which translate into a total
seating capacity of about 13,000. In conformance to the canons of Roman theatre galleries
serving as the entrance and exit ways, spectators reached the diazoma from the parados on
either side via vaulted passages and stairs; from there they were dispersed to their
seats.
The orchestra, situated between the cavea and the stage
building, is wider than a semicircle. Because of the gladiatorial and will animal combats
popular in the mid-third century, the orchestra was used as an arena. To keep the animals
from escaping, it was surrounded by carved balustrade panels that passed between marble
knobs made in the form of Herme.
The partially standing two-storey stage building can be
dated to the middle of the second century A.D. by its columned architecture and sculptural
ornamentation. On the facade, columns between the five doors by which the actors entered
and exited support a narrow podium above. The theatre's most striking feature is a series
of marble reliefs of mythological subject decorating the face of this podium. The first
relief on the right portrays the local god personifying the Kestros (Aksu) river, Perge's
lifeblood, along with one of the mythological females called nymphs. From here on, the
reliefs depict, in serial form, the entire life story of Dionysos, the god of wine and the
founder and protector of theatres. Dionysos was the son of Zeus and Semele, the daughter
of a king and reputed to be as beautiful as spring. Hera, ever jealous of her husband,
wanted to get rid of Semele along with her son. To trick her, the goddess assumed the form
of the girl's mother and begged Semele to persuade Zeus to let her see him in all his
might and glory. The credulous Semele was taken in by the ruse and implored Zeus to
acquiesce. Zeus, unable to resist the pleas of his beloved, came down from Olympos on his
golden chariot and appeared before her, but the mortal Semele could not withstand his
radiance and was consumed by fire. Dying, she gave birth to the fruit of her love, who had
not yet come to full term, and threw him from the flames. Zeus took this little boy, sewed
him into his hip and kept him there until his term was completed. It is in this way that
the boy was given the name Dionysos-born once from his mother's womb and coming into the
world a second time from his father's hip. So that the infant could be protected from
Hera's malevolence, fed and brought to manhood, he was taken by Hermes to the nymphs of
Mount Nysa, who raised the boy in a cave, giving him love and careful attention. Finally,
as a young man, Dionysos one day drank the juice of all the grapes on the vine growing
along the cave's walls. This is how wine was discovered. With the aim of introducing his
new drink into every corner of the globe and spreading the knowledge of viniculture, the
god of wine went on a journey around the world in a chariot drawn by two panthers.
It is unfortunate that an important section of these
beautiful reliefs was damaged as a result of the subsidence of the stage building. From
pieces recovered during excavations begun in 1985, it is evident that the building was
originally decorated with several more friezes on different themes. The subject of a 5
metre-long frieze from an as yet undetermined part of the building is especially
interesting. Here, Tyche holds a cornucopia in her left hand, and in her right a cult
statue. On either side are the figures of an old man and two youths bringing bulls for
sacrifice to the goddess.
On the right of the asphalt road running from the theatre
to the city is one of the best preserved stadiums to have survived from ancient times to
our own. This huge rectangular building measuring 34x 334 metres, is shaped like a
horseshoe on its north end and open on its south. It is wery likely that the building was
entered at this point via a monumental wooden door. The stadium was built on a
substructure of 70 vaulted chambers, 30 along each long side and 10 on its narrow northern
end. These chambers are interconnected, with every third compartment providing entrance to
the theatre. From inscriptions over the remaining compartments giving the names of their
owners and listing various types of goods,it is clear that these spaces were used as
shops. The tiers of seats which lie on top of these vaulted rooms, provided a seating
capacity of 12,000. When gladiatorial and wild animal combat became popular in the
mid-third century, the north end of the stadium was surrounded with a protective
balustrade and turned into an arena. Its architectural style and stone work date this
edifice to the second century A.D.
Another noteworthy ruin outside the city walls is the tomb
of Plancia Magna, who was the daughter of Plancius Verus, the Governor of Bithynia. She
was a wealthy and civic minded woman who, around the beginning of works in Perge, and who
had a number of spots in the city adorned with monuments and sculpture. Because of her
community service, the people, assembly, and senate erected statues of her. In various
inscriptions Plancia's name appears with the title "demiurgos", which was the
highest civil servant in the city's government. In addition, she was a priestess of
Artemis Pergaia, a priestess-for-life of the mother of the gods, and the head priestess of
the cult of the emperor.
A large part of Perge is encircled by walls that in some
places go back to the Hellenistic period. Towers 12-13 metres high were built on top of
the fortifications. However, during the time of the Pax Romana, which provided a period of
continuous peace and tranquility, the walls lost their importance, and buildings such as
the theatre and stadium could be built beyond the walls without fear. On entering the city
through a late period gate in the fourth century walls, one comes to a small rectangular
court 40 metres long bounded by walls of later date. From this courtyard one continues
through a second, southern gate built in the form of a triumphal arch and highly
decorated, particularly on the back. This gate leads into a trapezoidal courtyard 92
metres long and 46 metres wide. On the west wall of this court, which was used as a
ceremonial site during the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus (193-211 A.D.) is a
monumental fountain or nymphaeum. The building consists of a wide pool, and behind it a
two-storeyed richly worked facade. From its inscription, it is apparent that the structure
was dedicated to Artemis Pergaia, Septimius Severus and his wife Julia Domna, and their
sons. An inscription belonging to the facade, various facade fragments, and marble statues
of Septimius Severus and his wife, all found in excavations of the nymphaeum, are now in
the Antalya Museum.
A monumental propylon directly north of the nymhaeum opens
onto the largest and most magnificent bath in Pamphylia. A large pool (natacia) measuring
13x20 m. covers the inside of an apsed chamber on the south portico of a broad palaestra;
the palaestra is bounded in front by a portico. Pergaians cleansed themselves in this pool
after exercising in the palaestra. It is clear from the dynamic architecture of the
facade, the coloured marble facing, and the statues of Genius, Heracles, Hygiea, Asklepios
and Nemesis, that decorated, this space must have been dazzlingly beautiful. From here
another door leads to the frigidarium, a space that also contained a pool. Before
entering, bathers washed their feet in water flowing along a shallow channel running the
full length of the pool's north side. Existing evidence suggests that the frigidarium was
adorned with statues of the Muses. Next are the tepidarium and the caldarium, which
connect with each other. Beneath these rooms one can see courses of bricks belonging tothe
hypocaust system that circulated the hot air coming from the boiler room. Washing in a
Roman bath was a proces that took place in several stages. First the bather removed his
clothign in a room called the apodyterium and from there entered the palaestra where he
took his exercise. Then he either went into the pool to get rid of the dirt and
perspiration from this physical exertion, or washed himself in hot water in the caldarium.
From there he went to the tepidarium or to the frigidarium for a cold water bath. In the
Roman era the bath was not just a place for washing, but was also a place where men met to
pass the time of day or to discuss a variety of important topics. The long rectangular
compartment at the north of the frigidarium was probably a place where bathers strolled
and chatted. A long marble bench extends along this room's west wall. Inscriptions on a
large number of plinths found during excavations, indicate the statues that once stood on
them were donated by a man named Claudius Peison.
At the northern end of the inner court is a Hellenistic
gate that is Perge's most magnificent structure. Dating to the third century B.C., this
gate, consisting of two towers with a horseshoe-shaped court behind them, was clevery
designed according to the defensive strategy of the day. The towers had three storeys and
were covered with a conical roof. With the aid of Plancia Magna, several alterations in
the decoration of the court were made between 120 and 122 A.D., changing it from a
defensive structure to a court of honour. To create a facade, the Hellenistic walls were
covered with slabs of coloured marble, several new niches were opened, and Corinthian
columns were added. Figures of gods and goddesses like Aphrodite, Hermes, Pan and the
Dioskouroi occupied the niches on the lower level. In excavations in the court, the
inscribed bases of nine statues were found, but the statues themselves have not been
recovered. According to their inscriptions, these statues which must have been placed in
the niches on the upper level, represent the legendary heroes who founded Perge after the
Trojan War, as described in historical notes. In inscriptions on two pedestals, the names
M. Plancius Varus and C. Plancius Varus, his son, appear with the adjective meaning
"founder", essentially, because of their goodness and generosity toward Perge,
they were acepted as second founders for whom this honour seemed appropriate.
The horseshoe-shaped court is bounded on the north by a
three-arched monumental gate built by Plancia Magna. Inscriptions on pedestals unearthed
in excavations indicate that statues of the emperors and their wives from the reign of
Nerva to Hadrian, stood in the gate's niches.
An agora 65 metres square is located to the east of the
Hellenistic gate. On all four sides a wide stoa surrounds a central lined with shops. The
floor of these shops is paved with coloured mosaics. An interesting stone used in an
ancient game can be seen in front of one store in the north portico. The game, which was
played with six stones per person and thrown like dice, must have been very popular
throughout the region, as similar stones were also found in other neighbouring cities. At
the centre of the court is a round building, just as there is in Side's agora; the precise
nature of this structure is not yet known.
A colonnaded street runs north-south through the city
centre going under the triumphal arch of Demetrios-Apollonios, currently under
restoration, at a point near the acropolis. This thoroughfare is intersected by another
running east-west. On both sides of this 250 metre-long street are broad porticoes behind
which are rows of shops. In this way the columned architecture on both sides offers
various examples of the Roman understanding of perspective. The porticoes also provided a
place where people could both take shelter from the violent rains in winter, and protect
themselves from Perge's extremely hot summer sun. Because of their suitability for the
climate, avenues of this type are frequently found in the cities of southern and western
Anatolia. Certainly the most interesting aspect of Perge's colonnaded street is the
pool-like water channel that divides the road down tha middle. Made to flow by the rived
god Kestros, these clear, clean waters ran out of a monumental fountain (nymphaeum) at the
north end of the street and flowed placidly along the channels, cooling the Pergeians just
a little in the cruel Pamphylian heat. At approximately the middle of the street, four
relief-carved columns belonging to the portico immediately catch the eye. On the first
column, Apollo is depicted riding a chariot drawn by four horses; on the second is Artemis
the huntress; the third shows Calchas, one of the city's mythical founders; and the last,
Tyche (Fortune).
The main road comes to an end at another nymphaeum built at
the foot of the acropolis in the second century A.D. The rich architecture of its
two-tiered facade and its numerous statues make it one of Perge's most striking monuments.
The water brought from the spring empties into a pool beneath the statue of the river god
Kestros standing precisely in the centre of the fountain, and from there flows to the
streets via channels.
Turning left from the triumphal arch of Apollonios that
intersects the streets, and passing the Hellenistic gate, one comes to the palaestra,
known to be Perge's oldest building. Here, under the supervision of their teachers, the
youth of the city practised wrestling and underwent physical education. According to an
inscription this square edifice, consisting of an open area surrounded by rooms, was
dedicated to the Emperor Claudius (reigned 41-54 A.D.) by a certain C. Julius Cornutus.
Perge, transformed by artisans into a city of marble, was
truly magnificent, with a faultless layout that would have been the envy of modern city
planners. In order to fully appreciate its grandeur today, one must visit the Antalya
Museum to see the hundreds of sculptures from Perge now housed there.
Among the famous men raised in this city can be cited the
physician Asklepiades, the sophist Varus, and the mathematician Apollonios.
Perge has been under excavation by Turkish archaeologists
since 1946.
SILLYON
About 35 km. along the Antalya-Alanya highway, you turn
north and continue 8 km. until Silyon is reached. It was built on an ellipse-shaped
table-like plateau rising above the flat plain. Due to its location the surrounding areas
can easily be seen, and in fact the view stretches as far as the Mediterranean. It was
settled in the 4th century B.C. and it lived not only through the Hellenistic, Roman and
Byzantine periods, but was also used by the Seljuks who also added buildings and increased
its wealth. Some of its interesting sights are the stadium, gymnasium, turrets, Seljuk
mosque, the theater whose proscenium is buried under rocks, and the sports arena
This Pamphylian town, located between Perge and Aspendos,
is situated on top of a flat-topped hill with almost vertical flanks. With its unusual
physical formation, the hill is easily recognizable even from a distance. Strabo mentions
in his writings that the city, some 40 stad or 7.2 km, inland, was visible from Perge.
It is generally accepted that Sillyon, like other cities in
Pamphylia, was founded after the Trojan War by the heroes Mopsos and Calchas. A statue
base found in Sillyon bears Mopsos' name.
Sillyon began to mint coinage in its own name in the third
century B.C. On these coins the name of the city was written as Sylviys, which must have
been changed to Sillyon in the Roman era.
The name Sillyon is almost never mentioned in history
except, for its appearance in Arrianos' notes on the campaigns of Alexander the Great.
These notes indicate that the reaction of Sillyon's residents to Alexander was hostile, in
contrast to that of Perge, and that they defended themselves from a strong position,
relying on mercenaries as well as soldiers. In any case it appears that Sillyon had been a
military base since Persian times; the remains of buildings and fortifications from the
Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Seljuk epochs reveal that the city preserved its
military character for a long time.
Climbing a simple path from Yanky toward the hill, the
first thing one encounters is the lower gate. Consisting of a horseshoe-shaped court with
two rectangular towers. It is similar to Perge's Hellenistic gate in its plan and masonry.
On this basis it has been dated to the third century B.C.
Because Sillyon is situated on a steep-sided hill, there
was no need to surround the city with walls. It was only in the west and south-west
sections where the incline is at its slightest, that walls, towers, and ramparts were
erected. These exhibit painstaking stonework and considerable technical expertise.
The city's oldest ruins lie north-east of the main entrance
gate. The first structure one encounters here is a two-storey, high-walled building from
the Byzantine era; although it is in good condition, its function has not yet been
ascertained. At the end of its lies one of Sillyon's most important structures, a 7x55
metre palaestra of Hellenistic date. On its west wall are ten windows of differing
dimensions. A little further on is a small Hellenistic building with an elegant door and
carefully executed masonry. The building's fame is derived from an inscription written on
the door in the local Pamphylian dialect. The inscription, thirty lines in length, is the
longest and most important document in this dealect known today. It is a pity that a
portion of the inscription was lost when a hole was made in the door at a later date.
While the dialect, written in Greek characters, was used in a large part of Pamphylian
until the first century A.D., it was gradually forgotten after that date and was replaced
by Greek.
At the southern edge of the plateau one encounters a sad
scene. The Sillyon theatre and the odeon beside it, described as being in an excellent
state of preservation in the 1884 Pamphylian travel notes of the Austrian researcher
Lanckoronski, disappeared down the hill in a landslide in 1969; only eleven rows of seats
from the cavea were left in place.
Immediately after the theatre, rock-cut stairs with
balustrades along the sides lead to Hellenistic houses of square or rectangular plan
constructed in the meticulous stonework typical of that period. Going east, one sees a
small Hellenistic temple. Rising above a podium measuring 7.30x11.00 metres, the temple's
cella wall and stylobate are still standing. According to existing architectural remains,
the temple was of the Doric prostyle type.
From the beginning of the thirteenth century the Seljuks
settled in Sillyon in small groups, just as they did in certain other cities. In
accordance with their custom they built a small, thin-walled, crenelated citadel on the
acropolis. The most interesting building that has survived from the Seljuk period is a
square, domed mosque in the north-west part of the acropolis.
Other than a few Byzantine and Seljuk buildings there are
no important remains at the eastern end of the acropolis. On returning to the village from
the upper gate, one passes a necropolis area consisting of simple graves, before arriving
at a well preserved tower. Square in plan, the tower has two floors, with a door opening
into the lower one. Doors on the upper level placed there for defensive purposes open onto
the ramparts. The stadium is on a terrace south-west of the tower. It is in very poor
condition; all that remains are the tiers of seats mounted on vaults running along its
western length.
There could not have been enough springs in the area to
ensure an adequate water supply, since it is clear that importance was given to the
construction of covered and open cisterns from the Hellenistic period onward.
SIDE
Side, ancient Pamphylia's largest port, is situated on a
small peninsula extending north-south into the sea.
Strabo and Arrianos both record that Side was settled from
Kyme, city in Aeolia, a region of western Anatolia. Most probably, this colonization
occurred in the seventh century B.C. According to Arrianos, when settlers from Kyme came
to Side, they could not understand the dialect. After a short while, the influence of this
indigenous tongue was so great that the newcomers forgot their native Greek and started
using the language of Side. Excavations have revealed several inscriptions written in this
language. The inscriptions, dating from the third and second centuries B.C., remain
undeciphered, but testify that the local language was still use several centuries after
colonization. Another object found in Side excavations, a basalt column base from the
seventh century B.C. and attributable to the Neo Hittites, provides other evidence of the
site's early history. The word "side" is Anatolian in origin and means
pomegranate.
Next to no information exists concerning Side under Lydian
and Persian sovereignty. Nevertheless, the fact that Side minted its own coins during the
fifth century B.C. while under Persian dominion, shows that it still possessed a great
measure of independence.
In 333 A.D., despite its strong land and sea walls, Side
surrendered to Alexander the Great without a fight.
For a long period following the death of Alexander, Side
came under the dominion of the Ptolemaic and Seleucid Empires, and in 190 B.C. witnessed a
great naval battle. This encounter took place between the fleet of Rhodes, acting with the
support of Rome and Pergamum, and the fleet of Antiochos III, the king of Syria, under the
command of the famous Carthaginian Hannibal. Side took the side of Hannibal, but the
Rhodian forces carried the day.
In the second century B.C. Side was able to stave off the
forces of the Attaleids of Pergamum and preserve its independence, becoming a wealthy
commercial, intellectual, and entertainment centre. Side's importance in the Eastern
Mediterranean as an educational and cultural centre can be gauged by the fact that
Antiochos VII, who ascended the throne of Syria in 138 B.C., was sent to Side in his youth
to receive has education.
In the first century B.C. misfortune overtook Side in the
form of Cilician pirates, who seized the city and turned it into a naval base and slave
market. The people of Side seem to have tolerated the pirates because of the highly
profitable nature of this commerce, which, however, gave the city a bad name in the
region. Stratonicus, a man famous for his retorts and witticisms, answered the question,
"Who are the worst, most treacherous people?" saying, "In Pamphylia the
people of Phaselis, but in the whole world the people of Side". The famous Roman
general Pompey ended the reign of the pirates in 67 b.C. and Side, by erecting monuments
and statues in his honour, tried to erase its bad name.
Under Roman rule, Side prospered during a second golden
age, especially in the second and third centuries when it became a metropolis ,seat of the
provincial governor and his administrative staff. Due to its large harbour. Side in this
era enjoyed commercial relations throughout the Mediterranean particularly with Egypt.
Imported goods left Side for central Anatolia by road. Side's importance as a commercial
centre can be ascertained by the hundreds of shops occupying not only the main streets,
but also the narrowest of side streets and alleys. At the same time it continued as an
important slave trading centre. Documents from the Imperial Roman period found in Egypt
report that these slaves were sent to Side mainly from Africa. It is also known that Side
possessed a large commercial fleet which did not pass up opportunities to commit piracy.
Maritime commerce was the origin of the wealth of many merchants. These wealthy men did
not work solely to increase their fortunes, but also provided for activities benefiting
the people of the city, donating large sums to organize competitions and games, as well as
to beautify the city and create social and religious organizations. One inscription found
above a late period gate reports that two people, whose names cannot be made out, had a
deipnisterion or soup kitchen erected for the use of government employees and the council
of elders. A woman named Modesta organized gladiatorial events; Tuesianos, another
inhabitant of Side, organized a feast to celebrate the return of the seamen to Side; and a
husband and wife pair of philanthropists provided for the repairs of Side'' water system
out of their own pockets. A great proportion of the buildings and monuments still standing
at Side date to this magnificent epoch.
Side's last years of plenty occurred in the fifth and sixth
centuries A:D. when it served as the seat of the Bishopric of Eastern Pamphylia. At this
time there was much consturction, and the city expanded beyond the extant city walls.
Starting in the middle of the seventh century, destructive raids by Arab fleets on the
southern coast of Anatolia transformed it into a war zone. Side was naturally, affected,
and excavations have uncovered ashy burnt layers showing that the city was entirely burnt
by Arabs.
According to the twelfth century Arab geographer Idrisi,
Side was at one time a large and populous city, but after being sacked it was abandoned by
its inhabitants, who moved to Antalya, two days' journey away; as a result, according to
Idrisi, Side became known as Old Antalya.
In order to protect itself from threats coming by land or
sea, Side was surrounded on all four sides by high walls. The sea walls have been much
altered over the centuries due to repair and rebuilding and have most much of their
original appearance; they have even collapsed in several places. By contrast, the land
walls and their towers are almost whole, due to their having been carefully constructed of
conglomerate stone. The city is entered through two gates in the eastern fortification
wall. The large main gate was built during the Hellenistic period. It is flanked by two
towers and gives onto a horseshoe-shaped courtyard. After passing through the courtyard
and a square room, one enters the city. As is the case in Perge, the gate and courtyard
complex were ornamented with many storeys of columns in the second century A.D. and
transformed into a ceremonial place of honour. The second largest city gate, also
belonging to the Hellenisitic period, lies on the north-east of the city; behind its
square towers lies a courtyard that is also square in form.
The main street starts from this north-eastern gate and
stretches all the way to the peninsula's western tip in an almost completely straight
line. Along this street lay the city's principal official buildings and its squares.
Excavations have revealed a perfectly planned sewer system. This system, covered with
vaults, lay under the main street as well as the smaller streets.
Outside the city wall and opposite the main gate lies the
nymphaeum, a monumental fountain consisting of a richly ornamented facade with three
niches and with a fountain in front. Piped-in water used to flow from spouts in the middle
of these niches.
The agora, the city's centre of commercial and cultural
activity, lay along an arcaded street. It can be entered today from immediately opposite
the museum. This square space was surrounded on all four sides by porticoes. Rows of
stores can still be observed running behind the north-east and north-west porticoes. An
interesting vaulted building lies in the agora's south-west corner adjacent to the
theatre, this served as the city's latrium or public toilets and is the most highly
ornamented and best preserved example in Anatolia. Sewers carried away the waste from this
establishment, which had a 24-toilet capacity, while in front of the building ran a
channel carrying only purified water.
In the middle of the agora lay a circular temple dedicated
to Tyche (Fortune). All that is left today is the podium of this structure, but originally
twelve columns ran around its exterior and the temple was topped by a pyramidal roof.
This agora was linked to a second, state agora by a street
running along its southern edge. This agora, too, was square in plan and was enclosed by
porticoes of lonic columns. It is believed that the high platform in the middle of the
agora was used for the display and sale of slaves. Behind the eastern portico lay a large
ornamented three-chambered building which, due to its architectural peculiarities, is
thought to have been either an imperial palace or a library. From extant remains it can be
ascertained that the building was originally two storeys and richly adorned with statues.
Aside from a statue of Nemesis, which has been left in place to recall the original
decorative style, all the statues found during excavation have been removed to the Side
Museum.
The agora bathhouse, today used as the museum, is a
five-room Byzantine structure dating to the fifth century A.D. It is entered through two
arched doorways. The first room, possessing a small cold water pool, was the frigidarium.
From here one passes to a stone-domed sweating room or lokonicum. The third and largest of
the structure's rooms is the hot room or caldarium. The bath's heating system ran beneath
the marble flooring. From the caldarium one can enter the two-room tepidarium or washing
area through a narrow door. In front of the bath was a palaestra with a porticoed
courtyard where men could excercise before bathing.
Next to the triumphal arch, which at a late date was used a
city gate, lies a beautiful monument, partially restored in recent years. This monument
consists of a niche between two aedicules and, according to an inscription found in the
architrave, was built in 74 A.D. in memory of the Emperor Vespasion and his son Titus.
During the construction of the late period city wall in the fourth century A.D., this
monument was brought here from elsewhere in the city and turned into a fountain.
The theatre is the only extant example of its plan and
construction type to be fount in Anatolia. It was erected in the second century A.D. on
Hellenistic foundations. Because Side is virtually flat, the theatre's upper banks had to
be built into the only natural rise available, which is not very steep, while the lower
banks of seats overlay an arched substructure. Twenty nine seating levels can be counted
below the 3.30 metre-wide diazoma, which divides the cavea in two. In the upper section
only twenty two of the original twenty nine rows survive. Thus, this was Pamphylia's
largest theatre and had a seating capacity of 16-17.000 people. In the outside gallery of
the lower section, staircases rose to the diazoma. From interior galleries, staircases
ascended to the theatre's upper section. The galleries' two ends probably contained
paradoses, enabling them to be used as entrances for theatre staff and actors.
The orchestra was slightly larger than a semicircle, and at
a late date it was surrounded by a nigh thick wall that rendered inoperative the lowest
banks of seats. This wall was covered with waterproof pink plaster which allowed the
orchestra to be filled from time to time with water for reenactments of naval battles and
other sports; it no doubt also served as a pit for displays of wild animal combat. These
displays usually pitted predatory animals against one another or against gladiators.
Sometimes even unarmed people-criminals, slaves, and prisoners-were set against wild
animals, and their helpless struggle was followed with rude glee.
A stage building rose off a wide podium behind the
orchestra. It consisted of a two-storey facade 63 metres in length. On the podium, five
narrow doors linked the orchestra ornamented with coloumns, niches and statues, and its
lower storey contained five alrge openings allowing for the actors, and its entrance.
Between these openings, just as in the theatre at Perge, were marble friezes illustrating
Dionysiac themes. The stage building's reliefs have been transported to the agora for the
duration of the restoration work which has newly begun is this area.
During the troubles of the fourth century A.D., a new
fortification wall was built, and this wall took advantage of the high back wall of the
stage building. During the fifth and sixth centuries A.D., the theatre was used as an
open-air church, and the parados sections were decorated with floor mosaics and
transformed into small chapels.
The most varied and beautiful temples in all of Pamphylia
are to be found in Side. Two stupendous temples rose on the peninsula's southern point,
right next to each other, the sea and the harbour. These temples were built in the second
half of the second century A.D. Consisting entirely of marble, they are of the peripteros
type and employ the Corinthian order. The short sides have six columns each, the long
sides eleven. In the fifth century A.D. a large basilica was built in front of these
temples, incorporating them into its atrium. Despite being heavily damaged, the temples'
ancient configuration can be determined. Because Side's patron goddess was Athena, it is
highly probable that one of the temples was dedicated to Athena, who in consequence, would
have been featured extremely prominently as a protectress of the harbour and of sailors.
As for the other temple, it must have been dedicated to Apollo. Restoration of the Temple
of Apollo is ongoing.
Further on, to the east of the last big square off the
arcaded street, lies a semicircular temple dedicated to the god Men. The cella of this
temple was entered from the west by a staircase up the high podium. At the top of the
stairs are four Corinthian columns. This temple dates to the end of the second century
A.D.
Between the arcaded street and the theatre lie the remains
of an early Roman temple. Of this temple, which is of the pseudo-peripteral type, only the
podium remains. The podium remains is ascended from the north by seven steps. In front of
the cella rise four granite Corinthian columns. Because of its proximity to the theatre,
it is thought that this temple belonged to Dionysos.
Dating to the third century A.D., the biggest of Side's
three public baths lies on the arcaded street. Its dimensions are 40x50 metres and it is a
beautiful building in a fine state f preservation. Its various rooms are vaulted. The
broad courtyard in front of this building was most likely used as a palaestra.
In order to satisfy their for a plentiful water supply, the
people of Side went to almost superhuman lengths. Water from the head of the Melas river
(today's Manavgat ay) reached Side after an adventuresome 30 kilometre journey on
two-storeyed arched aqueducts, passing through channels carved out of cliffs, and vaulted
tunnels and across valleys before it was collected in city cisterns, from which it was
distributed in clay pipes.
Large cemeteries lie outside the city walls. In these
cemeteries one can still see many types of graves, be they simple square holes, plain or
carved sarcophagi, or magnificent memorials in the form of temples. These areas were
called necropoli, cities of the dead. The most beautiful of these can be found in the
western cemetery near the sea. On a podium reached by stairs rises a building shaped like
a temple with four columns. Inside this building marble sarcophagi are situated in arched
niches. This building dates to the second century A.D., and together with its ornamented
courtyard must have served as the tomb of a wealthy family.
Side has been excavated by Turkish archaeologists since
1947, and excavations continue intermiltently. |
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