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:: Ancient Theatre ::

:: The Road ::

:: The Bridge
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:: The Gates
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Ephesus |
Well-known from earliest
times, this city was established on the delta of what is now called
the Lesser Menderes River. The sheltered harbor of that period
was the beginning of a royal road the ended at the gate of Susa,
the capital or the Persian Empire, which secured the city its
importance. It became the capital of the Roman province of Asia
under Augustus and had a population of perhaps 200,000 in the
second and first centuries BC.
"CLINTONS" WAS HERE !
The Ephesus
Ancient Theatre Concerts:
Elton John, Ray Charles, Sting!
In the 6th century
BC science, art and culture were prominent here along with Miletus.
The famous philosopher Heraclitus, interpreter of dreams Artemidorus,
the poets Callinos and Hipponax, grammarian Zenodotus and the
doctors Soranus and Rufus were all from Ephesus.
The
oldest finds are from the Neolithic Age dated 6000 years before
Christ, found at the Çukuriçi Höyük. There
was a Hittite settlement on top of Ayasuluk Hill from the Old Bronze
Age. The name was then Apasus, according to Hittite inscriptions
found there. Linguists believe the name Ephesus came from this Hittite
name.
According
to Herodotus, colonists came from the west and settled here about
1000 BC while the Karyali and Leleg people of Anatolia were in residence
in the area. The colonists gave the name Artemis to the mother goddess
Kybele. The temple to Artemis from that period became one of the
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The city was attacked successively
by the Kimmer people in the 7th century, the Lydians in 560 BC,
and later the Persians. It regained its freedom under Alexander
the Great, after whom his general, Lysimachus, established his kingdom.
Based upon finds from this latest time, he set up his city based
upon the "Gridiron Plan" found in the Miletus Hippodrome.
The streets thus intersected one another in a regular pattern.
Under
Roman rule the city became the largest and richest in the province
of Asia thanks to both land and sea trade. There were marble monuments
everywhere in the city. It was the first city built entirely out
of marble. In the 4th century AD trade had declined because the
harbor was silting in. The Emperor Hadrian had the harbor dredged
several times. The harbor was finned in by silt from the Marnas
River and the Lesser Menderes coming from the north. In time the
city was increasingly distant from the sea. In the 7th century Arabs
attacked the coastal areas. The city moved to Ayasuluk Hill for
better defense. When the Turks came in the 13th century Ephesus
was just a small village. They built mosques, caravanserais, and
baths typical of Turkish civilization.
There
are two entrances to the city today. For an easy tour, begin at
the Magnesia Gate (Upper Gate) located on the road going to the
House of Mary. Immediately to one side is the East Gymnasium at
the foot of Panayir Mountain. The first monumental work one comes
to is the Odeion with the Varius Baths beside it. Ephesus had a
bicameral legislation, the first being the Congress of Councillors,
which met here, hence the name "Bouleterion". In front
of the Odeion was business council called the "Basilica."
Beside this was the Municipal Building, the "Prytaneion"
with its massive columns. The Prytan functioned as the mayor of
the city. His most important function was to keep alive the flame
that had been burning in the building for centuries. This was done
in the name of the local deity Hestia. The Artemis statues on display
in the Ephesus Museum were found in the vault of the Prytaneion.
The
area in front of the Odeion was the State Agora (Upper Agora). In
the middle was a temple to the Egyptian goddess Isis. In 80 Laecanus
Bassus erected AD a fountain in the southwest corner of the agora.
From the agora one proceeds to the Square to Domitian where things
like the Pollio and Domitian fountains, the Memmius Monument and
the Heracles Gate are clustered together.
The
famous Avenue of the Curates leads west from the Upper Agora. Things
along this avenue include the Trajan Fountain, the façade
of the Temple to Hadrian and the Scolasticia Baths. Immediately
beside the Temple to Hadrian are the Bordello and the Latrines.
On the left side of the avenue are the "Terrace Houses."
These houses are the most beautiful examples of peristyle houses
and were as comfortable as houses are today. They all had frescoed
walls and mosaic floors. Each had a heating system and bath. These
houses are eminent in archeological literature and well worth seeing.
At the end of the avenue is that most beautiful structure of Roman
times, the Celsus Library. When Ephesus governor Celsus died in
106 AD, his son had the library built as his monument and grave.
The sarcophagus is under the west wall of the library. One of the
most interesting structures in Ephesus is the Temple to Serapis,
immediately behind the Library. Beside the Library is the Mazeus
Mithridates Gate that leads in the Market Agora (Lower Agora).
Agora
is the starting point for the Marble Avenue. This is where St. Paul
preached. At the end of the avenue is the world's largest theater,
the Grand Theater, with a seating capacity of 24,000. Presently
the theater is the site of months of various cultural and musical
activities. At the corner of the theater is the Hellenistic Fountain,
the smallest structure in Ephesus. The Theater Gymnasium and Baths
across from it were built in the 2nd century AD.
The
longest street in Ephesus is the Harbor Avenue (Arcadian Avenue)
once lined with statues, and stretching from the theater to the
presently silted-in harbor. The Four Apostles' Monument was in the
middle of the avenue. At the end of the avenue was the Harbor Gymnasium
and Baths next to the ancient harbor. In the complex there stands
the Church of Mary, site of the General Church Council of 431 AD.
At
the city's northernmost point is the Vedius Gymnasium with Byzantine
walls beside it. There is also a stadium built in the time of the
Emperor Nero
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The Epheusus
Museum |
Valuable items found
at Ephesus and the Temple of Artemis are in this small museum. Although
called the EPHESUS Museum, it is actually in Selcuk and is one of
Turkey's premier collections with two famous statues of Goddess
Artemis, marble portrait busts and beautiful statuary from the streets,
fountains and altars. Also see gold, funerary items, coloured glassware,
surgical instruments (including an arrow-head remover), children's
toys and exquisite furniture like the "coffee" table supported
by rearing, roaring panthers. Outdoors in the walled garden are
restored Ottoman buildings with displays of old trades and businesses
and a nomadic tent! The 400-year old hamam there is a hamam &
folk museum - ask on arrival. Allow 1.5 hours.
THE TEMPLE OF ARTEMIS SITE
This was once one of the "Seven Wonders of the (Ancient) World"
- the creator of the list said it was the greatest of them all.
Four times the size of Athen's Parthenon, it was the largest of
the grand temples of Classical civilization. It was once joined
to Ephesus by a marble road lined with statues. Finally destroyed
by the Goths in 253 AD it was eventually stripped for building materials
for St. John Basilica and Aya Sofya in Istanbul. From 1869, after
6 years of excavation, the last remains were removed to the British
Museum. Only one small pillar (once there were 127 - 20 metres high
!), remains at the site. Today one can mentally rebuild the temple
- its size was astonishing. See its masonry at the Basilica of St.
John and the Isa Bey Mosque, its mammoth pillars and marble plaques
in Aya Sofya in Istanbul.
THE CAVE OF THE SEVEN SLEEPERS
A
legend similar to that of "Rip van Winkle" allegedly took
place here - seven boys who refused to sacrifice to Roman Emperor
Decius were said to have slept here for 120 years to escape persecution.
This Byzantine Graveyard was once an important Medieval pilgrimage
site; now a simple restaurant serves delicious, inexpensive "Gozleme"
(tasty thin dough "crepes") to hungry visitors instead!
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