| Miletus, an ancient city located
near the present Akkoy at the mouth of the Buyuk
Menderes (Meander) River, owed its importance to
its position on trade routes. It was one of the
largest cities in Anatolia with a population of
between 80,000 and 100,000. Highly prosperous, it
founded many colonies and was the home of the
6C BC philosophers Anaximander, Anaximenes,
and Thales, the town planner Hippodamus and
architect Isidorus. Miletus seems to have
produced geniuses the way Aphrodisias produced
sculptors. History of Miletus
According to
legend, the city was founded by Neleus, son of
King Codrus of Athens. Neleus came to settle with
his men and killed the resident males compelling
the women to marry the newcomers. After this took
place the women swore not to sit at the same
table with their husbands and also not to call
them by their names.
In the 11C BC
Ionians came to Miletus, and by the 7C BC
Miletus was at its peak which was to last for
more than two centuries. With other cities of
Ionia in 499 BC, Miletus rebelled against
the Persians, who had captured, burned it to the
ground and enslaved its surviving population.
This last battle was that of Lade in 494 BC,
just outside the harbor of Miletus where the
Persian fleet of 600 warships defeated the Ionian
force. The destruction was so bad that when the
play of Phrynichus, The Capture of Miletus was
performed in Athens, as Herodotus reported,
"the whole theater burst into tears, and the
people sentenced the playwright to pay a
fine". The role of Miletus was significant
in the defeat of the Persians at the Mycale
battle in 479 BC. Shortly after the battle,
Miletus joined the Delian Confederacy with a
contribution larger than that of Ephesus. Upon an
agreement between the Persian Satrap and Athens,
Miletus and other Ionian cities of Anatolia came
under the rule of the Persians again. At the end
of the 5C BC Miletus was ruled by the Carian
satraps.
Captured by
Alexander the Great after a siege in 334 BC
and ruled by the Seleucid Dynasty in the
following years, Miletus remained an important
trade center into Roman times.
St. Paul stopped
there in 57 AD on his way back to Jerusalem
at the end of his third missionary journey. In
Miletus Paul sent word to his friends in Ephesus
to join him, and after speaking with them for the
last time he bade them an emotional farewell,
boarded his ship in Miletus and sailed off via
Cos and Rhodes to Patara.
The Roman period
was followed by Byzantine and Turkish periods.
The Site
Miletus was a
major port city located on a peninsula with four
harbors. With the silting of the Buyuk Menderes
(Meander) River the ruins of the ancient city
today are a few kilometers away from the sea.
The city had a
grid plan which was developed by Hippodamus when
it was rebuilt in the 5C BC after the
Persians had sacked it.
The Theater
was a small Hellenistic theater with a seating
capacity of 5,300, but in the beginning of the
2C AD it was modified to a Roman theater and
held about 15,000 people. The lower section was
built onto a natural hillside, and the upper is
supported by vaulted substructures up to a height
of 40 m / 131 ft. The facade facing the
harbor is 140 m / 460 ft long. During
the Roman period the stage building had three
stories and was 34 m / 111 ft wide. In
front of the stage building it is still possible
to see pieces depicting hunting scenes of Eros.
At the top of the
theater hill was a Byzantine fortress
which is thought to have been built mostly with
the stones of the theater in the 7C AD but
restored later by the Seljuks. Harbor
monuments stood in front of the Lions’
Harbor. There were two of them; different in size
but similar in style. The large piece was
7.5 m / 25 ft high, mounted on a
three-cornered base built on a round foundation
with a diameter of 11 m / 36 ft. The
smaller one was only 5.3 m / 17.5 ft.
The Delphinium
was a Hellenistic open air shrine surrounded by
stoas on four sides with a 6C BC altar in
the center. Together with Apollo, the dolphin was
sacred for the Milesians as they believed that
when the first settlers sailed they were guided
by god in the form of a dolphin. The annual
festival and celebrations of Didyma were started
here. An Ionic Stoa lay parallel to the processional
road on the south of the Delphinium. It is
a 1C AD structure which had 35 Ionic columns
and 19 shops behind the columns.
The Bouleterion
was a 2C BC building which consisted of a
propylon, a courtyard and an auditorium. The
propylon had three Corinthian columns and friezes
depicting war scenes. It opened into a courtyard
with a monumental tomb in the middle. There were
four gates that opened into the main hall. The
auditorium seated 1,500 people and had a wooden
roof. The Nymphaeum was first built in the
2C AD and rebuilt in the following century.
It faced the bouleterion across the processional
road and had three stories with statues of gods
placed in niches and water spouting from the
mouths of bronze fish.
The South Agora
lay behind the bouleterion. It was a Hellenistic
structure which was later remodeled in the Roman
period. Today the North Gate is
unfortunately another of the gems from Anatolia
currently housed in the Pergamum Museum in
Berlin. The South Gate was 180 m by
150 m (196 yards by 164 yards) and destroyed
during the construction of Ilyas Bey mosque.
The Temple of
Serapis lay between the south agora and the
Faustina baths. It consisted of a pronaos and a
naos with Corinthian columns and a relief of
Serapis on the pediment. The temple was a
3C BC building which was rebuilt in the
3C AD with a donation by Emperor Julius
Aurelius.
The Baths of
Faustina were 2C AD Roman baths which
were built by Faustina, Marcus Aurelius’s
wife who usually accompanied her husband on his
journeys through the Empire. The frigidarium had
a reclining statue of the river god probably
personifying the Meander River.
Ilyas Bey
Camisi (The Ilyas Bey Mosque) was part of a
complex which consisted of a mosque, medrese,
cemetery and an imaret. It was built in the early
15C by Ilyas Bey, the regional Ottoman military
commander. The dome of the mosque was made of
bricks. At the entrance are three arched
partitions separated by two columns. The entrance
is through the center arch. The mosque was
destroyed in 1955.
The Caravansary
is a 15C building built by the Mentese
Principality which had a lower floor for animals
and an upper for people.
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