Kitanaura

Kitanaura
Shown within Turkey
Alternate name Kithanaura
Location Saraycık, Antalya Province, Turkey
Region Lycia
Coordinates 36°38′51″N 30°21′59″E / 36.64750°N 30.36639°E / 36.64750; 30.36639Coordinates: 36°38′51″N 30°21′59″E / 36.64750°N 30.36639°E / 36.64750; 30.36639
Type Settlement

Kitanaura or Kithanaura was an ancient city in Lycia. Its ruins are located near Saraycık, a small village in the Kumluca district of Antalya Province, Turkey.

History

The history of the city is largely unknown because it was not mentioned by any ancient author. Only the ruins of the city give some information. The earliest phase of the city's walls dates to the Hellenistic period, with the last phase dating to the Byzantine period. Because of the five churches which have been identified the city likely became more important with the spread of Christianity in Late Antiquity.[1]

Archaeological investigations

T. A. B. Spratt visited the site for two days in 1842 to copy inscriptions and draw a plan. He could not find any remains which indicated the name of the city, but he suspected that it was Marmara or Apollonia.[2]

Diodorus Siculus writes that Alexander the Great conquered a "great rock fortress" inhabited by the Marmares when he passed the frontier of Lycia.[3] Spratt refers to the fortress with the name Marmora, others use Marmara. Apollonia was a Thracian colony in Lycia, which might explain why Thracians guided the second division of Alexander the Great's army through this remote part of Lycia.[2] Marmara has not been found, but Apollonia was eventually discovered far away in western Lycia.

Later in 1842 the site was visited by A. J. Schönborn, who also proposed an identification as Marmara based on the description of Diodorus. A 1998 study of coins in the Antalya Museum led to the identification of the name of Kitanaura. The name of the city also appeared on a Roman milestone, the Miliarium Lyciae which was excavated at Patara in 1993. The inscriptions on the milestone give place names and distances during the 1st century AD. They mention Kitanaura lay at a distance of 17-18 kilometers to Idebessos. This made it possible to pinpoint the location of the city.[1]

Kitanaura was surveyed in detail by a team from Akdeniz University led by Nevzat Çevik in 2004–2005[4] and 2006–2007.[1]

Layout

The acropolis of Kitanaura was located on a hill extending in an east-west direction and surrounded by remains of structures to its south and west. The western and northern sides of the acropolis are covered by sheer rock cliffs, a less steeper rock slope is on southern side. Walls for the protection of the acropolis extended from the southwestern side to the eastern and northern side of the acropolis. They were 1.30 meters thick and have been preserved to a height of 5 to 6 meters at a few places.[1]

Remains of a basilica are found in the southwestern corner of the acropolis. Another large basilica stood in the center. A bath-gymnasium complex is the only building at the settlement which was reasonably well-preserved. It is located at the foot of the southwestern entrance to the acropolis and consisted of a palaestra and six other sections. A road which runs from the south of the acropolis and then turns north, passing the acropolis to west, is flanked by necropoleis on both sides. A heroon is found south of the acropolis.[1]

The quality of the construction and the size of the baths is striking for a medium-sized city in a relatively remote place in Lycia. With a size of 700 square meters the building is over twice the size of the central baths of Patara (315 m2) and the southern baths of Xanthos (295 m2), two of the largest cities in Lycia. The sizes of baths were influenced by both the population of a city and the number of occasional visitors from outside the city. The location of the baths at a crossroads of routes used by travelers suggests the baths served many temporary visitors.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Çevik, Nevzat (2008). "Northeast Lycia. The New Evidence - The Results from the past ten years from the Bey Mountains Surface Surveys". Adalya. 11: 189–233.
  2. 1 2 Spratt, T. A. B.; Forbes, Edward (1847). Travels in Lycia, Milyas and the Cibyratis. 1. London: John van Voorst. pp. 174–176, 202–205.
  3. Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 17.28
  4. Kızgut, İsa; Pimouguet-Pédarros, Isabella; Bulut, Süleyman; Özdilek, Banu; Çevik, Nevzat (2008). "Surveys in the Beydağları in 2007: Kitanaura" (PDF). ANMED. 6: 100–104.
  5. Tıbıkoğlu, H. Onur; Akalin, Emrah (2007). "An unknown bath-gymnasium at Kithanaura". In Aygün, Çiğdem Özkan. SOMA 2007: Proceedings of the XI Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology, Istanbul Technical University, 24–29 April 2007. Oxford, England: Archaeopress. pp. 374–379. ISBN 978-1-4073-0382-6.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.