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Archaeologist Mehmet Taslialan |
Yalvac
Yalvac, a town of Isparta
city,
is offering a beautiful ancient site to the history lovers today.
It is no doubt that archaeologist
Mehmet Taslialan has played a great role in bringing the city to the daylight.
He has been carrying out excavations for nearly 20 years as the director of Yalvac
museum.
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Today, one can find him
at the site in Yalvac while supervising excavations, or at the museum in his humble
office doing the paperwork, with a saturated enthusiasm and an ever-welcoming
smile on his face, as if he is in the first days of his career. For a first timer
( for you may always wish to go there again, having seen it once ) it would be
a great joy to listen to the stories of the ancient city from him or at least
to read from his book (*).
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Yalvac Museum |

Aquaducts in Psidian Antiock |
The
ruins of Antioch are quite spread out and require at least a two hour visit for
a proper touring.
First time visitor is always surprised to find the remains so much intact and
well preserved.
Especially the highlights of the city; the theatre, the temples of the God Men,
and of Augustus and St.Paul's church strike him most. |
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There had actually been some seventeen cities in ancient Anatolia with the same
title of Antioch, for it was a commonly used personal name by the Seleucids who
established many colonies in Anatolia such as this one which they named after
their own rulers. One should not mix the Antioch on the Orontes with the Antioch
in Psidia though, the former being far down on the Syrian border and called Antakya
or Hatay now.
In his book Taslialan mentions
the archaeologists W. Ramsay and D. M. Robinson to excavate the site in the years
of 1913-14 and 1924 for the first time. " The first excavations were carried
out here by W. Ramsay and D. M. Robinson, revealing that there had been a settlement
here since the neolithic age. According to written sources and archaeological
finds the city was founded by Antioch I in 280 BC.
The city proper, or polis, covers an area of 14 sq km, but the lands which belonged
to it stretched from Sultan Dagi to the southern shore of Lake Egirdir, and southwest
as far as Gelendost.It stood at a junction of two main roads stretching from west
to east and from north to south, and this strategic importance combined with its
fertile lands meant that it was an important settlement in the region for many
centuries." (*)
The ruins of Antioch are quite spread out and require at least a two hour visit
for a proper touring.
First time visitor is always surprised to find the remains so much intact and
well preserved.
Especially the highlights of the city; the theatre, the temples of the God Men,
and of Augustus and St.Paul's church strike him most.
There had actually been
some seventeen cities in ancient Anatolia with the same title of Antioch, for
it was a commonly used personal name by the Seleucids who established many colonies
in Anatolia such as this one which they named after their own rulers. One should
not mix the Antioch on the Orontes with the Antioch in Psidia though, the former
being far down on the Syrian border and called Antakya or Hatay now.
In his book Taslialan mentions
the archaeologists W. Ramsay and D. M. Robinson to excavate the site in the years
of 1913-14 and 1924 for the first time. " The first excavations were carried
out here by W. Ramsay and D. M. Robinson, revealing that there had been a settlement
here since the neolithic age. According to written sources and archaeological
finds the city was founded by Antioch I in 280 BC.
The city proper, or polis, covers an area of 14 sq km, but the lands which belonged
to it stretched from Sultan Dagi to the southern shore of Lake Egirdir, and southwest
as far as Gelendost.It stood at a junction of two main roads stretching from west
to east and from north to south, and this strategic importance combined with its
fertile lands meant that it was an important settlement in the region for many
centuries." (*)
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| The heydays
of the city began with the announcement of Antioch to be the military colony of
Rome in 25. It was the second Roman capital in Anatolia by the Emperor Augustus,
and three thousand veterans from Rome were brought to settle here. Interestingly
enough, the testament of the Emperor Augustus written by himself shortly before
his death was discovered here among the fragments of the propylon in which the
Emperor told about his achievements during his lifetime. |

St. Paul's Church |
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The temple of Augustus is partially unearthed today and one can easily see the
beautiful rocky foundations under it. The remains of the frieze with bull head
motifs all made in different styles are worth noticing. Formerly, there is believed
to be a temple of the Anatolian moon God Men here.
As once Taslialan had explained
when he kindly accompanied one of my groups, the theatre was another interesting
structure in the site;the only of its kind so far known, and maybe the first one
ever made in the history, in that there was constructed a 200 feet long tunnel
under the audience seats of the theatre, the cavea, which was made in the Roman
times out of necessity to enlarge the theatre without cutting the main avenue.
The theatre is also associated
with an event important in the development of Christianity in Anatolia. Thecla,
one of the earliest believers of Christianity, follows him here to Antioch from
Iconium ( Konya ) after she was converted by St. Paul there and was thrown to
wild beasts here.. A lion, as apocrypha has it, defends her against them and her
life is saved. This is believed to have taken place in this theatre.
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St.Paul's Baptisterium now
in the muesum |
What
moves all Christians coming here is, of course, St. Paul's church. St. Paul is
known to have come to Antioch with Barnabas in the 1st century AD and chose it
as a centre for his missionary activities. His first sermon to the congregation
of a synagogue was given here. Later, the first and largest church in Anatolia
dedicated to St. Paul was constructed on this site. This church and the remains
of the synagogue beneath it can still be seen today. It was here for the first
time that
St. Paul thought of going back to the gentiles, after he was un welcomingly treated
and sent away by the jews. |
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