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Cibyra

Cibyra or Kibyra (Greek: Κίβυρα), also referred to as Cibyra Magna, was an Ancient Greek city near the modern town of Gölhisar, in Burdur Province. It lay outside the north-western limits of the ancient province of Lycia and was the chief city of an independent state known as Cibyratis. Since 2016 it has been included in the Tentative list of World Heritage Sites in Turkey.

Kibyra
Κίβυρα
Roman amphitheatre of Kibyra
Shown within Turkey
LocationGölhisar, Burdur Province, Turkey
RegionPisidia
TypeSettlement
Kibyra theatre
Cities of ancient Lycia

Location edit

The site is identified by its inscriptions.

The Cibyratic plain is about 300 m above sea level. Cibyratis comprised the highest part of the basin of the Xanthus (river), and all the upper and probably the middle part of the basin of the Indus river, for Strabo describes Cibyratis as reaching the Rhodian Peraea. Mount Cragus (Babadağ) at 6,500 feet (1,969 m) bounded it on the west and separated it from Caria. Pliny's brief description[1] states that the river Indus, which rises in the hills of the Cibyratae, has sixty perennial tributaries.[2]

History edit

 
The Stadium
 
Agora and columnaded street
 
East Roman bath

The city is mentioned by ancient literary sources. According to Strabo, the Cibyratae (Ancient Greek: Κιβυρᾶται) were said to be descendants of Lydians who migrated and occupied the Cibyratis region and subdued the neighbouring Pisidians.[2] A short time after their arrival they moved their settlement to a new city. The move to the city is supported by archaeological finds at the Uytuptnar site about 18 km away from Cibyra where ruins from the early Iron Age were probably the previous settlements dating from around 3-4th c. BC before the great move.

During Eumenes II sovereignty (197-159 BC), Cibyra seems to have been ruled by the Kingdom of Pergamon.

The city grew to be powerful in the second century BC, Ancient sources and other written documents indicate that Kibyra was famous for its blacksmithing, leather processing and horse breeding. Other research shows that pottery production was very intense in the area also. Its territory extended between Pisidia and the adjoining Milyas to Lycia and the Peraea of the Rhodians. At this time it joined with three neighbouring Lycian towns, Bubon, Balbura, and Oenoanda, to form a confederation called the Tetrapolis. Within this confederation, the other three cities had one vote, but Cibyra had two votes, since it could muster 30,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry.

Cibyra is first mentioned by Livy[3] in his account of Ganaeus Manlius Vulso's operations in 189 BC during the Galatian War. Manlius approached Cibyra from the upper part of the Maeander river valley and through Caria. He probably advanced upon it by the valley of Karaook, through which a road led from Cibyra to Laodicea on the Lycus. Manlius demanded and got from Moagetes I, the tyrant of Cibyra, 100 talents and 10,000 medimni of wheat. Livy says that Moagetes controlled Syleum and Alimne, in addition to Cibyra. William Smith suggested that Alimne could be identified with the remains of a large town on an island in lake Gölhisar (east of modern Gölhisar), which were connected to the mainland by an ancient causeway.

Following the Treaty of Apamea in 188 BC, Cibyra became part of the Attalid Kingdom.[4]

Roman Rule edit

In 133 BC, the last Attalid king, Attalus III left his kingdom to the Roman Republic, which reconstituted it as the province of Asia. It is not clear whether Cibyra formed part of the new province or was granted its freedom like the rest of Lycia.[5]

In 83 BC, during the First Mithridatic War, the Roman general Lucius Licinius Murena deposed the last tyrant of Cibyra, Moagetes II, who was the son of one Pancrates,[6][2] and dissolved the Tetrapolis. Balbura and Bubon were assigned to the Lycian League.

Writing at the beginning of the 1st century AD, Strabo says that the Cibyratae spoke four languages: Pisidian, Solymian, Greek, and Lydian.[7] This makes Cibyra the last locality where the Lydian language, by then extinct in Lydia itself according to extant accounts, is attested.[8]

Cibyra was heavily damaged by an earthquake in 23 AD in the time of Tiberius, who recommended a Senatus Consultum be enacted relieving it from payment of taxes (tributum) for three years.[9] In the passage discussing these events, Tacitus calls it the civitas Cibyratica apud Asiam (Cibyratic community in Asia).[2] Most of the buildings preserved in the city were erected after the earthquake. Subsequent Roman emperors assisted in reconstruction of the city, particularly Claudius after whom the grateful citizens added Caesarea to its name as indicated by an inscription referring to "The Council and People of the Caesarean Cibyrites" (Καισαρεων Κιβυρατων ἡ βουλη και ὁ δημος) and by the legend "Caesareans" (Καισαρεων), which appears on some of the coins of Cibyra.[2] They also initiated games and started dating a new era from the year of 25 AD.

Hadrian, while travelling through the eastern provinces of the Empire, arrived at Kibyra in 129 and granted many privileges to its inhabitants.

Cibyra was the centre of a conventus (an assize district), which contained twenty-five cities, according to Pliny the Elder. Laodicea on the Lycus was one of the chief cities of this Conventus.

The poet Horace mentions Cibyra as a place of great trade[10] William Smith notes that its position does not seem very favourable for commerce, since it is neither on the sea nor on a great road, and suggests that the city might have exported grain of the Indus valley. Iron ore was plentiful in Cibyratis and a peculiarity was that its iron was easily cut with a chisel, or other sharp tool.[11][2]

Two artists of Cibyra were more famous for their knavery than for their artistic skill.[12]

Another earthquake struck in 417 and the city could not all be rebuilt. The last residents left the city in the 8th century for the settlement of Horzum now known as Gölhisar.

Archaeological remains edit

The ruins cover the crest of a hill between 300 and 400 feet above the level of the plain. The stone for the buildings is limestone from the neighbourhood. There are no traces of city walls.[2]

One of the chief buildings is a theatre in fine preservation: the diameter is 266 feet. The seats command a view of the Cibyratic plain, and of the mountains towards the Milyas. On the platform near the theatre are the ruins of several large buildings supposed to be temples, some of the Doric and others of the Corinthian order.

Odeon edit

 
Odeon of Kibyra

The Odeon or music theatre is on the densely occupied southwest corner of the hill and had an orchestra with a Medusa mosaic floor, unlike any other in the world.[13]

From text written on the mosaic floors in front of the odeon, the building was first built in the second half of 2nd c. AD for the city council assembly (Bouleuterion) but shortly afterwards, a stage (skena) was added to the building to make it into a theatre and a court room for the law centre of Asia Minor in the Imperial Roman Period, where important trials were held. The facade was covered with marble. Coloured marble columns and marble cladding decorated the facade of the stage. The orchestra floor was 9.80 X 5.80 m and was covered with very finely cut white, red, purple and gray marble slabs in opus sectile. In the centre of the orchestra was an exquisite Medusa.

 
Medusa head mosaic

The proskena facade facing the audience was made of thin coloured marble plates decorated with motifs on the doors and columns. A stoa in front of the odeon has nine columns and a mosaic floor whose text records its construction year as 249-254 AD. The mosaic was sponsored by Aurelius Sopatros and the Klaudius Theodoros brothers.

Stadium edit

 
Gladiatorial scene (Burdur Museum)

The stadium, 650 feet in length and 80 in breadth, is at the lower extremity of the ridge on which the city stands.

It was used not only for races, but also for gladiator fights as indicated by the extensive gladiator friezes discovered.

The hillside was partly excavated to make room for it; and on the side formed out of the slope of the hill were ranged 21 rows of seats, which at the upper extremity of the stadium turned so as to make a theatre-like termination. This part of the stadium is very perfect, but the seats on the hill side are much displaced by the shrubs that have grown up between them. The seats overlook the plain of Cibyra. The seats on the side opposite to the hill were marble blocks placed on a low wall built along the edge of the terrace, formed by cutting the side of the hill. Near the entrance to the stadium a ridge runs eastward, crowned by a paved way, bordered on each side by sarcophagi and sepulchral monuments. At the entrance to this avenue of tombs was a massive triumphal arch of Doric architecture, now in ruins.[2]

Inscriptions edit

The inscriptions from the site are collected in IK Kibyra, volume 60 of the Inschriften Griechischer Städte aus Kleinasien [de] series.[14] That corpus contains 448 Greek and Latin inscriptions, ranging in date from the second century BC to Late Antiquity.

Statues edit

In 2019, archaeologists found a bust of Serapis and a statue of Asclepius.[15] In the 2020 excavation season, another statue of Asclepius and the head of a bust of Serapis were found in Kibyra, date back to 2nd century A.D.[16]

Graves edit

In 2021, archaeologists found 30 graves in a basilica church. The researchers believe that many of them belonged to the important clergy of the city.[17]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ v. 28.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Cibyra". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.
  3. ^ xxxviii. 14.
  4. ^ Otto Mørkholm (31 May 1991). Early Hellenistic Coinage from the Accession of Alexander to the Peace of Apamaea (336-188 BC). Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-0-521-39504-5.
  5. ^ Morstein-Marx, Robert (1995). Hegemony to empire : the development of the Roman Imperium in the East from 148 to 62 B.C. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 113–114. ISBN 9780585160382.
  6. ^ Polybius xxx. 9.
  7. ^ Strabo, Geography, § 13.4.17
  8. ^ N.P. Milner (1998). An Epigraphical Survey in the Kibyra-Olbasa Region conducted by A S Hall (Monograph). British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara.
  9. ^ Tacitus Annales 4.13
  10. ^ Horace Ep. i. 6. 33
  11. ^ see Groskurd's Note, Transl. Strab. vol. ii. p. 633, where he unnecessarily make a distinction between τορεύεσθαι and τορνεύεσθαι).
  12. ^ Cicero Verr. ii. 4. c. 13
  13. ^ Kibyra ancient city comes to light https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/kibyra-ancient-city-comes-to-light-145948
  14. ^ Corsten, Thomas (2002). Die Inschriften von Kibyra. Bonn: Habelt. ISBN 9783774930346.
  15. ^ "Significant Roman-era artifacts found in Kibyra". Hürriyet Daily News. 25 November 2020.
  16. ^ "Statuette of Asklepios, bust of Serapis found in Kibyra". Hürriyet Daily News. 7 January 2021.
  17. ^ "Graves found in basilica-planned ancient city". Hürriyet Daily News. 2 April 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • Berns, Christof; Ali Ekinci, H. (2015). "Gladiatorial games in the Greek East: a complex of reliefs from Cibyra". Anatolian Studies. 65: 143–179. doi:10.1017/S0066154615000095. S2CID 130325531.
  • Corsten, T. (2002). Die Inschriften von Kibyra. Bonn.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Erkelenz, D. (1998). "Zur Provinzzugehorigkeit Kibyras in der romischen Kaiserzeit". Epigraphica Anatolica. 30: 81–95.
  • Japp, Sarah (2009). "The local pottery production of Kibyra". Anatolian Studies. 59: 95–128. doi:10.1017/S0066154600000910. S2CID 129577090.
  • Milner, N. P. (1998). An epigraphical survey in the Kibyra-Olbasa region conducted by A.S. Hall. London: British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara. ISBN 9781912090624.

External links edit

  • Over 190 pictures of the classical town

37°09′36″N 29°29′21″E / 37.1601°N 29.4892°E / 37.1601; 29.4892

cibyra, ancient, city, pamphilia, minor, genus, moth, moth, kibyra, greek, Κίβυρα, also, referred, magna, ancient, greek, city, near, modern, town, gölhisar, burdur, province, outside, north, western, limits, ancient, province, lycia, chief, city, independent,. For the ancient city of Pamphilia see Cibyra Minor For the genus of moth see Cibyra moth Cibyra or Kibyra Greek Kibyra also referred to as Cibyra Magna was an Ancient Greek city near the modern town of Golhisar in Burdur Province It lay outside the north western limits of the ancient province of Lycia and was the chief city of an independent state known as Cibyratis Since 2016 it has been included in the Tentative list of World Heritage Sites in Turkey KibyraKibyraRoman amphitheatre of KibyraShown within TurkeyLocationGolhisar Burdur Province TurkeyRegionPisidiaTypeSettlement Kibyra theatre Cities of ancient Lycia Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Roman Rule 3 Archaeological remains 3 1 Odeon 3 2 Stadium 3 3 Inscriptions 3 4 Statues 3 5 Graves 4 Gallery 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksLocation editThe site is identified by its inscriptions The Cibyratic plain is about 300 m above sea level Cibyratis comprised the highest part of the basin of the Xanthus river and all the upper and probably the middle part of the basin of the Indus river for Strabo describes Cibyratis as reaching the Rhodian Peraea Mount Cragus Babadag at 6 500 feet 1 969 m bounded it on the west and separated it from Caria Pliny s brief description 1 states that the river Indus which rises in the hills of the Cibyratae has sixty perennial tributaries 2 History edit nbsp The Stadium nbsp Agora and columnaded street nbsp East Roman bath The city is mentioned by ancient literary sources According to Strabo the Cibyratae Ancient Greek Kibyrᾶtai were said to be descendants of Lydians who migrated and occupied the Cibyratis region and subdued the neighbouring Pisidians 2 A short time after their arrival they moved their settlement to a new city The move to the city is supported by archaeological finds at the Uytuptnar site about 18 km away from Cibyra where ruins from the early Iron Age were probably the previous settlements dating from around 3 4th c BC before the great move During Eumenes II sovereignty 197 159 BC Cibyra seems to have been ruled by the Kingdom of Pergamon The city grew to be powerful in the second century BC Ancient sources and other written documents indicate that Kibyra was famous for its blacksmithing leather processing and horse breeding Other research shows that pottery production was very intense in the area also Its territory extended between Pisidia and the adjoining Milyas to Lycia and the Peraea of the Rhodians At this time it joined with three neighbouring Lycian towns Bubon Balbura and Oenoanda to form a confederation called the Tetrapolis Within this confederation the other three cities had one vote but Cibyra had two votes since it could muster 30 000 infantry and 2 000 cavalry Cibyra is first mentioned by Livy 3 in his account of Ganaeus Manlius Vulso s operations in 189 BC during the Galatian War Manlius approached Cibyra from the upper part of the Maeander river valley and through Caria He probably advanced upon it by the valley of Karaook through which a road led from Cibyra to Laodicea on the Lycus Manlius demanded and got from Moagetes I the tyrant of Cibyra 100 talents and 10 000 medimni of wheat Livy says that Moagetes controlled Syleum and Alimne in addition to Cibyra William Smith suggested that Alimne could be identified with the remains of a large town on an island in lake Golhisar east of modern Golhisar which were connected to the mainland by an ancient causeway Following the Treaty of Apamea in 188 BC Cibyra became part of the Attalid Kingdom 4 Roman Rule edit In 133 BC the last Attalid king Attalus III left his kingdom to the Roman Republic which reconstituted it as the province of Asia It is not clear whether Cibyra formed part of the new province or was granted its freedom like the rest of Lycia 5 In 83 BC during the First Mithridatic War the Roman general Lucius Licinius Murena deposed the last tyrant of Cibyra Moagetes II who was the son of one Pancrates 6 2 and dissolved the Tetrapolis Balbura and Bubon were assigned to the Lycian League Writing at the beginning of the 1st century AD Strabo says that the Cibyratae spoke four languages Pisidian Solymian Greek and Lydian 7 This makes Cibyra the last locality where the Lydian language by then extinct in Lydia itself according to extant accounts is attested 8 Cibyra was heavily damaged by an earthquake in 23 AD in the time of Tiberius who recommended a Senatus Consultum be enacted relieving it from payment of taxes tributum for three years 9 In the passage discussing these events Tacitus calls it the civitas Cibyratica apud Asiam Cibyratic community in Asia 2 Most of the buildings preserved in the city were erected after the earthquake Subsequent Roman emperors assisted in reconstruction of the city particularly Claudius after whom the grateful citizens added Caesarea to its name as indicated by an inscription referring to The Council and People of the Caesarean Cibyrites Kaisarewn Kibyratwn ἡ boylh kai ὁ dhmos and by the legend Caesareans Kaisarewn which appears on some of the coins of Cibyra 2 They also initiated games and started dating a new era from the year of 25 AD Hadrian while travelling through the eastern provinces of the Empire arrived at Kibyra in 129 and granted many privileges to its inhabitants Cibyra was the centre of a conventus an assize district which contained twenty five cities according to Pliny the Elder Laodicea on the Lycus was one of the chief cities of this Conventus The poet Horace mentions Cibyra as a place of great trade 10 William Smith notes that its position does not seem very favourable for commerce since it is neither on the sea nor on a great road and suggests that the city might have exported grain of the Indus valley Iron ore was plentiful in Cibyratis and a peculiarity was that its iron was easily cut with a chisel or other sharp tool 11 2 Two artists of Cibyra were more famous for their knavery than for their artistic skill 12 Another earthquake struck in 417 and the city could not all be rebuilt The last residents left the city in the 8th century for the settlement of Horzum now known as Golhisar Archaeological remains editThe ruins cover the crest of a hill between 300 and 400 feet above the level of the plain The stone for the buildings is limestone from the neighbourhood There are no traces of city walls 2 One of the chief buildings is a theatre in fine preservation the diameter is 266 feet The seats command a view of the Cibyratic plain and of the mountains towards the Milyas On the platform near the theatre are the ruins of several large buildings supposed to be temples some of the Doric and others of the Corinthian order Odeon edit nbsp Odeon of Kibyra The Odeon or music theatre is on the densely occupied southwest corner of the hill and had an orchestra with a Medusa mosaic floor unlike any other in the world 13 From text written on the mosaic floors in front of the odeon the building was first built in the second half of 2nd c AD for the city council assembly Bouleuterion but shortly afterwards a stage skena was added to the building to make it into a theatre and a court room for the law centre of Asia Minor in the Imperial Roman Period where important trials were held The facade was covered with marble Coloured marble columns and marble cladding decorated the facade of the stage The orchestra floor was 9 80 X 5 80 m and was covered with very finely cut white red purple and gray marble slabs in opus sectile In the centre of the orchestra was an exquisite Medusa nbsp Medusa head mosaic The proskena facade facing the audience was made of thin coloured marble plates decorated with motifs on the doors and columns A stoa in front of the odeon has nine columns and a mosaic floor whose text records its construction year as 249 254 AD The mosaic was sponsored by Aurelius Sopatros and the Klaudius Theodoros brothers Stadium edit nbsp Gladiatorial scene Burdur Museum The stadium 650 feet in length and 80 in breadth is at the lower extremity of the ridge on which the city stands It was used not only for races but also for gladiator fights as indicated by the extensive gladiator friezes discovered The hillside was partly excavated to make room for it and on the side formed out of the slope of the hill were ranged 21 rows of seats which at the upper extremity of the stadium turned so as to make a theatre like termination This part of the stadium is very perfect but the seats on the hill side are much displaced by the shrubs that have grown up between them The seats overlook the plain of Cibyra The seats on the side opposite to the hill were marble blocks placed on a low wall built along the edge of the terrace formed by cutting the side of the hill Near the entrance to the stadium a ridge runs eastward crowned by a paved way bordered on each side by sarcophagi and sepulchral monuments At the entrance to this avenue of tombs was a massive triumphal arch of Doric architecture now in ruins 2 nbsp Kibyra Stadium end nbsp Kibyra Stadium General view nbsp Kibyra Stadium nbsp Kibyra Stadium from curved part nbsp Kibyra Stadium view high side Inscriptions edit The inscriptions from the site are collected in IK Kibyra volume 60 of the Inschriften Griechischer Stadte aus Kleinasien de series 14 That corpus contains 448 Greek and Latin inscriptions ranging in date from the second century BC to Late Antiquity Statues edit In 2019 archaeologists found a bust of Serapis and a statue of Asclepius 15 In the 2020 excavation season another statue of Asclepius and the head of a bust of Serapis were found in Kibyra date back to 2nd century A D 16 Graves edit In 2021 archaeologists found 30 graves in a basilica church The researchers believe that many of them belonged to the important clergy of the city 17 Gallery edit nbsp Kibyra Theatre from top nbsp Kibyra Theatre from stage part nbsp Kibyra Temple nbsp Kibyra Odeon from the outside nbsp Kibyra Odeon inside nbsp Kibyra Odeon Roman bath nbsp Kibyra Odeon Roman bath nbsp Kibyra Agora Frieze nbsp Kibyra Roman bathReferences edit v 28 a b c d e f g h nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Cibyra Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray xxxviii 14 Otto Morkholm 31 May 1991 Early Hellenistic Coinage from the Accession of Alexander to the Peace of Apamaea 336 188 BC Cambridge University Press pp 9 10 ISBN 978 0 521 39504 5 Morstein Marx Robert 1995 Hegemony to empire the development of the Roman Imperium in the East from 148 to 62 B C Berkeley University of California Press pp 113 114 ISBN 9780585160382 Polybius xxx 9 Strabo Geography 13 4 17 N P Milner 1998 An Epigraphical Survey in the Kibyra Olbasa Region conducted by A S Hall Monograph British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Tacitus Annales 4 13 Horace Ep i 6 33 see Groskurd s Note Transl Strab vol ii p 633 where he unnecessarily make a distinction between toreyes8ai and torneyes8ai Cicero Verr ii 4 c 13 Kibyra ancient city comes to light https www hurriyetdailynews com kibyra ancient city comes to light 145948 Corsten Thomas 2002 Die Inschriften von Kibyra Bonn Habelt ISBN 9783774930346 Significant Roman era artifacts found in Kibyra Hurriyet Daily News 25 November 2020 Statuette of Asklepios bust of Serapis found in Kibyra Hurriyet Daily News 7 January 2021 Graves found in basilica planned ancient city Hurriyet Daily News 2 April 2021 Bibliography editBerns Christof Ali Ekinci H 2015 Gladiatorial games in the Greek East a complex of reliefs from Cibyra Anatolian Studies 65 143 179 doi 10 1017 S0066154615000095 S2CID 130325531 Corsten T 2002 Die Inschriften von Kibyra Bonn a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Erkelenz D 1998 Zur Provinzzugehorigkeit Kibyras in der romischen Kaiserzeit Epigraphica Anatolica 30 81 95 Japp Sarah 2009 The local pottery production of Kibyra Anatolian Studies 59 95 128 doi 10 1017 S0066154600000910 S2CID 129577090 Milner N P 1998 An epigraphical survey in the Kibyra Olbasa region conducted by A S Hall London British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara ISBN 9781912090624 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kibyra Over 190 pictures of the classical town 37 09 36 N 29 29 21 E 37 1601 N 29 4892 E 37 1601 29 4892 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cibyra amp oldid 1171843770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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