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Prusias ad Hypium

Prusias ad Hypium (Ancient Greek: Προῦσα πρὸς τῷ Ὑππίῳ ποταμῷ)[1] was a city in ancient Bithynia, and afterwards in the late Roman province of Honorias. In the 4th century it became a bishopric that was a suffragan of Claudiopolis in Honoriade. Before its conquest by King Prusias I of Bithynia, it was named Cierus or Kieros (Ancient Greek: Κίερος) and belonged to the Heraclea Pontica.[2] Photius writes that it was called Kieros, after the river which flows by it.[3]

Prusias ad Hypium
Konuralp
Stone fragments at Prusias ad Hypium ruins.
Shown within Turkey
LocationTurkey
RegionDüzce Province
Coordinates40°54′22″N 31°08′53″E / 40.90611°N 31.14806°E / 40.90611; 31.14806
TypeSettlement
History
PeriodsHellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Ottoman
Site notes
Public accessLimited

Location Edit

The site is near Konuralp,[4][5] 8 km (5.0 mi) north of Düzce on the road to Akçakoca, in northwestern Turkey.[6][7]

History Edit

The settlement, initially named "Hypios", was later renamed "Kieros".[7] According to Ancient Greek historical writer Memnon of Heraclea (c. 1st century), King Prusias I of Bithynia (r. 228 – 182 BC) captured the town of Kieros from the Heracleans,[8] united it to his dominions, and changed its name to "Prusias".[7][9] Pliny[10] and Ptolemy[1] merely mention it, one placing it at the foot of Mt. Hypius, the other east of the river Hypius. It was an important city on the road between Nicomedia (modern İzmit) at Propontis and Amastris (Amasra) at Euxine in the Pontus region.[6]

In about 74 BC, control of the region, and so of the city, was taken by the Roman Empire. From then on, the city was called "Prusias ad Hypium".[7] The city grew from four to twelve phylai during the Roman period until the 2nd century. Three Roman emperors, Hadrian (r. 117–138), Caracalla (r. 198–217), and Elagabalus (r. 218–222), visited the city in northwestern Asia Minor.[6][7] Already after the reign of Vespasian (r. 69–79), the city became autonomous in internal affairs and minted its own coins, though it remained dependent to Rome in foreign policy. In the beginning of the 5th century, the city became part of the newly established late Roman province of Honorias, and after 451 AD, it lost its wealth towards the end of the Byzantine period.[7]

In 1323, the city was conquered from the Byzantine Empire by Osman Ghazi (r. c. 1299 – 1323/4), the founder of the Ottoman Empire. Osman Ghazi handed over the city's control to his commander Konur Alp Bey.[11][12] In the Ottoman period, the city center was abandoned, and the settlement was called "Üskübü" from σκοπή (skopi) meaning "watchtower". During the Ottoman period, Islamic culture became prevalent.[7]

With the beginning of the Republican era (after 1923), the town's name was changed to "Konuralp". The name "Üskübü" is still used among the inhabitants.[7]

Archaeology Edit

In the 19th century, travellers passing by the city discovered archaeological fragments. There are official letters preserved in the Ottoman Archives indicating archaeological findings. The transport of a marble sculpture to the Istanbul Archaeology Museums in 1893–94 is mentioned in documents. Documents dated 1903 and 1909 relate to regulations for reuse and to secure archaeological findings until their delivery to the government, respectively.[7]

Scientific archaeological excavations were conducted by the archaeology department of Düzce University under the patronage of the Konuralp Museum and supported by the Municipality of Düzce.[8][11][12]

A plan of the city is not known. The archaeological remains and finds suggest that the settlement had a Hellenistic polis character. Main remains are part of the ramparts, a rampart gate, open-air theatre, aqueduct, and a Roman bridge. Some remnants of the ancient city are under the buildings of the modern settlement of vernacular architecture.[7]

According to inscriptions found at the site, a gymnasium and an agora existed in the ancient city. Their location and plan remain unknown. An inscription states that people contributed money to the construction and repair works of the agora. Another public building in the city, of which the location is not known, is the Domitius bathhouse, mentioned on the honor inscription erected for the son of M. Iulius Cabinius Sacerdos of Prusias.[12] A colonnaded street runs southwest from the Roman bridge. Architectural fragments such as entablatures, arches, pediments, pavements, and drains are found on the site. A bath and aqueduct are from the early Ottoman period.[6]

In 2020, archaeologists discovered a Medusa head dating back to the 1st or 2nd century AD.[13] In 2023, archaeologists found the head of Alexander the Great's statue.[14]

City walls and the "Horse Gate"
 
The "Horse Gate"

The ramparts of the city were built suitable to the topography of the terrain.[7] The western city walls are 4.70 m (15.4 ft) high at a length of 118 m (387 ft). The city walls were built during the Hellenistic and Roman periods in ashlar. Some cut stones were reused in altar and other architectural elements during the repairs in the Byzantine Empire. At the western end of the walls, there is an entrance built with reused block stones.[15] 200 m (660 ft) of the Byzantine city walls are still standing. These walls start right across the ancient bridge located at the edge of the road to Akçakoca, and run as far as Hamam Street. Some of the walls remaining in the gardens of the houses form the foundations of the garden walls. There are also walls dating back to the Ottoman period on the high parts of the slope where the city was founded.[12]

Coins from the time of Roman emperor Gallienus (r. 253–268) depict the main gate of the city with two towers. This gate is not extant.[12][7] The "Horse Gate", which stands today within the settlement of Konuralp,[7] and its extension ramparts are monuments of first grade. The city walls were repaired in different periods with reused inscribed materials. The gate lintel is made of local limestone material. It is a reused grave stele with an ancient Greek inscription dedicated to the mother of a Prusiasan and features a horse relief.[15][7] The city wall extending in a southeast direction from the gate is connected to a square-plan tower.[12] There is a small gate, formed by reused inscribed stone blocks, on the southern walls.[7]

Theatre
 
Theatre
 
Scaenae frons, the background stage building of the theatre

The theatre, which is locally called "The Forty Stairs", was built in the city center during the Hellenistic period (300–30 BC) and was expanded in the Roman period (30 BC-300 AD).[15] The theatre, with the dimensions of 100 m × 74 m (328 ft × 243 ft), covers an area of 5,978 m2 (64,350 sq ft).[12] The cavea stands on the hillside and is oriented southward.[7] It had a capacity of 10,000 spectators with 36 seating rows in three caveas separated by aisles;[12] only 17 rows in the lower section and 15 rows in the upper section are preserved today. The sides of the seating rows at the radial aisles are decorated with Alchemilla figures.[16]

The scaenae, the theatre stage, has a rectangular plan.[7] Two arched windows and an arched door of the scaenae frons as well as the parodoi stand firmly on the exterior of the stage.[6][12] The theatre is dated to the period between Hellenistic and Roman since the entrance on the stage is not common in ancient Greek theatre architecture. The cavea was constructed in the 1st century, and the scaenae was added in 190 AD.[7]

Roman bridge
 
The "Roman bridge" under reconstruction

A 74 BC-built 10 m (33 ft)-long three-arched bridge is located outside the city walls in the west, crossing the river Hypius (modern-day "Melen" is one of the oldest intact bridges in Turkey built by the Roman Empire).[6][7][12] The total length of the "Roman bridge" is 30.25 m (99.2 ft). It is 4.80 m (15.7 ft) wide and 3.17 m (10.4 ft) high. It is made of white marble blocks without using any mortar. The original length of the bridge was 39.20 m (128.6 ft).[15] The restoration of the bridge, after a flood ruined its pavement, was completed in 2019.[6][17]

Colonnaded street

A colonnaded street running between the city and the Roman bridge was discovered in 1974 during construction works for an irrigation canal in the southern section of the Düzce-Akçakoca highway D-655. Some architectural elements, such as the architrave, column fragments, vaulted blocks, and arches are deposited in the Konuralp Museum.[7]

Kemerkasım Aqueduct

This is an aqueduct located at the nearby Kemerkasım village. In the beginning of the 2nd century AD, P. Domitius Iulianus helped out financially to bring water to the city, and in the 3rd century a nobleman, Gavinius Sacerdos, financially supported the water system.[12] Eleven retaining legs from the old water system of the city, the Kemerkasım Aqueduct, have survived to the present day. The aqueduct was made of rubble stone.[15]

Necroplis

The necropolis of the ancient city, a large, designed cemetery of Roman period with elaborate tomb monuments, is located on three hills in the Şehit Hüseyin Kıl neighborhood of Konuralp. It covers an area of 173,697 m2 (1,869,660 sq ft). Artifacts found at this site, such as a garlanded sarcophagus, a Roman period statue, steles, block stones, and earthenware pieces, are exhibited in the Konuralp Museum.[12]

Konuralp Museum Edit

The nearby Konuralp Museum was established in 2003 to preserve the cultural heritage of the ancient city of Prusias ad Hypium. It contains a total of 6,237 artifacts including 1,848 archaeological, 491 ethnographic, and 3,898 coins.[15]

Tyche statue

A statue of Tyche, the presiding tutelary deity, who governed the fortune and prosperity of a city, was uncovered in 1931. The original statue, dated to 4th century AD, is exhibited after restoration in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums, and a copy of it is in the Konuralp Museum.[6][12]

Floor mosaics

A floor mosaic depicting Orpheus, a legendary musician, poet, and prophet in ancient Greek religion, with the Seasons was unearthed in the south of the ancient city in 1998.[6][12] After restoration works, it was placed in the museum.[12]

In 2016, another floor mosaic was unearthed inside a villa ruin, dated back to the Roman period of 300–400 AD, at Aynalı village about 3 km (1.9 mi) from the ancient city.[18] It depicts Achilles, a hero of the Trojan War, and his mother Thetis.[6][12]

Garland sarcophagus

A large garlanded sarcophagus was found in the necropolis situated in the hill west of Konuralp in 1937. The long sides of the sarcophagus are decorated with reliefs of garlanded bucrania. Its lower part features reliefs of several animals like pigs, lions, eagles, and fishing birds.[12]

Bishops Edit

The city became a bishopric in the 4th century. Bishop Georgios attended the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD, and Bishop Olympios took part at the Council of Chalcedon (451 AD).[6]

Several of its bishops are known:[19]

  • George (not Hesychius, as Le Quien says), 325
  • Olympios in 451
  • Dometius in 681
  • Theophilios in 787
  • Constantine in 869
  • Leo in 879
  • St. Paul, martyred by the iconoclasts in the ninth century

It is not known when this bishopric disappeared; it still existed in the tenth century.[20] No longer the seat of a residential bishop, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.[21]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Ptolemy. The Geography. Vol. 5.1.13.
  2. ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Prusa
  3. ^ Photius, Bibliotheca excerpts, § 224.32.1
  4. ^ Richard Talbert, ed. (2000). Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. Princeton University Press. p. 86, and directory notes accompanying.
  5. ^ Lund University. Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Prusias ad Hypium (Konuralp or Üskübü) Turkey". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Okur Coşkunçay, Esra (8–10 May 2014). Konuralp: A Town Between Antiquity and Today (Türkiye) (PDF). 2nd ICAUD International Conference in Architecture and Urban Design. Tirana, Albania: Epoka University. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Konuralp antik kenti yerli yabancı turistlerin gözdesi oldu". Hürriyet (in Turkish). 28 August 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  9. ^ "Frag. histor. Graec.", coll. Didot, frag. 27 and 47; fragment 41 treats of Kios/Cius or Guemlek, also called Prusias, and not of Kieros, as the copyist has written; this has given rise to numerous confusions.
  10. ^ Pliny. Naturalis Historia. Vol. 5.43.
  11. ^ a b "Batı Karadeniz'in Efes'i: Prusias ad Hypium Antik Kenti". Hürriyet (in Turkish). 18 August 2019. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Tarih Turizmi – Konuralp'ın Mihenk Taşlatından ... Prusias Antik Kentinin Dokusu" (in Turkish). Konuralp. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  13. ^ Medusa head found in ancient city
  14. ^ Head of Alexander the Great bust found in Düzce
  15. ^ a b c d e f "Prusias Ad Hypium Antik Kenti – Düzce" (in Turkish). Türkiye Kültğr Portalı. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  16. ^ "Prusias ad Hypium Antik Kenti" (in Turkish). T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı – Düzce Kültür ve Turizm Müdürlüğü. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  17. ^ "2000 Yılllık Köprü". Düzce Posta (in Turkish). 9 November 2019. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  18. ^ "Düzce'de Roma dönemine ait villa kalıntıları bulundu". Hürriyet (in Turkish). 17 August 2016. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  19. ^ Le Quien, Oriens christianus I, 579.
  20. ^ Heinrich Gelzer, Ungedruckte ... Texte der Notitiæ episcopatuum, 554.
  21. ^ Catholic Hierarchy

Attribution Edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Prusa". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Prusias ad Hypium". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:
    • De Hell, Voyage en Turquie et Perse, IV, 334–38, 353–73
    • Texier, Asie Mineure, 85
    • Le Bar, Voyage archéologique, 1174–82
    • Perrot, Expédition archéologique de la Galatie et de la Bithynie (Paris, 1872, 20–42)

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Prusias ad Hypium at Wikimedia Commons

prusias, hypium, ancient, greek, Προῦσα, πρὸς, τῷ, Ὑππίῳ, ποταμῷ, city, ancient, bithynia, afterwards, late, roman, province, honorias, century, became, bishopric, that, suffragan, claudiopolis, honoriade, before, conquest, king, prusias, bithynia, named, cier. Prusias ad Hypium Ancient Greek Proῦsa prὸs tῷ Ὑppiῳ potamῷ 1 was a city in ancient Bithynia and afterwards in the late Roman province of Honorias In the 4th century it became a bishopric that was a suffragan of Claudiopolis in Honoriade Before its conquest by King Prusias I of Bithynia it was named Cierus or Kieros Ancient Greek Kieros and belonged to the Heraclea Pontica 2 Photius writes that it was called Kieros after the river which flows by it 3 Prusias ad HypiumKonuralpStone fragments at Prusias ad Hypium ruins Shown within TurkeyLocationTurkeyRegionDuzce ProvinceCoordinates40 54 22 N 31 08 53 E 40 90611 N 31 14806 E 40 90611 31 14806TypeSettlementHistoryPeriodsHellenistic Roman Byzantine OttomanSite notesPublic accessLimitedWikimedia Commons has media related to Prusias ad Hypium Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Archaeology 4 Konuralp Museum 5 Bishops 6 References 6 1 Attribution 7 External linksLocation EditThe site is near Konuralp 4 5 8 km 5 0 mi north of Duzce on the road to Akcakoca in northwestern Turkey 6 7 History EditThe settlement initially named Hypios was later renamed Kieros 7 According to Ancient Greek historical writer Memnon of Heraclea c 1st century King Prusias I of Bithynia r 228 182 BC captured the town of Kieros from the Heracleans 8 united it to his dominions and changed its name to Prusias 7 9 Pliny 10 and Ptolemy 1 merely mention it one placing it at the foot of Mt Hypius the other east of the river Hypius It was an important city on the road between Nicomedia modern Izmit at Propontis and Amastris Amasra at Euxine in the Pontus region 6 In about 74 BC control of the region and so of the city was taken by the Roman Empire From then on the city was called Prusias ad Hypium 7 The city grew from four to twelve phylai during the Roman period until the 2nd century Three Roman emperors Hadrian r 117 138 Caracalla r 198 217 and Elagabalus r 218 222 visited the city in northwestern Asia Minor 6 7 Already after the reign of Vespasian r 69 79 the city became autonomous in internal affairs and minted its own coins though it remained dependent to Rome in foreign policy In the beginning of the 5th century the city became part of the newly established late Roman province of Honorias and after 451 AD it lost its wealth towards the end of the Byzantine period 7 In 1323 the city was conquered from the Byzantine Empire by Osman Ghazi r c 1299 1323 4 the founder of the Ottoman Empire Osman Ghazi handed over the city s control to his commander Konur Alp Bey 11 12 In the Ottoman period the city center was abandoned and the settlement was called Uskubu from skoph skopi meaning watchtower During the Ottoman period Islamic culture became prevalent 7 With the beginning of the Republican era after 1923 the town s name was changed to Konuralp The name Uskubu is still used among the inhabitants 7 Archaeology EditIn the 19th century travellers passing by the city discovered archaeological fragments There are official letters preserved in the Ottoman Archives indicating archaeological findings The transport of a marble sculpture to the Istanbul Archaeology Museums in 1893 94 is mentioned in documents Documents dated 1903 and 1909 relate to regulations for reuse and to secure archaeological findings until their delivery to the government respectively 7 Scientific archaeological excavations were conducted by the archaeology department of Duzce University under the patronage of the Konuralp Museum and supported by the Municipality of Duzce 8 11 12 A plan of the city is not known The archaeological remains and finds suggest that the settlement had a Hellenistic polis character Main remains are part of the ramparts a rampart gate open air theatre aqueduct and a Roman bridge Some remnants of the ancient city are under the buildings of the modern settlement of vernacular architecture 7 According to inscriptions found at the site a gymnasium and an agora existed in the ancient city Their location and plan remain unknown An inscription states that people contributed money to the construction and repair works of the agora Another public building in the city of which the location is not known is the Domitius bathhouse mentioned on the honor inscription erected for the son of M Iulius Cabinius Sacerdos of Prusias 12 A colonnaded street runs southwest from the Roman bridge Architectural fragments such as entablatures arches pediments pavements and drains are found on the site A bath and aqueduct are from the early Ottoman period 6 In 2020 archaeologists discovered a Medusa head dating back to the 1st or 2nd century AD 13 In 2023 archaeologists found the head of Alexander the Great s statue 14 City walls and the Horse Gate nbsp The Horse Gate The ramparts of the city were built suitable to the topography of the terrain 7 The western city walls are 4 70 m 15 4 ft high at a length of 118 m 387 ft The city walls were built during the Hellenistic and Roman periods in ashlar Some cut stones were reused in altar and other architectural elements during the repairs in the Byzantine Empire At the western end of the walls there is an entrance built with reused block stones 15 200 m 660 ft of the Byzantine city walls are still standing These walls start right across the ancient bridge located at the edge of the road to Akcakoca and run as far as Hamam Street Some of the walls remaining in the gardens of the houses form the foundations of the garden walls There are also walls dating back to the Ottoman period on the high parts of the slope where the city was founded 12 Coins from the time of Roman emperor Gallienus r 253 268 depict the main gate of the city with two towers This gate is not extant 12 7 The Horse Gate which stands today within the settlement of Konuralp 7 and its extension ramparts are monuments of first grade The city walls were repaired in different periods with reused inscribed materials The gate lintel is made of local limestone material It is a reused grave stele with an ancient Greek inscription dedicated to the mother of a Prusiasan and features a horse relief 15 7 The city wall extending in a southeast direction from the gate is connected to a square plan tower 12 There is a small gate formed by reused inscribed stone blocks on the southern walls 7 Theatre nbsp Theatre nbsp Scaenae frons the background stage building of the theatreThe theatre which is locally called The Forty Stairs was built in the city center during the Hellenistic period 300 30 BC and was expanded in the Roman period 30 BC 300 AD 15 The theatre with the dimensions of 100 m 74 m 328 ft 243 ft covers an area of 5 978 m2 64 350 sq ft 12 The cavea stands on the hillside and is oriented southward 7 It had a capacity of 10 000 spectators with 36 seating rows in three caveas separated by aisles 12 only 17 rows in the lower section and 15 rows in the upper section are preserved today The sides of the seating rows at the radial aisles are decorated with Alchemilla figures 16 The scaenae the theatre stage has a rectangular plan 7 Two arched windows and an arched door of the scaenae frons as well as the parodoi stand firmly on the exterior of the stage 6 12 The theatre is dated to the period between Hellenistic and Roman since the entrance on the stage is not common in ancient Greek theatre architecture The cavea was constructed in the 1st century and the scaenae was added in 190 AD 7 Roman bridge nbsp The Roman bridge under reconstructionA 74 BC built 10 m 33 ft long three arched bridge is located outside the city walls in the west crossing the river Hypius modern day Melen is one of the oldest intact bridges in Turkey built by the Roman Empire 6 7 12 The total length of the Roman bridge is 30 25 m 99 2 ft It is 4 80 m 15 7 ft wide and 3 17 m 10 4 ft high It is made of white marble blocks without using any mortar The original length of the bridge was 39 20 m 128 6 ft 15 The restoration of the bridge after a flood ruined its pavement was completed in 2019 6 17 Colonnaded streetA colonnaded street running between the city and the Roman bridge was discovered in 1974 during construction works for an irrigation canal in the southern section of the Duzce Akcakoca highway D 655 Some architectural elements such as the architrave column fragments vaulted blocks and arches are deposited in the Konuralp Museum 7 Kemerkasim AqueductThis is an aqueduct located at the nearby Kemerkasim village In the beginning of the 2nd century AD P Domitius Iulianus helped out financially to bring water to the city and in the 3rd century a nobleman Gavinius Sacerdos financially supported the water system 12 Eleven retaining legs from the old water system of the city the Kemerkasim Aqueduct have survived to the present day The aqueduct was made of rubble stone 15 NecroplisThe necropolis of the ancient city a large designed cemetery of Roman period with elaborate tomb monuments is located on three hills in the Sehit Huseyin Kil neighborhood of Konuralp It covers an area of 173 697 m2 1 869 660 sq ft Artifacts found at this site such as a garlanded sarcophagus a Roman period statue steles block stones and earthenware pieces are exhibited in the Konuralp Museum 12 Konuralp Museum EditThe nearby Konuralp Museum was established in 2003 to preserve the cultural heritage of the ancient city of Prusias ad Hypium It contains a total of 6 237 artifacts including 1 848 archaeological 491 ethnographic and 3 898 coins 15 Tyche statueA statue of Tyche the presiding tutelary deity who governed the fortune and prosperity of a city was uncovered in 1931 The original statue dated to 4th century AD is exhibited after restoration in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums and a copy of it is in the Konuralp Museum 6 12 Floor mosaicsA floor mosaic depicting Orpheus a legendary musician poet and prophet in ancient Greek religion with the Seasons was unearthed in the south of the ancient city in 1998 6 12 After restoration works it was placed in the museum 12 In 2016 another floor mosaic was unearthed inside a villa ruin dated back to the Roman period of 300 400 AD at Aynali village about 3 km 1 9 mi from the ancient city 18 It depicts Achilles a hero of the Trojan War and his mother Thetis 6 12 Garland sarcophagusA large garlanded sarcophagus was found in the necropolis situated in the hill west of Konuralp in 1937 The long sides of the sarcophagus are decorated with reliefs of garlanded bucrania Its lower part features reliefs of several animals like pigs lions eagles and fishing birds 12 nbsp Statue of goddess Tyche nbsp Orpheus mosaic nbsp Garland sarcophagus in the Konuralp Museum TurkeyBishops EditThe city became a bishopric in the 4th century Bishop Georgios attended the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD and Bishop Olympios took part at the Council of Chalcedon 451 AD 6 Several of its bishops are known 19 George not Hesychius as Le Quien says 325 Olympios in 451 Dometius in 681 Theophilios in 787 Constantine in 869 Leo in 879 St Paul martyred by the iconoclasts in the ninth centuryIt is not known when this bishopric disappeared it still existed in the tenth century 20 No longer the seat of a residential bishop it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church 21 References Edit a b Ptolemy The Geography Vol 5 1 13 Harry Thurston Peck Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities 1898 Prusa Photius Bibliotheca excerpts 224 32 1 Richard Talbert ed 2000 Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World Princeton University Press p 86 and directory notes accompanying Lund University Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire a b c d e f g h i j k Prusias ad Hypium Konuralp or Uskubu Turkey The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites Retrieved 10 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Okur Coskuncay Esra 8 10 May 2014 Konuralp A Town Between Antiquity and Today Turkiye PDF 2nd ICAUD International Conference in Architecture and Urban Design Tirana Albania Epoka University Retrieved 11 November 2020 a b Konuralp antik kenti yerli yabanci turistlerin gozdesi oldu Hurriyet in Turkish 28 August 2020 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Frag histor Graec coll Didot frag 27 and 47 fragment 41 treats of Kios Cius or Guemlek also called Prusias and not of Kieros as the copyist has written this has given rise to numerous confusions Pliny Naturalis Historia Vol 5 43 a b Bati Karadeniz in Efes i Prusias ad Hypium Antik Kenti Hurriyet in Turkish 18 August 2019 Retrieved 8 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Tarih Turizmi Konuralp in Mihenk Taslatindan Prusias Antik Kentinin Dokusu in Turkish Konuralp Retrieved 7 November 2020 Medusa head found in ancient city Head of Alexander the Great bust found in Duzce a b c d e f Prusias Ad Hypium Antik Kenti Duzce in Turkish Turkiye Kultgr Portali Retrieved 7 November 2020 Prusias ad Hypium Antik Kenti in Turkish T C Kultur ve Turizm Bakanligi Duzce Kultur ve Turizm Mudurlugu Retrieved 7 November 2020 2000 Yilllik Kopru Duzce Posta in Turkish 9 November 2019 Retrieved 10 November 2020 Duzce de Roma donemine ait villa kalintilari bulundu Hurriyet in Turkish 17 August 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Le Quien Oriens christianus I 579 Heinrich Gelzer Ungedruckte Texte der Notitiae episcopatuum 554 Catholic Hierarchy Attribution Edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Prusa Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Prusias ad Hypium Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company The entry cites De Hell Voyage en Turquie et Perse IV 334 38 353 73 Texier Asie Mineure 85 Le Bar Voyage archeologique 1174 82 Perrot Expedition archeologique de la Galatie et de la Bithynie Paris 1872 20 42 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Prusias ad Hypium at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prusias ad Hypium amp oldid 1179769838, wikipedia, 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