Phaselis Antalya – port and trading centre in Lycia
- Written by Portal Editor
Phaselis was one of the most important trading centres in the Mediterranean for several centuries in ancient times. Goods such as Lycian cedar wood and rose oil were shipped from here to Egypt and the Middle East.
It has been archaeologically researched since 1811 and, like Olympos, is located in the Olimpos Beydağları National Park, far away from the nearest modern town.
Phaselis as a trading city near Attaleia, today, Antalya
Membership of the Athenian League in the 5th century BC The 5th century AD brought Phaselis economic prosperity - and at the same time a bad reputation as a quarrelsome and greedy merchant town.
In the 5th century, Phaselis began to mint coins with the prow of a ship on one side. These coins were still in use until the third century AD. The city willingly opened its gates when Alexander the Great came to Anatolia. Strabo describes Alexander's "adventures" in the city as follows:
Pirates settled in Phaselis and in 77 BC it was destroyed. Brutus, who came to Phaselis in 42 BC, "removed" the pirates and incorporated the city into the Roman Empire. After this incorporation, the city flourished. The conqueror Hadrian came to Phaselis in 129 AD. The people living there glorified the conqueror with sculptures they had created themselves. Moreover, they built a monumental gate on the spot that the conqueror's ship used as a berth.
Heyday as a Byzantine naval base
“In five hours, before 8 a.m., we were at Tekrova, ancient Phaselis. We landed and immediately I saw the ruins of the old port. As much as I appreciated the ruins of the city inside, I admired both the design and dimensions, the workmanship of the ancient inhabitants, the traces of the ports and the maritime knowledge associated with them. The port and town of Phaselis are extremely skilfully built and very interesting, though small; the theatre, the stadium and the temples can still be traced and the many tombs on the hills show how long the city must have existed.”
In the 6th century, it was represented in the trading post of Naukratis in Egypt, with Rhodes, Cnidus and Halicarnassus, among others. From around 550 BC, it belonged to the Persian Empire for a long time - a position that was culturally and economically important for many Greek cities in Asia Minor.
Politically, however, this was used in Athens as a pretext to disguise the Athenian activities of the Athenian League as an anti-Persian fighting alliance. Thus, in 469 BC, Phaselis was "forcibly liberated" and forced into the League - as a flourishing trading city with high tributes in a strategically important location, a significant gain for Athens.
During the Diadochi Wars, initially Ptolemaic (until 197 BC), then Seleucid (until 187 BC), it was incorporated into the Lycian League under Roman rule until around 100 BC, although it belonged to Pamphylia.
Under Domitian, Trajan and Hadrian, the city, which had been destroyed in the pirate wars, was rebuilt in a representative manner at the end of the 1st century AD and experienced a second boom. Most of the ruins that have survived today date from this period. However, Phaselis never recovered from the later raids by pirates and Arabs in the middle of the 7th century, even though it temporarily rose economically again as a Byzantine naval base in the 8th century. From the 10th century onwards, it served only as a quarry for Antalya, which needed material for its fortifications.
Natural safe harbour
The so-called city harbour with its mighty quay walls is now a popular bathing bay. From there, the 20-meter-wide boulevard with the important Roman buildings on both sides leads to the southern harbour, which is protected by a wall. On the northwest side, the three agoras (marketplaces) from the times of Hadrian, Domitian and late antiquity are lined up next to one another. There are also remains of the thermal baths and Byzantine ruins. On the opposite southeast side, the city theatre was built on a hillside. The Acropolis of Phaselis above still shows the remains of the houses of the last residents, who abandoned the city in the 7th century and barricaded themselves on the ridge. The other residential areas with streets and houses have been almost completely demolished.
Sons and daughters of the city
Coordinates: 36° 31′ N, 30° 33′ E
Please also read:
Olympos - Tree or wooden houses characterize the image
Antalya Museum - Archaeology and Ethnography
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Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour -
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Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour -
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Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour Phaselis Antalya - Ancient Harbour
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