Gaziantep - many secrets still unsolved!
- Written by Portal Editor
On our tour through the southeast we also reached Gaziantep, whose mosaics in the Zeugma Mosaic Museum are known far beyond the country's borders.
While the Archaeological Museum today shows finds from the area around the city and from Zincirli, Yesemek, Arsameia on Nymphaios and some other excavations, the large collection of Roman mosaics from the lost city of Zeugma on the middle Euphrates has now been moved to the Zeugma mosaic museum, which opened in 2011 been outsourced. The Zeugma mosaic museum is probably the largest mosaic museum in the world.
Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara
Many of the finds from Kargamış are on display at the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara. Another once Hittite town worth seeing is Yesemek near İslahiye.
Between 1200 and 800 BC In the 4th century BC, this place was used by the Hittites as an open-air sculptor's studio and is therefore considered one of the oldest quarries in Anatolia. There are still 200 Hittite statues in the area around the town today.
Where the Merziman torrent flows into the Euphrates
It has a special meaning for Christianity because it is believed that the first Bible was kept in it.
In the centre of the castle there is a cistern whose enormous depth reaches down to the water level of the Euphrates. Belkıs (Zeugma), 10 km from the district capital Nizip, was an important city in Roman times.
This place is particularly famous for its mosaics, unfortunately only some of which were found in museums.
After their invasion of eastern Anatolia, the Turkish Seljuks, who had defeated the army of Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes (1068–1071) in the Battle of Manzikert on August 26, 1071, took control of this area. At that time, the fortress was built on the city hill of Antep.
The citadel from Seljuk times, which is now in the centre of the city, was probably the site of fortifications in ancient times. Some scholars even suspect that Gaziantep corresponds to or was close to the Seleucid city of Antioch ad Taurum.
Gaziantep also set up a light rail system for its public transport, comparable to Antalya. As early as 2009, 17 former Düwag subway and tram railcars of the Pt type were purchased from Frankfurt am Main, which have no longer been used in Frankfurt since April 1, 2007. They were transported by rail to Gaziantep, where they were modernized and used. The tram line, which runs from the university to the train station and is around 13 kilometres long, was opened in 2011. However, the connection was discontinued shortly after it went into operation due to lack of interest.
Please read as well:
Submerged in the floods of the Euphrates: Zeugma
The Diocletian's Aqueduct in Split
https://www.alaturka.info/en/turkey-country/southeastern/1648-gaziantep-past-and-present/amp#sigProId1ec3d0ad3a