Skip to main content

Aizanoi

Temple of Zeus at Aizanoi

Aizanoi, Çavdarhisar: urban and cultural development of prehistoric and early Roman city in western Central Anatolia.



Mosaic in Aizanoi

Aizanoi was an ancient Greek-Roman city in west central Anatolia, situated about 50 km southwest of the present province of Kutahya in the territory of the Turkish country town Çavdarhisar with charming farms. A settlement mound to the Early Bronze Age to Hellenistic settlement remains and very well-preserved Temple of Zeus from the time of Emperor Domitian (81-96 AD). The Roman town lies on both banks of the ancient river Penkalas. To the visible, well-preserved or restored buildings include two baths, theater, stadium, ancient bridges, squares and cemeteries. To the east of the settlement above the river, the sacred cave of Mother Goddess, Meter Steunene.

Reconstitution schématique du sanctuaire de Zeus à Aizanoi, Auteur Franck Devedjian, né le 12 août 1981 à Clamart, Wikipedia

Aizanoi experienced in the early imperial period a big boost. Many public buildings built, in the middle of the 1st Century AD, a temple of Artemis Hagiotate, and before the end of the sanctuary of Zeus, the chief god of the city, in the form of a pseudodipteros. It is preserved to a large extent. On the walls of the cella there are remains of extensive inscriptions from the reign of Hadrian, referring to the land of the sanctuary. Noteworthy is an underlying barrel vault with light windows, which probably served as a sanctuary. This is not a common architectural aspect of Roman structures in Anatolia. The question here is the presence of acroterion shaped female bust in front of the temple, which reminds that the temple might be dedicated to someone else, in time, other than Zeus. Another important deity was the Mother Goddess, who was worshiped in a cave...

Barrel vault underground hall below Aizanoi Temple of Zeus

In the 2nd Century AD, was also built in several stages, a theater that was linked in an unusual way with the adjacent stadium. In addition, the bank of Penkala attached and in 157 built a bridge still standing today. Some of these construction projects are related to a wealthy family of the city, especially Ulpius Appuleianus Flavian and his son Ulpius Appuleius Eurycles. Eurycles was also ambassador to Panhellenion in Athens, Hadrian had set up.

In this period also resulted in a large bath and gymnasium facilities and a well water line leading to it. Other public buildings were a round building that served as Macellum (Market building) and on which a copy of the maximum price edict of Diocletian was appropriate, and a late antique (c. 400 AD) column road.

Popular posts from this blog

Hattians - First Civilizations in Anatolia

The Hattians were an ancient people who inhabited the land of Hatti in Asia Minor in the 3rd to 2nd millennia BC. They spoke a non-Indo-European language of uncertain affiliation called Hattic (now believed by some to be related to the Northwest Caucasian language group). They eventually merged with or were replaced by the Hittites, who spoke the Indo-European Hittite language.

Early Neolithic site in southeastern Turkey dated to 11000 years ago: Göbekli Tepe, Urfa

Göbekli Tepe is an early Neolithic site in Urfa, southeastern Turkey. It is famous for containing the world's oldest known stone temples (dated to before 9000 BC), and because it contradicts the long-held belief that the introduction of agriculture preceded the construction of large buildings. Göbekli Tepe was created by hunter-gatherers, yet is assumed to be a key location for understanding the origins of agriculture. (To give a timescale, remember that Stonehenge, a Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monument located near Amesbury in the English county of Wiltshire, about 8 miles north of Salisbury, was erected between 2500 BC and 2000 BC although the surrounding circular earth bank and ditch, which constitute the earliest phase of the monument, have been dated to about 3100 BC.)

Etruscans: Anatolian Italians?

The Etruscan civilization is the name given today to the culture and way of life of people of ancient Italy whom ancient Romans called Etrusci or Tusci. The ancient Greeks' word for them was Tyrrhenoi, or Tyrrsenoi. The Etruscans themselves used the term Rasenna, which was syncopated to Rasna or Raśna.