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The
exact origins of the ancient town of Telmessos, over which the
modern town of Two
earthquakes in 1956 and 1957 destroyed a large number of its
ancient monuments. Fortunately the collection of rock tombs cut
into the cliff has remained intact. In fact, it can be said that
Fethiye boasts some of the best Lycian.
Kaunos
: According
to Herodotos, the inhabitants of Kaunos considered themselves
descendants of Architectural and structural elements
of the so-called Roman Theatre are of evident Further up
stand what is left of the Roman Baths, of a Palaestra almost
certainly of the same period, a Byzantine place of Myra.
These
ruins include a score of tombs arranged on the cliff in a jumble
overlooking the sea; perhaps this is the most amazing collection
of rock tombs in the whole of Anatolia. Myra comes from the
Greek word "mirra"; we know for certain that it dates
back at least as far as the 5th century B.C. and was
one of the most important towns in the Lycian Federation. Its
superiority lasted in time; in fact, during the Byzantine era
Theodosius II promoted it to capital of Lycia. Unfortunately,
its promotion coincided with the Arab predations that commenced
during the 7th century and continued for over two centuries. In
809, Myra was conquered by Harun el-Rashid and the city was
gradually abandoned.
Evidence
of its glorious past are the rock tombs dating back to the
Lycian era and the Greco-Roman theatre. On the subject of its
unique necropolis, it was a Lycian custom to bury their
dead high up because they believed that in this way they were
more easily transported to heaven. These funeral monuments date
from the 6th to the 3rd century B.C.: built isolatedly or cut
out of the rock-face, several of the facades have flat or
sloping roofs carved to imitate wooden beams supported by
pillars, suggesting that they are copied in form from wooden
temples; the Greek temple is revealed by the rich decorated
architraves.
The richness of decorations some still have traces of color
and in particular the magnificence of sculptured bas-reliefs,
usually portraying the dead person surrounded by his family,
testify to the exceptional taste and artistic sense of local
artists for the time.
The
same decorative taste can be found in the theatre, built
in Greek style, that is, against a hill with fourteen flights of
steps dividing the cavea in thirteen sectors, with twenty-nine
rows of seats in the lower part and nine in the upper. Here too
the stage wall featured bas-reliefs with garlands, friezes and
theatrical masks.
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