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The
ruins of the ancient city of Miletus lie on a hill encircled
by the waters of the Büyük Menderes near the Aegean coast.
As is the case with nearby Priene, the progressive
accumulation of riverborn debris has played a considerable
role in the city's historical and economical vicissitudes.
A
large number of archaeological finds of the Mycenaean age
indicate the existence of an old Mycenaean colony in the
middle of the second millennium B.C. It became an important
Ionian center of commerce and as its prosperity increased,
Miletus established a large number of colonies throughout
the Mediterranean area and along the coasts of the Black
Sea. Culturally the city flourished and was the birthplace
of the philosophers Anaximes and Anaximander, the historian
and geographer Hecataeus, and the architects Hippodamos and
Isidorus. When it fell into the hands of the Persians they
razed it to the ground to punish its rebel tendencies. Some
time later the city was rebuilt; as part of the Roman empire
(2nd cent. B.C.) it once more acquired some of
its ancient prestige, which however was rapidly threatened
by the silting up of the port and the consequent loss in
importance and decline of commercial activities.
Archaeological investigation of the zone of Miletus, begun
at the turn of the century, is still in course.
The
most frequently visited attraction is the Theatre.
Scenographically set against the hill, it was originally
built around the 4th century B.C. and was enlarged in the
Hellenistic period when it had a
seating capacity of 5,300. Its present size is the result of
a reconstruction undertaken in Roman times (2nd
cent. A.D.), which brought its seating capacity to a maximum
of 15,000. Further on what is left of two lion structures
set to guard the entrance to the port can still be seen. The
remains of the Sanctuary of the Delphic Apollo
represent the principal place of worship in the city. Built
in the archaic period, the edifice was transformed in Doric
style in the Hellenistic age; during Roman domination the
porticoes were rebuilt in Corinthian style.
Other
important vestiges include the Bonleuterion, which
was probably erected under Antiochus Epiphanes, king of
Syria (second half 2nd cent, B.C.), the southern Agora
(market place built in the Hellenistic age) and the Stadium
(2nd cent. B.C.), which contained up to 15,000
spectators. Near the southern agora stands the Ilyas Bey
Cmii. This square mosque (15th cent.) has a dome
and is notable for its fine architectural design as well as
the profusion of fine marble inlays and for its decor.
Particularly noteworthy is the prayer niche (mihrab).
The
Baths of Faustina were named after the wife of Marcus
Aurelius who donated them in the second half of the 2nd
century A.D. The bath complex is extremely well preserved
even though it does
not fit into the urban network of orthogonal streets planned
by Hippodamus. The central courtyard was surrounded by
Corinthian columns. The palaestra could be reached
through the dressing room (apodyterium) where the
statues of the Muses, now in the Museum of Istanbul,
were found. Of the rooms which were part of the bathing
establishment itself mention can be made of the frigdarium,
decorated with sculpture which served as a fountain for the
pool in the center, the calidarium composed of two apsed
rooms furnished with hypocausts for heating, and the tepidarium.
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