KAPIKIRI - Herakleia Ancient City
AIRVŪZ STAFF NOTE :
Top AirVuz contributor jesus_tr brings us this excellent drone video of an ancient ruins site in southwestern Turkey. It's called Heraclea at Latmus, and it's located on the shore of Lake Bafa in the province of Muğla. The city reached its height during the Hellenistic Period, the time between the death of Alexander the Great in the fourth century BC and the rise of the Roman Empire roughly three centuries later. The video includes footage of the Temple of Athena, the most well-known of the remaining ancient structures here.
- over 3 years ago
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Herakleia Ancient City Today Herakleia City is located on the ancient Milas Söke Highway. In the ancient times, the mountains of Besparmak, known as the Latmos Mountains, are covered with steep and forests and turn into the bay of Latmos. This ancient city, known for its natural beauty, is also known as Latmos or Latmia. Herakleia of Latmos lived its most brilliant period in the Hellenistic period. It has become very rich especially due to maritime trade. The ruins of ancient times are intertwined with the village of Kapıkırı, where the extensions of Latmos Mountain to Bafa Lake are located. In fact, the old city is located on a steep slope to the east of Herakleia. The city walls have been expanded by Lysimachos in BC.287, reaching 6.5 km in length. The fortifications were reinforced with 65 towers. Some years after Herakleia was completely abandoned, M.S. VIII. In the first half of the 9th century, Christian priests from the Sinai peninsula from Yemen made a number of monasteries and churches. These monasteries and churches spread from the Latmos Mountains to the bay and the islands on Lake Bafa. Since 1971, the German archaeologist Anneliese Peschlow, who has been working in the area, has crossed the Latmos Rock Paintings in 1994 in a village he visited. Experts who say that humanity is very important in terms of the history of development, these paintings express that Anatolia’s first family painting is explained in a symbolic language. In addition, it is emphasized that there are no war figures in contrast to those found in Europe. These paintings, which are not found in Western Anatolia, present information about pre-historic art as well as the relations between the men and women of the period. 170 paintings representing the transition from paleotic time to Neolithic time were found.