Thursday, July 10, 2025

26 April 2025 Antalya • Explore Perge

 

Today we visited the ancient Roman city of Perge, located along the coast near Antalya.  Perge has some of Turkey’s most beautiful Hellenistic and Roman ruins. Originally settled by the Hittites around 1500 BC, it is one of the oldest cities in Turkey. In 334 BC, it came under the Hellenistic control of Alexander the Great.  Today you can see the remains of the city walls and the two city towers that were built during this period. 

It wasn’t until the Roman Empire conquered Perge in 188 BC that the city prospered and became one of the richest cities of the Pamphylia Region (located in the southern part of Asia Minor).  The city was also a very important place for Christianity and in 46 CE, it was visited by the Apostle Paul, who preached his first sermon there and was also accompanied by Barnabas.

By the 5th-6th centuries CE, the city was a major center of Byzantine Christianity.  However, in the later years of the Byzantine empire, the city was subjected to a number of attacks by Arabs and a devastating earthquake in the 8th century, thus leading to the abandonment of the city. Below is a description of some of the many ruins that we saw as we walked through this ancient city.

Tour of the City

Stadium
The ruins of a 2nd century CE stadium are located on the eastern slope of the Acropolis hill on the west side of the city.  U-shaped in design, it was 750’ by 98’ and held about 12,000 people.  It was the center for entertainment in the city, hosting athletic events, boxing, gladiator fights, and festivals.  While not much is left of the stadium, there are fragments of seats and arches on the north-eastern section.




When you first enter Perge, you pass through two massive gates at the northern edge of the city.  The first is the Roman Gates, consisting of two gates with a courtyard between them.  These were built during the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus in the 2nd  century CE as part of the city’s fortifications.  It is protected by high towers on both sides of the gate; and the inner gate, also built during Severus’ reign, leads from the courtyard into the city itself.  

Perhaps the most iconic symbol of the city is the second of these massive gates – the Hellenistic Gate built in the 2nd Century BCE during the Hellenistic period.  It consists of two towers built of hewn stones that lead into a horseshoe-shaped courtyard built by Planica Magna.  Marble blocks cover the walls with a two-story colonnade.  In the niches between the columns of the second story were statues of Perge’s legendary founders, Mopsos and Calchas.  The lower level housed statues of Greek gods, namely Hermes, Aphrodite, and Pan.  Today most of these statues are located in the Antalya Museum.

Roman Gates

Hellenistic Gate

Courtyard of the Hellenistic Gate




Hadrian's Arch

Hadrian's Arch was a triumphal arch erected in 130 CE in honor of the Roman emperor Hadrian, whovisited Perge during his reign.  It was considered a symbol of Roman power and was used as another grand entrance to the city.  The arch featured three gateways and intricate carvings depicting mythological figures and scenes from Roman victories.  It was located at the southern edge of the Hellenistic Gate courtyard and marked the beginning of the colonnaded street.








Southern Basilica

In the Southern part of the city are the remains of a three-nave basilica, dating back to the 5th or 6thcentury CE.  The basilica was used as both a political venue and a court.  The eastern part of the building is the best preserved. 





The Roman baths are located on the west side of the Hellenistic gate.  A monumental gate leads to these baths that are, today, considered the best-preserved Roman baths in Turkey.  They consist of a series of rooms with windows, a frigidarium or cold water room with a swimming pool, a tepidarium or room with warm water, and the caldarium, the hot water room.  Still visible are the thin marble slabs, that once lined the brick walls and the exposed heating system – a floor supported on brick pillars and the air heated in the boiler room that circulated underneath.

Arch Leading into Roman Baths

Water Fountain Area in front of Baths

Large Swimming Pool in Baths

Underground Heating System of Baths

Layout of Roman Baths





















On the side of the street opposite the Roman Baths was the 4th century CE Agora, a large square area that was surrounded by columns and was the commercial and political center of the city.   Each side measured 213” and was lined with shops.  A fountain once stood in the center and there is evidence of a public latrine on one side of the square.

Agora

Ridged Column in Agora

Drainage System in Agora

Ruins of Fountain in Agora

Old Game Carved in Stone that
was Played in the Agora

The marble colonnaded street ran down the center of the city from south to north.   At the far southern end of the street is the Fountain of Hadrian.  This fountain is supported by the southern slope of the Acropolis hill and marks the beginning of a canal that ran down the center of the colonnaded street that had carried water to various parts of the city.  Built in a U-shaped form, the two-story building served as a gateway to the acropolis.  There were two entrances to the building and the façade between them contain a statue of Kaystros (the God of the River).  It once contained a statue of Hadrian, but that has since been moved to the Antalya Museum.  And in 1924, after 1800 years and extensive renovations, water is again flowing through the fountain.

Colonnaded Road

Fountain of Hadrian











Perge's Official Greater

As dinner was on our own tonight, we decided to do a little sightseeing in the Old Town of Antalya before getting to the restaurant.  The area where our hotel is located is zoned for pedestrians, but a few cars are allowed in.  It seemed we were forever dodging cars/taxis, motorcycles and bicycles!  We first walked a short distance to the Sehzade Korkt Mosque.   It was originally built in the 2nd century as a Roman temple.  In the 5th or 6th century CE (Byzantine Period) it was converted into a church that was dedicated to the Virgin Mary.  During the 7th century CE, it was destroyed by invading Arabs and then converted into a mosque as a symbol of conquest during the Seljuk Period (a Sunni Muslim dynasty during the 9th and 10th centuries).  This was when its original minaret was added (today that landmark which towers over Antalya is known as the Broken Minaret).  In 1361 it was again converted back into a church by the King of Cyprus, but with the Ottoman Period it was again converted back into a mosque. (It certainly has had a chaotic history!)

 In 1896, fire severely damaged the mosque and destroyed the wooden cone of the minaret, and the mosque was deemed unusable.  In 1974 it underwent a serious restoration, but it wasn’t until 2017 that work began to make the mosque ready for worship.  In 2019, a new wooden cone was attached to the minaret, and finally in 2022, after 126 years, it was reopened for worship.

In the courtyard of the mosque is an open-air museum with artifacts that reflect Antalya’s history from the Ancient Age through the Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman Periods.  Most of what we saw were just stone blocks.

Stones from the 3rd Century
Roman Temple

Inside the Mosqe

Stones from the Roman Era

Outside the Mosque

Broken Minaret

We then walked down to the waterfront where we saw the Hidirhk TowerLocated on the southwest corner of the city walls, it was built in the 1st or 2nd century CE by the Roman Emperor Hadrian.  It was thought to have been a monumental tomb, but its structure also indicates that it could have been used for defensive purposes during the Byzantine era.  During the Ottoman Period it was a military warehouse.  And throughout its history, it was used as a watchtower for ships sailing through the Gulf of Antalya.

We then had dinner at the Sauvignon Restaurant located on the waterfront right next to the Hidirhk Tower.  We also had a nice view of the old walls and the little bay inlet that forms the boundary of the town and the sea.  The restaurant was very nice and the wine exceptional – with a name like Sauvignon how could you go wrong.  Bill had what he called some of the best calamari and then a seafood spaghetti while I had shrimp tortellini.  A nice way to end our stay in Antalya.

Hidirhk Tower

What Better Wine than Sauvignon Blanc
to have at the Sauvignon Restaurant

Part of the Old City Walls

 

 

 

 

 

 

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