Friday, November 26, 2010

Backroads of Aegean Turkey

We drove on, looking back to hilltop Assos and its situation
on the sea
















From a high point: much more stone fencing here than we
have seen in Turkey; olive groves everywhere, the whole
population out in the groves for the harvest; I love olives;
they're cheap and delicious here; but seeing the labor-
intensiveness, the back-breaking work, will make me value
each one a little more



















One of a dozen or more stone round-houses we saw, all
bunched together in one little town
















An exceedingly rocky country, but beautiful grasses and
pines and undergrowth everywhere; maybe it was the
Mediterranean/Aegean light, but the greens here were as
verdant and vibrant as any I have seen


















Lunch-time view















The seaside fortress at Babakale, the last Ottoman castle
built
















View from Babakale
















Another
















The Temple of Apollo at Gulpinar; those of you familiar
with the Iliad will recognize this as (a much later version of)
the Apollo temple that figures importantly in Homeric
matters; Agamemnon had to return the daughter of the priest
here, after offending Apollo, and then grabbed Achilles'
trophy-girl, thus inflaming Achilles' rage, of which Homer
sang; much less importantly, it is also a temple to mice (yes,
mice), who figure in the founding of the city in ways too
boring to recount; 2nd century BCE






















More archaeology going on at Gulpinar















Funded by Efes; never forget that Jack Horner's first funder
was Rainier Beer; cheers for Efes
I am going to guess this is where the archaeology students
hang out in the summer-time; more Efes fans

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Assos

After Pergamum we decided to spend a few days doing the coastal backroads of Aegean Turkey, at least up to Troy. Tuesday night found us on a lay-by overlooking Assos (present-day Behramkale), in a bit of a gale. The next morning, as the skies cleared, we visited ancient Assos. It's well off the tour bus circuit, the site was actually closed for the season, but they left the gate open. Assos is important, to me, because Hermias, the 4th century BCE ruler, was a student of Plato, and he invited his schoolmate, Aristotle, to found a school of philosophy at Assos. (Which reminds me: I forgot to mention that the pre-Socratic Heraclitus was a native of Ephesus).
Um, I think this might be a more recent
representation of Aristotle




















Part of the city wall, necropolis, and cliff above Assos,
which evidently provided most of the building material
















A temple in the agora















Baths















Nice view from the residential section; that's Lesbos in the
distance ('distance' being a couple miles)
















Very faint inscription: "Aristotle's
'Peripatetic' School of Philosophy,
Office of Career Placement Services";
actually, all this does not have a happy
ending: the Persians arrived (again) in
348 BCE, Aristotle fled to Lesbos, and
Hermias was tortured to death
























Assos theatre
















Greek theatres were generally placed on a hillside with a
great view (in case the play was boring); this one is hard
to beat

















The seat inscriptions are usually for the stone masons'
guild or the tanners' guild, et al; this one is for the followers
of the Sarapis cult (an Egyptian god)

Pergamum

Pergamum has the usual Hellenistic/Roman pedigree--settled by Aeolians in the 8th century BCE--except that it was a hilltop city, not a port city. The city was quite spread out, including the hilltop main center, the Red Hall and associated structures below it, and the Asclepion on a hillside across the valley. The Asclepion was a sort of Mayo Clinic of later antiquity. The great ancient physician Galen taught and healed there. After touring the Bergama Museum, we drove up to the Asclepion, then decided we were not interested--Vicki was not enthused about drinking from the sacred spring, even using the SteriPen--so we drove back down, through the city, and up to the telepherique that goes to the top of Pergamum. (Ordinary cars can drive, but anything over 2.7m high, including us, is verboten.)
The museum was OK; actually the first one we have seen where the ethnoghraphic 
stuff was better than the archaeological stuff

















The Pergamum telepherique--nicest, most up-to-date I have ridden, period; and I 
have ridden a few in the past year or so
















The most famous parts of Pergamum are its theatre and its Trajan Temple, above; 
1st century
















Trajan Temple complex, different view















Ditto















To me, there was at least one other fascinating aspect of 
Pergamum, namely, how they got the water up there for
100,000+ residents and their baths--240,000 pieces of terra 
cotta pipe spanned 45k to a mountain-top spring, a 
kilometer or more of lead pipe going the last distance from 
the valley, all employing siphon technique; the ditch 
pictured is where the pipes entered the city, at its arsenal



























Pergamum's cliff-hanging Greek theatre, from the vicinity of the Asclepion, 
across the valley
















Function follows form; the hillside did not permit the usual 180+ degree theatre 
form, so the builders made it much steeper and higher; climbing the staircases 
one almost wants to be belayed...

















Looking down on the Altar of Zeus, considered the most magnificent altar of 
antiquity; alas, it was excavated by Germans, who took it all, including the great 
friezes, back to Berlin


















And that's it, at the Pergamon Museum in Berlin, which was closed when we were 
there in 2009











Temple of Dionysus, right next to the theatre stage; the stage building was timber, 
fitted into the square supports in a previous picture, and thus temporary, so it 
would not block view of the temple during non-festival times


















So much for the upper city; at this point I began walking down (Vicki stayed in the 
camper this day), first to the middle city, and then through the lower city; this is a
nearly intact mosaic, found only a decade or so ago, in one of the large peristyle 
residences in the middle city; the so-called "Building Z"



















Sanctuary of Demeter















Gymnasium and environs, middle city















At length--all this took 3 hours or so-- I reached the bottom, 
ran out of path, but fortunately got back on the road, thanks to
this hole cut in the barbed-wire fencing that encloses the whole 
site

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Pergamum: Throne of Satan

Just when you think you've seen it all, something new, something you could not even have imagined, pops up. Monday we drove up past sprawling Izmir (formerly Smyrna) to Bergama, and its ancient city of Pergamum. Among Pergamum's great variety of ancient sites is something called the Red Hall. It is an immense red brick structure, the size of a European cathedral, a large one, flanked by two sizeable, tall rotunda-like structures. Brick construction is very unusual for monuments and temples in this part of the ancient world; indeed it is the first we have seen. The size is, well, immense. Best of all, it was a 2nd century temple to the Egyptian gods, Harpocrates, Isis, and Serapis. The ancients were really into hedging their bets. When the Christians built a church in Pergamum, it is said, they simply built a basilica (now gone) inside the Red Hall.

Pergamum, if you know your Book of Revelation, and your seven cities/churches of the Apocalypse, was the city of the Throne of Satan. (Revelation 2:13: "I know where you dwell, where Satan’s throne is. Yet you hold fast my name, and you did not deny my faith even in the days of Antipas my faithful witness, who was killed among you, where Satan dwells.") The Christians and Satan are now long gone, but you can hear the muezzin very clearly, echoing about the valley, five times a day.
Red Hall; way too large to get in one frame















View of the Red Hall, taken from Pergamum hill (note tour bus for scale)
















One of the two flanking structures: one is a
sort of exhibit area, the other is a mosque





















Interior artsy-fartsy view




















This is a huge podium at the center of the temple, on which a 10 meter statue of 
one of the gods stood; a priest would go down the hole there and make the god 
"speak" to the faithful; "pay no attention to that man behind the curtain"


















Among many remnants laying around: looks Egyptian to me





















Restoration work goes on, the old-fashioned
way, too

Monday, November 22, 2010

Ephesus III: the Outtakes

It absolutely cracks me up that the Turkish name
for Ephesus is "Efes," which is also the name of
Turkey's very popular and very good beer;
"popular"--82% of the market, I have read, but
from what I have seen after nearly 2 months in
Turkey, I would have thought it was 98%

















Somehow, at Efes, the ancient public works, drains, sewer
lines, water lines, were more visible than in other cities we
have visited; here's a whole pile of drain spare parts, 2000
years old; or so



















Alas, an abiding image; at least the feral dogs here are well-
behaved, guardians, in fact, of the public spaces

















Another Turkish kitler















Of course everyone who finds the latrine
stages this shot...




















Every site has its mini-bazaar; Efes has two; Turkish
merchants, even the ones in the tourist trade, are a good-
natured lot

















We were feeling a bit guilty about having skipped St. John's
Basilica and the Virgin Mary's house, so we did stop by the
tomb of St. Luke; it was so identified in the 6th century
because it had a cross on it...


















Which afforded also this fine picture of one of the afore-
mentioned mini-bazaars (with a tour bus approaching) and
















A view of the biggest and best Priapos yet; marble, no less















Alas, spending the night on the beach at Pamucak would
have been great