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Omgeving:

Priene BouleuterionBouleterionPrytaneion of PrienePriene Agora and Temple of ZeusAgora of PrieneView from Agora of Priene on the Meandros PlainAgora of PrienePriene, BasilicaTemenos of the Egyptian Gods at PrieneTemenos of the Egyptian Gods at PrieneTemenos of the Egyptian Gods at PrienePriene TheaterPriene TheaterPriene TheaterTheatreTheatre of PrieneTheatre of PrieneMarket of PrieneTemple of Athena, PrieneTemple of Athena, PrieneTemple of Athena, PrieneTemple of Athena, PrienePriene, Propylon of Athena SanctuaryTemple of Athena, PrieneTerrace wallTemple of Athena, PrieneTemple of Athena, PrieneMarble inscription,  temple of Athena at PrieneThe Temple of Athena Polias, PrieneE. gate

Locatie:

  • Turkije, Güllübahçe Turun
  • geo:37.658802,27.298096
  • Locatie exact

Period or year:

  • -7xx / unknown

Classificatie:

  • Stad
  • Zichtbaar

Annotaties

Er zijn nog geen Nederlandstalige annotaties. Hier volgen annotaties in het Engels.

Priene: Greek city in western Turkey. See http://www.livius.org/pp-pr/priene/priene.html

Prine was ancient Ionian city in Anatolia ca 15 km north of Meander [modern Buyuk Menderes]. Originally city was situated on the sea coast on a slopes facing to the sea.

Pausanias: The Ionians who settled at Myus and Priene, they too took the cities from Carians. The founder of Myus was Cyaretus the son of Codrus, but the people of Priene, half Theban and half Ionian, had as their founders Philotas, the descendant of Peneleus, and Aepytus, the son of Neileus. The people of Priene, although they suffered much at the hands of Tabutes the Persian and afterwards at the hands of Hiero, a native, yet down to the present day are accounted Ionians.

  1. http://www.transanatolie.com/english/turkey/Architecture/priene.htm
  2. Ekrem Akurgal, Ancient Civilisations and Ruins of Turkey: From Prehistoric Times Until the End of the Roman Empir, II ed., Istanbul 1970, pp. 185-206
  3. Pausanias`  Description of Greece, VII.2

Priene: Greek city in western Turkey. See http://www.livius.org/pp-pr/priene/priene.html

Prine was ancient Ionian city in Anatolia ca 15 km north of Meander [modern Buyuk Menderes]. Originally city was situated on the sea coast on a slopes facing to the sea.

Pausanias: The Ionians who settled at Myus and Priene, they too took the cities from Carians. The founder of Myus was Cyaretus the son of Codrus, but the people of Priene, half Theban and half Ionian, had as their founders Philotas, the descendant of Peneleus, and Aepytus, the son of Neileus. The people of Priene, although they suffered much at the hands of Tabutes the Persian and afterwards at the hands of Hiero, a native, yet down to the present day are accounted Ionians.

  1. http://www.transanatolie.com/english/turkey/Architecture/priene.htm
  2. Ekrem Akurgal, Ancient Civilisations and Ruins of Turkey: From Prehistoric Times Until the End of the Roman Empir, II ed., Istanbul 1970, pp. 185-206
  3. Pausanias`  Description of Greece, VII.2

In de buurt

Bouleuterion of Priene

Administrative building of Priene.


Dit object is toegevoegd door René Voorburg op 2012-12-19. Laatst bewerkt door Elżbieta op 2024-02-03. Persistent URI: http://vici.org/vici/11333 . Download als RDF/XML, GeoJSON, KML.
Annotatie beschikbaar onder de Creative Commons Naamsvermelding-GelijkDelen 3.0 Unported-licentie. Metadata beschikbaar onder de Creative Commons Publiek Domein Verklaring, tenzij expliciet anders aangegeven.
Lijntracé bij dit punt door Jona Lendering.

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