Vici.org
Er zijn nog geen afbeeldingen met betrekking tot deze plaats toegevoegd.
Afbeelding toevoegen.

Omgeving:

Tralles, TheatreKarakemer Su Kemeri

Locatie:

  • Turkije, Aydın
  • geo:37.859901,27.835333
  • Locatie ± 5-25 m.

Period or year:

  • -2500~ / unknown

Classificatie:

  • Stad
  • Zichtbaar

Annotaties

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

According to Strabo Carian city of Tralles was founded by the Argives and Trallians1. The name Tralles (in Latin) or Tralleis was used in Roman and Byzantine times.

Strabo: After Magnesia is the road to Tralles;86 travellers have on the left hand Mesogis, and on the right hand, and from the road itself, the plain of the Mæander, which is occupied in common by Lydians, Carians, Ionians, Milesians, Mysians, and the Æolians of Magnesia. [..] The city of Tralles is built upon ground in the shape somewhat of a trapezium. It has a citadel strongly fortified, and the places around are well defended. It is as well peopled as any of the cities in Asia, and its inhabitants are wealthy; some of them constantly occupy chief stations in the province, and are called Asiarchs. [..] Tralles produced also celebrated orators, Dionysocles, and after him Damasus, surnamed Scombrus. It is said to have been founded by Argives and a body of Tralli Thracians,from whom it had its name. It was governed for a short time by tyrants, sons of Cratippus, about the period of the Mithridatic war 2.

Sources:

  1. George E. Bean, Turkey Beyond the Maeander. An Archaeological Guide, London Ernest Jersey 1971, p. 208-211
  2. Ekrem Akurgal, Ancient Civilisations and Ruins of Turkey: From Prehistoric Times Until the End of the Roman Empir, II ed., Istanbul 1970, p.23
  3. The Geography of Strabo. Literally translated, with notes, in three volumes. London. George Bell & Sons. 1903.

Bronverwijzingen

  1. George E. Bean, Turkey Beyond the Maeander. An Archaeological Guide, London Ernest Jersey 1971, p. 208-211
  2. Strabo XIV.1

According to Strabo Carian city of Tralles was founded by the Argives and Trallians1. The name Tralles (in Latin) or Tralleis was used in Roman and Byzantine times.

Strabo: After Magnesia is the road to Tralles;86 travellers have on the left hand Mesogis, and on the right hand, and from the road itself, the plain of the Mæander, which is occupied in common by Lydians, Carians, Ionians, Milesians, Mysians, and the Æolians of Magnesia. [..] The city of Tralles is built upon ground in the shape somewhat of a trapezium. It has a citadel strongly fortified, and the places around are well defended. It is as well peopled as any of the cities in Asia, and its inhabitants are wealthy; some of them constantly occupy chief stations in the province, and are called Asiarchs. [..] Tralles produced also celebrated orators, Dionysocles, and after him Damasus, surnamed Scombrus. It is said to have been founded by Argives and a body of Tralli Thracians,from whom it had its name. It was governed for a short time by tyrants, sons of Cratippus, about the period of the Mithridatic war 2.

Sources:

  1. George E. Bean, Turkey Beyond the Maeander. An Archaeological Guide, London Ernest Jersey 1971, p. 208-211
  2. Ekrem Akurgal, Ancient Civilisations and Ruins of Turkey: From Prehistoric Times Until the End of the Roman Empir, II ed., Istanbul 1970, p.23
  3. The Geography of Strabo. Literally translated, with notes, in three volumes. London. George Bell & Sons. 1903.

Bronverwijzingen

  1. George E. Bean, Turkey Beyond the Maeander. An Archaeological Guide, London Ernest Jersey 1971, p. 208-211
  2. Strabo XIV.1


In de buurt

Tralles, Gymnasium

Gymnasium of Tralles

Tralles, Aqueduct

Tralleis, Trallis


Dit object is toegevoegd door René Voorburg op 2012-05-29. Laatst bewerkt door Elżbieta op 2024-02-02. Persistent URI: http://vici.org/vici/3984 . Download als RDF/XML, 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.

Vici.org partners:

Livius.org: articles on ancient history   Rijksmuseum van Oudheden