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Showing posts with label perge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perge. Show all posts

Sunday, April 9, 2023

ARTEMIS and the essence of her mother divinity


    Man lives in a universe of symbols. Everything that surrounds us; numbers, colours, shapes are symbols.

    Human beings comprehend each historical phenomenon with symbols/symbols. It is undeniable that mankind has used symbols expressing this power on the way to a divine power and creation by concretising the events he has seen or perceived in nature since the Upper Palaeolithic Period. These symbols are the very essence of nature, the cycle of reproduction and death, and nature itself.




    The cult of the mother goddess is found in every region of Anatolia since Prehistoric times. The characteristics of this belief, which provides all kinds of abundance and fertility and has great power over plants and animals, have developed depending on natural conditions.

    God and idol are synonymous in Neolithic Period cultures. The idols created especially at Çatalhöyük in the Neolithic Age and at almost all settlements during the Chalcolithic Age and at Alaca and Kültepe in the following Bronze Age are the fruits of the Mother Goddess cult in Anatolia. With the Early Bronze Age; the Mother Goddess Wurushemu, who was perceived abstractly in Hatti, becomes the Sun Goddess of Arriana and Hepat in Yazılıkaya by becoming pictorialised in the Hittite Civilisation of the Middle and Late Bronze Age. Even the fall of the Hittites could not destroy this belief, which was worshipped in every region of Anatolia. Like ploughed soil, like a tree whose branches have been pruned, it continues uninterruptedly with the New Hittite Kubaba. This continuity affects Phrygian art and beliefs in sculpture and Cybele beliefs, and the 7th century BC Phrygian Cybele paintings shape the Ionian Goddesses. The Archaic Age shows the first signs of the golden age of Ionian art. After the Persian invasion, the belief in the Mother Goddess and the symbols expressing her have now left Anatolia and reached the opposite shore. All the goddesses known as "Greek" were born from her, only their names changed.

    Artemis emerged from this idea, daughter of Zeus and Leto, sister of Apollo. Even this mythos cannot tear her away from Anatolia, the arrival of the Achaeans in front of Troy binds her to her ancestral land and keeps the Trojans. He sits on the mountains and peaks again. He inhabits the forested valleys. All plants and animals are under her control.(Potnia Theron) According to another local rumour of antiquity, Leto gave birth to Apollo and Artemis not in Delos, but in Patara and Ephesus in the pains of holy birth, in the Anatolian Mother Goddess's own land.

    Artemis draws her essence from nature and the cult of the Anatolian Mother Goddess. So much so that she is symbolised by the very primitive image "xoanon", a statue of an almost unhewn tree. Artemidoros of Ephesus, who lived in the second century AD, recommends the worship of Artemis Ephesia and Eleuthera as well as the old abstract form of Artemis Pergaia.

    Artemis Eleuthera, Artemis Pergaia, Artemis of Ephesos, Phrygian Cybele and Neo-Hittite Kubaba share common characteristics.  It is known that the Goddess Artemis was worshipped in Myra with the epithet Eleuthera and festivals were held in honour of the Goddess. And this worship continued until the Roman Period. So much so that the depiction on the reverse side of one of the Myra city coins of the reign of Gordianus III (238-244 A.D.) is very interesting.


    While the goddess is depicted as a whole with the tree trunk, two snakes prevent two figures on her right and left from attempting to cut the tree with axes in their hands. It is interesting that this depiction appears on a coin during the Roman Period. In other words, by emphasising the identity of the goddess with nature, it is expressed that this belief and worship is protected by nature itself. The fact that the idea of perceiving the divine power in the tree goes back to the Bronze Age Beycesultan with concrete findings coincides with the fact that Eleuthera was "born" from the essence of the Anatolian Mother Goddess. Artemis Pergaia, locally known as Wanassa Periia, who was worshipped in Perge, is depicted in relief on a pillar belonging to the skene frons of the Perge Theatre; with her high calathos on her head and inside the temple.


    In Ephesos, the most important Artemis cult centre known, the goddess shows us her identity with nature with her high headdress, plant and animal ornaments, breast-like braids on her torso symbolising fertility and fertility, and deer figures on both sides. It is difficult to make a definite judgement whether the "stele" shaped abstract body of both goddesses and the Artemis of Kaumos symbolises the "tree" or the rock in which her power is perceived; what is known is that in every case the Mother Goddess exists in that essence.

The best historical places in Antalya

 Some historical places you can visit in Antalya:

    Antalya Kaleici: Kaleiçi, the historical centre of Antalya, contains historical buildings from the Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman Empire periods. While travelling in this region, you can see many important historical buildings such as the historical clock tower, Hıdırlık Tower, Hadrian's Gate, Yivli Minaret, Kesik Minaret and historical houses.

    Perge Ancient City: The ancient city of Perge, located 18 km east of Antalya, was founded during the Roman Empire and had a population of 15,000 people. Here you can visit many historical buildings such as ancient theatre, agora, stadium, baths and city walls.


    Aspendos Ancient Theatre: Aspendos Ancient Theatre, located in the Serik district of Antalya, was built during the Roman Empire. With a capacity of 15,000 people, the theatre is one of the best preserved ancient theatres in the world.


    Termessos Ancient City: Termessos Ancient City, located in the west of Antalya, is a city in the Lycian region. Located on the top of a steep mountain, the city contains many historical buildings such as city walls, agora, theatre, baths and mausoleums.


    Myra Ancient City: Myra Ancient City, located in the west of Antalya, is an important city in the Lycian region. Here you can visit important buildings such as ancient theatre, mausoleums and St. Nicholas Church.


    Side Ancient City: Side Ancient City, located in the Manavgat district of Antalya, hosts many historical buildings from the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods. Here you can visit important structures such as ancient theatre, agora, colonnaded street, Temple of Apollo and aqueducts.


    Phaselis Ancient City: Phaselis Ancient City, located in Kemer district of Antalya, is an ancient city in the Lycian region. Here you can visit important buildings such as ancient theatre, agora, baths and harbour.


    Alanya Castle: Alanya Castle, located in the Alanya district of Antalya, is a castle complex dating from the Seljuk period. The castle contains many historical buildings such as walls, towers, mosques and baths. By climbing the castle, you can see a view dominating the castle.


    Antalya Museum Antalya Museum has a rich museum collection that tells the history and culture of Antalya. The museum contains many historical artefacts such as archaeological finds from the Lycian period, mosaics from the Roman period, churches from the Byzantine period and manuscripts from the Ottoman period.


    Antalya Clock Tower: The clock tower, one of the historical symbols of Antalya, is located in the Kaleiçi region. The clock tower, which belongs to the Ottoman period, has a 3-storey structure and has an impressive appearance especially with its night lighting.




Saturday, September 13, 2014

Antalya İli, Perge Antik Kenti’nde Antalya Müzesi Müdürlüğü başkanlığında sürdürülen kazı çalışmalarında çok önemli ve benzersiz sayılabilecek heykeltıraşlık eserlerinin ortaya çıkarılmasına devam ediliyor.

Özellikle son iki yıldır artan çalışma gün sayısı ve ivme kazanan çalışmalar ile kentte yürütülen restorasyon çalışmaları yanında, göz kamaştıran heykeltıraşlık eserleri de Perge’nin ihtişamını ve sanatsal zenginliğini ortaya koyuyor.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Antalya ili, Aksu ilçesi, Perge Antik Kentinde Antalya Müzesi Müdürlüğü başkanlığında 2012 yılından bu yana yürütülen kazı, restorasyon ve temizlik çalışmalarına 2014 yılında da yaklaşık 60 kişilik bir ekiple aralıksız devam ediliyor.

Kazı çalışmalarında kentin kuzey-güney caddesini batı yönde kesen,  üzerinde su kanalı, güney ve kuzeyinde portikli yol ve dükkânlar yer alan batı caddenin sonuna yaklaşılırken, Kuzey Hamamın caddeye bakan cephesi de açığa çıkarılıyor.

Sunday, January 20, 2013






ROMA DÖNEMİ PERGE HEYKELTIRAŞLIĞI

            Perge günümüz Antalya İlinin 18 km. doğusunda, Kestros(Aksu) ile Katarraktes(Düden) nehirleri arasındadır.[1] Perge'deki ilk bilimsel kazılar, Ord.Prof.Dr. Arif Müfid Mansel başkanlığında 1946 yılında başlamıştır.
Kentin Batı Nekropolisindeki mezarlık caddesi ortaya çıkarılmış, Akropolis ve İyilk Belen tepelerinde  Artemis Pergaia Tapınağı araştırılmıştır. Bu kısa süreli araştırmadan sonra kazılara ara verilmiş, 1953-1957 yılları arasında Ord.Prof.Dr. Arif Müfid Mansel başkanlığında kapsamlı araştırmalar yürütülerek  Hellenistik Kuleler ve Sütunlu Cadde kazılmıştır.[2]