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Sagalassos is an ancient archaeological site of a Hellenic city in southwestern Turkey. Renovation has made it a major tourist attraction and a target of a major archaeological study.
HistoryHuman settlement in the area goes back to 8000 BCE. Hittite documents refer to a mountain site of Salawassa in the 14th century BCE and the town spread during the Phrygian and Lydian cultures. Sagalassos was part of the region of Pisidia in the western part of the Taurus mountains. During the Persian period, Pisidia became known for its warlike factions. Sagalassos was one of the wealthiest cities in Pisidia when Alexander the Great conquered it in 333 BCE on his way to Persia. It had a population of few thousand. After Alexander died, the region became part of territories of Antigonos Monopthalmos, possibly Lysimachos of Thrace, the Seleucids of Syria and the Attalids of Pergamon. Archeological record indicates that locals rapidly adopted Hellenic culture. Roman Empire absorbed Pisidia after the Attalids and it became part of province of Asia. In 39 BCE it was handed out to Roman client king Galatian Amyntas but after he was killed in 25 BCE, Rome turned Pisidia into the province of Galatia. Under Roman Empire Sagalassos became the important urban center of Pisidia. Contemporary buildings also have Roman character. Around 400 AD Sagalassos was fortified for defence. Earthquake devastated it in 518 and a plague around 541-543 halved the local population. Arab raids threatened the town around 640 and after another earthquake destroyed the town in the middle of the 7th century AD, the site was abandoned. Populace probably resettled in the valley. Excavations have found only signs of a fortified monastery, possibly a religious community, which was destroyed in the 12th century. Sagalassos disappeared from the records. In the following centuries, erosion covered the ruins of Sagalassos and, maybe also due to its location, it was not looted in significant extent. Explorer Paul Lucas, who was traveling in Turkey on a mission for the court of Louis XIV of France, visited the ruins 1706. After 1824, when British F.Arundell deciphered the name of the site, western travelers begun to visit the ruins. Polish count K. Lanckoronsi produced the first map of Sagalassos. However, the city did not attract much archaeological attention until 1985, when a British-Belgian team led by Stephen Mitchell begun a major survey of the site. LocationSagalassos is located 7 km north of village Aglasun in the province of Burdur. It is on the southern flank of the Mount Akdag of the Taurus Mountains is located at an altitude of 1.45 - 1.6 kilometers. Modern projectFrom 1990 Sagalassos has been, in addition to being a major tourist site, a major excavation project lead by Marc Waelkens of the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium. One is now exposing the monumental city center; four major restoration projects there are (nearly) completed. The project also undertakes an intensive urban and geophysical survey, excavations in the domestic and industrial areas, and an intensive survey of the territory. Whereas the former document a thousand years of occupation, from Alexander the Great to the seventh century, the latter has established the changing settlement patterns, the vegetation history and farming practices, the landscape formation and climatic changes during the last 10,000 years. External Links
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