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Western Asia Minor
ОглавлениеInland western Asia Minor was the territory of the Lydian kingdom as the Aiolian, Ionian, and Dorian cities were located on the coastal line. The topography of this region comprises fertile river‐cut valleys (Kaikos/Bakırçay, Hermos/Gediz, Kayster/Küçük Menderes, and Meandros/Büyük Menderes) and forested mountain ranges (Pindasos/Madra Da, Aspordenos/Yunt Daı, Sipylos/Spil Daı, Tmolos/Boz Da), all oriented in east–west directions reaching the Aegean Sea, dotted by the Aeolian and Ionian cities on the coastline, and the Lydian territory in central western Anatolia. The inland, in particular, was known for its rich mineral deposits, including iron, lead, silver, and gold, as well as marble quarries. This geography with river valleys and agricultural land on the plains contributed to the excellent road network that facilitated communication between the coast and the interior. On the foothills of the Tmolos mountain range, overlooking the Hermos plain, the Bin Tepe, the Pactolos River, and the Gygean Lake lay the city of Sardis, the Lydian capital and a major regional administrative center in the western Achaemenid Empire. Its acropolis stood over by its steep cliffs, rising more than 300 m above the Hermos plain. The site has been excavated since the middle of the twentieth century following the foundation of the Archaeological Exploration of Sardis earlier in the century.
The sack of Sardis by the Achaemenid army has been archeologically well documented. There is impressive material evidence for combats that took place in the streets of the city thanks to the carefully explored destruction debris, especially in the northern and eastern sectors of the city, in the Lydian houses, and under the Roman period theater. Among the finds are the skeletal remains of two warriors in their mid‐twenties who died during combat, as indicated by fractures in their skulls and bones. During the chaotic days of the fall of the city, there was clearly no opportunity to give a proper burial to these defeated, presumably Lydians, nor were they robbed for their valuable belongings that included their weapons, a small croeseid, and a bronze and iron helmet (Cahill and Kroll 2005: pp. 590–608; Cahill 2010: pp. 339–357). Cahill cautiously suggests a date for the destruction between 550 BCE, the accession of Cyrus to power, and the conquest of Babylon by his army in 539 BCE.
The urban design of the acropolis comprised terrace walls and stairways built of worked blocks, a large portion of which were eventually recycled in the Byzantine period fortress, but the surviving parts testify to the skills of the builders. Sets of terraces belonged to a system, supporting a number of buildings on the acropolis, which may have included elements of public landscapes such as gardens (Greenwalt 1995, 2011: pp. 1116–1125). The lower city was surrounded by a strong fortification wall covering an area of about 108 ha. So far, excavations have revealed no structure that could be directly associated with the palace(s) of the Lydian rulers and the Persian satraps.
During the Achaemenid period, freestanding monumental tombs emerge in Asia Minor, reaching a peak with the construction of the Maussolleion at Halikarnassos in the second half of the fourth century BCE. The Pyramid Tomb, located on a ridge on the northern slope of the acropolis in Sardis, appears to be one of the first in this category (Ratté 2011: pp. 65, 94–99, no. 15). The structure, the remains of which consist of a stepped platform, was probably never completed. On the platform there would have been a freestanding chamber, possibly with a gabled roof. Based on the building techniques and the masonry, the monument is dated to the second half of the sixth century BCE. An associated monument with a stepped construction and a false door is Taşkule standing on the roadside of Phokaia (Cahill 1988).
Occupation and sanctuaries stretched beyond the city walls of Sardis. One of the extramural sanctuaries belonged to the goddess Cybele, active during the Achaemenid period (Cahill 2010: pp. 100–101). A second sanctuary to the south of the settlement was for Artemis. Its earliest architectural evidence, “the Lydian Altar” situated in the west end of the Hellenistic temple, is a stepped platform comparable to the Pyramid Tomb, but unlike the Pyramid Tomb it is solid, not constructed around a rubble core. A date between the late sixth and early fourth centuries BCE has been suggested (Ratté 2011: pp. 123–125).
The burial chambers of many of the tumuli at Bin Tepe, the Pactolos valley, central Lydia, and those in the Uşak‐Güre area display Lydian ashlar masonry; only a few were built out of irregular blocks covered with plaster. The majority of tombs are from between the mid‐sixth and mid‐fifth centuries BCE, with no significant typological change from the Lydian period; a few show a variety, e.g. three chambers, pitched roofs, flat ceilings, false barrel vault, chambers with dromoi and antechambers (Roosevelt 2009: pp. 148–151).
Among portable artifacts, the deep bowl with high rim as the adaptation of Achaemenid metal original in pottery was widely available in Sardis (Dusinberre 2003: pp. 172–195). The jewelry and seals in the Istanbul Archaeological Museums from Sardis, excavated in the early twentieth century, are from tombs in the close precincts of the settlement (Curtis 1925; Dusinberre 2003: pp. 264–283; Meriçboyu 2010). Besides their artistic value, their well‐recorded archeological contexts offer a significant contribution to studies exploring the social environment of their owners. In a similar social context are the retrieved contents of the vandalized tumuli from the Uşak‐Güre area, known as “the Lydian Treasure” (Özgen and Öztürk 1996). The assemblage consists of 363 objects: bronze and silver tableware, incense burners, jewelry and seals, tools to make jewelry, cosmetic containers, wall painting fragments, and marble tomb furnishings. In addition to burial customs, these tumuli and their contents in central western Anatolia, including those from Milyas/northern Lycia, provide a glimpse into the lifestyle, social status, self‐ascription, and wealth of the elite under Achaemenid rule.
Evidence for territorial military control is exemplarily demonstrated by a fortified stronghold at S¸ahankaya (S¸ahinkaya) in northern Lydia, where a lead sling bullet with the name of Tissaphernes was also found (Roosevelt 2009: pp. 118–121). Regional surveys in Ionia have also documented a number of fortified strongholds (Gezgin 2001: pp. 186–188).
Archeological evidence for the peaking prosperity during the fourth century BCE appears to have been demonstrated by the ambitious building activities in Ionia, Karia, and Lycia, some of which is generally attributed to the patronage of the Hekatomnids, viz. the initiation of the Temple of Athena at Priene in Ionia, designed by the architect Pytheos, which most likely took place before the arrival of Alexander. The urban development that has been observed in many of the Ionian cities likely owes its inception to the security and financial stability under Achaemenid hegemony.