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Cabotage at Aperlae in Ancient Lycia

International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, 2000
Aperlae was a small remote maritime city in ancient Lycia with a millennial floruit (late 4th century BC through the late 7th century AD). The harsh terrain of its hinterland forced a reliance on the Mediterranean from its founding to its demise. The Aperlites stabilized and enhanced their urban waterfronts in modest ways over the centuries, but ...
Robert L Hohlfelder
exaly   +4 more sources

The Cities of Lycia

Abstract Although influenced by Greek culture since the Archaic period, the main part of Lycia was not part of the Greek world in pre-Hellenistic times and there were only a few Greek colonies in the east of the region. The larger Lycian settlements were turned into poleis after the decline of the dynasts, the aristocratic Lycian ruler ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Quantitative analysis of the Early Christian churches of Central Lycia [PDF]

open access: yes, 2021
Since the publication of R. Martin Harrison’s seminal work, ‘Churches and chapels of Central Lycia’ in 1963, numerous scholars have focused on the region, attracted by the large number of extant remains.
A. Scardina
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

From Lycia to Teke Province, from Cedar to Warehouse the Story of Antalya Wooden Granaries

Cedrus, 2022
The geography of Anatolia is one of the important steps in human development from the Neolithic Age, shifting from hunter gathering to production culture.
Naciye Küçük
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Lycia

1997
Abstract Rescripts to cities are always addressed to the archontes , council and people; letters may be addressed to the council or council and people or all three (examples of each for Rhodiapolis: 4; 10; 1, 16). Rescripts and letters to the koinon are normally addressed to the koinon of the Lycians, but one letter is addressed ‘the ...
P J Rhodes, David M Lewis
openaire   +4 more sources

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