Listed 5 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "KADYANDA Ancient city TURKEY" .
Pages of the Turkish Ministry of Culture
About 19 km NE of Fethiye (Makri). Of the ancient authorities only
Pliny (HN 5.101) mentions the city, but the name is evidently of high antiquity,
and the monuments and inscriptions go back to the 5th c. B.C. The Lycian name
was Kadawanti. Despite the city's obscurity the ruins are quite impressive though
of comparatively late date. The site is on a steep mountain over 900 m above sea
level and 300 m above the village. It was defended by a ring wall which survives
chiefly on the S side. In the city center is an open space 9 m wide, running straight
for over 90 m, with six rows of seats on one side; this is recognized as a stadium
from the numerous agonistic inscriptions found in it; two local athletic festivals
are mentioned in these and other inscriptions. Adjoining this on the S is a building
identified by an inscription lying close by as the baths built by Vespasian, and
on the N a Doric temple badly ruined. Farther to the S is a stoa some 100 m in
length, which may have been part of the gymnasium mentioned in an inscription,
and at the S end of the site is a small but attractive theater, facing S, with
18 rows of seats. The masonry is mostly Roman, and the cavea forms an exact semicircle;
but some of the masonry seems older, and the stage building is largely of polygonal
work.
Tombs are very numerous. Many close to the city have the vaulted form
characteristic of Olympos in E Lycia, but not of Lycia as a whole. Of the others,
three in particular are remarkable. Two of these are at the foot of the mountain
about 1.6 km E and SE respectively from Uzumlu. The first is a pillar tomb of
Lycian type, as at Xanthos and elsewhere; the grave chamber at the top is lacking.
It carries an inscription in Lycian, now badly weathered and largely illegible.
The second is a tomb of house type hewn entirely from an outcrop of rock and standing
free on all four sides. All sides except the back carry reliefs, in which the
figures are accompanied by their names in Lycian and Greek; on the flat roof is
a broken sarcophagus, also decorated with reliefs. The third tomb is on the slope
of the mountain towards Uzumlu it too is cut solidly out of a huge boulder, now
tilted over, and has reliefs on the long sides. These tombs are dated to about
400 B.C. or a little earlier.
G. E. Bean, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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