Antalya
- Ancient
Greek Attalia - city and Mediterranean
port, lies in south-western Turkey. The
city is located in the west of the
Mediterranean region. In ancient times it
covered all Pamphylia that means "the
land of all tribes". The land really
deserves the name since it has witnessed
many successive civilizations throughout
history.
The
Hitites, who are believed to have come to
Antalya from the Caucasus and Mesopotamia,
exercised sovereignty over Antalya during
the years 2500-1400 B.C. Historical maps
of the region during that years show that
the Kingdom of the Hitites encompassed
Antalya.
The
tribes that came from Trakya during the 8th
and 7th centuries B.C. put an
end to the Hitite Civilization, and the
city-states of Pamphylia, Lycia and
Cicilia were founded. Today's province of
Antalya entirely covers Pamphylia, while
parts overlap into southern Pisidya,
western Cicilia and eastern Lycia.
Attalia,
the ancient name of Antalya, is derived
from that of the Pergamon king Attalos II
Philadelphus, who founded the city on the
Pamphylian seacoast around 150 BC. The
settlement of Antalya and its environs
stretches back to the dawn of humanity
however as attested to by Paleolithic
finds discovered in the near by Karain and
Beldibi caves and Early Bronze Age finds
discovered at Semahöyük. Today it is
part on Turkey's "Gold Coast",
an exquisite land of sun, sea, and
history.
It
is know that it was visited by St. Paul by
way of Perge in 46 A.D., that it was an
important trading centre in the 2nd
century A.D. and that the Emperor
Hadrian's visit in 130 A.D. was
commemorated with new monuments. After
Antalya was annexed to Turkish held lands
by the Seljuk Sultan Giyaseddin Keyhusrev
in 1207, the area witnessed another great
period of development and was adorned with
works of Seljuk architecture, some of
which can still be seen today.
Although
Ottoman sultan Bayezid I occupidied it
first in 1391, its incorporation into the
Ottoman Empire was delayed until the late
15th century because of the
disruption caused by the invasion of Timur
(Tamerlane). In the tripartite agreement
of 1917 for the post war division of the
Ottoman Empire among Italy, France, and
the United Kingdom, Italy claimed Antalya
and its hinterland. Italian troops
occupied the district in 1919 but were
driven out in July 1921 by Turkish
nationalist forces.
Today
the tourists have taken over the
attractive Mediterranean location.
Easily
accessible via an international airport,
the town is also the economic centre of a
rich, agricultural Region. The most
significant cinematic event in Turkey, the
"Golden Orange Film Festival",
has established itself in Antalya.
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