Situated
at the mouth of the Meander
in the south of the province
of Ionia in Western Anatolia,
the ancient city of Miletus
was the oldest and the
most powerful of the twelve
Ionian cities in Asia
Minor. It also founded
over ten colonies on the
shores of the Marmara
and the Black Sea, while
its commercial activities
extended as far as Egypt.
Its schools made a very
great contribution to
the intellectual and scholarly
development of the Mediterranean
world and one cannot talk
of Miletus without mention
of the great contributions
to geometry and science
made by Thales, one of
the greatest scholars
produced by the city.
Miletus
is also renowned as the
first city to which the
principles of modern town-planning
were applied. The gridplan
introduced by Hippodamos
was later to form the
basis of town-planning
in all Roman cities. As
a result of the silting
caused by the alluvium
washed down by the Meander
the city now lies at a
distance of several kilometres
from the sea. The fact
that Miletus formerly
possessed four separate
harbours well indicates
the important role played
by the Meander in the
history of the city.
The
Miletus alphabet was accepted
as the normal script employed
in writing ancient Greek.
The following are a few
of the philosophical views
put forward by Milesian
philosophers:
- "The
healthy and well-educated
man is a happy man."
- Beauty
arises not from a beautiful
body but from beautiful
actions."
- "Expect
the same behaviour from
your children as you
showed your own parents."
Thales
of Miletus
- "The
skilful man is superior
to the strong man."
- "Don't
come to a conclusion
before listening to
both sides."
- "A
small spark is enough
to burn down a whole
forest."
- "Lend
the fallen a helping
hand." Phocylides
of Miletus
HISTORY
OF MILETUS:
The
origins and earliest history
of Miletus are still a
subject of controversy.
The name "Milawanda"
that occurs in Hittite
texts may well refer to
Miletus. The excavations
undertaken so far have
reached as far as the
Bronze Age. The first
excavations were conducted
by the German archaeologist
Theodor Wiegand but these
were several times interrupted
by wars and various other
events. Excavations were
resumed by Gerhard Kleiner
and continued by Werner
MüllerWiener.
The
history of Miletııs can
be traced back to the
2nd millennium B.C. Settlers
from Crete arrived here
in 1500 B.C., to be followed
by the Mycenaeans froin
mainland Greece, who fortified
the city. According to
ancient Greek aııthors,
the first inhabitants
were the Carians and Lelegians.
After the capture of the
city by the Ionians under
their leader Neileus in
1000 B.C., the conquerors
killed the Milesian men
and married their wives
thus forming the new population
of the city. Legend has
it that the women of Miletus
expressed their resentment
and punished their new
husbands by refusing to
sit at table with them.
The city was ruled for
a time by kings descended
from Neileus, but after
800 B.C. administration
passed into the hands
of the aristocracy. After
687 B.C. it was ruled
by dictators known as
"tyrants", and
it was during this period
that the city began to
found colonies overseas.
By
the first half of the
6th century, Miletus,
thanks to these colonies,
possessed a large maritime
empire. The distinguished
scholars produced by the
city at that time included
natural philosophers such
as Thales, Anaximenes,
Anaximander and Hecataeus.
Thales, the first to forecast
an eclipse of the sun,
produced new theories
in geometry and astronomy,
Anaximander carved on
stone universal laws independent
of the gods and Hecataeus
excelled in geography.
Miletus had a special
agreement with Croesus,
but after the collapse
of Lydia in 547-546 B.C.
the city came under Persian
hegemony. After the Greek
victory over the Persians
in the naval battle at
Mycale in 479 B.C., Miletus
was rebuilt on a grid
plan with the help of
the famous Milesian architect
and town-planner Hippodamos.
After 402 B.C. the city
came entirely under Persian
rule and in the 4th century
was ruled by Carian satraps
subject to the Persians.
In 334 B.C. Miletus was
captured by Alexander
the Great. Following his
death it was subjected
by Antigonus in 313 B.C.
and the Seleucides in
301 B.C. The city regained
its independence in 188
B.C. In 133 B.C., when
the Kingdom of Pergamon
was incorporated in the
Roman Empire, Miletus
became part of the province
of Asia Minor. The city
declined in size under
Byzantine rule, shrinking
to the area occupied by
the castle known as Palatia
to the rear of the theatre.
In 1328 it came under
Seljuk rule, after which
it continued to exist
as the small village of
Balat.
The
first monument one encounters
on entering Miletus from
the south is the Temple
of Athena. Built in the
first half of the 5th
century B.C., it has six
Ionic columns on each
of the shorter sides and
ten on the longer sides
Immediately to the north
of the temple lies an
agora from the Hellenistic
period, while to the east
of the agora is located
a Roman stadium built
in 150 A.D. A little further
to the north is a theatre
dating originally from
the 4th century B.C. Although
it underwent extensive
modifications on three
occasions, it is one of
the best preserved theatres
in Anatolia. The remains
of the building, with
its entrances and vaulted
corridors, display all
the distinguishing f~atures
of the Roman period. To
the east of the stadium
are the baths of Faustina
and, adjacent to the baths,
city defence walls dating
from the reign of the
Emperor Justinian. There
is also a Serapeum, or
temple of Serapis, from
the 3rd century A. D .
From here one arrives
at the southern agora
built in the Hellenistic
period with shops in the
southern and eastern wings.
The monumental gate in
the north-eastern corner
of the agora leads into
the city centre. The richly
decorated nymphaeum that
stood in the vicinity
of this gate is now preserved
in the Pergamon Museum
in East Berlin. To the
west of the nymphaeum
there is a bouleuterion
dating from the 2nd century
B.C. capable of accommodating
1, 500.
|