EPHESUS
According to the old legends, Ephesus was founded by the female warriors known as
the Amazons. The name of the city is thought to have been derived from "APASAS",
the name of a city in the "KINGDOM OF ARZAWA" meaning the "city of the
Mother Goddess". Ephesus was inhabited from the end of the Bronze Age onwards, but
changed its location several times in the course of its long history in accordance with
habits and requirements. Carians and Lelegians are to be have been among the city's first
inhabitants. Ionian migrations are said to have begun in around 1200 B.C. According to
legend, the city was founded for the second time by Androclus, the son of Codrus, king of
Athens, on the shore at the point where the CAYSTER (Küçük Menderes) empties into the
sea, a location to which they had been guided by a fish and a wild boar on the advice of
the soothsayers. The Ionian cities that grew up in the wake of the Ionian migrations
joined in a confederacy under the leadership of Ephesus. The region was devastated during
the Cimmerian invasion at the beginning of the 7th century B.C. Under the rule of the
Lydian kings, Ephesus became one of the wealthiest cities in the Mediterranean world. The
defeat of the Lydian King Croesus by Cyrus, the King of Persia, prepared the way for the
extension of Persian hegemony over the whole of the Aegean coastal region. At the
beginning of the 5th century, when the Ionian cities rebelled against Persia, Ephesus
quickly dissociated itself from the others, thus escaping destruction.
Ephesus remained under Persian rule until the arrival of
Alexander the Great in 334 B.C., when it entered upon a fifty year period of peace and
tranquillity. Lysimachus, who had been one of the twelve generals of Alexander the Great
and became ruler of the region on Alexander's death, decided to embark upon the
development of the city, which he called Arsineia after his wife Arsinoe. He constructed a
new harbour and built defence walls on the slopes of the Panayır and Bülbül Mts.,
moving the whole city 2.5 km to the south-west. Realising, however, that the Ephesians
were unwilling to leave their old city, he had the whole sewage system blocked up during a
great storm, making the houses uninhabitable and forcing the inhabitants to move. In 281
B.C. the city was re-founded under the old name of Ephesus and became one of the most
important of the commercial ports in the Mediterranean.
In
129 B.C. the Romans took advantage of the terms of the will left by Attalos, King of
Pergamon, by which they were bequathed his kingdom, to incorporate the whole region into
the Roman Empire as the province of Asia. Ancient sources show that at this time the city
had a population of 200,000. In the 1st century B.C. the heavy taxes imposed by the Roman
government led the population to embrace Mithridates as their savior and to support him in
his mutiny against Roman authority and in 88 B.C. a massacre was carried out of all the
Latin speaking inhabitants of the city, which was then stormed and sacked by a Roman army
under Sulla, It was from the reign of Augustus onwards that the buildings we admire today
were constructed. According to documentary sources, the city suffered severe damage in an
earthquake in 17 A.D. After that, however, Ephesus became a very important centre of trade
and commerce. The historian Aristio describes Ephesus as being recognised by all the
inhabitants of the region as the most important trading centre in Asia. It was also the
leading political and intellectual centre, with the second school of philosophy in the
Aegean. From the 1st century onwards, Ephesus was visited by Christian disciples
attempting to spread the Christian belief in a single God and thus forced to seek refuge
from Roman persecution. Besides enjoying a privileged position between East and West
coupled with an exceptionally fine climate, the city owed its importance to its being the
centre of the cult of Artemis.
For the Christians, the city, with its highly advanced way
of life, its high standard of living, the variety of its demographic composition and its
firmly rooted polytheistic culture, must have presented itself as an ideal pilot region...
From written sources we learn that St Paul remained in the city for three years from 65 to
68, and that it was here that he preached his famous sermons calling upon the hearers to
embrace the faith in. one God. He taught that God had no need of a house made with human
hands and that he was present in all places at all times. This was all greatly resented by
the craftsmen who had amassed great wealth from their production of statues of Artemis in
gold, silver or other materials. A silversmith by the name of Demetrius stirred up the
people and led a crowd of thousands of Ephesians to the theatre, where they booed and
stoned Paul and his two colleagues, chanting "Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!
Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!" So turbulent was the crowd that Paul and his
companions escaped only with great difficulty. From his Epistles to the communities it
would appear that Paul spent some time as a prisoner in Ephesus.
Legend has it that St John the Evangelist came to
Ephesus with the Virgin Mary in his care. Some also say that it was here that he wrote his
Gospel and was finally buried. In 269 Ephesus and the surrounding country was devastated
by the Goths. At that time there was still a temple in which the cult of Artemis was
practised. In 381, by order of the Emperor Theodosius, the temple was closed down, and in
the following centuries it lay completely abandoned, serving as a quarry for building
materials.
The situation of the city, which had given it its
privileged geographical position, was also the cause of its decline and fall. The
prosperity of the city had been based on its possession of a sheltered natural harbour,
but by the Roman period ships reached the harbour to the west of Mt Pion 1.5 km from the
Temple of Artemis through a very narrow and difficult channel. The cause of this was the
Meander (Cayster) River, which emptied into the Aegean a little to the west of the city of
Ephesus, where it created a delta formed by the alluvium carried down by the river over
thousands of years. By the late Byzantine era the channel had been so silted up as to be
no longer usable. The sea gradually receded farther and farther, while the marshy lands
around the harbour gave rise to a number of diseases, such as malaria. The new outlook
that had arisen with the spread of Christianity led to the gradual abandonment of all
buildings bearing witness to the existence of polytheistic cults and the construction in
their place of Christian churches. In the year 431 the third Ecumenical council took place
in Ephesus.
Emperor Theodosius convoked another council in
Ephesus in 449, which came to be known as the "robber council". From the 6th
century onwards the Church of St John was an important place of pilgrimage, and Justinian
took measures to protect it by having.the whole hill on which it stood surrounded by
defence walls. Shortly afterwards, the Church of the Virgin and other places of worship
were destroyed and pillaged in Arab raids. In the 7th century the city was transferred to
the site now occupied by the town of Selçuk and during the Byzantine era Ephesus grew up
around the summit of Mt Ayasuluğ. The city enjoyed its last years of prosperity under the
Selçuk Emirate of the Aydınoğulları. During the Middle Ages the city ceased to
function as a port.
By the 20th century the silt carried down by the
Meander had extended the plain for a distance of 5 km.
Photographs by:Erdal Yazici,Gungor
Ozsoy,Haluk Ozozlu,Tahsin Aydogmus
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