From:
http://www.exploreturkey.com/asos.htm
Assos was originally founded by Aeolian colonists from Lesbos in
the 7th century B.C. In the 6th century B.C.it came under the
rule of the Lydians and with their defeat at the hands of the
Persians in 546 B.C., the city came under Persian rule.
Ariobarzanes, the Persian governor who rebelled against King
Artaxerxes was defeated at Assos in 365 B.C. and he was replaced
by Euboulos, a prominent banker. He was succeeded by the eunuch
Hermias, one of Plato's students and it was because of this
association that Hermias's friend Aristotle
stayed with him for three years at Assos (348-345 B.C.).
In 334 B.C. Assos was taken by Alexander,
and the city was part of the Pergamon
kingdom from 241 to 133 B.C. after which it came under Roman rule. Assos was ruled by Byzantium after 395 A.D. During this
period it was known as Makhram. (It
is believed that "Behramkale",
the name of the village above Assos, is derived from this.)
Assos became an Ottoman possession
during the reign of Murad I (1359-1389). The acropolis was
defended by a double wall. The inner walls
appear to have been repaired in Medieval and Ottoman times and
have been restored. Beside them is a mosque
built during the reign of Murad I. The bridge
below, which is no longer usable, was also built in the 14th
century.
he Temple of Athena was built on a
site with a magnificent view overlooking the sea at a height of 238 meters. At present only a few of the
temple's columns are standing but restoration
work is in progress.
The temple was built some time around 530
B.C. It is constructed of andesite rather than marble and
has 6 by 13 columns and measure 14 by 30 meters in size. The acropolis is surrounded by a wall three
kilometers in length. These walls are skillfully constructed of
stone and reach 20 meters in height
in some places. There are two big gates,
one on the west and another on the east, as well as seven smaller
gates. The walls were reinforced with numerous towers and were built in 365 B.C. (The
polygonal walls we see here and there predate the 4th century
however.)
We shall begin our tour of the city
proper by entering through the main gate on the west. Just
outside the western gate is a necropolis
containing tombs from Hellenistic and Roman times. The arched
structure here is the monumental tomb of Publius Varius.
Entering through the gate we see the defensive towers located on
either side. On the left side after entering the gate is the
Assos gymnasium. Measuring 32 by 40
meters, this gymnasium is the form of a courtyard surrounded on
four sides by colonnades. On the northern side of the courtyard
is a cistern. The gymnasium is a work of the 2nd century B.C.
A bit beyond this one comes to the Assos agora
located on a terrace the foot of the acropolis. Its northern
boundary is a double-story Doric-order stoa
measuring 111.52 m long and 12.42 m wide. (The holes that one
sees in the rear wall of the stoa are where the beams supporting
the upper story were once set). The stoa on the southern side had
three stories but owing to the slope of the terrain, the top
floor was built on a level with the first floor of the northern
stoa. The middle floor and basement opened only to the south
while the top floor provided a view of both the agora and the
sea. This was undoubtedly a favorite promenade
place for the inhabitants. The middle story contained thirteen shops while in the basement there
were two cisterns and thirteen bathrooms.
Between the two stoas on the western side of the agora there were
Hellenistic-period shops and next to
them a temple built in the 2nd
century B.C.
Below the agora is the Assos theater.
Originally built in 3rd century B.C., it was altered in Roman
times and is now in ruins.
No longer!
The theatre has been partly
restored by now and will soon be re-used!
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