Ancient Greek city
Plan of Perge
The agora
The stadium
Perga or Perge (Hittite : Parha [ a] , Greek : Πέργη Perge , Turkish : Perge ) was originally an ancient Lycian settlement[ b] that later became a Greek city in Pamphylia .[ 14] It was the capital of the Roman province of Pamphylia Secunda , now located in Antalya Province on the southwestern Mediterranean coast of Turkey . Today its ruins lie 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) east of Antalya .
It was the birthplace of Apollonius of Perga , one of the most notable ancient Greek mathematicians for his work on conic sections . A unique and prominent feature for a Roman city was the long central water channel in the centre of the main street which contained a series of cascading pools and which would have been remarkable even today in a semi-arid area where summer temperatures reach over 30 degrees Celsius.
^ Gurney, Oliver Robert (1997). "The Annals of Hattusilis III" . Anatolian Studies . 47 : 128– 135. doi :10.2307/3642903 . JSTOR 3642903 . S2CID 162163204 . Retrieved 25 November 2022 .
^ Gander, Max (2012). "Review: The Historical Geography of Western Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age: still an open question" . Orientalia . 81 (2): 137. Retrieved 25 November 2022 .
^ Gander, Max (2014). "Tlos, Oinoanda and the Hittite Invasion of the Lukka lands. Some Thoughts on the History of North-Western Lycia in the Late Bronze and Iron Age" . Klio . 81 (2): 370. Retrieved 25 November 2022 .
^ Blasweiler, Joost (2019). The kingdom of Purušhanda and its relations with the kings of Mari and Kanesh in the 18th Century BC . Joost Blasweiler. p. 25. ISBN 978-90-820497-5-6 .
^ Çilingir, Sevgül (2011). Hitit Tapınak Kentleri (MSc). Ege Üniversitesi. p. 25.
^ Matessi, Alvise; Tomassini Pieri, Bianca Maria (2012). "South-Central: Archaeology". In Weeden, Mark; Ullmann, Lee Z. (eds.). Hittite Landscape and Geography . Brill. p. 98. ISBN 978-90-04-34939-1 .
^ Rutherford, Ian (2012). Hittite Texts and Greek Religion: Contact, Interaction, and Comparison . Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 51. ISBN 9780199593279 .
^ Gurney, Oliver Robert (1997). "The Annals of Hattusilis III" . Anatolian Studies . 47 : 135. doi :10.2307/3642903 . JSTOR 3642903 . S2CID 162163204 .
^ Bryce, Trevor R. (1992). "Lukka Revisited" . Journal of Near Eastern Studies . 51 (2): 123. doi :10.1086/373535 . JSTOR 545499 . S2CID 222441745 .
^ Yakar, Jak (2014). "The Archaeology and Political Geography of the Lower Land in the Last Century of the Hittite Empire". In Çınardalı-Karaaslan, Nazlı; Aykurt, Ayşegül; Kolankaya-Bostancı, Neyir; Erbil, Yiğit H. (eds.). Anadolu Kültürlerine Bir Bakış Some Observations on Anatolian Cultures Armağan Erkanal'a Armağan Compiled in Honor of Armağan Erkanal . Hacettepe Üniversitesi Yayınları. p. 504.
^ Seçer, Sezer (2012). Yazılı Belgeler Işığında Lukka, Pedassa ve Walma Ülkelerinin Tarihi ve Tarihi Coğrafyası (PDF) (MSc). İstanbul Üniversitesi. p. 39.
^ Talloen, Peter (2015). "The Archaeology and Political Geography of the Lower Land in the Last Century of the Hittite Empire". Cult in Pisidia: Religious Practice in Southwestern Asia Minor from Alexander the Great to the Rise of Christianity . Brepols Publishers. p. 62.
^ Bilgin, Tayfun (2015). "The Archaeology and Political Geography of the Lower Land in the Last Century of the Hittite Empire". Officials and Administration in the Hittite World . De Gruyter. p. 23. doi :10.1515/9781501509773 . ISBN 9781501509773 . S2CID 166095378 .
^ Hannah M. Cotton; Robert G. Hoyland; Jonathan J. Price; David J. Wasserstein, eds. (3 September 2009). From Hellenism to Islam: Cultural and Linguistic Change in the Roman Near East . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-87581-3 . OCLC 1014862628 . Like Ephesus, Perge was a Greek Polis, and the seat of the governor and the financial procurator of the province of Lycia-Pamphylia.
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