Art and antiquities (4900 Subjects)
View of the Sanctuary of Zeus in ancient Aizanoi near Çavdarhisar, Asia Minor.
View of Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the Phrygian valley.
View of the rock-cut monument known as “small Yazılıkaya” in Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the Phrygian valley.
Side view of the rock-cut monument known as “small Yazılıkaya” in Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the Phrygian valley.
View of the rock-cut monuments in Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the larger territory of the Phrygian valley.
Close view of the rock-cut monument known as “small Yazılıkaya” in Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the larger territory of the Phrygian valley.
View of the rock-cut monuments in Doganli valley (today Yazılıkaya) near Eski Sehir. This ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the larger territory of the Phrygian valley.
View of Midas monument in the village of Yazılıkaya, near Eski Sehir. The whole of the ancient site is also called Midas City due to its plethora of Phrygian monuments, and forms part of the Phrygian valley.
The Phrygian monumental tomb called Arslan Kaplan Kümbet at Kümbet village, in the Phrygian valley.
Ancient ruins possibly of Seleucia of Pisidia or Seleucia Sidera, close to Bayat village, Asia Minor.
Peasant using the cover of an ancient sarcophagus as a drinking trough, outside Yalvaç, which is built next to the site of Antioch of Pisidia.
View of the palaestra of ancient Hierapolis.
Funerary monuments in the necropolis of Hierapolis.
View of the odeon of ancient Hierapolis. The remains of a porticum in the foreground.
View of the Roman theatre of Hierapolis.
Fragments of reliefs from the Roman theatre of Hierapolis.
Fragments of reliefs, column bases, plan of a column and other architectural features from Hierapolis, possibly from Frontinus Gate.
The Gate of Frontinus and the ruins of an early Christian church in Hierapolis.
View of the Roman theatre and the ruins of Hierapolis. In the background, the travertine terraces of Pamukkale.
View of funerary monuments in the valley of Hierapolis.
Sarcophagi and other fragments of ancient monuments near a cascade at Pamukkale.
View of the necropolis of Hierapolis. A traveller is reading an inscription on a funerary monument.
View of the aqueduct of Laodicea in Denizli area. In the background, Maeander plain and the remains of Hierapolis. Zeibek tents in the background.
The plain of the Maeander seen from the ancient theatre of Laodicea. A group of Zeibeks is gathered on the theatre's scene.
The remains of the ancient theatre of Tripolis of Phrygia, in modern-day Yenicekent, Asia Minor.
Panoramic view of Maeander plain from the Roman theatre of Nysa in Caria. The plate shows the remaining parts of the aqueduct and the bridge of Nysa, only second in size to the bridge of Pergamon among ancient bridges.
View of the ruins of Alinda or Alexandria by Latmus and the modern village of Karpuzlu.
View of the remains of Magnesia on the Maeander.
Panoramic view of ancient Teos and Sigacik bay.
Panoramic view of ancient Ephesus, in two plates (1).