Priene
is an
ancient
Hellenistic
city located
just to the
north of
Miletus
in western
Turkey. It
was an
ancient
Greek holy
city and the
home of an
important
temple of
Athena.
Priene's
picturesque
ruins
include
several
columns of
the Temple
of Athena,
much of the
city wall, a
well-preserved
theater and
a council
chamber. The
ruins are
next to the
modern town
of
Güllübahce.
History
By the
8th
century BC
Priene was a
member of
the
Ionian
League.
The League's
central
shrine, the
Panionion,
lay within
the city's
boundaries,
making
Priene an
important
holy city.
Priene was
sacked by
Ardys of
Lydia in the
7th century
BC but
regained its
prosperity
in the 8th.
Captured by
the generals
of the
Persian king
Cyrus
around 540
BC, Priene
took part in
several
revolts
against the
Persians
(499–494).
The city was
subject to
the Persians
until the
time of
Alexander
the Great.
 |
The
ruins
seen
today
date
from
when
the
city
was
rebuilt
around
350
BC
after
frequent
attacks
by
the
Persians.
Priene
was
originally
a
port
city,
but
the
continuous
silting
caused
by
the
Meander
River
had
by
this
time
blocked
the
city's
access
to
the
sea.
The
new
city
was
thus
built
farther
inland,
on
the
present
site.
The
new
city's
main
temple,
of
Athena
Polias,
was
dedicated
by
Alexander
the
Great
in
334,
who
stayed
here
during
his
lengthy
siege
of
Miletus.
Another
famous
resident
of
Priene
was
the
philosopher
Bias,
one
of
the
Seven
Sages
of
Greece,
who
was
born
here. |
In 129 BC
Priene was
added to the
Roman
province of
Asia Minor.
It was
sacked by
Mithridates,
King of
Pontus, in
88 and 84
BC, but
regained its
former
wealth and
prosperity
under the
Emperor
Augustus.
The cult of
the Roman
emperor was
performed in
the Temple
of Athena
and the
Sacred Stoa.
|
The
little
city
grew
slowly
over
the
next
two
centuries
and
led
a
quiet
existence.
Unlike
its
more
well-known
neighbors,
Priene's
population
was
limited
and
probably
never
exceeded
5,000.
This
was
probably
due
in
part
to
its
cliffside
location.
Priene
is
not
mentioned
in
the
Bible,
but
it
is
likely
that
the
early
Christians
of
Miletus
had
contact
with
the
city.
Priene
had
a
substantial
Christian
community
during
the
Byzantine
period
and
was
the
seat
of a
bishop.
Four
of
Priene's
bishops
are
known:
Theosebius,
present
at
the
Council
of
Ephesus
(431);
Isidore,
who
was
living
in
451;
Paul,
present
at
the
Council
of
Constantinople
(692);
and
Demetrius
(12th
century). |
 |
Priene
gradually
declined due
to its
increasing
distance
from the
sea, and it
was
abandoned
after
passing into
Turkish
hands in the
13th century
AD.
Excavations
of the site
began in the
19th
century.
To See
The
ruins of
Priene
are well
worth a
visit. They
are in a
peaceful,
sheltered
location and
feature a
number of
unique side
streets and
structures.
Its
well-preserved
remains are
a major
source of
information
about
ancient
Greek town
planning.
Long
stretches of
the
Hellenistic
city
wall
have
remained
intact, in
some places
6 feet wide
and 18 feet
tall.
Inside, the
city's
remains lie
on
successive
terraces
that rise
from a plain
to a steep
hill, upon
which stands
the Temple
of Athena
(see below).
Priene was
laid out in
an orderly
grid
plan,
unlike the
more
sprawling
arrangement
of most
ancient
cities. Six
main streets
run
east-west
and 15
streets
cross at
right
angles, all
evenly
spaced. The
town was
thus divided
into about
80 blocks,
or
insulae,
each
averaging
150 by 110
feet (46 by
34 m). This
impressive
layout can
be
appreciated
from the
vantage
point of the
nearby
cliffside.
About 50 of
the
insulae
are devoted
to
private
houses.
The
better-class
insulae
had just
four houses
apiece, but
most had
many more. A
Priene
private
house
usually
consisted of
a
rectangular
courtyard
enclosed by
living
quarters and
storerooms
and opening
to the south
onto the
street by
way of a
small
vestibule.
Ruins of
several
houses can
be seen
today,
including
the
"Alexander
House."
Five columns
(from the
original 66)
of the great
Temple of
Athena
Polias
still stand.
Built on the
orders of
Alexander
the Great
around 333
BC and
designed by
Pythius,
architect of
the
Mausoleum of
Halicarnassus
(one of the
wonders of
the ancient
world), the
Temple of
Athena is
considered a
classic
example of
the pure
Ionic style.
The temple
enclosed a
smaller (23
ft/7 m) high
version of
the
statue of
Athena
that was in
the
Parthenon.
Near the
temple in
the center
of town is
the agora,
stoa and
theater.
Theaters are
common
around these
parts, but
this one
boasts a set
of
five
armchair
seats,
some with
lion-paw
armrests.
The stage
buildings of
Priene's
theater are
also more
intact than
most.
Originally
built in the
4th century
BC by the
Greeks, the
theater was
expanded by
the Romans
in the 2nd
century AD
to hold
6,000
spectators.
Other ruins
at Priene
include the
well-preserved
seating and
altar of the
2nd-century-BC
bouleuterion
(city
council
chamber,
which could
hold 650
people),
more
temples,
the
stadium
(2nd century
BC; 190 m
long) and a
Upper and
Lower
Gymnasium.