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Karian Sites and Inscriptions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

The sites and inscriptions which follow were noted during a series of short journeys made in 1893 and 1894 with the help of grants from the Hellenic and Royal Geographical Societies. The geographical and descriptive results are published in Journ. Roy. Geog. Soc. viii, (shortly to appear), and a short account of the geology in Journal Oxf. Junior Scientific Club, ii. 33 (Jan. 1896): cf. Proc. Brit. Ass. 1893 (Nottingham), p. 746. An account of Telmessos, Karyanda and Taramptos has already appeared in the Hellenic Journal, xiv. 373 ff.

These researches are confined to the area included between Latmos (Besh-parmak) and the Latmian Gulf (Denizli Liman) on the north, the Marsyas valley (China Chai) on the east, the Gulf of Keramos on the south, and the sea on the west. Though sites already identified were in nearly all cases visited, they are not discussed here, unless there is fresh evidence to bring forward.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1896

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References

1 An account of the early Karian tombs of this neighbourhood will appear in the next number of this Journal, and will be accompanied by a map, tho completion of which has been delayed.

2 Of these alternatives, W.R.P. prefers tlie first, J.L.M. the second.

3 The same is said of the neighbourhood of Hissar, KarajàB.C.H. xiv. p. 627Google Scholar (Douhlet and Deschamps). Cf. B.C.H. iv. 139 (Haussoullier).

4 The smaller is a fragment of a Greek moulding, with egg and tongue pattern; the other struck me at first sight as being Byzantine, but afterwards as being a piece of old Carian work. My drawings of the marbles were lost, owing to a mishap, and I cannot verify my judgment about them without revisiting the site. It is improbable that they were brought to this not easily accessible place as votive offerings, although we know how much the magie power of sculptured stones is esteemed by superstitious people in these countries. —W.R.P.

5 Au account of the tumuli, and the map, follow in the next Journal.

6 Marked in ‘Alikashli Bay,’ Adm. Ch. 1604.

7 Pliny, , N.H. v. 29Google Scholar.

8 ‘Ouroun,’ the E horn of ‘Petasa Bay, Adni. Ch. 1604.

9 Inscription No. 2 below.

10 v. map: the hill has no local name.

11 Strabo 658. Zephyrion is the promontory between Kadi Kalé and Giumushli, v. below p. 34.

12 It very closely resembles the wall of Arkesine in Karpathos.—W.R.P.

13 Halicarnassus, &c., ii. p. 597 ff.

14 Turkish: ‘plateau of the horse.’-W.R.P.

15 Identified by Waddington and Kiepert. The visible ruins are all Byzantine, and the ancient marbles found here seem to have been all brought from Yeronda (Branchidae) to build churches, etc.