Iasos
| Name | Iasos |
| Native Name | Ἰασός or Ἰασσός |
| Alternate Name | Iassos |
| Image | |
| Caption | The hill with the acropolis, the bouleuterion (center) and a Hellenistic tower (right) near the agora of Iasos. |
| Map Type | Turkey |
| Map Size | 270 |
| Coordinates | 37°16′40″N, 27°35′11″E |
| Location | Kıyıkışlacık, Muğla Province, Turkey |
| Region | Caria |
| Type | Settlement |
Iasos or Iassos (ˈaɪəˌsɒs; «Ἰασός» Iasós or «Ἰασσός» Iassós), also in Latinized form Iasus or Iassus (ˈaɪəsəs), was a Greek city in ancient Caria located on the Gulf of Iasos (now called the Gulf of Güllük), opposite the modern town of Güllük, Turkey. It was originally on an island, but is now connected to the mainland. It is located in the Milas district of Muğla Province, Turkey, near the Alevi village of Kıyıkışlacık, about 31 km from the center of Milas.
History
Ancient historians consider Iasos a colonial foundation of Argos, but archaeology shows a much longer history. According to the ancient reports, the Argive colonists had sustained severe losses in a war with the native Carians, so they invited the son of Neleus, who had previously founded Miletus, to come to their assistance. The town appears on that occasion to have received additional settlers. The town, which appears to have occupied the whole of the little island, had only ten stadia in circumference; but it nevertheless acquired great wealth, from its fisheries and trade in fish.
Iasos was a member of the Delian League and was involved in the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC). After the Sicilian expedition of the Athenians, Iasos was attacked by the Spartans and their allies; it was governed at the time by Amorges, a Persian chief, who had revolted from Darius II. It was taken by the Spartans, who captured Amorges and delivered him up to Tissaphernes. The town itself was plundered on that occasion. It became part of the Hecatomnid satrapy in the 4th century and was conquered by Alexander. We afterwards find it besieged by Philip V, king of Macedon, who, however, was compelled by the Romans to restore it to Ptolemy V of Egypt.
The mountains in the neighbourhood of Iasus furnished a beautiful kind of marble, of a blood-red and livid white colour, which was used by the ancients for ornamental purposes. Near the town was a sanctuary of Hestia, with a statue of the goddess, which, though standing in the open air, was believed never to be touched by the rain. The same story is related, by Strabo, of a temple of Artemis in the same neighbourhood. Iasus, as a celebrated fishing place, is alluded to by Athenaeus. The place is still existing, under the name of Askem or Asýn Kalessi. Chandler (Travels in As. Min. p. 226) relates that the island on which the town was built is now united to the mainland by a small isthmus. Part of the city walls still exist, and are of a regular, solid, and handsome structure. In the side of the rock a theatre with many rows of seats still remains, and several inscriptions and coins have been found there.
It seems to have been abandoned in about the 15th–16th century, in the Ottoman period, when a small town was founded nearby named Asin Kale or Asin Kurin, in the sanjak of Menteşe within the vilayet of İzmir.
Archaeology
Preliminary research was done by the French archaeologist Charles Texier in 1835. A number of ancient Greek inscriptions were removed from the site which were later donated to the British Museum by the Duke of St Albans. Since then, Iasos and the necropolis have been under regular scientific excavations on behalf of the Italian School of Archaeology at Athens by Doro Levi (1960–1972), Clelia Laviosa (1972–1984) and Fede Berti (1984–2011). From 2011 till 2013 the Director of Iasos excavations has been Marcello Spanu .
The site of Iasos has been settled continuously since the Early Bronze Age. In early times, Iasos was influenced by the culture of the Cyclades islands.
During the 1970s, archaeological excavations at Iasus revealed Mycenean buildings (with two "Minoan" levels underneath them).
"At Iasus, Mycenaean buildings, approximately dated by the presence of LH IIIa ware, have been found below the protogeometric cemetery. Below this again two 'Minoan' levels are reported, the earlier containing local imitations of MM II-LM I ware, the later imported pieces of the Second Palace Period (AJA 1973, 177-8). Middle and Late Minoan ware has also occurred at Cnidus (AJA 1978, 321)."
Other archaeological finds cover Geometric, Hellenistic and Roman periods, through the Byzantine period.
Outstanding remains in Iasos include an Artemis stoa and Roman villas.
Church history
Four of its bishops are known: Themistius in 421, Flacillus in 451, David in 787, and Gregory in 878 (Michel Le Quien, Oriens Christianus I:913). The see is mentioned in the Nova Tactica, 10th century (Heinrich Gelzer, Georgii Cyprii descriptio orbis romani, nos. 340, 1464), and more recently in the Notitiae Episcopatuum.
Iasus is listed among the titular sees of Caria in the Annuario Pontificio. The titular see has had the following
Bishops:
- Bishop Salvador Martinez Silva (1940.08.10 – 1969.02.07)
- Bishop Antonio Laubitz (1924.11.08 – 1939.05.17)
- Bishop Gregorio Ignazio Romero (1899.06.19 – 1915.02.21)
- Bishop John Joseph Keane (later Archbishop) (1888.08.12 – 1897.01.29)
- Bishop Gaetano d'Alessandro (later Archbishop) (1884.03.24 – 1888.03.18)
- Bishop Étienne-Louis Charbonnaux, M.E.P. (1844.07.08 – 1873.06.23)
- Bishop Ernst Maria Ferdinand von Bissingen-Nieppenburg (1801.12.23 – 1820.03.12)
- Bishop Emanuel Maria Graf Thun (1797.07.24 – 1800.08.11)
- Bishop-elect Bartolome Gascon (1727.03.17 – ?)
Notable people
- Choerilus of Iasus (4th century BC), an epic poet who accompanied Alexander the Great.
Gallery


















See also
Notes
References
- Grande Encyclopédie, s.v. Iasos 20:505.
- Fede Berti, Roberta Fabiani, Zeynep Kızıltan, Massimo Nafissi (ed.), Marmi erranti. I marmi di Iasos presso i musei archeologici di Istanbul. Gezgin Taşlar. Istanbul Arkeoloji Müzeleri'ndeki Iasos Mermerleri. Wandering marbles. Marbles of Iasos at the Istanbul Archaeological Museums. (Istanbul Arkeoloji Müzeleri 7.12.2010 – 4.7.2011). Istanbul: Istanbul Arkeoloji Müzeleri Müdürlüğü, 2010.
External links
- Official Web Site
- Guide Bodrum
- Iasos article at the Perseus Project
- Greek inscriptions from Iasos, in English translation
- Informative site by Selçuk University in English with button for Turkish version
Category:Populated places disestablished in the 16th century
Category:1835 archaeological discoveries
Category:Greek colonies in Caria
Category:Ancient Greek archaeological sites in Turkey
Category:Former populated places in Turkey
Category:Geography of Muğla Province
Category:Buildings and structures in Muğla Province
Category:History of Muğla Province
Category:Populated places in ancient Caria
Iasus
Category:Greek city-states
Category:Members of the Delian League
Category:Milas