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Roman aquaduct below Seleucia (Lyrbe)

Ancient Seleucia..... (Greek: Σελεύκεια – also transliterated as Seleukeia) was an ancient Greek city on the Mediterranean coast of Pamphylia, in Anatolia, approximately 15 km northeast of Side; the site is currently about 1k north of the village of Bucakşeyhler (also Bucakşıhler), approximately 12 km northeast of Manavgat, Antalya Province, Turkey. It is situated on a hilltop with steep escarpments on several sides making a strong defensive position. The track from the village has recently been clearfelled but the main site is still within a mature pine forest. The German researcher Johannes Nollé has suggested, however, that the remains at this location are not those of Seleucia but rather those of Lyrba. An inscription that was found later (written in the language of Side) indicated Lybre should be the name of well-preserved set of ruins, the most important of which is the agora. A notice indicates the inscription implied the city was founded before Hellenistic times, which would put its foundation before the 330-30 BC period. There are remains of an agora containing a row of two-storey and three-storey building façades, a gate, a mausoleum, a Roman bath, a necropolis, in addition to several temples and churches.Because of its remote location,the site has not been plundered for building materials and the area is littered with columns and other items like large grindstones for flour making.

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Uploaded on August 17, 2015
Taken on August 16, 2015