Aphrodisias
and Hierapolis
One of the best
preserved ancient cities is the city of Aphrodisias near Aydin. The city of Aphrodisias
contains a clovershaped church dating from the Byzantine period. A crypt is found in the
adjacent cemetery which is strongly believed to be that of a saint. In an excavation done
in Aphrodisias in 1961 a palace believed to be the seat of a Cardinal was discovered at a
site near the ancient odeon. The palace is in the shape of a three-leafed clover consists
of numerous rooms and salons and has a very luxurious bath made of seven shades of blue
marble.
One of the important cities of the Byzantine
period is the city of Hierapolis at
Pamukkale. The nave of the basilica found here has
been divided by columns and this structure was most likely a cathedral. It is believed
that the side naves were roofed by cradle vaults. The middle nave was made up of three
sections, all covered with domes. This city had a setond basilica as well. This basilica
stood outside the city walls and strongly resembles the Roman Maxentius Basilica with its
three naves. Excavations carried out at the Necropol by an Italian team have unearthed the
remains of an octangular structure having a diameter of twenty meters and covering a 60-62
square meter area. This building was built at the end of the 4th or the beginning of the
5th century AD and is accepted to be the Cathedral of St.Philip the Martyr
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