An interesting attraction, with a minimum of tourists. Kinds. There are very beautiful views of the surrounding area. We rented an ATV, it's a pleasure to ride along the winding paths, you can go down and pick up on the gravel.
It's a great place. From the series "touch the antiquity". Before visiting, you need to read the history on the Internet. There is no guide. At the entrance there is an information board with a description of the historical place. Admission is free.
The place definitely deserves a visit! Excellent access by an ordinary passenger car right to the city itself! We were in April. There are few people. There are only Europeans. The territory is quite large, there is a place to roam. There is no heat in April, so it turned out to enjoy a walk around this ancient place. The views of the mountains and the valley are stunning. We combined this trip with the Oymapynar reservoir (or Green Canyon is a bombastic place too).
If you arrive by car, you can walk there all by yourself - excursions are brought in transit, for 20 minutes and leave. After the fire, part of the territory was overgrown with bushes, but the main part is well accessible. The difference of epochs and examples of ancient technologies are clearly visible)
And a gorgeous panorama from the cliff
A great place to explore the history of ancient Greek civilization on your own. The road leaves much to be desired, but it is such an "untrodden" place for unity with nature and awareness of the impermanence of existence.
It is incredibly beautiful and an entourage place. Alexander's troops came here and founded the city! Korod is at the top of the mountain. Water was also supplied here, huge stone buildings, baths, houses were built. It is simply unimaginable - with what efforts all this was built and how it has been preserved to this day. The road to the place is rocky, through the forest, but the trip is worth it. A very atmospheric place, full of history.
The early Christian chapel shown in my photos was built in the northwestern part of the Agora (commercial and business part) of the city of Lirbe in eastern Pamphylia in the 4th-5th centuries. The chapel is a symbol of the arrival of Christianity in Anatolia. The Agora itself was built in the 2nd century BC (Hellenistic period). The main architectural compositions of the Agora were: 6 gates-entrances along the perimeter, a library and an exedra from the north, a semicircular odeon (concert hall) with wooden seats, as well as shops on the eastern side. Most of the floors in the rooms of the Agora were covered with colored mosaics. Orpheus, the famous singer, musician and founder of the religious and philosophical movement of Orphism, was baked on one of the preserved mosaics. This and several other less well-preserved mosaics are now on display at the Antalya Archaeological Museum (Antalya Arhchaeological Museum).
The city of Seleucia is actually lyrbe.
Not a bad road to the city, quite colorful. There were no people at all, no payment, no security. Climb wherever you want, feel and touch.
The scale is impressive.