[Home]History of Ankara

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Revision 5 . . (edit) August 28, 2001 12:47 am by MichaelTinkler
Revision 2 . . April 20, 2001 5:27 pm by ErdemTuzun
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff)

Changed: 1c1,98
Ankara (formerly known as Angora) is the capital of Turkey and the country's second largest city. Ankara is an important commercial city as the marketing center for the surrounding agricultural area. The city was famous before being a capital for its long-haired goats and their wool (Angora wool). Being a capital of Galatia from the 2nd century B.C., it gradually became a minor city after being conquered respectively by Romans, Persians, Arabs, Seljuk Turks and Ottoman Empire. Ankara was chosen as the capital during the indepence war (after World War I) led by Kemal Atatürk because of its central location in Anatolia and as an uprising against Ottoman Empire and its capital Istanbul.
Ankara (formerly known as Angora, and in the classical period, Ancyra) is the capital of Turkey and the country's second largest city. Ankara is an important commercial city as the marketing center for the surrounding agricultural area. The city was famous before being a capital for its long-haired goats and their wool (Angora wool). Being a capital of Galatia from the 2nd century B.C., it gradually became a minor city after being conquered respectively by Romans, Persians, Arabs, Seljuk Turks and Ottoman Empire. Ankara was chosen as the capital during the indepence war (after World War I) led by Kemal Atatürk because of its central location in Anatolia and as an uprising against Ottoman Empire and its capital Istanbul.




Following text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed


ANCYRA (mod. Angora, <<<well, that was the modern transliteration in 1911!!!), an ancient city of Galatia
in Asia Minor, situated on a tributary of the Sangarius.
Originally a large and prosperous Phrygian city on the Persian
Royal Road, Ancyra became the centre of the Tectosages,
one of the three Gaulish tribes that settled permanently in
Galatia about 232 B.C. The barbarian occupation dislocated
civilization, and the town sank to a mere village inhabited
chiefly by the old native population who carried on the
arts and crafts of peaceful life, while the Gauls devoted
themselves to war and pastoral life (see GALATIA.) In 189
B.C. Ancyra was occupied by Cn. Manlius Vulso, who made
it his headquarters in his operations against the tribe.
In 63 B.C. Pompey placed it (together with the Tectosagan
territory) under one chief, and it continued under native rule
till it became the capital of the Roman province of Galatia
in 25 B.C. By this time the population included Greeks,
Jews, Romans and Romanized Gauls, but the town was not yet
Hellenized, though Greek was spoken. Strabo (c. A.D. 19)
calls it not a city, but a fortress, implying that it had none
of the institutions of the Graeco-Roman city. Inscriptions
and coins show that its civilization consisted of a layer
of Roman ideas and customs superimposed on Celtic tribal
characteristics, and that it is not until c. A.D. 150 that
the true Hellenic spirit begins to appear. Christianity was
introduced (from the N. or N.W.) perhaps as early as the 1st
century, but there is no shred of evidence that the Ancyran
Church (first mentioned A.D. 192) was founded by St Paul
or that he ever visited northern Galatia. The real greatness
of the town dates from the time when Constantinople became
the metropolis of the Roman world: then its geographical
situation raised it to a position of importance which it
retained throughout the middle ages. See further ANGORA (1).

The modern town contains many remains of the Roman and Byzantine
periods. The most important monument is the Augusteum,
a temple of white marble erected to "Rome and Augustus"
during the lifetime of that emperor by the common council
or of the three Galatian tribes. The temple was
afterwards converted into a church, and in the 16th century
a fine mosque was built against its S. face. On the walls
of the temple is engraved the famous Monumentum Ancyranum,
a long inscription in Latin and Greek describing the ''Res
gestae divi Augusti''; the Latin portion being inscribed on
the inner left-hand wall of the pronaos, the Greek on the
outside wall of the naos (cella.) The inscription is a
grave and majestic narrative of the public life and work of
Augustus. The original was written by the emperor in
his 76th year (A.D. 13-14) to be engraved on two bronze
tablets placed in front of his mausoleum in Rome, and as a
mark of respect to his memory a copy was inscribed on the
temple walls by the council of the Galatians. Thus has been
preserved an absolutely unique historical document of great
importance, recounting (1) the numerous public offices
and honours conferred on him, (2) his various benefactions
to the state, to the plebs and to his soldiers, and (3)
his military and administrative services to the empire.

BIBLIOGRAPHY.--C. Ritter, Erdkunde von Asien, vol.
xviii. (1837- 1859); Hamilton, Researches in A. M. (1842);
Texier, Descrip. de l'Asie Min. (1839-1849); Perrot,
Explor. de la Galatie (1862): Humann and Puchstein,
Reisen in Kleinasien (1890). For Mon. Ancyr., Mommsen,
Res gestae divi Augusti (1883); and Inscr. graecae ad
res Romanas pertinentes, iii. (1902). For coins, Brit.
Museum Catal., Galatia (1899); Babelon-Reinach, Recueil
general d, A. M. See also under GALATIA. (J. G. C. A.)

SYNOD OF ANCYRA.--An important ecclesiastical synod was held at
Ancyra, the seat of the Roman administration for the province of
Galatia, in A.D. 314. The season was soon after Easter; the
year may be safely deduced from the fact that the first nine
canons are intended to repair havoc wrought in the church by
persecution, which ceased after the overthrow of Maximinus in
313. The tenth canon tolerates the marriages of deacons who
previous to ordination had reserved the right to take a wife;
the thirteenth forbids chorepiscopi to ordain presbyters or
deacons; the eighteenth safeguards the right of the people in
objecting to the appointment of a bishop whom they do not wish.

See Mansi, ii. 514 ff. The critical text of R. B. Rackham
(Oxford, 1891), Studia Biblica et ecclesiastica,
iii. 139 ff., is conveniently reprinted in Lauchert 29
ff. H. R. Percival translates and comments on an old
text in the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (2nd series),
xiv. 61 ff. An elaborate discussion is found in Hefele,
Concilien- geschichte (2nd ed.), i. 219 ff. (English
translation, i. 199 ff.); more briefly in Herzog-Hauck (3rd
ed.), i. 497. For full titles see COUNCIL. (W. W. R.*)




HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
Search: