![]() Untersuchungen zur Münzprägung von Anazarbos und anderer ostkilikischen Städte. The house of Tarkondimotos: a late Hellenistic dynasty between Rome and the East. Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia 20, 73-81. Tarkondimotid responses to Roman domestic politics: from Antony to Actium. Okupation und Verwaltung der Provinzen des Imperium Romanum von der Insbesitznahme Siziliens bis auf Diokletian. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 269-288. Durugönül (eds.), La Cilicie: espaces et pouvoir locaux (IIe millénaire av. Tempel und Grossmacht : Olba in hellenistischer Zeit. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 381-386. The Tarcondimotid dynasty in Smooth Cilicia. Proceedings of an International Conference held at Lincoln, Nebraska, October 2007, 27-42. New Historical and Archaeological Approaches. Central and Local Powers in Hellenistic Rough Cilicia. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 519-551. River-gods in Cilicia in the light of numismatic evidence. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 373-380. Seine Dynastie, seine Politik, sein Reich. Dalla prima guerra punica a Diocleziano, 207-213. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 505-518. Cilicia as a part of the Seleucid empire. The Coinage of Alexandreia kat’ Isson in Cilicia. Funerary and votive monuments in Graeco-Roman Cilicia: Hellenistic, Roman and early Byzantine examples in the museums of Mersin and Alanya. Untersuchungen zur Geschichte und Identitätskonstruktion von Aigeai im römischen Kilikien (20 v. Actes de la Table Ronde d’Istanbul, 2-5 novembre 1999, 289-325. Tempel und Grossmacht : Olba Diokaisareia und das Imperium Romanum. 1 (aprile): Scambi e identità culturale: la Cilicia), 105-140. Diversità e interazione culturale in Cilicia Tracheia. Dall’étà di Kizzuwatna alla conquista macedone, 177-202. 1 (aprile): Scambi e identità culturale: la Cilicia), 141-165.ĭesideri P and Jasink A. 1 (aprile): Scambi e identità culturale: la Cilicia), 67-107.ĭesideri P. Grecità linguistica e grecità figurativa nella più antica monetazione di Cilicia. Proceedings of an International Conference held at Lincoln, Nebraska, October 2007, 87-98. The Rule of Antiochus IV of Commagene in Cilicia: a Reassessment. Boyraz Seyhan (eds.), Proceedings of the First International Congress of the Anatolian Monetary History and Numismatics, 25-28 February 2013, Antalya, 59-78. Achaemenid Asia Minor: Coins of the Satraps and of the Great King. The Coinage of Satraps during the Reign of the Achaemenids (c. Hellenistic coins of Aegeae (Cilicia), ANS Museum Notes 27, 53-96.īodzek J. The aim is to find out how specific powers ruling over cities influenced local traditions, what were the remnants of those, and how they eventually evolved over time.īloesch H. This paper attempts to look into the iconography of their coinage and analyze political and religious symbols and their subjects of depiction. There are a few Cilician cities in which coins were minted from the Achaemenid times to the Roman Empire. Another type of evidence which reflects the complicated past of Cilicia is also available: numismatic evidence. Effects of this cultural mixture are clearly visible in archaeological excavations and in many types of artefacts. Each of them left own political and cultural imprint on the area. Both parts of Cilicia experienced governance of many powers: Achaemenid Persia, local rulers, Hellenistic kings, and the Romans. Its location made it a bridge for various cultural and religious influences coming from neighboring countries, but also an object of their expansion. The southern part, Cilicia Pedias, was much more prosperous and intensively urbanized. The northern part of Cilicia, Cilicia Aspera, was mountainous, sparsely populated and poorly urbanized cities were few and located mainly on the seashore. The geography of the area held importance for its cultural development as well. The geographical setting, between the Taurus Mountains, the Mediterranean Sea and Anatolia, and the fact that territory of Cilicia was crossed by several routes connecting Anatolia with the Mediterranean sea shore and Syria determined its strategic significance. In antiquity Cilicia was a small but important area. Cilicia, numismatics, mints, ancient coinage Abstract ![]()
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