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XANTHOS
(KINIK)
This is the oldest and the largest city of the mountain province
of Lycia, settled in the valley of the Xanthos river. Until the
Persian invasion it was an independent state. When the people of
Xanthos,who had bravely tried to defend their city, realized that
they could not repulse the invasion, they first killed their women
committed mass suicide by throwing themselves into the flames. About
80 surviving families and people who immigrated there rebuilt the
city, but a fire which broke out about 100 years later razed it
to the ground. In spite of this, the city was again rebuilt and,
as a result of establishing good relations with the west, was considered
as an important centre. However, Xanthos again met with an unfortunate
end. As a result of resisting the taxes the Athenians wanted to
impose on them in 429 B.C., the city was largely destroyed and the
inhabitants were drawn into a war. And thus Xanthos became "a
city of disasters". The city itself consists of the Lycian
acropolis and the parts remaining outside it, as well as the Roman
acropolis. The most interesting building is the Roman theatre and
the edifices of the theatre's western shoreline. Of these the most
famous is the Harpy Monument, which is a family sarcophagus situated
on a rock. The original of this relief-decorated sarcophagus is
in the British Museum, and a very good copy of this is in its place.
Close by can be seen very interesting Lycian sarcophagi from the
6th and 1st centuries B.C.
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