Southern Turkey – Priene, Miletus, and Didyma

Our last full day in southern Turkey was a road trip south to three ancient sites – Priene, Miletus, and Didyma. Priene was a favorite and was just as I remembered it from 18 years ago though back then the hills weren’t as steep or as tall. It was a huge, sprawling site with lots of amazing things to see and *we were the only people there* – at one point another couple blew through and a guard checked on us once but other than that it was just insects buzzing and refreshing breezes in the pines.

Miletus was also interesting (if you are into axiomatic proofs it is where it all began) but was mainly the ruins of the (still amazing) amphitheater. Most amphitheaters were build into hillsides to simplify the engineering but Miletus was an imposing structure coming up out of a flat plane.

The final site was the Temple of Apollo at Didyma. Not too much remained of it but in its heyday it must have been something to see. Had it not been destroyed by an earthquake it was a favored contender to make the 7 Wonders of the Ancient World list.

One interesting observation visiting sites like this is the sense of time past. Looking at an very old tree – maybe 60-80 years growing up out of the ruins of an old temple and it is easy to imagine that tree taking root after the city was abandoned. But that’s not the case. Ten times that many trees have grown, aged, fell, rotted and been replaced since these cities were thriving centers.

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