|
THE DARK AGE
Anatolia's Dark Age (700-490 BC)
After 2,000 years of great civilizations, the eastern
world fell into the dark ages in the 8CBC. This was the time that civilizations
passed to the western world. At this turning point of world history, the civilized
eastern world was represented by the Egyptians, Hittites, Phoenicians, Babylonians,
Assyrians and Urartians. The Urartians were the last civilization of this age.
LYDIANS
In ancient times Lydia was the name of a fertile and
geologically wealthy region of western Anatolia. It extended from Caria in the
south to Mysia in the north and was bound by Phrygia in the east and by the
Aegean in the west. Lydia first achieved prominence under the rule of the Mermnad
in 680 BC. They underwent some Cimmerian attacks on several occasions. During
the reign of Croesus, powerful King of Lydia (560-546 BC), the borders of the
state in the east reached as far as Halys (Kizilirmak River). In 546, Croesus
was defeated by the Persian King Cyrus and Lydia was dominated by the Persians
until Alexander the Great. The country passed to the Romans in 133 AD.
The most important city in Lydia was Sardis (Sart), N of Mount Tmolos (Bozdag),
where the Pactolos River (Sartcay) passed through to reach the Hermos River
(Gediz). The rich gold deposits of the Pactolos Valley were very important for
Lydia's economy. This wealth was obtained from the alluviums of the mythological
Pactolos River.
Lydians claimed to have invented games like knucklebones and dice which they
passed on to their Greek neighbors and through them to the rest of the world.
In 640 BC, the first time in history, coins made of electrum (a natural mixture
of gold and silver) were used in exchange for goods and facilitated regularization
of commercial transactions by the Lydians. This was Lydia's most significant
contribution to human history.
CARIANS
The Carians, from the hinterland of Miletus and Halicarnassus,
enter history as mercenaries in the service of the Egyptian king along with
their Ionian neighbors in the 7CBC.
In the 5CBC, Caria was ruled by tyrants and princes, some of whom chose the
Persian side at the time of the Ionian insurrection. At the end of the 5CBC
Caria belonged to the Delian League. It seems to have been constituted as a
separate Persian Satrapy. The Carian Satrap Mausolus took part in the great
insurrection of the western satraps but later changed sides and conquered Phaselis
and western Lycia for the Persian King. Mausolus made Halicarnassus the metropolis
of Caria. The architecture of the city included the Satrap's tomb and the Mausoleum
(another of the Seven Wonders of the World). The Mausoleum was planned by Mausolus
himself but was actually built by his wife and successor, Artemisia.
|
|