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Antiochia ad Cragum

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Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum
Antiochia ad Cragum also known as Antiochetta or Latin: Antiochia Parva is an ancient Hellenistic city on Mount Cragus overlooking the Mediterranean coast, in the region of Cilicia, in Anatolia. In modern-day Turkey the site is encompassed in the village of Güneyköy, District of Gazipaşa, Antalya Province. The city was founded by Antiochus IV Epiphanes in approximately 170 BC. It minted coins from the mid-1st century to the mid-2nd century; the last known of which were issued under Roman Emperor Valerian. The city became part of the kingdom of Lesser Armenia in the 12th century. In 1332, the Knights Hospitallers took the city, after which it was known variously as Antiochetta, Antiocheta, Antiocheta in Rufine , and Antiochia Parva. Some scholars claim an identity of Antiochia ad Cragum with the city Cragus or, although it lies more than 100 km away, with Sidyma, which some scholars assert was the Lycian Cragus .Ruins of the city remain, and include fortifications, baths, chapels, Roman necropolis, and the largest Roman mosaic found in Turkey.In 2018, latrine mosaics with dirty jokes about Narcissus and Ganymede, were discovered in Antiochia ad Cragum.
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