Exploring Ephesus | Selçuk, Turkey
We spent the day exploring the ancient city of Ephesus. It was awesome.
Click show more to see time stamps of different sections in the video.
0:10 - Welcome to Ephesus
0:35 - Heracles Gate (aka Hercules in English) and Street of Curetes
1:00 - Fountain of Trajan
1:13 - Temple of Hadrian
1:19 - Terrace Houses (so cool!)
2:15 - Library of Celsus
2:32 - Camera Fail :(
2:49 - Public Market
2:59 - Harbour Street (ancient main entrance into the city)
3:14 - Grand Theatre
3:47 - Mary's Church
4:14 - Taking a Dolmus (minibus) from Ephesus back to Selcuk
4:30 - Exploring!
5:06 - Exercising!
5:50 - Temple of Artemis
6:23 - Train from Selcuk to Denizli
7:01 - Arrival in Denizli
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Soho by Riot
Training in the Fire by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Artist:
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About PerfectLittlePlanet:
I'm Brian and my wife is Isa. We live in New York. Everything we do is focused on having a great experience, and we want you to have one too! We encourage everyone to Explore your world, Live your dream, and Discover your passion! We upload new experiences to YouTube once or twice a week, but you can see more frequent posts in other places.
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Hercules Gate
Provided to YouTube by Catapult Reservatory, LLC
Hercules Gate · Acts Travel
Ephesus - Audio Walking Tour
℗ 2008 Acts Travel
Released on: 2009-03-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Daan Van Der Deen by Joost Konings for IAmElk Agency Amsterdam
Video by Joost Konings:
Inside the Terrace Houses Ephesus 2012 July 28th 2012
Basilica of St. John in Selcuk, Ephesus
Oud Romeinse bedelaar staat langs de Hoofdweg van Efeze West Turkije
Efez, Turcja (foto)
Efez, Turcja (foto: Ewa, 3.09.2014)
Ephesus, Turkey | Efes, Türkiye |
Efez (gr. Ἔφεσος Ephesos) – w starożytności jedno z dwunastu miast jońskich w Azji Mniejszej. Leżało przy ujściu rzeki Kaystros (tur. Küçük Menderes – Mały Meander) do Morza Egejskiego na terenie obecnej Turcji.
Zabytki w Efezie:
Odeon, świątynia Dea Roma i Divus Julius, Prytanejon, Droga Kuretów, Świątynia Domicjana, Fontanna Pollia, Monument Memmiusa, Brama Heraklesa, Fontanna Trajana, Domy na tarasach, Świątynia Hadriana, Łaźnie Scholastyki, Latryny dla mężczyzn, w sąsiedztwie łaźni naprzeciw Biblioteki Celsusa ruiny budynku uznanego za dom publiczny, Świątynia Serapisa, Biblioteka Celsusa, Brama Mazeusa i Mitridiusza, Agora handlowa, Ulica Marmurowa, Wielki Teatr, Droga Arkadiusza, Kościół Marii Panny i Stadion |
Ephesus, the ancient one of the twelve Ionian cities in Asia Minor. It lay at the mouth of the river Kaystros to the Aegean Sea in what is now Turkey.
Monuments in Ephesus:
Odeon, Temple of Dea Roma and Divus Julius, Prytanejon road Kuretów, Temple of Domitian, Fountain Polli, Memmius Monument, Gate of Heracles, Fountain of Trajan, Houses on the terraces, the Temple of Hadrian, Scholastica Baths, Latrines for men, in an environment in front of the Library of Celsus ruins building recognized as a public house, the Temple of Serapis, Library of Celsus, Gate Mazeusa and Mitridiusza, Commercial Agora, Marble Street, Grand Theatre, Arkadiusz Road, Church of Our Lady and Stadium |
Efes, Anadolu'daki on iki İon kentinden eski bir. Türkiye'nin şimdi ne Ege Denizi'ne nehir Kaystros ağzında yatıyordu.
Efes Anıtlar:
Odeon, Dea Roma ve Divus Julius, Prytanejon yol Kuretów, Domitian Tapınağı, Fountain Polli, Memmius Anıtı, Herakles Kapısı, Trajan Çeşmesi, teraslarda Evleri, Hadrian Tapınağı, Skolasticia Hamamları Tapınağı, Celsus kalıntıları Kütüphanesi önünde bir ortamda erkekler için Latrinalar, bir kamu evi olarak tanınan bina, Serapis Tapınağı, Celsus, Gate Mazeusa ve Mitridiusza, Ticari Agora, Mermer Cadde, Büyük Tiyatro, Arkadiusz Road, Our Lady ve Stadyumu Kilisesi Kütüphanesi |
Efes (Ephesus Ancient City)
Efes Antik Kent, İzmir
Ephesus Ancient City, İzmir
İzmir Ephesus Tours | Turkey Travel Guide | Acetes Travel
The Ephesus is a most popular historical place in Turkey and high on every traveler's things to do list.
Its dazzling marble-columned temples and colonnaded streets are every history buff's dream, and there's plenty more to do in the vicinity once you've finished rambling through the ruins.
Ephesus sits on the edge of the vibrant town of Selçuk, which has long been a favorite stop for independent travelers. With a castle, excellent museum, Byzantine basilica, and a Roman aqueduct running straight through the center, this little town may be overshadowed by the mammoth ruin next door but has plenty of sightseeing to offer those who choose to spend a few days here.
Further Informations
Things to do in Ephesus:
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Must do in Ephesus:
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Ephesos, Turkey
Video with images of Ephesos an ancient commercial city at the Mediterranean coast of classical Asia Minor. In the period of the Roman empire the prosperous city attained its present form as an adminstrative and intellectual centre.
In the southeast of Ephesos was an odeon at a public agora with colonnade. The odeon was a also a bouleuterion for public meetings of the city council. At the west end of the public agora was a temple built for the emperor Domitian. At the entrance of the square leading to the temple was a nymphaeum with statues, reliefs and inscriptions. The Memmius monument nearby was built by a grandson of the emperor Sulla in memory of his family.
Passing the Hercules gate one desends Curetes street which was paved with marble stone slabs. At the right side of the street was a nymphaeum of the emperor Trajan. Further down the street was a temple of the emperor Hadrian which was restored in the fourth century AD. Some of the reliefs in the upper section depicted the imperial family of emperor Theodosius. Behind the temple was a public bath house with latrines.
Down at the end of Curetes Street was the library of Celsus a former governor of Asia Minor. The library had two stories with columns, statues and friezes. To the north of the Celsus library was a colonnaded street which led to the harbour. Right in front of the street was a theatre for shows of actors and gladiators.
House of Pleasure
Provided to YouTube by Catapult Reservatory, LLC
House of Pleasure · Acts Travel
Ephesus - Audio Walking Tour
℗ 2008 Acts Travel
Released on: 2009-03-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Ephesus - Terrace Houses 1
EFES EPHESUS DREAM CITY - ANCIENT CITYS e08 - with ENG subtitle
Located within what was once the estuary of the River Kaystros, Ephesus comprises successive Hellenistic and Roman settlements founded on new locations, which followed the coastline as it retreated westward. Excavations have revealed grand monuments of the Roman Imperial period including the Library of Celsus and the Great Theatre. Little remains of the famous Temple of Artemis, one of the “Seven Wonders of the World,” which drew pilgrims from all around the Mediterranean. Since the 5th century, the House of the Virgin Mary, a domed cruciform chapel seven kilometres from Ephesus, became a major place of Christian pilgrimage. The Ancient City of Ephesus is an outstanding example of a Roman port city, with sea channel and harbour basin.
Within what was once the estuary of the river Kaystros, a continuous and complex settlement history can be traced in Ephesus beginning from the seventh millennium BCE at Cukurici Mound until the present at Selçuk. Favourably located geographically, it was subject to continuous shifting of the shore line from east to west due to sedimentation, which led to several relocations of the city site and its harbours. The Neolithic settlement of Cukurici Mound marking the southern edge of the former estuary is now well inland, and was abandoned prior to settlement on the Ayasuluk Hill from the Middle Bronze Age. Founded by the 2nd millennium BCE, the sanctuary of the Ephesian Artemis, originally an Anatolian mother goddess, became one of the largest and most powerful sanctuaries of the ancient world. The Ionian cities that grew up in the wake of the Ionian migrations joined in a confederacy under the leadership of Ephesus. In the fourth century BCE, Lysimachos, one of the twelve generals of Alexander the Great, founded the new city of Ephesus, while leaving the old city around the Artemision. When Asia Minor was incorporated into the Roman Empire in 133 BCE, Ephesus was designated as the capital of the new province Asia. Excavations and conservation over the past 150 years have revealed grand monuments of the Roman Imperial period lining the old processional way through the ancient city including the Library of Celsus and terrace houses. Little remains of the famous Temple of Artemis, one of the ‘seven wonders of the world’ which drew pilgrims from all around the Mediterranean until it was eclipsed by Christian pilgrimage to the Church of Mary and the Basilica of St. John in the 5th century CE. Pilgrimage to Ephesus outlasted the city and continues today. The Mosque of Isa Bey and the medieval settlement on Ayasuluk Hill mark the advent of the Selçuk and Ottoman Turks.
Ephesus is an exceptional testimony to the cultural traditions of the Hellenistic, Roman Imperial and early Christian periods as reflected in the monuments in the centre of the Ancient City and Ayasuluk. The cultural traditions of the Roman Imperial period are reflected in the outstanding representative buildings of the city centre including the Celsus Library, Hadrian’s Temple, the Serapeion and Terrace House 2, with its wall paintings, mosaics and marble panelling showing the style of living of the upper levels of society at that time.
Historical accounts and archaeological remains of significant traditional and religious Anatolian cultures beginning with the cult of Cybele/Meter until the modern revival of Christianity are visible and traceable in Ephesus, which played a decisive role in the spread of Christian faith throughout the Roman Empire. The extensive remains of the Basilica of St. John on Ayasuluk Hill and those of the Church of Mary in Ephesus are testament of the city’s importance to Christianity. Two important Councils of the early Church were held at Ephesus in 431 and 449 CE, initiating the veneration of Mary in Christianity, which can be seen as a reflection of the earlier veneration of Artemis and the Anatolian Cybele. Ephesus was also the leading political and intellectual centre, with the second school of philosophy in the Aegean, and Ephesus as a cultural and intellectual centre had great influence on philosophy and medicine.
Almelo'' TURKIYE 3-2 Czech Republic' @ Station
IEDEREEN DOOR STATION
Prytaneum
Provided to YouTube by Catapult Reservatory, LLC
Prytaneum · Acts Travel
Ephesus - Audio Walking Tour
℗ 2008 Acts Travel
Released on: 2009-03-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
EFES ANTİK KENTİ ( Rehberli Anlatım)
Turkish Traveler(Türk Gezgin) kanalıma hoş geldiniz. Tarihin beşiği İzmir Efes Antik Kentindeyiz. Rehber eşliğinde ülkemizin tarihi güzelliklerinden birini daha ziyaret ettik. Keyifli seyirler.
We are in Ephesus Ancient City in cradle of history.We traveled one more of the historical places of our country with a guide.Have well watch.
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History enthusiasts step back in time at Viking festival
(10 Aug 2010)
AP Television
Bugac, Hungary, August 8, 2010
1. MS Hungarian 'shaman' drummers walking to stage
2. CU Shaman chanting, pull-out to WS of group drumming
3. WS visitors watching shaman 'show'
4. Nomadic slippers for sale
5. Visitor looking at bows
6. Visitor looking at war clubs for sale
7. MS Kazak woman in tribal costume
8. Turkish musicians marching across the puszta
9. Tilt up Zsolt Andras Biro meeting fan
10. MS Zsolt Andras Biro having photo taken with fan
11. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Zsolt Andras Biro, anthropologist and president of Hungarian Turan Foundation:
Things are back on track in Hungary in terms of where we come from. There are two points: on the one hand there is scientific research, and on the other hand you have cultural events. Kurultaj is a cultural event where we can celebrate the fact that we have common roots with the nomadic, horse-riding tribes who dwelled on the steppes of Central Asia.
12. MS flags from participating countries
13. WS zoom man cracking two whips at once
14. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Zsolt Andras Biro, anthropologist and president of Hungarian Turan Foundation:
Not long ago Hungary had its parliamentary elections and there's a new government - and I would say that there is a more supportive atmosphere for celebrating Hungarian culture, and there is more emphasis on our own Hungarian culture here at home. We trust that the new government believes that the first and foremost goal of all European countries is to support their own national culture.
15. Various of archers on horseback
16. Various of Kazakh musicians
17. SOUNDBITE: (Kazakh) Abzal Anykbaer, Musician, Turan Ensemble, Kazakhstan:
Our ancestors went through the Altay region to Europe and to Italy, including going through Hungary - so we know we have a common route through here. So because of this, we feel that we are closely related to the people here.
18. Young boy looking at door of yurt
19. CU pan, door of yurt
20. People standing in line in front of yurt with ancient skeleton
21. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Visitor:
I used to be part of an archery and traditionalist group when I was younger, so for me this is really nostalgic. My heart pulls me here.
22. Various inside yurt
23. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Visitor:
This is about solidarity and perseverance - unfortunately, during these dangerous and chaotic times in Hungary right now, this is the one chance to catch our breath, to fill up spiritually.
24. Children's hands on giant drum
25. WS front of drum
26. WS circle pan of people touching tree of life
27. Various of soldier in traditional chain mail
28. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Andras Bencsik, Visitor:
The Magyar myth is being reborn. Every year I go to Oktoberfest (beer festival) in Munich and I envy the carefree ability of Germans to celebrate simply being German. This is finally a chance for Hungarians to celebrate themselves with abandon, that we can just celebrate who we are. That's what I like the best about it.
29. Various shots, tribal drum jam session in yurt
30. Traditional Hungarian horse herders (cowboys) riding horses, doing tricks, cracking whips
LEAD IN:
Thousands of traditionalists have gathered in Hungary to celebrate ancient Magyar culture.
The Kurultaj - or great tribal meeting - is a chance for Hungarians to re-enact a time when the Magyar tribe ruled supreme in the Carpathian basin.
STORYLINE:
The plains of Bugac in Hungary echo with the beat of drums and the chants of a bygone age.
These modern-day shamans are taking part in a three-day retreat called 'Kurultaj' - the Asiatic-nomadic term for 'great tribal meeting.'
They beat their drums, dress in traditional nomadic costume and live in ancestral tents called yurts.
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