Asia Minor is a
geographic region in the south-western part of Asia comprising most of what is
present-day Turkey. The earliest reference to the region comes from tablets of
the Akkadian Dynasty (2334-2083 BCE) where it is known as “The Land of the
Hatti” and was inhabited by the Hittites. The Hittites themselves referred to
the land as "Assuwa" (or, earlier, Aswiya) which actually only
designated the area around the delta of the river Cayster in Lydia but came to
be applied to the entire region. Assuwa is considered the Bronze Age origin for
the name `Asia' as the Romans later designated the area. It was called, by the Greeks, “Anatolia”
(literally, 'place of the rising sun’, for those lands to the east of Greece).
The name 'Asia Minor’ (from the Greek `Mikra Asia' - Little Asia) was first coined by the Christian historian
Orosius (c. 375-418 CE) in his work Seven Books of History Against the Pagans
in 400 CE to differentiate the main of Asia from that region which had been
evangelized by the Apostle Paul (which included sites known from Paul’s
Epistles in the Bible such as Ephesus and Galicia). The Byzantine Empire of the
9th century CE referred to the region as "East Thema" which meant,
simply, Eastern Administrative Division, and later sailors called it "The
Levant" which meant `the rising' or `to rise' referring to how the land
rose up out on the horizon of the sea.
In the ancient world,
Asia Minor was the seat of the kingdoms and cities of Thrace, Bythinia,
Paphlagonia, Aeloia, Phrygia, Galicia, Pontus, Armenia, Urartu, Assyria,
Cilicia, Pamphylia, Lycia, Pisidia, Lycanoia, Caria, Mysia, Ionia, Lydia and,
most famously, Troy.
THE ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF
THE PEOPLE OF ASIA MINOR ARE VAST AND COMPRISE A CATALOGUE OF SOME OF THE MOST
FAMOUS PEOPLE, PLACES, AND EVENTS IN ANCIENT HISTORY.
The accomplishments and
advancements of the people of Asia Minor are vast and comprise a catalogue of
some of the most famous people, places, and events in ancient history.
According to the historian Philo of Byzantium (writing in 225 BCE) and later
writers, Asia Minor was the site of two of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient
World: The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus (in the region of Ionia) and the Tomb
of Mauslos at Halicarnassus (also known as The Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, in
Caria). In the city of Miletus, in Ionia,
the first western philosopher Thales, and his followers Anaximander and
Anaximenes, sought the First Cause of existence, the matter which gave birth to
all things, and initiated scientific inquiry and method. Herodotus, the `Father
of History' was born at Halicarnassus. The great philosopher and mathematician
Pythagoras was born on the island of Samos and Heraclitus, another important
philosopher, at Ephesus, where he lived and wrote. Cilicia included the city of
Tarsus where the Apostle Paul was born, a region known for its expertise in
tent making, which was Paul’s vocation.
Lydia was the kingdom
of the great King Croesus who defied the Persian Empire under Cyrus and claimed
to be the happiest man in the world until his defeat and capture by the
Persians. Lydia was also the site where, in Greek mythology, the Titan called
Asia lived and, earlier, where the great mother goddess Potnia Aswiya (Mistress
of Assuwa) was worshipped (who became Artemis and whose great temple was
dedicated in the capital of Lydia, at Ephesus). Phrygia was the mythological
birthplace of Rhea, the Greek Mother of the Gods and the City of Troy was made
famous in Homer’s 8th century BCE works the Illiad and the Odyssey. The region
of Asia Minor is regarded as the birthplace of coinage and the first to use
coined money in trade; which of the kingdoms were the first to do this,
however, is much disputed.
Between 1250 and 1200
BCE the Sea People's invaded from the south, making incursions into Greece,
harassing Egypt, and finally driving the Hittites from the region of Assuwa.
The Sea Peoples did not remain to colonize the area, however (at least not to
any important degree) and eventually moved on to settle, in part, to the south
in Canaan. Greek colonists, mainly from Athens and surrounding Attica, settled
the coastline of Asia Minor from the Mediterranean up to the Black Sea. It was
these Ionian colonies which, supported and funded by Athens and Eretria, rose
in revolt when the area came under Persian control, provoking the wrath of the
Persian king Darius I and the first invasion of Greece in 490 BCE which was
repelled at the Battle of Marathon.
Alexander the Great
defeated the Persians in 334-333 BCE and conquered Asia Minor. In Gordium,
capital of Phrygia, he is claimed to have famously cut the Gordian Knot which
the oracles claimed meant Alexander would be king of Asia. Following his death
the land was governed by his general Antigonus in the north and west and his
other general Seleucus to the south and east and was prominently involved in
the Wars of the Diadochi (the wars of Alexander's successors). The region
remained unstable throughout the rule of the Hellenistic governors until the
coming of Rome in 133 BCE (King Attalus III of Pergamon left his city to Rome
in his will and thus invited the Roman presence into the region). After 133,
Rome steadily conquered or annexed the cities of Asia Minor until it was wholly
a Roman province.
Under Roman rule, the
land became stabilized; roads were built and the infrastructures of many of the
cities improved. The coastal communities flourished and Ephesus, especially,
enjoyed great prosperity until the rise of Christianity when `earthly' advances
in the region were neglected in anticipation of the Second Coming of Christ.
The Byzantine Empire controlled the region after the fall of Rome in 476 CE
and, after the rise of Islam, the later Byzantine Christians fought the Islamic
Fatimids for the land until the coming of the Seljuq Turks in 1068 CE. Turkish
control increased in the region until 1299 CE when Asia Minor became part of
the Ottoman Empire and, after its collapse, became Turkey.
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