Research uncovers Lycian roads in Antalya monument

Under the light of the pillar of the Monument of the Roads, which is considered one of the world's oldest road maps, showing roads built by the Roman Emperor Claudius in Lycia, 21 out of 63 roads have been so far been uncovered by archeologists. 

Akdeniz University Department of Ancient Languages and Cultures Professor Eda Akyürek Şahin said she and a team of academics were working on the research on the Roman roads in Lycia and Pamphylia. 

Şahin said they took over the research after the death of her husband Professor Sencer Şahin in 2014. Work was first initiated in 2004 within the scope of the Stadiasmus Patarensis in Patara, also known as the Stadiasmus Provinciae Lyciae and the Miliarium Lyciae. 

The Akdeniz University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit, Koç University, the Suna and İnan Kıraç Mediterranean Civilizations Research Center and Patara excavations head Professor Havva İşkan Işık also contribute to the research, she said. 

One of members of the research team, academic Fatih Onur, said the Stadiasmus Patarensis was found in Patara in 1994. "The blocks were reunited by the late professor. It was revealed that those blocks were the parts of a seven-meter monument and it had inscriptions on its three sides," he said. 

Onur added that the monument, "unique in Turkey and the world," was dedicated to the Roman Empire Claudius in 46 A.D.

"It is written on the monument that the Romans took control of Lycia. There is a road map on the monument, listing 63 roads with their distance from other cities. The names of 50 cities are mentioned on the map," he said.

Monument 'gave a fearful message' 

The roads in the monument might have been used as a propaganda...

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