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Stratonikeia (in Greek Στρατoνικεια or Στρατoνικη), one of the most important towns in the interior of Caria (today part of western Turkey), was situated on the south-east of Mylasa, and on the south of the river Marsyas, today called Cine Suyu. It appears to have been founded by the Seleucid king Antiochus I Soter (281-–261 BC), who named it after his wife Stratonice. 1 Or at least this is what has been generally told; some historians have contested this date as too early, and proposed to consider the city's founder Stratonice's son, Antiochus II Theos, or, later still, Antiochus III the Great.
What seems certain is that the city was founded on the site of an old Carian town, Idrias, anciently called Chrysaoris2, said to be the first town funded by the Lycians. Idrias is mentioned in 425 BC as a tributary of Athens, responsible for the payment of the considerable sum of six talents.
Under the succeeding Seleucid kings Stratonikeia was adorned with splendid and costly buildings. At a later time in the 3rd century BC was ceded to the Rhodians. 3 Rhodes seems to have then temporarily lost it, possibly during Macedon's king Philip V Carian campaign (201–-198 BC), but it retook control of the place in 197 BC, keeping it until 167 BC when with the whole of Caria it was declared free by the Roman Republic. From this point starts the city's independent coinage, which was to last till the times of the emperor Gallienus (253-–268 ). In 130 BC the city had a central role in the revolt led against the Romans, since here the self-proclaimed king Aristonicus made a last stand before falling in the hands of his enemies with the fall of the city.
Some time after, in 88 BC, Mithridates VI of Pontus (120-–63 BC), after imposing a fine and a garrison on the city, resided for some time at Stratonikeia, and married Monima, the daughter of Philopoemen, one of its principal citizens.4 Then came in 40 BC the siege sustained against Quintus Labienus and his Parthian troops, and the brave resistance it offered to him entitled it to the gratitude of Augustus and the Senate.5 The emperor Hadrian is said to have taken this town under his special protection, and to have changed its name into Hadrianopolis, a name, however, which probably refers to another town also called Stratonikeia. Pliny6 enumerates it among free cities in Anatolia. Near the town was the temple of Zeus Chrysaoreus, at which the confederate towns of Caria, united in the Chrysaoric League, held their meetings; at these meetings the several states had votes in proportion to the number of towns they possessed. The Stratoniceans, though not of Carian origin, were admitted into the confederacy, because they possessed certain small towns or villages, which formed part of it. The league is attested by an inscription already in the 267 BC, was probably older still. Menippus, according to Cicero7 one of the most distinguished orators of his time, was a native of Stratonikeia.
Under the Roman Empire, the town seems to have continued in its prosperity: it was in this age that were built Stratonikeia's most impressive remains, first of all the theatre, with the seats remaining, estimated to be able to contain no less than ten thousand people; and secondly, the Serapeum, or a temple dedicated to the cult of Serapis, built about 200 AD, full of inscriptions and invocations to the gods. Other important ruins are on the acropolis, surrounded by a wall and crowned by a small temple dedicated to the cult of the emperors, and a powerful fortress. Much worse is the state of conservation of the city walls and its Agora, while the location of the temple of Zeus Chrysaoreus is still unknown.
It was Christianized early. The Notitiae Episcopatuum mention the see up to the thirteenth century among the suffragans of Stauropolis. Only three of its bishops are known, by their signatures at councils: Eupeithus, at the Council of Chalcedon (451); Theopemptus, at the Council of Constantinople (692); and Gregory, at the Council of Nicaea (787). Stratonikeia remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church, Latinized as Stratonicensis in Caria; the seat has been vacant since the death of the last bishop in 1977.8
The city's site is today partly occupied by the Turkish village of Eskihisar, not far from Bodrum. The village has a local museum, which contains mostly Roman remains; but the most remarkable object is a Mycenaean stirrup-cup of buff with horizontal red stripes which is dated to the 12th or 11th century BC. All the exhibits were found locally.
References
"Stratonicea" from the Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)
Richard Stillwell, William L. MacDonald, Marian Holland McAllister (editors); The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, "Stratonikeia", Princeton, (1976)
Smith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, "Stratoniceia", London, (1854)
Blue Guide, Turkey, The Aegean and Mediterranean Coasts (ISBN 0393304892), pp. 346-47.
Notes
- 1 Strabo, Geography, xiv. 2; Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, s.v. "Stratonikeia"
- 2 Pausanias, Description of Greece, v. 21
- 3 Livy, Ab urbe condita, xxxiii. 18, 30; Polybius, Histories, xxx. 22
- 4 Appian, The Foreign Wars, "The Mithridatic Wars", 21
- 5 Tacitus, Annals, iii. 62; Dio Cassius, Roman History, xlviii. 26
- 6 Pliny, Naturalis Historia, v. 29
- 7 Cicero, Brutus, 91
- 8 Catholic-Hierarchy.org, ["Stratonicea"]
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This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography by William Smith (1857).
Bodrum Pages, "Stratoniceia"
Hazlitt, Classical Gazetteer, p. 326
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