Theancient Greek theatre overlooking the sea | |
![]() Interactive map of Antiphellus | |
| Location | Kaş,Antalya Province,Turkey |
|---|---|
| Region | Lycia |
| Type | Settlement |
| Site notes | |
| Archaeologists | Charles Fellows |
| Condition | Ruined, now mostly built on by the modern town |
Antiphellus orAntiphellos (Turkish:Antifellos,Ancient Greek:Ἀντίφελλος), known originally asHabesos, was an ancient coastal city inLycia. The earliest occurrence of itsGreek name is on a 4th-century-BCEinscription. Initially settled by theLycians, the city was occupied by thePersians during the 6th century BCE. It rose in importance under the Greeks, when it served as the port of the nearby inland city ofPhellus, but once Phellus started to decline in importance, Antiphellus became the region's largest city, with the ability tomint its own coins. During theRoman period, Antiphellus received funds from the civic benefactorOpramoas ofRhodiapolis that may have been used to help rebuild the city following theearthquake that devastated the region in 141.
The Irish naval officer SirFrancis Beaufort discovered the site of the city in the 1820s, when it was deserted. During a visit in April 1840, the Englisharchaeologist and explorerCharles Fellows noted the existence of over 100 stone tombs. Much of the city's archaeological remains has since been destroyed due to the growth ofKaş (formerlyAndifili) during the modern period; most of thesarcophagi being destroyed when the local population used the flat-sided stones for building materials.
Survivinginscriptions written in the now extinctLycian language date from the 4th century BCE. The restoredHellenistic amphitheatre at Antiphellus, originally built to seat 4000 spectators, and still largely complete, never possessed a permanent stone stage. Surviving ruins visible on the ground include the 4th century BCE Doric Tomb, which has a 1.9 metres (6 ft 3 in) high entrance and a chamber decorated with a relief of dancing girls; the King's Tomb, located in the centre of the modern town, which has a uniquely written and as yet untranslated Lycian inscription; a small 1st century BCE temple; rock tombs set in cliffs above the modern town; and parts of the city's ancient sea wall.
The originalLycian name for Antiphellus (Ancient Greek: "the land opposite the rocks") wasHabesos;[1][2] according to the Roman military commanderPliny the Elder, the city's pre-Hellenic name wasHabessus.[2] The discovery of architectural elements, now in theAntalya Museum, have confirmed that the Lycians had settled there (and therefore also Phellus) by the 6th century BCE.[3] It was entitled to one vote at theLycian_League, and emerged to be a centre of trade that minted its own coins.[1] The area was invaded by thePersians in around the middle of the 6th century BCE.[1]

Located at the head of a bay on the region's southern coast, the settlement served during theHellenic period as the port of the nearby inland city ofPhellus,[4] although despite the vulnerability of its coastal position, neither adefensive wall or anacropolis was ever built there.[5] The earliest mention of the Greek nameAntiphellus is on aninscription on a 4th-century-BCE tomb inKaş, which describes the deceased man as originating from Antiphellus.[6] As Phellus declined in importance, Antiphellus emerged to become the region's largest city.[4]
The city, unlike Phellus, is mentioned in theRoman guidebook for sailors, theStadiasmus Maris Magni.[7] Roman imperial coins found at Antiphellus bear the legendἈντιφελλειτων[4] ("of the Antiphellitans").[8] Pliny wrote that the softestsponges were found in the area.[5] The Roman scholarStrabo incorrectly placed Antiphellus among the inland cities:[9][10]
And in the interior are places called Phellus and Antiphellus and Chimaera, which last I have mentioned above.
According to the Turkish archaeologist Cevdet Bayburtluoğlu, Antiphellus was probably affected by theearthquake that devastated the region in 141–142.[11] The shock from this earthquake triggered atsunami that inundated the Lycian coast and travelled a considerable distance inland.[12] Funds known to have been donated to the city byOpramoas ofRhodiapolis may have been used to help repair the damage caused by this event.[11]
Thebishopric of Antiphellus was asuffragan of themetropolitan see ofMyra, the capital of theRoman province of Lycia. Its bishop Theodorus took part in theCouncil of Chalcedon in 451. He also attended the provincial synod held in 458 in connection with the murder ofProterius of Alexandria, but because of health difficulties with his hands, the acts of the meeting were signed on his behalf by the priest Eustathius.[13][14] No longer a residential bishopric, Antiphellus is today listed by the Catholic Church as atitular see.[15]
The site is now in the municipality of Kaş, Turkey, which before the forciblepopulation exchange between Greece and Turkey of 1922–1923 was calledAndifili,[4] and during the 19th century,Andiffelo.[16]
Antiphellus, all but deserted by 1828,[17] and built up in the following decades, became known during the mid-19th century, both to scholars and travellers.[16] The Irish naval officer SirFrancis Beaufort visited Antiphellus in the 19th century. He gave a description of what he found there, including the amphitheatre and groups of inscribed and plain sarcophagi, noting that the inscriptions he saw were: "from the rudeness of their execution, to be very antient. Intermixed with the usual Greek letters, there are several uncommon characters of which the following are a few specimens."[18]

The Englisharchaeologist and explorerCharles Fellows saw the ruins of Antiphellus in April 1838.[19] During a return visit in April 1840, Fellows noted the existence of over 100 tombs.[20] In 1841, he produced drawings of specimens of ends ofsarcophagi, pediments, and doors of tombs, andThomas Abel Brimage Spratt'sTravels in Lycia, Milyas, and the Cibyratis (1847) contains a plan of the ancient city's ruins.[9] Fellows and his companions found a tomb with a bilingual inscription (a cast was made in 1844); and he sketched the pillar tomb that now stands in the centre of the modern town.[21]
The abandoned Lycian settlement left hillside tombs, including a sarcophagus on a high base with a long inscription in "Lycian B",[4] now generally identified asMilyan, aLuwian language. Inscriptions in theLycian language are dated from the 4th century BCE, as are the earliest records inGreek inscriptions. One such inscription, copied by Fellows in 1840, contains the ethnic nameΑΝΤΙΦΕΛΛΕΙΤΟΥ.[22] Much of the archaeology at Antiphellus has been lost due to the urban development of Kaş;[23] Fellows observed that the settlement had expanded even since his previous visit and had swallowed up many of the ruins.[24]Excavations carried out in the modern town in 1952 produced few results, leading the archaeological team to conclude that 4th century Antiphellus consisted of a few buildings, concentrated near the harbour.[8]
TheHellenistic amphitheatre, which was restored in 2008,[25] is located 500 metres (1,600 ft) from the centre of Kaş. It was capable of seating 4000 spectators.[26] The amphitheatre is the only structure of its type inAnatolia with a sea front.[27] It is complete, but lacks aproscenium, so as to avoid blocking the view of the sea.[11][9]
After the amphitheatre was built, the east wall collapsed, possibly due to the earthquake that devastated the region in 141. Repairs to the wall are visible; the restoration work was done soon afterwards, probably by means of the funds provided to Antiphellus by Opramoas.[11]
The retaining wall of the amphitheatre, which curves around in slightly more than a semicircle, is built of irregularashlar blocks, which vary in size and shape. There is nodiazoma (the passage dividing the lower from the upper rows of seats), nor a permanent stone stage.[28]
One of the town's sarcophagi is the 4th century BCE Lycian Inscribed Mausoleum, known locally as the King's Tomb, which is located on Uzunçarşı Street.[27] It is in excellent condition.[30] Thehyposorium, which is cut from the solid rock, is approximately 5 feet (1.5 m) in height; the floor is sunken and the entrance is unsealed. The base is 30 inches (760 mm) high.[30] On thehyposorium is an unusual type of Lycianepitaph, being in the form of a poem, as observed by Fellows in the 1840s, who wrote that "the inscription does not begin in the manner of any of those we have yet met with, nor does it contain any words of a funereal character".[31] The text is written in theMilyan language (otherwise known as Lycian B), an extinct ancient Anatolian languageattested from only three inscriptions: two poems on the Xanthian Obelisk, and the shorter inscription on the King's Tomb.[32] The text has not been interpreted.[30] The free space under the inscription suggests the text was supposed to be longer, and that thestonemason, intending to save space, accidentally left too much room.[33]
The sarcophagus on top is cut from a separate block of stone. Two lions' heads project from the sides of the lid, which is divided into four panels showing standing figures in relief.[30] The sarcophagus was kept for the tomb's builder and his wife, who are depicted in the frontpediment as a bearded man leaning on a staff in front of a seated woman.[34]

The tomb was first depicted, but not discussed, inLuigi Mayer'sViews in the Ottoman Empire, published in London in 1803.[35] A copy of the inscription, made by the British archaeologistWilliam Gell in 1812, was one of the first copies of any Lycian inscription. Between 1836 and 1842 the inscription was copied by the French historianCharles Texier, Charles Fellows, the classicalphilologist Julius August Schönborn, and the English artistEdward Thomas Daniell. It was copied again in 1882, 1892, and 1894, before the Austrianclassical philologistErnst Kalinka published the authoritative copy of the inscription in 1901.[36]
Most of the ancient tombs found by Fellows have since disappeared,[20] as the local population used most of them for building materials.[37] The isolated tomb above the amphitheatre, known as the Doric Tomb, is of a unique form.[28] Cube shaped and cut into the rock face, with sides of 4.5 metres (15 ft). The east-facing entrance is 1.9 metres (6 ft 3 in) high and leads to a single chamber.[38] One of the inside walls has a relief of dancing girls, now grimy due to the tomb's use as a shepherds' shelter. From the clothes worn by the dancers, scholars have dated the tomb to the first half of the 4th century BCE.[39] The base has amoulding and a shallowpilaster at each corner; only one of thecapitals has survived. On the south side a band withmutules is preserved. The entrance, which was originally closed by means of a sliding door, has a moulded frame.[28]
The lower parts of a small temple have survived. The remains have a height of five blocks of rectangular ashlar. It was constructed in the 1st century BCE, with later additions added four centuries later. The temple was dedicated to an unknown god.[40][11]
There are rock tombs in the cliffs just beyond the modern town, including one with both a Lycian inscription and a later one written in Latin.[41] Remnants of a wall on the shoreline are still visible.[42] The harbour lay on the seaward side of the isthmus, where a reef runs out to sea, providing protection; it may have been strengthened in ancient times. Antiphellus had neither an acropolis nor a city wall. The part of the ashlar sea-wall that survives to the west of the modern town stands six courses high for a length of over 500 yards (460 m).[5]
36°12′07″N29°38′17″E / 36.20200°N 29.63800°E /36.20200; 29.63800