| 1884 Perron map PERGAMUM, MYSIA, ASIA MINOR, TURKEY, #99 |
Nice small map titled Pergame, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression. Overall size approx. 16 x 16 cm, image size approx. 10.5 x 9 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Pergamum
Greek Pergamon
ancient Greek city in Mysia, situated 16 miles from the Aegean
Sea on a lofty isolated hill on the northern side of the broad
valley of the Caicus (modern Bakir) River. The site is occupied
by the modern town of Bergama, in the il (province) of Izmir,
Turkey. Pergamum existed at least from the 5th century BCE, but
it became important only in the Hellenistic Age (323–30 BCE),
when it served as the residence of the Attalid dynasty. Their
fortress and palace stood on the peak of the hill, while the town
itself occupied the lower slopes. Under the Roman Empire the city
was situated on the plain below.
It had formal autonomy under the Attalids, who, however,
interfered in most aspects of civic government. Initially they
ruled Pergamum as vassals of the Seleucid kingdom, but Eumenes I
declared himself independent of Antiochus I (263 BCE). When he
died in 241, he was succeeded by his nephew Attalus I, who
defeated the Galatians and assumed the royal title; the dynasty
received its name from him. The original Attalid territory around
Pergamum (Mysia) was greatly expanded by 188 BCE with the
addition of Lydia (excluding most Greek coastal cities), part of
Phrygia, Lycaonia, and Pisidia (from 183 BCE), all former
Seleucid territories. This expansion was accomplished as the
result of Eumenes II's alliance with Rome in its conflict with
the Seleucid Antiochus III.
When Eumenes' son and second successor, Attalus III, died without
an heir, he bequeathed the kingdom to Rome (133). Rome accepted
it and set up the province of Asia (129), which included Ionia
and the territory of Pergamum, but left the other regions to
neighbouring kings, who were clients of Rome. The kingdom of
Pergamum yielded much wealth, especially in agricultural
surpluses and silver, first to the Attalid rulers and later to
Rome.
The Attalids made the city of Pergamum one of the most important
and beautiful of all Greek cities in the Hellenistic Age; it is
one of the most outstanding examples of city planning in that
period. They built a library excelled only by that at Alexandria.
The kings after Attalus I collected many works of art from Greece
to adorn the city's temples and courtyards, supplementing the
many works of sculpture, painting, and decoration commissioned
from resident artists. In Roman times its population was an
estimated 200,000. Excavations that were begun in 1878 under the
auspices of the Berlin Museum, besides unearthing many artistic
treasures, have enabled archaeologists to reconstruct the plan of
the most important areas of the Hellenistic city. Its monuments
included a theatre; the temple to Athena Nicephorus; and the
great altar of Zeus with its richly decorated frieze, a
masterpiece of Hellenistic art. A part of the altar and its
surviving reliefs, restored and mounted, now stands in the
Pergamon Museum in Berlin.
The civic structures of the lower city included a large
marketplace, a gymnasium, and temples of Hera and Demeter. Roman
remains include an amphitheatre, a theatre, and a racetrack. The
early Attalids erected the first structures of the upper (royal)
city, but the later kings Eumenes II and Attalus III, by their
extensive building and rebuilding, were chiefly responsible for
the city's great architectural and artistic reputation. After the
fall of Rome, Pergamum was ruled by the Byzantines until it
passed into Ottoman hands early in the 14th century.