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Image search results - "aphrodisias" |
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Convenience Center228 viewsThis lovely rock structure housed the rest rooms at Aphrodisias, as well as the Anatolia Restaurant.
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Aphrodisias Rest Rooms188 viewsClean and beautifully decordated.
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Men's Room 233 viewsI thought the rest rooms at Aphrodisias deserved special mention because so much attention and care had been lavished on making them unusually spiffy and green.
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The Aphrodisias Museum249 viewsThe ancient city was renowned for its sculptures, and many of them are now housed in this building.
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Gaius Julius Zoilus215 viewsPerhaps captured by pirates, Zoilus was sold to Julius Caesar. Upon Caesar's assassination, Zoilus was passed to his heir Octavian, who eventually freed him. Zoilus returned to his native city a wealthy man, and became a leading citizen, initiating an expansive building program.
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Stone Lion224 viewsOn display near the Aphrodisias Museum.
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Kenan Erim's Last Resting Place189 viewsKenan Erim was a Turkish-born professor at New York University who was largely responsible for the excavation of the ancient city of Aphrodisias, which he supervised from 1961 to his death in 1990.
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Strolling amidst the ruins of Aphrodisias283 viewsOur tour group heads for the Amphitheater.
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Amphitheater and Acropolis296 viewsLooking west. The Amphitheater was built into the side of the Acropolis.
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South Agora and Baths of Hadrian282 viewsThe Baths of Hadrian, built across the west end of the South Agora, were massively constructed from large tufa-like blocks faced with marble veneer and consist of five great barrel-vaulted chambers, with an imposing colonnaded court in front.
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South Agora208 viewsLooking toward the South Agora and the Baths of Hadrian; the Amphitheater is off to the right.
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The Amphitheater at Aphrodisias222 viewsThe theater was built in the late first century BC under the patronage of Gaius Julius Zoilus, a native of Aphrodisias who had become a slave of Julius Caesar but was freed by his heir Octavian. Returning to his birthplace a wealthy man, Zoilus initiated a vast building program, of which the Amphitheater was one of the first fruits.
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