Topping the karst limestone mountain of Nemrut Dagi (2150m/7056ft) in the south-eastern Taurus 90km/56 miles north-east of Adiyaman is the Hierothosion of the Kommagene King Antiochus I (69-38 B.C.), dedicated to his own glory and that of the gods.
Antiochus' tomb is concealed somewhere inside the 50m/164ft high man-made burial mound, with its spectacular terraces on three sides (east, north and west). The 80m/260ft long north terrace, lined with (collapsed) columns, served as a place of assembly and arena for processions and other rituals.
On either side of the east terrace stand relieves of the King's ancestors, paternal (Persian) to the north, maternal (Seleucid) to the south, framing the colossal figures of the gods (heads standing on the ground) facing the main altar. These include, in addition to eagles and lions, the Greco-Persian mixed deities Zeus - Oromasdes, Hercules - Verethragna - Artagnes - Ares, Apollo - Mithras - Helios - Hermes and Kommagene - Tyche, as well as Antiochus I himself.
A similar arrangement is repeated on the west terrace, which is some
10m/33ft lower than the east. Here the heads of the colossal statues are
better preserved and there are also more of them. The "Lion Horoscope"
with its astral motifs symbolizes the deification of Antiochus I through
the metamorphosis of king into star.
The ruins of Samosata (3rd c), the old Kommagene
capital on the Euphrates, now mostly lie submerged beneath the waters of
the Atatürk Baraji (Dam) south-west of Kahta.
Only when the level in the reservoir is low does the 45m/148ft high castle
hill, which in 1990 was still being excavated, break the surface of the
water. The site is reached from Adiyaman by
driving east to Anil and then south along the new road to Yeni Samsat (about
65km/40 miles). From about 640 Samsat, like Adiyaman,
was one of the frontier forts (thugur) constantly changing hands between
Byzantium
and the Arab and Turkoman invaders, sometimes under Christian
occupation (e.g. 700, 860, 1098) and at other times Muslim
(10th c. Emirate of Aleppo; 12th c. Seljucks).
Approximately 25km/15 miles north-east of Adiyaman, above the east bank of the Kahta Cayi (Nymphaios) opposite Yeni Kale castle near Eski Kahta (see below), is a cult and burial site known today as Eski Kale (Mithridates I Kallinikos) and the summer residence of the Kommagene rulers founded in the 3rd c. B.C. by Arsames. In addition to the remains of steps and buildings on the summit plateau (mosaics from the 2nd c. B.C.), a number of relieves and rock chambers are passed on the approach. Lower relief (II): the god Mithras - Helios (a further part depicting Antiochus II is missing); middle relief (I): (fragments) Mithridates and his son Antiochus I, antechamber (cult site of the god Mithras?) with, to the rear, a rock tunnel with fourteen steps leading to the burial chamber of Mithridates (?); upper relief (III): Dexiosis relief of king (Mithridates or Antiochus I) with the demigod Hercules (extending his right hand), inscription by Antiochus I, steeply-stepped, blocked, rock tunnel (158m/518ft deep), purpose unknown.
This well-preserved Roman bridge crossing the Cendere (the ancient Chabinas)
at a point where the river emerges from an impressive gorge into the wide
valley of the Kahta Cayi, was built between A.D. 198 and 200 by the "legio
XVI Flavia firma", stationed in Samosata (Samsat). According to an inscription
four Kommagene towns financed the building of
the single- arched bridge with its span of 34.2m/112ft. One of the original
four dedicatory columns (to Septimus Severus, his wife lulia Domna and
their sons Caracalla and Geta), the one to Geta, was taken down in A.D.
212, part of an attempt to obliterate any reminder of Caracalla's having
had his brother and co-ruler removed.
The Dikilitas tumulus, 6m/20ft high and 35m/115ft in diameter, located
60km/37 miles south-west of Adiyaman, is almost
certainly the burial place of Mithridates II of Kommagene
and his wife. Of the three original pairs of columns (from which the old
name Sesonk = "three columns" was derived) only the southernmost survive
complete with linking architrave. The outer chamber, with three tombs,
is accessible. If driving there the best route, which even then is not
without its problems, is via Sambayat, Besyol and Zormagora (4km/2.5 miles
on foot).
The village of Kocahisar, 70km/43 miles north-east of Adiyaman,
is a convenient spot from which to visit the Mameluke fortress of Yeni
Kale, built on a narrow mountain spur high above a Seljuk
bridge spanning the Kahta Cayi gorge. The complex was constructed on top
of earlier foundations by Kara Sonkar (Governor of Aleppo, 1286), being
altered and extended at the end of the 13th c. and in the mid 14th c. Water
was brought up from the Kahta Cayi via a stepped passage-way and stored
in a cistern. For the "express" delivery of messages carrier pigeons were
used, notably during Sultan Kala'un's decisive battle against the Mongols
at Horns (1281).
A short distance east of Dikilitas are the remains of a triple-arched bridge
(centre arch, 31m/102ft, collapsed) over the Göksu, the ancient Singas,
a tributary of the Euphrates. Up until the Middle Ages this was an important
river crossing on the former military road from Samosata to Zeugma (60km/37
miles south-west of Adiyaman).
Kahta (formerly Kolik), 35km/22 miles east of Adiyaman,
is the principal town of the district and the starting point for the drive
through ancient Kommagene. Being short of hotel
accommodation it has found itself increasingly eclipsed by the provincial
capital.
This Kommagene tumulus 47km/29 miles north-east of Adiyaman was erected by Mithridates II (36-20 B.C.) for his mother Isias, his sister Laodike (36 B.C., wife of the Parthian King Orodes IV), and his niece Aka. From the original three pairs of columns only four now survive, the southernmost being crowned by an eagle (Karakus = "black bird"), the north-easterly one by a bull. On the north-west side are a toppled lion and a column the inscription on which records details of the tomb.
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