Front cover image for Mountain and plain : from the Lycian coast to the Phrygian plateau in the late Roman and early Byzantine period

Mountain and plain : from the Lycian coast to the Phrygian plateau in the late Roman and early Byzantine period

"In the classical period, the remote region of Lycia supported up to forty cities. The coastal centers grew to considerable size and importance, perhaps owing their prosperity to the fact that the main shipping lanes from wealthy Egypt and Syria lay right along the Lycian coast, with its numerous safe harbors. In late antiquity, a population shift seems to have occurred. The urban populations along the coast appear to have declined, while smaller settlements (monasteries, villages, and towns) began cropping up in the sheltered mountain vales farther up and farther in. To be sure, the coast was not abandoned - indeed, evidence suggests a mutual dependence between the inhabited centers of mountain and plain."

Print Book, English, ©2001
University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, ©2001