Myra

Soundtrack

Popular As Mayra Caról Ambriz Quintana

Birthday May 21, 1986

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Demre, Antalya Province, Turkey

Age 38 years old

Nationality United States

#54581 Most Popular

1840

When the traveler Charles Fellows saw the tombs in 1840 he found them still colorfully painted red, yellow and blue.

Andriake was the harbor of Myra in ancient times, but silted up later on.

The main structure there surviving to the present day is a granary (horrea) built during the reign of the Roman emperor Hadrian (117–138 AD).

Beside this granary is a large heap of Murex shells, evidence that Andriake had an ongoing operation to produce purple dye.

1923

In 1923, its Greek inhabitants was required to leave by the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, at which time its church was finally abandoned.

The author of the Acts of the Apostles (probably Luke the Evangelist) and Paul the Apostle changed ships here during their journey from Caesarea to Rome for Paul's trial, arriving in a coastal trading vessel and changing to a sea-faring skiff secured by the Roman centurion responsible for Paul's transportation to Rome.

The Acta Pauli probably testify to the existence of a Christian community at Myra in the 2nd century.

Le Quien opens his list of the bishops of this city with St. Nicander, martyred under Domitian in 95, who, according to the Greek Menologion, was ordained bishop by Saint Titus.

In 325, Lycia again became a Roman province distinct from that of Pamphylia, with Myra as its capital.

Ecclesiastically, it thus became the metropolitan see of the province.

The bishop of Myra at that time was Saint Nicholas.

1932

The 6th-century Index of Theodorus Lector is the first document that lists him among the fathers of the First Council of Nicaea in 325.

Many other bishops of Myra are named in extant documents, including Petrus, the author of theological works in defence of the Council of Chalcedon quoted by Saint Sophronius of Jerusalem and by Photius (Bibliotheca, Codex 23).

Theodorus and Nicolaus were both at the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, the former recanting his previous iconoclast position, the latter being the Catholic bishop whom the iconoclasts had expelled.

The Notitia Episcopatuum of Pseudo-Epiphanius, composed in about 640 under the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius, reports that Myra at that time had 36 suffragan sees.

2005

Myra (Μύρα, Mýra) was a Lycian, then ancient Greek, then Greco-Roman, then Byzantine Greek, then Ottoman town in Lycia, which became the small Turkish town of Kale, renamed Demre in 2005, in the present-day Antalya Province of Turkey.

It was founded on the river Myros (Μύρος; Turkish: Demre Çay), in the fertile alluvial plain between Alaca Dağ, the Massikytos range and the Aegean Sea.

Although some scholars equate Myra with the town, of Mira, in Arzawa, there is no proof for the connection.

There is no substantiated written reference for Myra before it was listed as a member of the Lycian League (168 BC–AD 43); according to Strabo (14:665), it was one of the largest towns of the alliance.

The ancient Greek citizens worshiped Artemis Eleutheria, who was the protective goddess of the town.

Zeus, Athena and Tyche were venerated as well.

Pliny the Elder writes that in Myra there was the spring of Apollo called Curium and when summoned three times by the pipe the fishes come to give oracular responses.

In the Roman period, Myra formed a part of the Koine Greek speaking world that rapidly embraced Christianity.

One of its early Greek bishops was Saint Nicholas.

Alluvial silts mostly cover the ruins of the Lycian and Roman towns.

The acropolis on the Demre-plateau, the Roman theatre and the Roman baths (eski hamam) have been partly excavated.

The semi-circular theatre was destroyed in an earthquake in 141, but rebuilt afterward.

There are two necropoleis of Lycian rock-cut tombs in the form of temple fronts carved into the vertical faces of cliffs at Myra: the river necropolis and the ocean necropolis.

The ocean necropolis is just northwest of the theatre.

The best-known tomb in the river necropolis, 1.5 km up the Demre Cayi from the theatre, is the "Lion's tomb", also called the "Painted Tomb".

2009

Excavations have been carried out at Andriake since 2009.

The granary was turned into the Museum of Lycian Civilizations.

The granary has seven rooms and measures 56 meters long and 32 meters wide.

Artifacts found during the excavations in the Lycian League were placed in the museum.

The structures in the harbor market as well as the agora, synagogue, and a six-meter deep, 24-meter long and 12-meter wide cistern were restored.

A 16-meter-long Roman-era boat, a crane, and a cargo car were placed in front of the museum.

2010

The early 10th-century Notitia attributed to Emperor Leo VI the Wise lists only 33.

Myra is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see both in general and as a bishopric of the Melkite Catholic Church in particular.

While Latin bishops are no longer appointed to this Eastern titular see, Melkite bishops are.

After a siege in 809, Myra fell to Abbasid troops under Caliph Harun al-Rashid.