manuel cohen

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • Search (in english)
  • Reportages
  • Fine Art Prints
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • PicRights

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 70 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Stadium, Roman, 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The stadium is horseshoe in shape and its auditorium seats 12,000 spectators in 12 rows supported by a vaulted arcade. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_002.jpg
  • Agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_008.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_028.jpg
  • Relief of flaming torches on a stone on the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_029.jpg
  • Agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_038.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_055.JPG
  • Agora, with central circular fountain, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_066.jpg
  • Agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades, 4th century AD, and behind, the Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_017.JPG
  • Perga, seen from the acropolis, with intersection of the colonnaded streets, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_025.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_031.JPG
  • Marble relief on a shop surrounding the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_032.jpg
  • Walls of the Roman baths, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The baths contain a frigidarium or cold water room, tepidarium or warm water room, and caldarium or hot water room, with raised floors over the heating system. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_003.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. In the distance is the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades, 4th century AD. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_006.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_014.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_020.jpg
  • Hadrian's Gate, a monumental gate built during the reign of the Emperor Hadrian in the 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. An inscription over the middle arch states that the Plancia Magna dedicated the gate to the city. Behind is the Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt. The gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_040.jpg
  • Theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_048.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street and behind, the nymphaeum or Nympahion of Kestros, a monumental fountain under the acropolis, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_050.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. In the distance is the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades, 4th century AD. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_060.jpg
  • Nymphaeum of Septimius Severus (left), 2nd century AD, a monumental fountain dedicated to the goddess Artemis and to the emperor, on the edge of the southern baths, and (right) the Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_065.jpg
  • Stadium, Roman, 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The stadium is horseshoe in shape and its auditorium seats 12,000 spectators in 12 rows supported by a vaulted arcade. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_001.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. In the distance is the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades, 4th century AD. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_004.JPG
  • Relief of flowers and a winged sea creature at the Nymphaeum of Septimius Severus, 2nd century AD, a monumental fountain dedicated to the goddess Artemis and to the emperor, on the edge of the southern baths, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Behind is the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_005.jpg
  • Basilica, 6th century AD, next to the Roman city gate, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The basilica is Byzantine and has 3 naves, a narthex and the apse and East walls are still standing. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_016.jpg
  • Agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_015.jpg
  • Gymnasium, Roman, built 1st century AD, on the slopes of the acropolis in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The gymnasium or palaestra was a square 2 storey limestone building used for physical exercise and consists of a large courtyard with changing rooms, fed with fresh water by an aqueduct. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_027.jpg
  • Shop along the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_030.jpg
  • Propylon or monumental gate leading to the baths, Roman, 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The gate was decorated with reliefs of Selene, Dionysus and Eros. The propylon was built on a 2 stepped marble covered platform, with granite columns with square pedestals and Corinthian capitals. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_033.JPG
  • Relief of a winged sea creature at the Nymphaeum of Septimius Severus, 2nd century AD, a monumental fountain dedicated to the goddess Artemis and to the emperor, on the edge of the southern baths, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_034.jpg
  • Seating in the auditorium and colonnaded gallery, in the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_035.jpg
  • Marble relief on a shop surrounding the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Behind is Hadrian's Gate, a monumental gate built during the reign of the Emperor Hadrian in the 2nd century AD. An inscription over the middle arch states that the Plancha Magna dedicated the gate to the city. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_037.jpg
  • Relief on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_045.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_054.jpg
  • Stadium, Roman, 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The stadium is horseshoe in shape and its auditorium seats 12,000 spectators in 12 rows supported by a vaulted arcade. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_058.jpg
  • Agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades and shops, 4th century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_061.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. On the right is the main colonnaded street and the agora, an open public square surrounded by colonnades, 4th century AD. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_062.jpg
  • Relief of the life of Dionysus, on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_068.jpg
  • Relief on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_069.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_007.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_019.jpg
  • Nymphaeum of Septimius Severus, 2nd century AD, a monumental fountain dedicated to the goddess Artemis and to the emperor, on the edge of the southern baths, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_022.jpg
  • Relief of the life of Dionysus, on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_044.JPG
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_043.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (foreground), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_056.JPG
  • Relief on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_067.jpg
  • Stadium, Roman, 2nd century AD, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The stadium is horseshoe in shape and its auditorium seats 12,000 spectators in 12 rows supported by a vaulted arcade. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_057.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_012.jpg
  • Carved inscription on a stone at the intersection of the 2 main colonnaded streets, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_010.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_011.jpg
  • Shop along the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_023.jpg
  • Section of city walls, 3rd century BC, supported by an arcade, next to the Roman Gate in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_018.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street with open water channel, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_026.jpg
  • Roman Gate, built in the city walls, backed by a courtyard, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The inner and outer gates were built in the 2nd century AD during the reign of Septimius Severus. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_036.JPG
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_039.jpg
  • Relief on the podium of the skene of the theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_046.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_052.jpg
  • Theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_047.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street leading down the hill, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_053.JPG
  • Walls of the Roman baths, and the Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, seen from the stadium, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_059.jpg
  • Intersection of the 2 main colonnaded streets, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_064.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre (shown here), with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_070.jpg
  • Carved stone detail with scrolls and inscription, on the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_009.jpg
  • Hellenistic Gate, with 2 towers originally built in Hellenistic times and later rebuilt, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The Gate is in the north of Septimius Severus Square, with 2 oval towers built in the 3rd century BC, supported by vaults. Behind the towers is a horseshoe shaped courtyard. The towers were used in defence and were extended in Roman times. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_013.jpg
  • Theatre, Greco-Roman, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The theatre seats 15,000 with a cavea divided by a diazoma. The auditorium was built c. 120 AD and the skene building in the 2nd century AD, altered in the 3rd, with many friezes and statues. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_021.jpg
  • Stone with carved inscription and behind, a shop, on the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_042.jpg
  • Nymphaion of Kestros, a monumental fountain under the acropolis, at the end of the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. The limestone nymphaion gate complex is U-shaped and 2 storeys high, accessed via 2 passages covered by slab vaults. The fountain has a triple-arched central niche with a reclining sculpture of the river god Kestros. In the foreground is the open water channel along the centre of the main street, which is fed by the fountain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_051.jpg
  • Perga, seen from the acropolis, with intersection of the colonnaded streets, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_063.jpg
  • Perga, seen from the acropolis, with intersection of the colonnaded streets, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_024.jpg
  • Colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_041.jpg
  • Arch and basin on the colonnaded main street, in Perga, an ancient Pamphylian city ruled by the Persians, Greeks and Romans, in Antalya, Turkey. Perga has 2 main streets intersecting to divide the city into 4. The main street is 480m long and 22m wide and was used by pedestrians and vehicles. Shops with porticoes with mosaic floors line the limestone road, and an open water channel lies along its centre, with sewage systems underground. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_TURKEY_MC_049.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x