Donuktaş Explained

Donuktaş
Map Type:Turkey
Map Size:300
Coordinates:36.9164°N 34.9033°W
Location:Tarsus, Mersin Province, Turkey
Type:Temple
Archaeologists:Nezahat Baydur
Winfried Held
Condition:In ruins

Donuktaş (literally “Pale Stone”) is a Roman temple in Tarsus ilçe (district) of Mersin Province, southern Turkey.

Location

Donuktaş is in the urban fabric of Tarsus. It is to the east of other historical places of Tarsus and to the north of Turkish state highway D.400. Its distance to Mersin is about .

Exploration history

The first written document about Donuktaş dates back to 1545. According to a member of the Venetian Barbaro family, who was the Bailo of Constantinople, Donuktaş was a palace. But according to later accounts in the 19th century, it is a mausoleum. The French historian Victor Langlois (1829–1869) in his book Voyage Dans la Cilicie et Dans la Montagnes du Taurus 1852-1853 described Donuktaş as the mausoleum of Sardanapalus (612-605 BC), the last Assyrian king. The German archaeologist Robert Koldewey (1855–1925) supported this assertion. British orientalist William Burckhardt Barker (1810?–1856) on the other hand, believed that Donuktaş is a mausoleum of another king. However, during the systematic exploration between 1982 and 1992 by Turkish archaeologist Nezahat Baydur, Donuktaş was defined as a temple built in the 2nd century, during the Roman Empire, much later than the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–609 BC).[1] Originally, It was a temple of Sandon, an ancient Hittite deity. Later, Sandon was identified with the Roman god Jupiter, and the temple became a Temple of Jupiter. The exploration continued after 2007 by the German archaeologist Winfried Held.[2]

The building

The building is huge construction without a roof. It has a rectangular form oriented in northeast to southwest direction. Its length is and the width is . It is surrounded by -thick walls. The walls are about high. The building material is Roman cement.[3] Although the wall is presently naked, it was originally covered by marble.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://arkeodenemeler.blogspot.com/2013/10/donuktas-donuktas-tapnag-kilikia-mersin.html Taylan Köken:Archaeology essays
  2. http://www.academia.edu/15655158/Tarsus_Donukta%C5%9F_Tap%C4%B1na%C4%9F%C4%B1_Har%C3%A7lar%C4%B1nda_Arkeometrik_%C3%87al%C4%B1%C5%9Fmalar_-_Archaeometric_Studies_of_Mortars_From_Tarsus_Donuktas_Temple Paper by Ali Akın Akyol, Yusuf Kağan Kadıoğlu and Winfried Held pg. 83
  3. Marsin Valiliği: Mersin Ören Yerleri, İstanbul, 2009, p.87