Hyllarima

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationKapraklar, Muğla Province, Turkey
RegionCaria
Coordinates37°30′18″N 28°20′58″E / 37.505071°N 28.34938°E / 37.505071; 28.34938
Hyllarima
Ὑλλάριμα (in Ancient Greek)
Hyllarima is located in Turkey
Hyllarima
Hyllarima
Shown within Turkey
Hyllarima is located in Turkey Aegean
Hyllarima
Hyllarima
Hyllarima (Turkey Aegean)
LocationKapraklar, Muğla Province, Turkey
RegionCaria
Coordinates37°30′18″N 28°20′58″E / 37.505071°N 28.34938°E / 37.505071; 28.34938

Hyllarima (Ancient Greek: Ὑλλάριμα, Carian: 𐊤𐊣𐊠𐊪𐊹 yλarmi-[1][2]) was an inland town of northeastern ancient Caria.[3] Its site is located near Mesevle in Asiatic Turkey.[3][4] Hyllarima is the find-site of about 30 inscriptions and is the type-site of one variant of the Carian alphabets. It governed a number of rural sanctuaries, of which the most notable is that of Zeus Hyllos.[5][6]

The settlement's name appears in Greek sources as Hyllarima (Ancient Greek: Ὑλλάριμα). This is thought to derive from the epithet of the local deity Zeus Hyllos; Hyllos may originally have been a native Anatolian god which merged with Zeus through syncretism. Similar processes can be seen at Panamara and Labraunda in Caria, whose chief sanctuaries were for Zeus Panamaros and Zeus Labraundos respectively.[7]

The Carian name of Hyllarima is attested as yλarmi- in an inscribed list of "priests of the gods of Hyllarima", qmoλš msoτ yλarmiτ (ʘ𐊪𐊫𐊣𐤭 𐊪𐊰𐊫𐋇 𐊤𐊣𐊠𐊪𐊹𐋇).[8] The form yλarmiτ is inflected, resulting in the syncope of the original medial vowel /i/ which survives in the Greek form.[9]

The archaic form of Hyllarima might be Wallarima, which is attested in Hittite texts of the 2nd millennium BCE as the name of a community in this region, alongside nearby Iyalanda (Alinda).[10]

It is thought that the otherwise-unknown toponym Kaprima (Ancient Greek: Κάπριμα), the site of Eupolemus' defeat by Ptolemaeus according to Diodorus Siculus, is a corruption of Hyllarima.[11][12] This corruption corresponds with the well-known alternation between initial /h-/ and /k-/ in Carian toponyms, such as in Hydai/Kydai or Hyromos/Kyramos/Euromos.[13]

History

Excavations

References

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