Plain Cilicia formed an important link between Syria, and, by extension, Mesopotamia and Egypt as well, with Cyprus and the Anatolian highlands for several periods.
Neolithic Due to its propitious environmental conditions, Plain Cilicia has been intensively settled by humans since the Neolithic Period. During the Neolithic Period, ceramic wares from Cilicia show links to northern Syria and nothern Mesopotamia, as well as to the ceramics of Inner Anatolia. Influences from the
Halaf culture of northern Mesopotamia are visible in Cilicia in this period, and so are influences from the
Ubaid culture. , circa 2200 BC.
Chalcolithic During the Chalcolithic Period, close contacts existed between Cilicia and the Amuq E and F cultures of the nearby Amuq Plain. During the Late Chalcolithic Period, when the Uruk culture spread in Mesopotamia, Cilicia exhibited closer cultural links to the Anatolian Highlands.
Bronze Age Beginning in the Early Bronze Age II period, and especially during the Early Bronze Age III period, which corresponds to the Early Bronze Age I-IV of the northern Levant, Syrian-Levantine influence on Cilician pottery was more intensely felt, resulting in the appearance of special types of pottery such as Metallic Ware and Syrian Flasks. Thus, Cilicia moved away from influence by the Anatolian cultural sphere and towards the northern Syrian cultural zone during the early Bronze Age, with this latter one persisting until the Middle Bronze Age. Cilicia is not mentioned in any ancient texts in the 3rd millennium BC, and even the sources of
Ebla do not refer to it. The first recognisable mentions of the Cilician Plain instead are from between and , with the
Story of Sinuhe, which takes place during the reign of
Senusret I (), referring to a from the south of the land of Kawa, who can be located in Plain Cilicia; the Luwian title of this ruler shows that the ruling class of Cilicia during this period were
Luwians. An Egyptian inscription from the reign of Senusret I's successor,
Amenemhat II (), mentioned the port city of Ura. There is otherwise no information about the political situation of Cilicia from the period lasting from to , with neither the letters of Assyrian traders in
Kaniš nor the royal correspondence of the palace at
Mari providing any information about Cilicia. Archaeological remains from this period derive almost solely from Tarsus, Mersin, Kinet Höyük and
Sirkeli Höyük. Beginning in the Bronze Age IA, which is when the land of Kawa was mentioned in the Story of Sinuhe, Painted Syro-Cilician Ware became prevalent in large parts of the Levant and Syria, which, in addition to its similarities with
Khabur Ware and Levantine Painted Ware, showed close connections between Cilicia and these regions. Contacts between Cilicia and Central Anatolia are discernible in the forms of the ceramics, such as spouted jugs found at Sirkeli Höyük, as well as by the dominance of Central Anatolian house types at Tarsus and Mersin. Before the end of the Middle Bronze Age, the
Hurrian language and
religion had spread into Cilicia, where the Hurrian and Luwian components were dominant among the population of the region from the period lasting from to . During the Late Bronze Age, Cilicia was dominated by the kingdom of
Kizzuwatna which came into existence during the middle of the 2nd millennium BC, at the time of the Hittite king
Ammuna, and was an independent power as well as a buffer between the
Hittite Empire and the
kingdom of Mitanni. During this period, silver from this region was exported to
Middle Kingdom Egypt. (now
Tell Atchana) and Pilliya of
Kizzuwatna (now Cilicia), (c. 1480 BC) Ref:. Even at this early period, Kizzuwatna was an important location for the Hittite Empire, since it provided the Hittites with access to Syria, which was useful for trade and was strategically advantageous. The border between Kizzuwatna and the Hittite kingdom was established by the treaty between
Šunaššura of Kizzuwatna and
Tudḫaliya I/II of the Hittites, according to which Kizzuwatna's most western city was to be Pitura on the coast and opposite of Lamiya (Classical
Lamos), thus leaving the port-city of Ura under Hittite rule. Meanwhile, the southwest-northeast border of Kizzuwatna ran through the Taurus Mountains and included the upper reaches of the Šamri (Classical Saros) river. Kizzuwatna was later annexed by the Hittites, possibly during the reigns of
Arnuwanda I or
Šuppiluliuma I, the latter of whom appointed Kantuzzili, and later Telipinu, as priest at Kummanni. The incorporation of Kizzuwatna into the Hittite Empire allowed Šuppiluliuma I to engage in an aggressively expansionist policy in Syria. Kizzuwatna had a significant cultural influence on the Hittite Empire: its Hurrian and Luwian populations and being open to Syria, it influenced Hittite religion in many aspects. In the Middle Bronze Age developed a far-reaching economic and socio-political system across the eastern Mediterranean, which was maintained by the palaces, and would reach its peak in the Late Bronze Age. Because of the dominance of the secular ruling classes in the economic, poilitical and ideological domains, it is referred to in research as a "Bronze Age palace culture," characterised by a reciprocal exchange system which included trade and prestige goods, craftsmen, and ideas. Evidence of this system is visible in the archaeological finds and texts from palaces like
Knossos in
Crete,
Avaris in
Egypt,
Hattusa in Anatolia, and
Ugarit,
Alalaḫ and
Qatna in the Levant, although the processes through which this interregional cultural exchange unfolded are still poorly understood. The extent to which Cilicia was integrated into this international system, in which form did a palace culture develop there, and the degree to which it participated in the widespread exchange of luxury goods are also still currently unknown; until the present day, no palaces have been found and excavated in Cilicia. It is therefore also impossible to know which architectural styles from surrounding areas were borrowed by Cilician architecture, and whether certain luxury goods were imported and imitated there, as was the case in Syria. The second half of the Late Bronze Age in Cilicia is characterised by Hittite Drab Ware and Red Lustrous Wheelmade Ware, whose origin was either from Cilicia itself or from Cyprus. Several Cypriot pottery imports and isolated Mycenaean shards also appeared in Tarsus at the same time as this ware, thus providing an outline of the cultural exchanges under way at this time. Influence from Central Anatolia was especially intense, as attested by the city wall in Mersin, which used the box-and-beam masonry technique based on Hittite models.
Iron Age With the Bronze Age Collapse, Kizzuwatna also came to an end, and from its remains several local states emerged in Cilicia, which therefore became dominated by two main polities: • in the east was
Ḫiyawa, corresponding to Plain Cilicia, and referred to as in Neo-Assyrian sources and as in
Neo-Babylonian sources; • in the west, corresponding to Rough Cilicia, was the state referred to as in Neo-Assyrian sources and as in Neo-Babylonian sources. Both Hiyawa and Hilakku came under pressure from the Neo-Assyrian Empire from the 9th century BC, and more so in the 8th century BC, when they were temporarily annexed and made into Neo-Assyrian provinces. During the 1st millennium BC, silver from Cilicia was exported to Assyria. During the 8th to 7th centuries BC, Greek traders and colonists established settlements on the Cilician coasts, such as
Nagidos and
Celenderis founded by
Samos,
Soli founded by
Lindos; Greeks also established themselves in local settlements, such as at
Anchiale and
Tarsus.
Kingdom of Cilicia Following the collapse of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, an independent state, called Cilicia () by the ancient Greeks, was established in southeastern Anatolia in the 6th century BC under the rule of a native dynasty, with its capital at the city of
Tarsus.
Submission to the Achaemenid Empire In the mid-6th century BC, the kingdom of Cilicia supported the founding king of the
Persian Achaemenid Empire,
Cyrus II, in his wars against Croesus of Lydia, as a consequence of which Cilicia became a vassal of the Achaemenid empire as from , and the Cilician rulers became part of the Achaemenid administration. Under early Achaemenid rule, Cilicia maintained a significant degree of autonomy and the native rulers at Tarsus acted as
satraps (governors) for the Achaemenid administration, with their authority extending until as far west as
Aspendus. Cilicia remained under efficient administration, and it would continue to provide troops for the Achaemenid wars in Anatolia, Egypt and Cyprus.
Satrapy of Cilicia In 401 BC, the Achaemenid king of kings
Artaxerxes II abolished the autonomy of Cilicia in reaction to the local Cilician ruler
Syennesis III's support for the rebellion of
Cyrus the Younger, resulting in the kingdom of Cilicia being abolished and fully integrated into the Achaemenid empire as a normal province ruled by and appointed by the Achaemenid king of kings, which it would remain until the
end of the Achaemenid Empire in 333 BC. Once the revolt of Cyrus the Younger had been suppressed, Cilicia was again used as an assembly point for Achaemenid forces in preparation for military action in the Aegean Sea during 396 to 395 BC, and against Cyprus in the 380s BC. During the 390s BC,
Camisares was appointed as satrap of Cilicia. Camisares was himself succeeded by his son,
Datames, who eventually became the satrap of both Cilicia and Cappadocia until his assassination in . . Satrap of Cilicia, 361/0-334 BC.
Tarsos, Cilicia. , with
Artaxerxes III as
Pharaoh. Satrap of Cilicia, 361/0-334 BC.
Tarsos, Cilicia. In the 340s BC, the satrap of Cilicia was
Mazaeus, who was also given authority over Syria as reward for his service in a campaign against Egypt.
Hellenistic period Following the
Battle of Issus, Cilicia became part of the
empire of
Alexander III of
Macedon after he entered the region through the Cilician Gates in the Taurus Mountains without facing any resitance. Alexander forded the
Halys River in the summer of 333 BC, ending up on the border of southeastern
Phrygia and Cilicia. He knew well the writings of
Xenophon, and how the Cilician Gates had been "impassable if obstructed by the enemy". Alexander reasoned that by force alone he could frighten the defenders and break through, and he gathered his men to do so. In the cover of night, they attacked, startling the guards and sending them and their satrap into full flight, setting their crops aflame as they made for
Tarsus. This good fortune allowed Alexander and his army to pass unharmed through the Gates and into Cilicia. During Alexander III's invasion, a lesser officer named
Arsames who had fled to Cilicia from the northwest to organise new resistance there defended it against the Macedonian forces. During the Hellenistic period, Cilicia became disputed between the
Ptolemaic Kingdom and the
Seleucid Empire, with the latter being mostly in control of it, while the Teucrid dynasty ruled at the city of Olba. Although no later Persian empire ever regained control of Cilicia, one Seleucid officer named Aribazus and attested as administrator of Cilicia in 246 BC was possibly of Persian descent. During the
Hellenistic era, numerous cities were established in Cilicia, which minted coins showing the badges (gods, animals, and objects) associated with each polis. The Seleucids, especially
Antiochus IV, focused on Hellenising Cilicia by establishing or rebuilding several poleis, such as Seleucia on the Calycadnus, Antioch on the Cydnus (Tarsus), Seleucia on the Pyramus (
Mopsuestia), Hierapolis (
Castabala), and
Epiphaneia. In the 3rd century BC, sporadic Ptolemaic presence was attested in Rugged Cilicia. With the weakening of the Seleucid kingdom in the late 2nd century BC,
piracy spread in the Mediterranean which had its main bases in Rugged Cilicia.
Roman and Byzantine periods In 102 BC, the
Roman Republic established a Roman province| of the Praetor|
Marcus Antonius in Cilicia to fight the Cilician pirates, with the command being renewed repeatedly. In 83 BC, the
Armenian king
Tigranes II conquered Plain Cilicia, and he deported Cilicians to
Tigranocerta. Between 78 and 74 BC,
Publius Servilius Vatia Isauricus conquered the population of Rugged Cilicia, which made a permanent Roman presence in Cilicia possible. In 69 BC,
Lucullus returned the Cilician deportees to Tigranocerta back to their homeland. After
Pompey was given the , he was able to defeat the Cilician pirates in 67 BC, and he arranged for his defeated enemies to be settled in Pompeiopolis (formerly Soli) and other depopulated Cilician towns. This victory strengthened the Roman presence in Cilicia, and in 64 BC the province was extended to include Plain Cilicia. , later converted into the city's south gate In 56 BC, the province of Cilicia was temporarily extended to include a large inland territory reaching Phrygia so that it could protect the province of Asia and made the presence of a Roman garrison there unnecessary. In 51 BC, the
Parthian Empire was able to take advantage of the weakness of the Roman Republic to invade Cilicia (). In 51 or 50 BC, the Proconsul|
Cicero successfully campaigned in Cilicia against the Eleutherokilikes in the Amanus Mountains, which further solidified the Roman presence in CIlicia. After Julius Caesar's death, the of Cilicia was dissolved in 43 BC, and most of Rugged Cilicia was given to
Amyntas of Galatia, then to
Archelaus of Cappadocia. Plain Cilicia meanwhile was ruled by the kingdom of
Tarcondimotus I as well as other smaller client-states of the Roman Republic, or administered as part of Syria. Tarcondimotus I had supported the losing side of
both Roman civil wars by offering naval support to Pompey and
Mark Antony, due to which his son
Tarcondimotus II Philopator was deposed in 30 BC, although he was restored to power between 20 BC and 17 AD. Parts of Cilicia were given to
Antiochus IV of Commagene by
Caligula, who incorporated the rest of it into Syria. A united province of Cilicia consisting of both Rugged and Plain Cilicia with Tarsus as capital was re-established in 72 AD by
Vespasian. During the early 2nd century AD, 39 cities of Cilicia issued coins. In 194 AD,
Septimius Severus defeated
Pescennius Niger at the Cilician Gates. Under the
Severan dynasty, during the late 2nd to early 3rd centuries AD, the city of
Anazarbus, which was made into a metropolis, became a rival of Tarsus. In 259 or 260, the Persian
Sasanian king of kings
Shapur I defeated the Roman Emperor
Valerian, whose army included Cilician soldiers. After Valerian's defeat, the Sasanian forces burnt and sacked several cities in Syria, Cilicia () and Cappadocia, and devastated large parts of Cilicia. Under Diocletian's reforms, Cilicia was split into Cilicia Prima, Cilicia Secunda which included the northwestern part of Syria now known as Hatay, and a province named
Isauria with its capital at Seleucia which included Rugged Cilicia. Cilicia had numerous Christian communities and is mentioned six times in the
Book of Acts and once in the
Epistle to the Galatians (1:21). After Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire in the 4th century, Cilicia was included in the territories of the patriarchate of Antioch. The region was divided into two civil and ecclesiastical provinces:
Cilicia Prima, with a
metropolitan diocese at
Tarsus and
suffragan dioceses for
Pompeiopolis,
Sebaste,
Augusta,
Corycus,
Adana,
Mallus and
Zephyrium; and
Cilicia Secunda, with a metropolitan diocese at
Anazarbus and suffragan dioceses for Mopsuestia,
Aegae,
Epiphania,
Irenopolis,
Flavias,
Castabala,
Alexandria,
Citidiopolis and
Rhosus. Bishops from the various dioceses of Cilicia were well represented at the
First Council of Nicaea in 325 and at the later ecumenical councils. In 400,
Theodosius I divided Plain Cilicia into the provinces of Cilicia Prima, headquartered at Tarsus, and Cilicia Secunda, whose capital was Anazarbus. The Christian Church in Cilicia was under the authority of the
Patriarch of Antioch. Cilicia remained prosperous, due to which several, largely ecclesiastical, construction works were undertaken there. From the middle of the 7th century, Cilicia became more and more close to the border between the
Byzantine Empire and the
Caliphate, resulting in the depopulation of the region.
Early Islamic period In the 7th century Cilicia was invaded by the Muslim Arabs. The area was for some time an embattled no-man's land. The
Umayyad Caliphate conquered Cilicia around . Under the
Abbasid Caliphate, Cilicia was resettled and transformed into a fortified frontier zone (
thughur). Tarsus, re-built in 787/788, quickly became the largest settlement in the region and the Arabs' most important base in their raids across the
Taurus Mountains into Byzantine-held Anatolia. Fortified settlements such as
Ḥiṣn al-Tīnāt (identified with the Tüpraş Field near Kinet Höyük) were not only military posts but also played economic roles, showing that parts of coastal Cilicia functioned not merely as a border zone. Through their complex alliances with the Crusader states, the Armenian barons and kings often invited Crusaders to maintain castles in and along the borders of the Kingdom, including
Bagras,
Trapessac,
T‛il Hamtun,
Harunia,
Selefkia,
Amouda, and
Sarvandikar.
Gosdantin (r. 1095 – c. 1100) assisted the
Crusaders on their march to
Antioch, and was created knight and
marquis.
Thoros I (r. c. 1100 – 1129), in alliance with the Christian princes of Syria, waged successful wars against the Byzantines and Seljuk Turks.
Levon II (Leo the Great (r. 1187–1219)), extended the kingdom beyond
Mount Taurus and established the capital at
Sis. He assisted the Crusaders, was crowned King by the
Archbishop of Mainz, and married one of the
Lusignans of the Crusader
Kingdom of Cyprus. The Mongols then assisted with the defence of Cilicia from the
Mamluks of Egypt, until the Mongols themselves converted to Islam.
Turkmens The
Ilkhanate lost cohesion after the death of
Abu Sa'id (r. 1316–1335), and thus could not support the Armenian Kingdom in guarding Cilicia. Internal conflicts within the Armenian Kingdom and the devastation caused by the
Black Death that arrived in 1348, led nomadic Türkmens to turn their eyes towards unstable Cilicia. In 1352, Ramazan Beg led Turkmens settled south of Çaldağı and founded their first settlement,
Camili. Later that year, Ramazan Beg visited
Cairo and was licensed by the Sultan to establish the new frontier
Turkmen Emirate in Cilicia. Yüreğir Türkmens lived as a small community for 7 years in southeast of Adana, and named their new land,
Yüreğir.
Collapse When
Levon V died (1342), John of Lusignan was crowned king as
Gosdantin IV; but he and his successors alienated the native Armenians by attempting to make them conform to the
Roman Church, and by giving all posts of honour to
Latins, until at last the kingdom, falling prey to internal dissensions, ceded Cilicia Pedias to the
Ramadanid-supported
Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt in 1375. in 1892
Ottomans ended the Ramadanid administration of Adana sanjak in 1608, ruling it directly from Constantinople then after. The autonomous sanjak was then split from the
Aleppo Eyalet and established as a new province under the name of
Adana Eyalet. A governor was appointed to administer the province. In late 1832,
Eyalet of Egypt Vali Muhammad Ali Pasha invaded
Syria, and reached Cilicia. The
Convention of Kütahya that was signed on 14 May 1833, ceded Cilicia to the
de facto independent
Egypt.
Alawites brought to Cilicia from Syria to work at the flourishing agricultural lands. İbrahim Paşa, the son of Muhammed Ali Paşa, demolished the Adana Castle and the city walls in 1836. He built the canals for irrigation and transportation and also built water systems for the residential areas of the towns. Adana had the infrastructure it needed by the second half of the 19th century to become major center of Southeastern Anatolia. After the
Oriental crisis, the Convention of Alexandria that was signed on 27 November 1840, required the return of Cilicia to Ottoman sovereignty. The
American Civil War that broke out in 1861 disturbed the cotton flow to Europe and directed European cotton traders to fertile Cilicia. The region became the centre of cotton trade and one of the most economically strong regions of the Empire within decades. In 1869, Adana Eyalet was re-established as
Adana Vilayet, after the re-structuring in the Ottoman Administration.
Adana–Mersin railway line was opened in 1886, connecting Cilicia to international ports through
Port of Mersin. A thriving regional economy, the doubling of Cilician Armenian population due to flee from the
Hamidian massacres, and the end of autocratic
Abdulhamid rule with the
revolution of 1908, empowered the Armenian community and envisioned an autonomous Cilicia. Enraged supporters of Abdulhamid that organized under Cemiyet-i Muhammediye amidst the
countercoup, led to a series of anti-Armenian pogroms in 14–27 April 1909. The
Adana massacre resulted in the deaths of roughly 25,000 Armenians, orphaned
3500 children and caused heavy destruction of Christian neighbourhoods in the entire
Vilayet. The Cilicia section of the
Berlin–Baghdad railway was opened in 1912, connecting the region to the Middle East. Over the course of the
Armenian genocide, an Ottoman telegraph was received by the Governor to deport the more than 70,000 Armenians of the Adana Vilayet to Syria. Armenians of Zeitun had organized a successful resistance against the Ottoman onslaught. In order to finally subjugate Zeitun, the Ottomans had to resort to treachery by forcing an Armenian delegation from Marash to ask the
Zeituntsis to put down their arms. Both the Armenian delegation, and later, the inhabitants of Zeitun, were left with no choice.
Modern era arrives Mersin
Armistice of Mudros that was signed on 30 October 1918 to end the
World War I, ceded the control of Cilicia to France. French Government sent four battalions of the
Armenian Legion in December to take over and oversee the repatriation of more than 170,000 Armenians to Cilicia. Returning Armenians negotiated with France to establish an autonomous
State of Cilicia. The Armenians formed the
Armenian National Union which acted as an unofficial Cilician Armenian government composed of the four major political parties and three Armenian religious denominations.
Mihran Damadian, the chief negotiator for Armenians, signed the provisional
Constitution of Cilicia in 1919 to bring new order to the region. The French forces were spread too thinly in the region and, as they came under withering attacks by Muslim elements both opposed and
loyal to
Mustafa Kemal Pasha, eventually reversed their policies in the region. A truce arranged on 28 May between the French and the Kemalists, led to the retreat of the French forces south of the Mersin-Osmaniye railroad. With the changing political environment and interests, the French further reversed their policy: The repatriation was halted, and the French ultimately abandoned all pretensions to Cilicia, which they had originally hoped to attach to their
mandate over Syria.
Cilicia Peace Treaty was signed on 9 March 1921 between France and
Turkish Grand National Assembly. The treaty did not achieve the intended goals and was replaced with the
Treaty of Ankara that was signed on 20 October 1921. Based on the terms of the agreement, France recognized the end of the
Cilicia War, and French troops together with the remaining Armenian volunteers withdrew from the region in early January 1922.
Maronite community were re-settled in
Lebanon by the French Administration. Later in 1922, roughly 10,000 Greeks were forced to move to Greece by the policy of
Greco-Turkish population exchange. From the 1920s, around 60 percent of the Cilician Armenians moved to
Argentina. An informal census of 1941 revealed that, 70 percent of all the
Armenian Argentines in
Buenos Aires had Adana origins.
Republic of Turkey The region become part of the
Republic of Turkey in 1921 with the signing of the Treaty of Ankara. On 15 April 1923, just before the signing of the
Treaty of Lausanne, the Turkish government enacted the "Law of Abandoned Properties" which confiscated properties of Armenians and Greeks who were not present on their property. Cilicia were one of the regions with the most confiscated property, thus
muhacirs (en: immigrants) from Balkans and
Crete were relocated in the old Armenian and Greek neighbourhoods and villages of the region. All types of properties, lands, houses and workshops were distributed to them. Also during this period, there was a property rush of Muslims from
Kayseri and
Darende to Cilicia who were granted the ownership of large farms, factories, stores and mansions. Within a decade, Cilicia had a sharp change demographically, socially and economically and lost its diversity by turning into solely Muslim/Turkish. Remaining Jews and Christians were hit by the heavy burden of the
Wealth Tax in 1942, which caused them to leave Cilicia, selling their properties for peanuts to families like
Sabancı, who built their wealth on owning confiscated or cheaply purchased properties. Forcible change in means of production led to abuse of wealth and harsh treatment of labor later in the 20th century, as the new possessors did not have the necessary management attributes that the previous owners had for centuries.
Legacy According to one Greek myth, Cilicia was named after
Cilix (), a
Phoenician who went to live there after searching for his sister
Europa following the instructions of his father, the king
Agenor of
Tyre or
Sidon. In another Greek myth, the name of Cilicia was derived from a people named the (), who were Greeks who originally lived in the
Troad, and who settled the coastland of Cilicia under the leadership of the seer
Mopsus. The Karatepe Luwian-Phoenician
bilingual inscription mentions the House of Mopsus (; ) as the reigning dynasty of the kingdom of Ḫiyawa. == Society and culture ==