Neolithic age Humans had begun inhabiting the area surrounding Ephesus by the
Neolithic Age (about 6000 BC), as shown by evidence from excavations at the nearby
höyük (artificial mounds known as
tells) of
Arvalya and
Cukurici.
Bronze Age Early Bronze Excavations in recent years have unearthed settlements from the early
Bronze Age at
Ayasuluk Hill.
Late Bronze According to
Hittite sources, the capital of the kingdom of
Arzawa (another independent state in Western and Southern Anatolia/Asia Minor) was Apasa (or
Abasa), and some scholars suggest that this is the same place the Greeks later called Ephesus. In 1954, a burial ground from the
Mycenaean era (1500–1400 BC), which contained ceramic pots, was discovered close to the ruins of the
basilica of St. John. This was the period of the
Mycenaean expansion, when the
Ahhiyawa began settling in
Asia Minor, a process that continued into the 13th century BC. The names
Apasa and
Ephesus appear to be cognate, and recently found inscriptions seem to pinpoint the places in the Hittite record.
Iron Age Greek migration in the town of
Selçuk, near Ephesus. Ephesus was founded as an Attic-Ionian colony in the 10th century BC on a hill (now known as the Ayasuluk Hill), three kilometers () from the centre of ancient Ephesus (as attested by excavations at the
Seljuk castle during the 1990s). The mythical founder of the city was a prince of
Athens named
Androklos, who had to leave his country after the death of his father, King Kodros. According to the legend, he founded Ephesus on the place where the oracle of
Delphi became reality ("A fish and a boar will show you the way"). He was a successful warrior, and as a king he was able to join the twelve cities of
Ionia together into the
Ionian League. During his reign the city began to prosper. He died in a battle against the
Carians when he came to the aid of
Priene, another city of the Ionian League. Androklos and his dog are depicted on the Hadrian temple frieze, dating from the 2nd century. Later, Greek historians such as
Pausanias,
Strabo, and
Herodotos and the poet Kallinos reassigned the city's mythological foundation to
Ephos, queen of the
Amazons. The Greek goddess
Artemis and the great Anatolian goddess
Kybele were identified together as
Artemis of Ephesus. The many-breasted "Lady of Ephesus", identified with Artemis, was venerated in the
Temple of Artemis, one of the
Seven Wonders of the World and the largest building of the ancient world according to Pausanias (4.31.8). Pausanias mentions that the temple was built by Ephesus, son of the river god
Caystrus, before the arrival of the Ionians. Of this structure, scarcely a trace remains. Ancient sources seem to indicate that an older name of the place was
Alope ().
Archaic period Ephesus became an important ally to the
kingdom of Lydia because, like other Ionian cities, it had a port that provided land locked Lydia with trade. Hence, its rulers were connected with the
Mermnad dynasty by marriage. Melas the Elder was the brother-in-law of
Gyges (680-652 BC), while his grandson Miletus married the daughter of
Ardys in the late 7th c. BC. This may explain why in 640 BC, Ephesus and the sanctuary of Artemis were raided, following
Sardis, by the
Cimmerians, a warlike people who had destroyed the kingdom of
Phrygia in central Anatolia decades before. Pythagoras became a tyrant towards the late 7th century BC and adopted an anti-aristocratic policy. Melas the Younger must have succeeded him in power, while his son Pindar was a tyrant when his uncle
Croesus ascended to the Lydian throne. In the conflict over the Lydian throne Pindar took the side of
Croesus's half-brother Pantaleon. coin from Ephesus, 620–600 BC. Obverse: Forepart of stag. Reverse: Square incuse punch. Croesus besieged the city, but the Ephesians connected the walls with a rope extending to the sacred Artemisium and thus were spared. Consequently, Pindar was exiled and Ephesus made peace with Lydia, while Croesus is said to have regretted the sacrilege and thus became the main contributor to the reconstruction of the temple of Artemis. Later in the same century, the Lydians under Croesus went to war against Persia, which had recently conquered the
Median Kingdom. The Ionians refused a peace offer from
Cyrus the Great, siding with the Lydians instead. After the Persians defeated Croesus, the Ionians offered to make peace, but Cyrus insisted that they surrender and become part of the empire. They were defeated by the Persian army commander
Harpagos in 547 BC. The Persians then incorporated the Greek cities of Asia Minor into the
Achaemenid Empire. Those cities were then ruled by
satraps. Ephesus has intrigued archaeologists because for the Archaic Period there is no definite location for the settlement. There are numerous sites to suggest the movement of a settlement between the Bronze Age and the Roman period, but the silting up of the natural harbours as well as the movement of the Kayster River meant that the location never remained the same.
Classical period Ephesus continued to prosper, but when taxes were raised under
Cambyses II and
Darius, the Ephesians participated in the
Ionian Revolt against Persian rule in the
Battle of Ephesus (498 BC), an event which instigated the
Greco-Persian wars. In 479 BC, the Ionians, together with
Athens, were able to oust the Persians from the shores of Asia Minor. In 478 BC, the Ionian cities with Athens entered into the
Delian League against the Persians. Ephesus did not contribute ships but gave financial support. During the
Peloponnesian War, Ephesus was first allied to Athens but in a later phase, called the Decelean War, or the Ionian War, sided with Sparta, which also had received the support of the Persians. As a result, rule over the cities of Ionia was ceded again to Persia. These wars did not greatly affect daily life in Ephesus. The Ephesians were surprisingly modern in their social relations: they allowed strangers to integrate and education was valued. In later times,
Pliny the Elder mentioned having seen at Ephesus a representation of the goddess
Diana by
Timarete, the daughter of a painter. In 356 BC the temple of Artemis was burnt down, according to legend, by a lunatic called
Herostratus. The inhabitants of Ephesus at once set about restoring the temple and even planned a larger and grander one than the original.
Hellenistic period '', 1890 When
Alexander the Great defeated the Persian forces at the
Battle of Granicus in 334 BC, the Greek cities of Asia Minor were liberated. The pro-Persian tyrant Syrpax and his family were stoned to death, and Alexander was greeted warmly when he entered Ephesus in triumph. When Alexander saw that the temple of Artemis was not yet finished, he proposed to finance it and have his name inscribed on the front. But the inhabitants of Ephesus demurred, claiming that it was not fitting for one god to build a temple to another. After Alexander's death in 323 BC, Ephesus in 290 BC came under the rule of one of Alexander's generals,
Lysimachus. As the river
Cayster (Grk. name Κάϋστρος) silted up the old harbour, the resulting marshes caused malaria and many deaths among the inhabitants. Lysimachus forced the people to move from the ancient settlement around the temple of Artemis to the present site two kilometres () away, when as a last resort the king flooded the old city by blocking the sewers. The new settlement was officially called
Arsinoea ( or Ἀρσινοΐα) or
Arsinoe (Ἀρσινόη), after the king's second wife,
Arsinoe II of Egypt. After Lysimachus had destroyed the nearby cities of
Lebedos and
Colophon in 292 BC, he relocated their inhabitants to the new city. Ephesus revolted after the treacherous death of
Agathocles, giving the Hellenistic king of Syria and Mesopotamia
Seleucus I Nicator an opportunity for removing and killing Lysimachus, his last rival, at the
Battle of Corupedium in 281 BC. After the death of Lysimachus the town again was named Ephesus. Thus Ephesus became part of the
Seleucid Empire. After the murder of king
Antiochus II Theos and his Egyptian wife in 246 BC, pharaoh
Ptolemy III invaded the Seleucid Empire and the Egyptian fleet swept the coast of Asia Minor. Ephesus was betrayed by its governor
Sophron into the hands of the Ptolemies who ruled the city for half a century until 197 BC. The Seleucid king
Antiochus III the Great tried to regain the Greek cities of Asia Minor and recaptured Ephesus in 196 BC but he then came into conflict with Rome. After a series of battles, he was defeated by
Scipio Asiaticus at the
Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC. As a result of the subsequent
Treaty of Apamea, Ephesus came under the rule of
Eumenes II, the Attalid king of
Pergamon, (ruled 197–159 BC). When his grandson
Attalus III died in 133 BC without male children of his own, he left his kingdom to the
Roman Republic, on condition that the city of Pergamon be kept free and autonomous.
Classical Roman period (129 BC–395 AD) Ephesus, as part of the kingdom of Pergamon, became a subject of the
Roman Republic in 129 BC after the revolt of
Eumenes III was suppressed. ,
overgrazing (mostly by goat herds),
erosion and
soil degradation, the Mediterranean coast is now away from the site,
sediment having filled the plain and the coast. In the background can be seen the muddy remains of the former harbour, barren hill ridges and
maquis shrubland. The city felt Roman influence at once; taxes rose considerably, and the treasures of the city were systematically plundered. Hence in 88 BC Ephesus welcomed
Archelaus, a general of
Mithridates, king of
Pontus, when he conquered Asia (the Roman name for western
Anatolia). From Ephesus, Mithridates ordered every Roman citizen in the province to be killed which led to the
Asiatic Vespers, the slaughter of 80,000 Roman citizens in Asia, or any person who spoke with a Latin accent. Many had lived in Ephesus, and statues and monument of Roman citizens in Ephesus were also destroyed. But when they saw how badly the people of
Chios had been treated by Zenobius, a general of Mithridates, they refused entry to his army. Zenobius was invited into the city to visit
Philopoemen, the father of
Monime, the favourite wife of Mithridates, and the overseer of Ephesus. As the people expected nothing good of him, they threw him into prison and murdered him. Mithridates took revenge and inflicted terrible punishments. However, the Greek cities were given freedom and several substantial rights. Ephesus became, for a short time, self-governing. When Mithridates was defeated in the
First Mithridatic War by the Roman consul
Lucius Cornelius Sulla, Ephesus came back under Roman rule in 86 BC. Sulla imposed a huge indemnity, along with five years of back taxes, which left Asian cities heavily in debt for a long time to come. King
Ptolemy XII Auletes of Egypt retired to Ephesus in 57 BC, passing his time in the sanctuary of the temple of Artemis when the Roman Senate failed to restore him to his throne.
Mark Antony was welcomed by Ephesus for periods when he was proconsul and in 33 BC with
Cleopatra when he gathered his fleet of 800 ships before the
battle of Actium with
Octavius. When
Augustus became emperor in 27 BC, the most important change was when he made Ephesus the capital of
proconsular Asia (which covered western Asia Minor) instead of
Pergamum. Ephesus then entered an era of prosperity, becoming both the seat of the governor and a major centre of commerce. According to
Strabo, it was second in importance and size only to Rome. The city and temple were destroyed by the
Goths in 263 AD. This marked the decline of the city's splendour. However, emperor
Constantine the Great rebuilt much of the city and erected new public baths.
The Roman population Until recently, the population of Ephesus in Roman times was estimated to number up to 225,000 people by Broughton. J.W. Hanson estimated the inhabited space to be smaller, at . He argues that population densities of 150~250 people per hectare are more realistic, which gives a range of 33,600–56,000 inhabitants. Even with these much lower population estimates, Ephesus was one of the largest cities of Roman Asia Minor, ranking it as the largest city after
Sardis and
Alexandria Troas. estimate an inhabited area to be 263 hectares and their demographic model yields an estimate of 71,587 inhabitants, with a population density of 276 inhabitants per hectare. By contrast, Rome within the walls encompassed 1,500 hectares and as over 400 built-up hectares were left outside the Aurelian Wall, whose construction was begun in 274 AD and finished in 279 AD, the total inhabited area plus public spaces inside the walls consisted of ca. 1,900 hectares. Imperial Rome had a population estimated to be between 750,000 and one million (Hanson and Ortman's (2017) Emperor
Flavius Arcadius raised the level of the street between the theatre and the harbour. The
basilica of St. John was built during the reign of emperor
Justinian I in the 6th century. Excavations in 2022 indicate that large parts of the city were destroyed in 614/615 by a military conflict, most likely during the
Sasanian War, which initiated a drastic decline in the city's population and standard of living. The importance of the city as a commercial centre further declined as the harbour, today 5 kilometres inland, was slowly silted up by the river (today, Küçük Menderes) despite repeated dredging during the city's history. The loss of its harbour caused Ephesus to lose its access to the
Aegean Sea, which was important for trade. Sackings by the
Arabs first in the year 654–655 by
caliph Muawiyah I, and later in 700 and 716 hastened the decline further. In 781, the
Tayyaye Arabs attacked Ephesus and carried away about 7,000 captives. The city became part of the
Thracesian Theme in the 7th century and was also known as Hagios Theologos. According to Persian geographer
Ibn Khordadbeh, who wrote in 847, Ephesus served as the theme's capital (but that is not certain, as the capital could have instead been at Chonae). The city seems to have prospered again as a place of craftsmen and merchants, with a port and market that generated a revenue of 100 pounds of gold per year in taxes during the reign of
Constantine VI. Ephesus became part of the
Theme of Samos in the late 9th century and was the seat of one of the two tourmarchai of the theme (the other one was in Adramyttion). The
Seljuks conquered and plundered Ephesus in 1090, but the Byzantines resumed control in 1097. Ephesus became one of the cities in Asia Minor where
Venetian traders were granted commercial privileges by
Alexios I Komnenos. The Crusaders of the
Second Crusade fought the Seljuks just outside the city in December 1147. In 1206, Ephesus came under the control of the
Laskaris. It was an important religious and intellectual center during the 13th century.
Nikephoros Blemmydes, a prominent intellectual of the time, taught in the city. However, the Byzantines lost control of the region by 1308.
Pre-Ottoman period (1304–1390) constructed in 1374–75, is one of the oldest and most impressive remains from the
Anatolian beyliks. On 24 October 1304, the town surrendered to Sasa Bey, a Turkish warlord of the
Menteşoğulları Beylik. Contrary to the terms of the surrender, the Turks pillaged the church of Saint John and, when a revolt seemed probable, deported most of the local population to
Thyrea. During these events, many of the remaining inhabitants were massacred. Shortly afterwards, Ephesus was ceded to the
Aydinid principality that stationed a powerful navy in the harbour of
Ayasuluğ (the present-day
Selçuk, next to Ephesus). Ayasoluk became an important harbour, from which
piratical raids on the surrounding Christian regions were organised, some officially sanctioned by the state and some by private parties. The town knew a short period of prosperity again during the 14th century under these new
Seljuk rulers. They added important architectural works such as the
İsa Bey Mosque, caravansaries, and
hamams (bathhouses).
Ottoman period Ephesians were incorporated as vassals into the
Ottoman Empire for the first time in 1390. The Central Asian warlord
Tamerlane defeated the Ottomans in Anatolia in 1402, and the Ottoman sultan
Bayezid I died in captivity. The region was restored to the
Anatolian beyliks. After a period of unrest, the region was again incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1425. Ephesus was completely abandoned by the 15th century. Nearby Ayasuluğ (
Ayasoluk being a corrupted form of the original Greek name) was
turkified to Selçuk in 1914. ==Ephesus and Christianity==