A similar temple estate dedicated to Mēn Askaenos existed in
Pisidia, first centered around Anabura and then shifted to the nearby city of
Pisidian Antioch after its founding by the
Seleucids around 280 BC. The temple estate/sacred sanctuary (ἱερόs) was a theocratic monarchy ruled by the "Priest of Priests," a hereditary title. According to
Strabo, this "temple state" that the cult of Mên Askaenos controlled near
Pisidian Antioch, persisted until the city was refounded by the Romans in 25 BC, becoming Colonia Caesarea Augusta. The colony was primarily settled by veterans from
Legio V Alaudae and
Legio VII Gemina. Taşlıalan (1988) in a study of
Antioch in Pisidia has remarked that the people who settled on the acropolis in the Greek colonial era carried the
Mēn Askaenos cult down to the plain as
Patrios Theos and in the place where the
Augusteum was built, there are some signs of this former cult as
bucrania on the rock-cut walls. ==Roman reception==