跳转到内容

皮西迪亚

维基百科,自由的百科全书

这是本页的一个历史版本,由Douglasfrankfort留言 | 贡献2007年9月26日 (三) 10:48 历史编辑。这可能和当前版本存在着巨大的差异。

一张15世纪的地图,上面标出了皮西迪亚的位置

皮西迪亚拉丁语:Pisidia)安纳托利亚历史上的一个地区,位于今土耳其安塔利亚省。其地理位置在吕基亚以北,与卡里亚吕底亚弗里吉亚潘菲利亚等地区交界。在古代,这里的主要居民点是忒耳墨索斯塞尔革克瑞谟那萨伽拉索斯安条克奈阿波利斯菲洛墨利乌姆

自然环境

虽然皮西迪亚的位置邻近地中海,但南方的温暖气候并不能越过托罗斯山脉。因为气候原因,皮西迪亚没有大面积的树林,但农作物由于雨水充沛生长得很好。这一地区的城市大多建在山坡上,以利用土地和灌溉资源。

历史

皮西迪亚地区在旧石器时代就有人居住。古典皮西迪亚人的祖先大约是在前14世纪时迁入这一地区,当时的一份赫梯文献第一次提到了萨伽拉索斯这个地名。皮西迪亚或许是赫梯人所称的阿尔扎瓦地区的一部分。关于皮西迪亚人的语言,历史学家们知道得很少,只能推测这是属于印欧语系安纳托利亚语族的一种语言。

希罗多德在其著作中称一些皮西迪亚部落为“拉库纳人”,他们居住在安塔利亚湾以北的的山区里。在希波战争中,皮西迪亚人是波斯人的盟友。几乎可以肯定所谓皮西迪亚人和潘菲利亚人本来是同一民族,但是从很早的时候两者之间就出现了文化差异。潘菲利亚人住在海岸地带,而皮西迪亚人住在内陆;由于更容易与外界接触,潘菲利亚人的文化更发达一些。

皮西迪亚地区民风强悍。在赫梯帝国时期,皮西迪亚是一个不受赫梯直接控制的地带。吕底亚称霸时,皮西迪亚仍保持了很大的独立性;甚至在波斯帝国征服整个安纳托利亚之后,这里仍然是一个难于管制、叛乱频发的地区。uprisings and turmoil.

Alexander the Great had somewhat better fortune, conquering Sagalassos on his way to Persia, though the city of Termessos defied him. After Alexander died, the region became part of territories of Antigonus Monophthalmus, and possibly Lysimachus of Thrace, after which Seleucus I Nicator, founder of the Seleucid Dynasty of Syria, took control of Pisidia. Under the Selucids Greek colonies were founded at strategically important places and the local people Hellenised. Even so, the Hellenistic kings were never in complete control, in part because Anatolia was contested between the Selucids, the Attalids of Pergamon, and the Galatians, invading Celts from Europe. The cities in Pisidia were among the last in western Anatolia to fully adopt Greek culture and to coin their own money.

Pisidia officially passed from the Selucids to the Attalids as a result of the Treaty of Apamea, forced on Antiochos III of Syria by the Romans in 188 BC. After Attalos III, the last king of Pergamon, bequeathed his kingdom to Rome in 133 BC as the province of Asia, Pisidia was given to the Kingdom of Cappadocia, which proved unable to govern it. The Pisidians cast their lot with pirate-dominated Cilicia and Pamphylia until Roman rule was restored in 102 BC.

In 39 BC Marcus Antonius entrusted Pisidia to the Galatian client king Amyntas and charged him with putting down the bandit Homonadesians of the Taurus Mountains, who threatened the roads connecting Pisidia to Pamphylia. After Amyntas was killed in the struggle 25 BC, Rome made Pisidia part of the new province of Galatia. The Homonadesians were finally wiped out in 3 BC.

During the Roman period Pisidia was colonized the area with veterans of its legions to maintain control. For the colonists, who came from poorer parts of Italy, agriculture must have been the area’s main attraction. Under Augustus, eight colonies were established in Pisidia, and Antioch and Sagalassos became the most important urban centers. The province was gradually Latinised. Latin remained the formal language of the area until the end of the 3rd century.

Pisidia was important in the early spread of Christianity. St. Paul visited Antioch on each of his missionary journeys, helping to make it a center of the new faith in Anatolia. After the Emperor Constantine's legalization of Christianity in 311 it played an important role as a metropolitan city. Afterwards it became the capital city of the Christian Pisidian Province, founded in the 4th century. Most Pisidian cities were heavily fortified at that time due to civil wars and foreign invasions.

The area was devastated by earthquake in 518, a plague around 541-543, and another earthquake and Arab raids in the middle of the 7th century. After the Muslim conquest of Syria disrupted trade routes, the area declined in importance. In the 8th century the raids increased. In the 11th century the Seljuk Turks captured the area and founded the Seljuk Sultanate in Central Anatolia. Pisidia constantly changed hands between the Eastern Roman Empire and the Turks until 1176, when the Great Sultan Kılıçarslan defeated Manuel Commenos in the Myriokephalon (thousand heads), which ended Roman rule and cemented Turkish rule of the area.

相关条目

外部链接