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ANCIENT THEATRES

The remains of ancient cities founded thousands of years ago speak to us about the magnificent architecture, art and culture of their time, and the amphitheatres above all stand out as the foremost cultural buildings of those cities. Almost every ancient city possessed a theatre, small or large, a fact which surely demonstrates the level of culture attained in ancient times. It is thought that in addition to the nearly one hundred ancient theatres to be seen in Turkey today, there are as many again still hidden beneath the soil.The people of ancient times gathered together to watch animals fights (particularly cock fighting) and

performances of satyr dances, to sing, recite poetry or engage in literary discussion. The first theatres were merely a circular space known as an orchestra surrounded by wooden benches. Later on, with the emergence of tragedies, a stage with a back wall became necessary. The earliest theatre plays were a part of festivities held in honour of Dionysus, god of wine. At these festivities groups of people dressed in rams' skins would sing and dance. The advent of tragedy came in 543 BC when a theatre director named Thespis added a player who spoke a part separately from that of the chorus. In time the number 

of actors increased,and the subjects of plays diversified. Scenery and costume gained new importance.In the fifth century BC the Peloponnesian Wars against the Persians in the Aegean brought economic hardship, and interest in the theatre began to decline. Less high-brow but cheering entertainment in the form of comedies came to the rescue. With the additional advantage of being cheaper to produce, although not so highly regarded, comedies began to dominate ancient theatre.Just as we do today, ancient audiences purchased tickets for the theatre in the form of fired clay medallions bearing the motif of a theatre mask. Popular interest in tragedy and comedy during Hellenistic times declined in the Roman period due both to changes in lifestyle and the cultural policy of the state. So interest in literary plays increasingly made way for a love of displays involving violence and bloodshed.

The most notorious new forms of public entertainment in the Roman period were the gladiator fights in which contestants fought to the death, fights between wild animals and people, animal fights known as venationes, and water displays. Gladiator fights became widespread in Anatolia following the Roman conquest. For the most part prisoners or slaves were forced to fight against one another or specially trained gladiators to the death, and gladiators also fought to the death against lions, tigers, leopards, bears and other wild animals. Accounts of these games were sometimes recorded in inscriptions at the city theatre, one of the best examples being that at the theatre in Sagalassos. This inscription tells us how a gladiator named Tertullus fought against lions, panthers and bears brought from Africa, and defeated them. That similar displays were held at the theatres of Selge, Myra, Perge and Ephesus is evident from structural alterations made to the theatres. Broad entrances for wild animals, and high walls around the arena to protect the audience were built.

Water displays were particularly popular during the 4th and 5th centuries AD, when the orchestra would be filled with water. In the large pools so formed, re-creations of historic sea battles using boats would take place, and pretty girls would perform synchronised swimming displays. Theatres in the cities of Myra, Ephesus, Nysa and Hierapolis were paved with marble for this purpose, and had plumbing for filling and emptying the orchestra.In Hellenistic Anatolia, theatres were mainly built on hillsides, as we see at Pergamum, Ephesus, Antiphellos, Limyra, Kyaneai, and Laodicea. In many cases the Romans continued to use these, carrying out repairs and alterations where necessary, as at Alabanda, Kibyra, Ephesus, Miletus and Myra. When they constructed a new theatre, however, they chose not a sloping but a flat site, where they built semicircular theatres, such as we see at Aspendos and Side.

The fundamental element of the theatre was the orchestra where the plays and displays were performed, and around this were the curving tiers of seats. The skene or stage structure faced the audience behind the orchestra. The oldest known surviving skene is that at Priene, and the best preserved theatre façade is that of Aspendos.Ancient theatres could accommodate between one thousand and forty thousand people, audience sizes that even today are rarely attained, but were common in those days. The theatres which were the most important buildings in ancient cities from the Hellenistic to the early Christian era went into decline for around 1500 years, the result of the centuries of hostility between paganism and Christianity. Early converts to the new monotheistic faith were pitilessly used as material in the savage displays which took place in theatres during the Roman period. As a result theatres became symbols of the cruelty and persecution suffered by Christians. The populace came to hate them, sometimes to the point of vandalising them. From the 5th century onwards amphitheatres gradually went out of use, and in the 7th century were abandoned altogether. 

* Şengül G. Aydıngün is an archaeologist and art historian.