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Sabas Asidenos (second half of 12th c. - first half of 13th c.) was a court official and a relative of the imperial family of the Laskarids. In 1204, after the fall of Constantinople to the Latins, he temporarily assumed control over the valley of the lower Meander River. Towards the end of his life he was awarded the title of sebastokrator. |
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Saborios of the Persian origin |
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Safranbolu, Residential architecture |
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Sagalassos was one of the most important cities of Pisidia, prosperous thanks to its favourable position and substantial resources. After it was occupied in 334 BC by Alexander the Great, it came into the spotlight. In the years of Alexander’s Diadochi (“Successors”—a reference to the chief officers who partitioned his empire) the city was mainly under the Seleucids. Under the treaty of Apamea (188 BC) the Romans ceded Sagalassos to Pergamon. In the imperial years the city reached its heyday... |
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Sagalassos (Antiquity), Abattoir (Macellum) |
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Sagalassos (Antiquity), Agoranomeion |
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Sagalassos (Antiquity), Aqueducts |
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