Pompeiopolis is a Roman city-state and a
titular see in ancient
Paphlagonia, situated today in the
Taşköprü district,
Kastamonu,
Turkey.
The exact location is 45 km north of Kastamonu, to the north of Taşköprü,
in the valley today known as Gökırmak (Roman name Amnias, or Amneus). The
borders of Pompeiopolis reach the Küre mountains to the north,
Ilgaz
mountains to the south, Halys river to the east and Pınarbaşı valley to
the west. The city remnants today consist of an
acropolis, rock-cut tombs,
tumuli,
a bridge and remains of houses with
mosaic
tile floors. It is believed that many more artifacts and remnants can be
uncovered if further
archaeological diggings can be conducted at the Zımbıllı hills within
the city boundaries.Pompeiopolis is said to have been established
together with
Andrapa-Neapolis
by the Roman general and politician
Pompey (Gnaeus
Pompeius Magnus) in the year
64 BC in
the double province of
Bithynia
- Pontus.
The town, which ranked as a
metropolis was annexed to the vassal princes of Paphlagonia, and in 6
BC, after the death of Deiotaros Philadelpho, the last king of Paphlagonia,
annexed to the
Galatia
province of the Roman Empire. While the city flourished and grew during
this period, it was the metropolis of Paphlagonia from the reign of
Antoninus Pius to
Gallienus. The city was called Sebaste for a short period of time
during the patronship of Claudius Severus,
Marcus Aurelius' son-in-law. Rare
coins surviving from that era bear the inscriptions "Sebaste
Metropolis of Paphlagonia".
It is believed that Pompeiopolis was shortly deserted in late 6th or
early
7th
centuries AD due to the attacks of
Persian
or Arab
tribes, and with the rearrangements of the
Byzantine emperor
Justinian. Probably in conjunction with the reorganization of the
province, Pompeiopolis received the title autocephalus
archdiocese. The region was conquered by the Turks in
11th century; also in the same period, Pompeiopolis became a
metropolitan see until the
14th century when the diocese was suppressed. Among the fourteen
titulars of the diocese are Philadelphus at the
First Council of Nicaea, Severus of
Constantinople and Theodore of Constantinople.
The antic city and the remains will be preserved and exhibited by a
Museum of Archaeology that is planned to be built in Taşköprü by the
Turkish Ministry of Culture. The first
excavations in the area were conducted in 1910 which revealed some
columns and mosaic tile panels, however, a devastating fire that broke out
in 1927 in the nearby residential area had greatly harmed the ruins. Many
of the artifacts that were revealed in the excavations are currently being
exhibited in the Museum of Archaeology of
Kastamonu.
The Pompeiopolis in Pahphlagonia must not be confused with the
Soloi-Pompeiopolis in
Cilicia,
also established by Pompeius.
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