Letoon

Letoon
Λητῶον

The foundations of the three temples at the Letoon are clearly visible.
Shown within Turkey
Alternate name Letoum
Location Kumluova, Muğla Province, Turkey
Region Lycia
Coordinates 36°19′55″N 29°17′23″E / 36.33194°N 29.28972°E / 36.33194; 29.28972Coordinates: 36°19′55″N 29°17′23″E / 36.33194°N 29.28972°E / 36.33194; 29.28972
Type Sanctuary
Part of Xanthos
History
Founded Late 6th century BCE
Abandoned 7th century CE
Site notes
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Official name Xanthos-Letoon
Criteria Cultural: (ii), (iii)
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Reference 484-003
Inscription 1988 (12th Session)

The Letoon (Ancient Greek: Λητῶον), sometimes Latinized as Letoum,[1] was a sanctuary of Leto near the ancient city Xanthos in Lycia. It was one of the most important religious centres in the region. The site is located south of the village Kumluova in the Fethiye district of Antalya Province, Turkey. It lies approximately four kilometres south of Xanthos along the Xanthos River.[2]

History

Archaeological finds at the site, which was never a fully occupied settlement, but remained essentially a religious centre, date back to the late sixth century BCE, before the Greek cultural hegemony in Lycia, which began in the early fourth century. In earlier times, the site was probably already sacred to the cult of an earlier mother goddess— she is Eni Mahanahi in Lycia— which was superseded by the worship of Leto, joined by her twin offspring.[3]

In Greek mythology, a claim for an early cult of Apollo in the valley of the Xanthus, unsupported by history or archeology, was provided by two myths, each connected to an eponymous "Lycus". One sprang from the autochthonous Telchines of Rhodes and would have colonized the region at the time of Deucalion's flood; the other Lycus was an Athenian brother of Aegeus driven from Athens, a seer who introduced the cult of Lycaean Apollo, which a folk etymology connected with Lycia and therefore made him its Athenian colonizer:[4] see Lycus (mythology).

The foundations of the Hellenistic temple dedicated to Leto, and her children, Artemis and Apollo, have been excavated under the direction of H. Metzger from 1962.[5] Archæologists have excavated much of the ruins; discoveries include the Letoon trilingual, bearing inscriptions in Greek, Lycian and Aramaic, which has provided crucial keys in the deciphering of the Lycian language; it is conserved in the Fethiye Museum.

The sacrosanctity of the site is the purport of an anecdote related by Appian concerning Mithridates, who was planning to cut down the trees in the sacred grove for his own purposes in his siege of the Lycian coastal city of Patara, but was warned against the sacrilegious action in a nightmare.[6] The site remained active through the Roman period. The site was Christianised by the construction of an early church, which reused cut stone from the sanctuary, but was abandoned from the seventh century CE.

Notes

  1. Note that the name has three syllables: Le-to-on or Le-to-um.
  2. Noted by Strabo, xiv.2.2 and 3.6.
  3. Lycian Turkey.
  4. Pierre Grimal, The Dictionary of Classical Mythology: "Lycus".
  5. H. Metzger, "Fouilles du Létôon de Xanthe (1962-65)" Revue archéologique (1966).
  6. Appian, Mithridates, 27, noted by T. R. Bryce, "The Arrival of the Goddess Leto in Lycia", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 321 (1983:1-13). p. 3 and note 9.
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