✅ GUÍA definitiva en ÉFESO Turquía 🇹🇷 Una de las ruinas Más FAMOSAS del mundo 🏛 4K

Ephesus was an important religious, 🙏🏼 cultural 🏺 and commercial 🏬 center for centuries and the passage of different civilizations. 🧍🏽 Cimmerians, Persians, Romans, Goths, Arabs... 🌍 They all passed through this coveted place, 📍 gateway to Asia Minor 🚪 and important commercial port with exit to the Aegean Sea and the whole Mediterranean. 🌊 The second of the Roman Empire 🏛 with more than 250,000 inhabitants. 👥 It would reach its greatest prosperity at the time of Emperor Augustus, 💸 becoming one of the most important places in Asia Minor thanks to trade. 🛍 At that time the great Library of Celsus was built, among other buildings. 📚 From there, the passing of the centuries ended with the city. 🏚 Sackings, 💵 invasions, 🥷🏻 earthquakes 💨 and with the port already blinded by sediments, ⚓️ would cause the definitive decline of the city in the Middle Ages. 😢 Visiting the ruins of Ephesus is like touring a city of Antiquity. 🤩 In the enclosure we will find public buildings, 🏙 stores, 🗃 private houses, 🏡 streets still paved 🛣 and other elements that made up the city. 🏢 The ensemble has been part of the Unesco World Heritage List since 2015. 🏅 During the visit there are several buildings that attract attention, 👀 both for their importance and for the state of conservation they present. 🌟 Let's detail the main monuments of Ephesus. Theater 🏟 Perhaps the most impressive are the ruins of the theater. 🤩 It has spectacular stands still standing, which held an estimated 25,000 people. 👥 It's wonderfully magical to think that those same stones were laid there between the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC 🪨 and that theater, circus and gladiatorial performers passed through it. 🤡 It is, without a doubt, a colossal work with an arch measuring 150 meters in diameter. 🌈 Avenue of the Curetes The Curetes were priests in Greek mythology ⛩ in charge of keeping the sacred fire alive in the Prytaneum, 🔥 seat of the magistrates of the city. The main thoroughfare is the avenue of the Curetes, 🛣 around which most of the ruins are distributed. 🏚 This cobblestone street is a real open-air museum, 😱 with remains of houses, temples, columns and a floor that still retains the mosaics that composed it. 🏛 Library of Celso 📚 Almost at the beginning of the avenue of the Curetes is the Library of Celsus. 👨🏻🏫 It was built around 117-135 in honor of the Roman senator and proconsul of Asia, Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemianus. 🤷🏽♂️ It was one of the largest libraries in the ancient world, after Alexandria and Pergamum, and had a capacity of 12,000 scrolls of parchment. 📜 The facade of the building is preserved in very good condition and is one of the ruins that most impact the visitor, ✨ with two rows of eight columns where the statues of four virtues were housed, in clear Greek influence. 🇬🇷 Temple of Hadrian 🏛 Also on the avenue of the Curetes was the Temple of Hadrian, of which part of the facade is preserved. It was built around 138, dedicated to the Emperor Hadrian who would visit the city about 10 years earlier. 🤴🏼 ▶️ Have you seen these videos yet? How to pack suitcase? 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼    • CÓMO EMPACAR MALETA parte 2 💼 Equipaje de ...   ▶️ We are 🙋🏻♂️ Diego Rey and Natalia Huertas 🙋🏻♀️ 2 world travelers in love with discovering new things, telling them through our camera, follow us in this adventure of traveling ✈️ Subscribe HERE: 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼🏼👇🏼    / @viajerosporelmundo   ▶️ Follow us on our INSTAGRAM 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼. @viajerosporelmundo_dyn 💏   / viajerosporelmundo_dyn   #travelersthroughtheworld #efeso #visitturkey