Wow beautiful!A few more postcards from me, this time from Hierapolis / Pamukkale.
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Hierapolis was considered a sacred city in the Antiquity. It has a vast necropolis in the north. Variety of architectural styles of the tombs suggest that the dead were brought here from various other areas for burial.
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This has to be one of the most beautiful burial places in the world: A tomb standing on a travertine.
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The city gate built during Byzantium. Behind it is 900-meter-long Frontius street, once with shops and basins for washing.
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Thermal water from underground made its way throughout the city along natural canals, these two ending in a thermal lake.
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The site of Plutonium, an alleged entrance to the underworld. Poisonous fumes and carbon dioxide from the underground to this day kill any bird flying into it.
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The magnificent Hierapolis theater towering over the city. Only the first of three levels of the stage have been restored.
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Dionysus and Pan - possibly my favourite piece in the museum, housed inside a relatively well-preserved Hierapolis Bath.
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This isn't snow. This is calcium carbonate, which gives Pamukkale its Turkish name - "the Cotton Castle". Most of these terraces were overflowing with thermal waters at one time. Today, there are a few natural pools at the top, open to the public.
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All in all, this is the ancient city I would want to live in. Provided I was not a slave. Or a woman.![]()

