EPHESUS 
 
 
In                                          the year of 10 BC, Androclos, the son                                          of King of Athens-Kodros, was searching                                          a location for establishing a site. Androclos                                          belonged to Akhas, was running from the                                          Dor invasion in Greece. He was leading                                          one of the migration convoys. It was predicted                                          by an Apollon oracle that a fish and a                                          boar would show the location of the new                                          settlement. Days later, parallel to the                                          oracle’s prediction, while frying,                                          a fish fell down from the pan, irritating                                          a hiding boar behind the bushes. The feared                                          boar escaped immediately. Androclos followed                                          the boar and established the city of Ephesus,                                          where he had killed the boar. When Androclos                                          died in the wars with Carians, a mausoleum                                          was built to the memory of the first king                                          of Ephesus. The mausoleum is considered                                          to be placed around "The Gate                                          of Magnesia". 
  
                                          Ephesus was ruled by the Lydian                                          king, Kreisos, in the mid 6BC. The city                                          reached the "Golden Age" and                                          became a good model to the Antic World                                          in culture and art, as well.                                          As the detailed excavations have not completed                                          yet, apart from the Artemis,                                          the remains of that age haven’t                                          been revealed. 
 
   
 
Later,                                          Ephesus was dominated by Persians.                                          As Ephesians did not join the "Ionian                                          Rebellion" against Persians, the                                          city was saved from destruction. The rebellion                                          resulted in the loss of Persian. Alexander                                          the Great won Persians and the Ionian                                          cities got their independence in the year                                          of 334. Ephesus was in great prosperity                                          during the times of Alexander the Great                                          Until the arrival of Alexander the Great,                                          Ephesus was consisted of two governing                                          systems, democratic and oligarchic. But                                          the oligarchic system was violated with                                          the coming of a new ruler, and a rebellion                                          existed in Ephesus.      
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