Evidence of human habitation dating back over 200 000
years has been unearthed in the Carain caves 30 km to the
north of Antalya city. Other findings dating back to Neolithic
times and more recent periods show that the area has been
populated by various ancient civilizations throughout the
ages.
Records from the Hittite period (when the first recorded
political union of Anatolian cities was set up calling
itself the Lycian league) refer to the area as the Lands
of Arzarwa and document the lively interaction going on
between the provinces in 1700 BC.
Historical records document how cities developed independently,
how the area as a whole was called Pamphilia and how a
federation of cities was set up in the province. There
is also a record of the migration of the Akha Clan to the
area after the Trojan war.
The reign of the Kingdom of Lydia in the west Anatolia
came to an end in 560 BC after the Persians defeated it
during the battle of Sardis in 546 BC.
From 334 BC until his death, Alexander the Great conquered
the cities of the area one by one - leaving out Termessos
and Silion- and so continued the sovereignty of the Persians.
With the defeat of the Seleucid army at Apamaea began
the reign of the Kingdom of Pergamon. In 150 BC Attalos
the 2nd, king of Pergamon, founded the city of Attalaia
(today’s Antalya) to base his powerful naval fleet.
When Attalos the 3rd, the last king of Pergamon, died
in 133 BC he left his kingdom to the Romans. The Roman
and subsequent Byzantine Empires ruled the area for the
next 13 centuries.
In 1207 A.D. the Selchuk Turks conquered Antalya and then
Alanya in 1220 A.D.This marked the end of Roman/Byzantine
rule.
Ottoman rule began in 1391. The brief occupation of the
area by the Italians came to an abrupt end after the First
World War with the founding of the Turkish Republic in
1923. The area is now registered as a province of the Republic
of Turkey.