Heritage — Archaeological Sites
Antalya sits on one of the most archaeologically layered landscapes in the eastern Mediterranean. Lycian, Pamphylian, Pisidian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Seljuk civilisations have all left legible traces — many still unexcavated, some actively threatened.
Selected archaeological sites — click markers for details.
The western districts of Antalya province — Kaş, Kalkan, Demre, Finike — form the heartland of ancient Lycia, one of the few pre-Hellenistic Anatolian cultures to leave a distinct written record. Lycian rock-cut tombs, pillar tombs and sarcophagi are scattered across hillsides, many located on private land with minimal protection. Xanthos-Letoon (UNESCO World Heritage) anchors the zone but dozens of minor sites remain unmapped.
Ancient Cities
65+
In Antalya province
UNESCO
3
World Heritage Sites
Unmapped Sites (est.)
200+
Minor Lycian finds
The coastal plain east of Antalya — ancient Pamphylia — is home to four major Hellenistic-Roman cities: Perge, Aspendos, Side and Sillyon. Aspendos retains the best-preserved Roman theatre in the world, still used for performances — raising questions of conservation versus active use. Perge's colonnaded street, nymphaeum and stadium complex are under ongoing excavation.
Antalya's Roman heritage extends beyond monumental buildings to infrastructure — aqueducts, harbour moles, road milestones, bath complexes and cisterns. The Hadrianic aqueduct system feeding Termessos is partly traceable. The Roman harbour wall of Antalya (beneath the modern marina) represents an underwater archaeological site with almost no protection.
A looted tomb cannot be de-looted. An excavated site without a conservation plan is a ruin accelerated. Protection must precede tourism.