Before empires carved marble cities across Anatolia, the Phrygians ruled its rugged highlands with timber-built capitals, monumental tombs, and sacred rock sanctuaries. Shaped by kings like Midas and devotion to a powerful Mother Goddess, their legacy still echoes across central Turkey’s landscapes today.
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Into the World of the Phrygians
Phrygia was an Iron Age kingdom that rose in central Anatolia after the collapse of the Hittite world. From around the 8th to 6th centuries BCE, the Phrygians controlled a vast highland region stretching across modern Ankara, Eskişehir, and Afyon. They were not just another post-Hittite culture—they were a distinct people with their own language, identity, and way of life.
What makes the Phrygians compelling is the world they built. Their cities were constructed from timber and mudbrick, their rulers were buried beneath massive tumuli, and their beliefs were carved directly into rock across the highlands.
Figures like King Midas stand at the intersection of history and legend, while their devotion to the Mother Goddess would echo far beyond Anatolia, reaching the Greek and Roman worlds.
Phrygian Settlements Across Anatolia
The Phrygians were not confined to a single city—their presence spread across the highlands of central and western Anatolia. From their capital at Gordion near modern Polatlı, their influence extended through Eskişehir, Afyon, and into the wider Anatolian plateau.
The map above highlights how these settlements formed a network rather than an isolated kingdom. What stands out is their strategic positioning. Phrygian settlements were often located along key routes connecting the Aegean coast, central Anatolia, and Mesopotamia.
This allowed them to control movement, trade, and communication across regions. Instead of dense urban clusters, their world was defined by fortified citadels, rural highland communities, and sacred rock landscapes spread across a wide geography.
Our Itineraries and articles about The Phrygians
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Gordion: Ancient Capital of Phrygia
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Must-See Phrygian Sites in Anatolia
Spread across the highlands of central Anatolia, the Phrygians left behind a landscape of powerful cities, sacred rock monuments, and royal burial mounds. These key sites offer a glimpse into their world—where kings ruled from fortified capitals and religion was carved directly into the stone of the mountains.
Gordion: The Royal Capital
Gordion, near modern Polatlı, was the political and ceremonial heart of Phrygia. Flourishing in the 8th–7th centuries BCE, it was a fortified citadel surrounded by over a hundred tumuli. Archaeological layers reveal timber houses, palaces, and streets destroyed by fire, giving insight into daily life and elite culture.
The city controlled key trade routes between the Aegean and central Anatolia, linking the highlands to neighboring powers like Lydia and Assyria. Royal mounds, especially the one linked to King Midas, showcase monumental timber-and-stone burial practices, preserving furniture, metalwork, and traces of elaborate feasting rituals.
Midas City : Sacred Rock Landscapes
Midas City, near modern Eskişehir, is a stunning Phrygian rock sanctuary dating to the 8th–7th centuries BCE. Monumental façades carved into cliffs feature niches, altars, and geometric patterns that imitate timber architecture. These sacred spaces honor rulers and deities, linking daily life to spiritual authority.
The site is also closely associated with the Phrygian Mother Goddess, Matar, later known as Cybele in Greco-Roman tradition. Pilgrims offered votive objects and performed rituals on terraces and platforms, blending the natural highland landscape with the spiritual life of the kingdom, making Midas City a cultural and religious centerpiece of Phrygia.
Mother of Mountains: Phrygia’s Sacred Goddess
In the Phrygian Highlands, the Mother Goddess—known as Matar in Phrygian inscriptions and later identified with Cybele in Greco-Roman religion—was central to faith and ritual. She was worshipped as a goddess of mountains, fertility, and wild nature, often represented with lions and associated with high-altitude rock sanctuaries.
Archaeological sites such as Midas City (Yazılıkaya) and other cliff façades in western Anatolia preserve her cult’s platforms, niches, and carved reliefs. These sacred spaces show how Phrygians integrated worship into the landscape, influencing later Anatolian and Mediterranean religious practices well into the Roman period.
Voices in Stone: The Phrygian Language
Phrygian was an Indo-European language spoken in west-central Anatolia from roughly the early 8th century BCE until the 6th century BCE. Although geographically close to Luwian-speaking regions, it was linguistically distinct and probably closer to Greek than to Hittite or Luwian.
Its use is documented mainly through inscriptions carved on rock façades, stelae, tombs, and monuments across the Phrygian Highlands and at Gordion, the capital.These inscriptions range from royal dedications and religious invocations to short administrative texts, giving scholars insights into Phrygian society, governance, and cult practices.
The script itself resembles early Greek alphabets, yet conveys a completely different language, reflecting the Phrygians’ unique identity. Archaeological evidence also shows that Phrygian writing coexisted with symbolic rock carvings and monumental art, linking their language directly to religious and cultural expression.
Understanding Phrygian language allows us to see these people not merely as “successors of the Hittites,” but as an independent Iron Age culture. When walking among the tumuli of Gordion or the rock sanctuaries of Yazılıkaya, one can trace the voice of this ancient civilization in the inscriptions that have survived over 2,700 years.
Discover Phrygian Legacy with Us
Curious to step into the world of the Phrygians and experience their highland cities, sacred rock sanctuaries, and royal tumuli firsthand? Join us on our specialized tours across central Anatolia, where history comes alive and every monument tells a story of kings, rituals, and ancient life.
Explore the legacy of this remarkable Iron Age culture with us, from Gordion’s timber citadel to the rock-carved sanctuaries of Yazılıkaya. Discover how the Phrygian language, architecture, and cult of the Mother Goddess shaped Anatolia and beyond.
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