Saraganda was a town of ancient Pisidia inhabited during Roman times. [1]
Its site is located near Hasanpaşa, in Asiatic Turkey. [1] [2]
Apollonia Salbaces or Apollonia Salbakes was a town in ancient Caria, Anatolia.
Neapolis, was a coastal town of ancient Caria, near Myndus, to which it may have been the successor settlement. Some scholars place it at Karyanda.
Pyrrha or Pyrra was a small town on the Maeander River, opposite to Miletus; it was 50 stadia distant from the mouth of the river.
Hippucome or Hippoukome was a town of ancient Lycia.
Mobolla was a town of ancient Caria, in the Rhodian Peraia. The name is not attested in history, but is derived from epigraphic and other evidence.
Ioniapolis was a town of ancient Caria that flourished during the Hellenistic period.
Ceretapa or Keretapa, also called Diocaesarea or Diocaesareia or Diokaisareia (Διοκαισάρεια), was a Graeco-Roman town of Phrygia Pacatiana. It minted coins bearing the demonym Κερεταπεύς. The coins also show that there was near it a river or fountain Aulindenus. It was a bishopric with Silvanus representing the city at the Council of Ephesus, 431. No longer the seat a residential bishop, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.
Diolkides was a town of ancient Bithynia.
Libum or Libon was a town of ancient Bithynia, on the road from Nicomedia to Nicaea.
Kosilaos was a town of ancient Bithynia located on the road from Libyssa to Chalcedon on the north coast of the Sinus Astacenus, an arm of the Propontis.
Iasonion or Daphne was a town of ancient Thrace, inhabited during Roman and Byzantine times.
Olbasa was a town in the western part of ancient Pisidia between Adada and Zorzela. It later received a Roman colony under the name of Colonia Iulia Augusta.
Sibidounda was a town of ancient Pisidia and later of Pamphylia inhabited during Roman and Byzantine times.
Nais was a town of ancient Lydia, inhabited during Roman times.
Kilaraza or Kilarazos was a town of ancient Caria, inhabited during Roman times. Its name does not occur among ancient authors, but is inferred from epigraphic and other evidence.
Sebastopolis, also known as Saleia, was a town of ancient Caria, inhabited during Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine times. It minted coins in antiquity.
Mokolda was a town of ancient Anatolia, inhabited during Roman and Byzantine times. Its name does not occur among ancient authors, but is inferred from epigraphic and other evidence.
Corna or Korna was a town of ancient Lycaonia, inhabited in Byzantine times. It became a bishopric; no longer the seat of a residential bishop, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.
Cidramus or Kidramos, also known as Kidrama, was a town of ancient Phrygia and later of Caria, inhabited in Roman and Byzantine times. It became a bishopric; no longer the seat of a residential bishop, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church. The town issued coins with the legend ΚΙΔΡΑΜΗΝΩΝ.
Dioskome was a town of ancient Phrygia, inhabited in Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine times.
Coordinates: 37°15′32″N29°52′11″E / 37.258957°N 29.869768°E