Sagalassos is located 7 km north of Aglasun and 1700 meters from the sea on the Akdağ slopes. Sagalassos is the most important city of the Roman Empire during the Pisidia region. Most of the buildings in the city belong to the Roman period. The first discovery of Sagalassos was carried out in 1706 by the French traveler Paul Lucas. In the city between the dwellings upon arrival, the houses below are the baths, lime and metal furnaces, the lower agora (arcade), the fountain and the odeon, the higher the houses, the right-hand side theater, the Neon library, the Hellenistic fountain, the ceramic production center, the center of the city up in the agora, the parliament building, church, on the upper left side is the heroon, the temple and the Cladius gate. Sagalassoslular BC He was a member of the Pisidian people, a branch of the Luwian tribes in Western and Southern Anatolia at the end of the third millennium. B.C. In 333 BC Alexander the Great conquered this city. Sagalassos, Seleucid (Seleukos) and Attalid (Attalos) entered into dominance, BC. In 25, he joined Amyntas, the king of Galatia, and Agustus, then the Roman Empire. The growth of Hadrian, which began in the 120s when Sagalassos chose the official center of the Pisidian imperial cult, initiated a one-year development. The city continued to develop until the mid-6th century M.S. It was destroyed by the great earthquake in 590. A.D. In the mid-13th century, the Seljuks continued to maintain several small villages among the ruins of the city until the last Byzantine castles had been eradicated. The most prominent structure is the magnificent Antonine fountain. The city had the best political, social and social era during the reign of Emperor Hadrian (2nd century AD). Sagalassos is one of the best preserved antique settlements in Asia Minor since it was abandoned. Sagalassos was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2009. Emperor Marcus Aurelius and Emperor Hadrian's statues and other artifacts that were estimated to have a height of around 5.5 meters were presented to the Burdur Museum.