J. (10.2-22)
Western and Central Turkey
(21
days) $3675 plus $140 local airfare and $300 yacht supplement =
$4115

From Athens we'll fly to the
island
Samos and take the 90-minute ferry to Kusadasi, near Ephesus.
After a full day at the museum and site of Ephesus, we'll spend the
next day at Miletus, Didyma, and Euromus, and then go to Dalyan on the
Mediterranean, where we'll board our private yacht. For the next
four days we'll pretend we're millionaires while visiting places like
ancient Krya, inaccessible by land. We'll leave the yacht at
Fethiye and drive through Lykia to Antalya, where we'll see the
spectacular museum and the ancient sites Aspendus (where we'll have
lunch with the mayor, Nomad Nuri), Perge, and Termessus. Then
we'll visit Egirdir, a mountain city on Lake Egirdir, and Catalhuyuk
(oldest city in the world) on our way to Cappadocia, where we'll stay 2
nights in Urgup. We'll next visit the Hittite sites Yazalikaya
and Hattusas and go to Ankara, capital of Turkey, to see the Museum of
Anatolian Civilizations. From Ankara it's a 5-hour drive to
Istanbul on the new super-highway. As a group we'll see Aya Sofia,
Topkapi Palace, Kariye Museum, the archaeological museums, and take a
private cruise of the Bosphorus; there'll be free time for other things
like the imperial mosques and the Grand Bazaar.
OCT 2 Athens
If you’re coming
to Greece
from the US, you will have left the day
before.
The time difference between the two countries is 7 to 10 hours; if it’s
8 am in California (and 11 am in Toronto), it’s 6 pm the same day in
Greece.
The new airport of Athens is attractive and efficient, and easy to
navigate.
It’s a good idea to change some money in the banks at the airport;
unlike
some countries, banks at the airport and everywhere in Greece have
approximately
the same rate of exchange, which is always better than the rate outside
Greece.
After coming out the front door of either airport, you’ll see a line of
taxis, and a corresponding line of people waiting for taxis. Take a
taxi from the taxi stand to the HOTEL AUSTRIA, 7 MOUSON STREET,
AKROPOLIS - FILOPAPPOU (telephone
923-5151). When you arrive at the hotel, tell the driver to wait
while
you go inside. Tell the desk clerk at the hotel you’re with Dick, and
he’ll
make sure you pay the right amount for the taxi (it should be around
30-35
euros) .
You or I can be contacted
anytime at this Athens telephone number: 011-301-923-5151 (Hotel
Austria). The FAX number is 011-301-924-7350. Dial all 13 digits from
North America, only the last seven in Athens. If anyone might want to
contact you, tell them to use these numbers and we will be notified
immediately, wherever
we are. Be sure that you, or whoever is calling, mention the name
“Dick,”
so as to be identified properly. I do not include numbers of all our
hotels, since at most of them the desk clerks do not speak English
(anyone calling probably would not be able to leave a message).
Since not everyone will
arrive on the same flight, we’ll first meet in the hotel lobby at 7 pm
to
socialize a bit, then go to dinner (a 10 minute walk). After dinner,
the
roof terrace of the hotel affords an excellent view of the light show
on
the Akropolis. It’s a good idea to stay up until 10 or 11 (or later) on
your first night in Athens. If you skip dinner and go to bed early,
you’ll
wake up in the middle of the night and merely prolong jet lag by one
day.
OCT 3 Selcuk
Our bus will take us to
Olympic airport for the 1-hour flight to Samos, a Greek island just off
the Turkish coast. Samos reached the height of its wealth and prestige
during the 6th century BC under the tyrant Polykrates, when it became
the home of notable sculptors, architects, and poets. The fabulist
Aesop
was born here, as were the poets Ibycus and Anacreon; the most famous
Samian
was Pythagoras, who migrated from here to south Italy around 530. We’ll
have time for a look around the capital Vathy and have lunch at the
pretty
village Kokari; we’ll also visit the Archaeological Museum with its
incredible
16-feet high kouros and, if time permits, we’ll visit the Heraion. At 5
PM we'll take the 90-minute ferry (or 45-minute hydrofoil) to Kusadasi
on the Turkish coast, where our bus will meet us and take us to our
hotel in Selcuk l.
Samos
OCT 4 Selcuk
Today we’ll see the Ephesus
Museum and the site of ancient Ephesus.
Ephesus was the
second most important
city in Greek Asia Minor during the Archaic and Classical periods
(Miletus
being the first), and by the Hellenistic and Roman periods Ephesus’
position
was rivalled only by that of Alexandria. During antiquity Ephesus was a
port; the silting of the river Kayster (a branch of the Maeander)
forced
the Ephesians to move twice in ancient times, and now the sea is some 7
miles to the west. The history of Ephesus is similar to that of the
other
Ionian cities: colonized by Ionian Greeks (in myth, under the
leadership
of the Athenian prince Androklos), Ephesus became rich and culturally
advanced by the end of the Archaic period, despite being conquered by
the Lydian king Croesus in the 6th century and then, with the rest of
Lydia, passing into the control of Persia. After the break-up of
Alexander’s kingdom
upon his death. Ephesus professed allegiance to virtually all the
Hellenistic kingdoms at one time or another, finally coming under the
power of the
Pergameme kingdom and, after the death of Attalos III. entering the
Roman
empire. The wealth and importance of Ephesus reached its height during
the
first two centuries of the Roman empire, when it became the capital of
the
Roman province of Asia and the residence of the Roman governor. The
population of Ephesus during the early empire has been estimated at
close to 300,000, and it was the cultural and commercial, as well as
political, center of
western Asia
Ephesus was a religious
center as well. The first Greeks to arrive there found the cult of the
Asian mother-goddess Kybele and transformed their own goddess Artemis
into a version of this eastern deity. The original temple of Artemis
was
built in the 8th century, and a second was under construction when
Croesus
arrived in the 6th century; this temple was destroyed by arson in 356
(on the night of Alexander’s birth), and a new temple was built which
was
considered one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world (the other six
were the Egyptian pyramids. the Colossus of Rhodes, the statue of Zeus
at Olympia, the hanging gardens of Babylon, the lighthouse of
Alexandria,
and the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus). Today only a few miserable
fragments
remain of this famous structure. Christianity quickly achieved a
foothold
in Ephesus; St. John visited here (supposedly with the Virgin Mary) and
his grave is in the Church of St. John (a 6th century basilica built by
the Byzantine emperor Justinian). St. Paul lived in Ephesus for three
years
and was apparently so successful that the silversmiths who made statues
of Artemis/Diana were losing money: they organized a large
demonstration and Paul left town.
By the 6th century AD silt
again made the port unusable, and the city was moved to the vicinity of
the Church of St. John. Near the church was built a citadel whose
ruins
are the most prominent site in Selcuk today. With the coming of
the
Turks Ephesus was renamed Ayasoluk (a Turkish version of the Byzantine
name
Ayios Theologos), and in 1914 Ayasoluk became Selcuk.
We'll
begin
with a visit
to the Ephesus Museum, one of the most interesting in Turkey.
Selcuk Museum: Diana of
Ephesus
We
pass through the entrance hall to the room in which are kept the finds
from the restored Roman houses called the “Terrace Villas”; note
especially the large Priapus (a garden watch-god), the bronze statue of
an Egyptian priest (centuries older than the house in which it was
found), and the fresco of Diana (appearing here in her more familiar
guise as a short-skirted huntress). In the next two rooms
pedimental sculptures from the Pollio Fountain show Odysseus blinding
the Cyclops, and there are exquisite ivory furniture
decorations.. In the rear courtyard are several large pieces,
including a sarcophagus with reliefs of the Muses and a large curved
stone inscription which stood in the harbor and listed customs and tax
regulations. The next room has pottery and funerary remains and a
chart showing the various forms taken over the centuries by Anatolian
goddesses. The highlight of the museum is the display of objects
from the Artemision (the precinct of Artemis), especially the two great
statues of the Ephesian Artemis; she is fully clothed and looks almost
like a pillar, wearing a headdress like a capital. The rows of
oval objects across her chest have been interpreted as multiple
breasts, fruit, eggs, and most recently as bulls’ testicles (odd as it
may seem, this last interpretation may be closest to the truth).
She seems utterly different from the Artemis of mainland Greek religion
and cult, the only visual connection between the two goddesses being
the numerous animals portrayed on her lower limbs (since the Greek
Artemis was a huntress and was associated with forests, wild animals,
and fertility). In fact (although this probably has little, if
anything, to do with their eventual identification), both Artemises
perhaps derive from a common ancestress, the fertility goddess of the
Early Bronze Age (3000-2000 BC) in Asia Minor, Greece, the Cycladic
islands, and Crete (where she appears on seals as the “mistress of
animals,” a title given to Artemis by the historical Greeks). The
last room contains representations of various Roman emperors.
After lunch in Selcuk there
will be time for those who wish to visit the Byzantine church of St.
John (built during the reign of Justinian). Then we’ll drive 5
minutes to the site of ancient Ephesus (actually, the Hellenistic and
Roman site; the early city, just south of the temple of Artemis, cannot
be excavated because of the high water table).
We'll stop briefly
at what remains of the Temple of Artemis (the Artemision), then drive
by the Magnesia Gate and the East Gymnasium, then go on foot down the
ancient road (called Curetes Street) by the Prytaneion, the Upper
Agora, and the Odeion. Next
to the temple of Domitian is the Pollio Fountain, where the pediment we
saw in the museum was located. Across from the Trajan fountain
and
the temple of Hadrian are the restored Terrace Villas. At present
two of these villas are open; each consists of around 10 rooms around a
central court and they are decorated with beautiful frescoes and
mosaics.
Their owners are unknown but they must have been rich Ephesians of the
Roman
Imperial period. The two buildings (separated by the famed public
toilet with marble seats) are the Scholasticia Bath, restored by a
Roman
lady of this name in the 4th century a.d., and what used to be called
the
brothel; half-way between the "brothel" (now regarded as some kind of
public
building) and the theater a sign is etched in the marble street — a
left
foot, a heart, and a figure of a woman, fancifully interpreted as a
sign
telling passers-by that the brothel is just ahead to the left.
The
two most striking buildings at Ephesus are the theater and the Library
of
Celsus. The library is the tomb and memorial of Gaius Julius
Celsus Polemaeanus, proconsul of Asia in 106 AD, and was built by his
son Aquila.
Thanks to years of restoration by the Austrian excavators, the
two-story
facade is virtually complete; the books were kept in rectangular niches
in
the walls of the inner room.
Ephesus: Celsus Mausoleum
In front of the library
a three-arched gate leads to the Lower Agora; the inscription above the
arches records the gate’s dedication by the freedmen Mithridates and
Mazaeus
to the emperor Augustus and his son-in-law Agrippa. The theater
was
built probably around 300 BC and extensively remodeled during the 1st
century
AD. It held 24,000 viewers and is still in use today for musical
and
theatrical events. The marble road leading from the theater to
the
ancient harbor is named Arcadiane for the emperor Arcadius (395-408
a.d.)
and was one of the few ancient streets to have street lighting.
On
the north side of this road are the Harbor Baths and a gymnasium;
walking
between these structures we come to the lower parking lot, where our
bus
is waiting. Just before the parking lot a path turns off to the left to
the
Mary Church, a large Roman building whose west half was converted to a
Christian
basilica of the Virgin Mary during the 3rd century. Driving out we pass
the
poorly-preserved stadium and the baths of the 2nd century Vedius
gymnasium.

Peter Lorre retired to Turkey
OCT 5 Guvercinlik
This is one of the best
site-seeing days of the tour, taking in Miletus,
Didyma, and Euromus.
Miletus was the most important city in the Greek world
during the first part of the 6th century
BC.
Here philosophy
began, under a succession of famous names: Thales, who predicted an
eclipse of the sun in 585, founded geometry, and taught that the
fundamental material of the universe is water; his successor
Anaximander, who taught evolution, drew the first map of the earth, and
believed that the basic principle of the universe is the “Unlimited;”
and Anaximander’s pupil Anaximenes, who taught that the universe is
consituted by the condensation and rarefaction of divine air. Also from
this period was the first Greek geographer Hekataios, who traveled in
Egypt and Asia and wrote a “Journey around the World.” In 499 Miletus
led a revolt against Persia (the “Ionian Revolt”) which was put down in
494 after a naval defeat at Lade, then an island off Miletus but now,
thanks to the silting of the delta, one of the hills west of the ruins.
During the 4th century Miletus came under the control of Mausolos of
Halicarnassus, was liberated by Alexander, and eventually became part
of the Roman province of Asia. It shared in the wealth of the Roman
empire, but gradually declined as shipping was prevented by the silting
of the harbor.
From the parking lot we
walk directly to the theater (the water in the plan by the entrance to
the site is of course no longer in our path). The theater, originally
built
in the 4th century, was enlarged during Hellenistic and Roman times
from
a capacity of 5,300 to 25,000. Only the bottom half of the seating area
is preserved; the large structure in the upper part of the audience is
part of a Byzantine fortress. Walking around the theater and over the
theater
hill, we come to the port and city center. Two hellenistic lion statues
guard the entrance to the harbor, and the large harbor monument
commemorates
Pompey’s victory over the pirates in 63 BC and Augustus’ victory at
Actium
in 31. The harbor gate leads via the Processional Road to the South
Agora. To the left of the gate are a Greco-Roman bath and the
Delphinion, a Hellenistic precinct of Apollo. On the left side of the
road are a partially reconstructed Ionic Stoa, a 15th century Selcuk
bath, the Capito baths, a Hellenistic gymnasium, and a 2nd century AD
fountain-house. On the right side are the North Agora , and the
Bouleuterion. Next we come to a long storehouse and a small
temple of Serapis with a well-preserved pediment.
Our final stops are at the
Ilyas Bey mosque, completed in 1404 and one of the great examples of
Selcuk architecture, and at the monumental Faustina bath complex, built
by the wife of the emperor Marcus Aurelius.
Miletus: Ionic Stoa
From Miletus a Sacred Road
led to the sanctuary of Apollo at Didyma, and we’ll now follow
this route.
Didyma was never a city; it
was the religious center for Miletus and one of the most famous oracles
of antiquity. The archaic temple (which, according to Pausanias,
replaced an earlier [i.e., indigenous] cult shrine), was renowned
throughout the Greek world; before it was destroyed by the Persians in
494 BC., it received gifts from the Pharaoh Necho and from Croesus of
Lydia. A new larger temple on the same model was begun by 300 BC and
still not completed 500 years later: most of this temple still stands.
A small inner temple
(naiskos), which once contained a statue of Apollo, is within the
interior walls (cella); the room in which the oracles were actually
delivered is up a flight of stairs at the opposite end of the
courtyard, flanked on either side by labyrinths. The entrances to
the courtyard are through tunnels under the labyrinths. The dimensions
of the whole temple are 623 by 167 feet.
Didyma: Temple of
Apollo

Didyma: fallen column
From Didyma we’ll
drive
south
to the Mediterranean coast, stopping once
to see the 2nd century Temple of Zeus at ancient Euromus, a pleasant
contrast to the gigantic temple at Didyma.
Our overnight stop will be
at Guvercinlik, a small port on the Aegean Sea near Bodrum.
OCT 6 Dalyan
We'll reach
the Mediterranean at
Dalyan, a picturesque village on the
Dalyan
River. High on the cliff-side
opposite the
village is one of the most imposing sights in Lycia, a group of Karian
temple-tombs carved into the rock, most of them from the 4th century
BC. Dalyan is a very pleasant village, with good restaurants
overlooking the rushing river and a spectacular view of the
temple-tombs.
We’ll charter a small boat for the trip
down
the river, passing first through forests of reeds like a scene from The
African
Queen, to the site of ancient Kaunos. Once a bustling port, Kaunos is
now
separated from the sea by about three miles of marsh. The most
interesting ruins at Kaunos are a Roman nymphaeum called the Fountain
of Vespasian, a circular structure which may have been a pool, and, on
a higher level, a Roman bath, an early Christian church, and a small
but well-preserved theater. The long sandbar at the mouth of the Dalyan
River was for several
years the subject of a raging dispute between developers and
conservationists;
the latter wanted to protect the area, which is one of the last
breeding
places for the Mediterranean sea turtle, and against all expectations
they
won!

Karian tombs at Dalyan
We'll spend the night
at a
family-owned boutique hotel on the riverfront.
OCT 7
We'll drive 90 minutes to
Fethiye, where we'll meet our private yacht,
or gulet. These typical Turkish motor sailers are
hand-made of pine and
teak,
averaging 70-100 feet in length, with two masts and 6-10 cabins.
We'll stay on the boat tonight and for the next four days and
nights.
OCT 8 Yacht
After sailing along the coast to the
southwest tip of Fethiye Bay, we'll stop for a wilderness hike, a
fairly strenuous trip through mountain valleys and pine forests.
Toward the beginning of the 2 1/2 hour hike we'll come across an
ancient
city, never excavated and not even securely identified (perhaps its
name was Krya). The end of the hike brings us to Cleopatra's
Cove, where a Roman
bath
is half-submerged in the sea. There'll be lots of time for
swimming and relaxing, and we'll eat all our meals on the yacht.

OCT 9-10 Yacht
We'll sail to various coves in the
enormous Bay of Fethiye, to the ritzy marina at Gocek, and end up at
Turunc, my favorite cove in
the
whole area.
OCT 11 Fethiye
We'll leave the yacht today
and go to nearby Tlos, one of the most spectacular sites in Turkey.
Located on a plateau
high above the Xanthos river valley, Tlos has a Roman bath whose main
room
looks out through a curved wall of open arches on the valley below (the
only Roman bath room I know of which clearly was built for the view), a
theater with interesting relief sculptures on the stage building, and
an
acropolis whose sides are covered with sarcophagi and Lycian
temple-tombs (the most famous of these is the so-called Tomb of
Bellerophon, the mythical hero who rode the winged horse Pegasos and
slew the fire-breathing monster Chimaira).
Tlos
From Tlos we'll drive along
the
coast of the rugged Lykian peninsula (much like the drive along Big
Sur), with stops at Xanthos, Kas, and Phaselis. We'll end up at
Antalya, largest city on Turkey's Mediterranean coast. We’ll have
dinner at one of the finest restaurants in the area, next to our
hotel. This hotel, the Keptur, is a resort hotel about 10
minutes' drive north of Antalya, situated in a pine forest in the
foothills of the Toros Mountains.

The "Harpy Tomb" at Xanthos
OCT 12 Antalya
The general name for this
coastal area is Pamphylia (“all-tribes”), which may be connected with
the
tradition that southern Asia Minor was settled by a “mixed multitude”
of
Greeks after the collapse of the Mycenean civilization. Antalya
was
originally called Attaleia for its founder, the Pergamene king Attalos
II.
It quickly became, and remains, the principal port of Turkey’s south
coast,
and it is now a metropolis with over 300,000 inhabitants. Both
St. Paul and
the emperor Hadrian visited the city, and the latter’s presence in 130
a.d.
was commemorated by one of the ubiquitous Hadrian’s Arches which fill
the
Roman world. Other than this Arch, a Roman mausoleum called
Hidirlik
Kulesi above the harbor, a few Byzantine churches which were converted
to
mosques, and sections of the old wall, hardly anything remains of
Antalya’s
ancient past. Nevertheless it is a delightful city with a restored Old
Town
(mostly 19th century Ottoman structures) and a magnificent view from
the
promenade high over the harbor, looking across a great bay to the
mountains
of Lycia to the west.
This morning we’ll visit one
of the most striking sites in Turkey, ancient Termessos, about 15 miles
northwest of Antalya and high on a mountainside 3300 feet above the
Pamphylian plain. Thanks both to its remoteness and to the quality of
its defenses and defenders, Termessos successfully resisted a siege by
Alexander the Great in 333. There is a Hellenistic theater in good
shape (with a spectacular view onto the
valley below), several interesting rock tombs, a series of great
cisterns,
and a weird necropolis with sarcophagi lying like tumbled dominoes on
the
hillside, but by far the most remarkable aspect of Termessos is its
setting.
After visiting the
spectacular Antalya museum (best known for a remarkable display of
sculpture from Perge, a unique Phrygian treasure found just a few years
ago, and the bones of Santa Claus) we’ll drive east to the site of
ancient Perge,
about 10 miles east of Antalya, where the spectacular sculptures we saw
in
the Antalya Museum were found. The large theater of Perge is one of the
best-preserved
anywhere, but it is not nearly as impressive as it should be if you
have
just come from Aspendus. Near the theater is one of the best examples
anywhere
of a Roman stadium; it held 12,000 spectators. Between the two entrance
gates
(the inner is Hellenistic, the outer is much later) is a large Roman
bath,
probably the most interesting of all the baths we’ll see in Turkey.
There
is also a long colonnaded Main Street with a water-channel running down
the
middle; at the west end of the street is a fountain-house decorated
with
a statue of the river god Cestrus.

The Roman bath at Perge
OCT 13 Egirdir
Today we'll drive to ancient
Aspendus on the Eurymedon river near the Mediterranean coast, where
we’ll see two fantastic structures: the best-preserved ancient theater,
from any period, anywhere in the world, and the best surviving example
of a Roman aqueduct. Greek legends say that Aspendus was founded by the
prophet Mopsos, and there may be a basis in historical reality for this
story. During the 6th century Aspendus, Side, and the other
cities of the south coast were conquered by Croesus, King of Lydia, but
his rule was replaced by the Persians in 546 BC. The great defeat
of Persia at Salamis in 480 did not affect the cities of Pamphylia
until the Athenian admiral Kimon's victory over a Persian army and
fleet at the Eurymedon in 468. The cities were free for a
while, but reverted to Persian domination after the treaty between
Greece
and Persia of 386. After Alexander’s conquest Pamphylia was
fought
over by the various Hellenistic monarchies, some of it was allotted to
Pergamum
after the battle of Magnesia in 190, and around 100 BC Pamphylia became
a
Roman province (although the province was called Cilicia). In 43 AD
Pamphylia
and Lycia, to the west, were made into one combined province of
Lycia-Pamphylia; under the emperor Diocletian (284-305) they were split
into separate provinces. As in the rest of Asia Minor, Aspendus reached
its height of prosperity
during the first three centuries of the Roman empire.
The Aspendus theater was
built late in the 2nd century AD by the Curtius brothers, Crispinus and
Auspicatus, whose dedicatory inscription, in Greek and Latin, is over
the entrances. It is virtually the same now as when it was built; the
only things missing are the stage, which was made of wood, and the
statues which filled the
niches on the rear wall. There are forty rows of seats, and the
capacity
was nearly 20,000. The pedimental figure at the top center of the
back wall is Bacchus (Dionysos), but a local story says that it is a
girl
(it’s always hard to tell with Bacchus/Dionysos) named Bal Kiz (Honey
Girl)
and that is why the local village is called Belkis.

Aspendus theater
Following the road past a
small cafe we turn right up a path which winds to the acropolis;
structures
include an unidentified building and, on three sides of the Agora, a
stoa
with shops, a basilica (commercial building) with annex and a high
facade
which may be a fountain. Continuing on the path along the east side of
the
acropolis we suddenly come into view of the aqueduct which brought
water
from the mountains 20 miles away.
We'll have lunch with the mayor
of Aspendus, Nuri the Nomad, and then drive north through a national
park to Egirdir, high on the Anatolian plateau and overlooking Lake
Egirdir, Turkey's third largest. Despite its setting, there are
few tourists here (in 1996 and 2000 we shared our hotel with the
Turkish Olympic weightlifting team) and it's a rare and wonderful
opportunity
to see a real Turkish town.
OCT 14 Cappadocia
On our way to Cappadocia
we'll stop
at Catalhuyuk, the oldest city in the world (c. 7500 BC). It's a
spectacular excavation.
Continuing east from Konya
to Urgup in Cappadocia, we’ll pass several caravanserais (han),
inn-complexes along the major Seljuk trade routes, which provided free
food, lodging, and
services to merchants and travellers. They were virtually self-
contained cities; the most famous is the Sultan Hani (1229), about an
hour’s drive east
of Konya.
OCT 15 Cappadocia
Our base in
Cappadocia
is
Urgup, and from here the most famous places and sights of Cappadocia
are
only a few minutes’ drive. Since the strangeness of Cappadocia requires
for
description a literary style more florid than my talents allow. I quote
the
following from John Freely’s Companion Guide to Turkey:
“Most of this part of Cappadocia
is
covered
with
a deep layer of tufa, a soft stone of solidified mud, ash and lava
which
once poured down from the now extinct volcanoes on Hasan Dagi and
Erciyes
Dagi, the two great mountain peaks of Cappadocia. In the eons since
then
the rivers of the region have scoured canyons, gorges, valleys and
gulleys through the soft and porous stone, and the elements have eroded
it into fantastic
crags. folds, turrets. pyramids, spires, needles, stalagmites, and
cones,
creating a vast outdoor display of stone sculptures in an incredible
variety
of shapes and colors. The cone is the most frequent form in
Cappadocia’s lunar
landscape: many of them stand more than a hundred feet tall, some in
groups
and others standing alone like eccentric obelisks or sand castles
fashioned
by a giant child. Many of them are topped by a fragment of the basalt
strata
which once lay above the tufa; these huge rocks protected the tufa
directly
beneath them while the surroundings were eroded away. These black
basalt
capitals, balanced precariously on the fantastic phallic
cones,
are known by the locals as pen bacalari, or fairy chimneys. The
predominant
color in some areas is brick-red, rust, ochre, or umber, while in
others
it may be ashen or even salt-white; but the sensuous rock surfaces
subtly
change their hues with the shifting patterns of sunlight and shadow.
here
and there deepening into pools of midnight blue, deep violet, or even
an
ephemeral green, and then at twilight the whole countryside is pervaded
with
an evanescent pink and golden glow, fading into a palette of pale
pastels
as night falls on this enchanted landscape. What nature has left
undone
in the way of phantasmagoric architecture has been completed by the
restless
ingenuity of man; for since time immemorial the Cappadocians have been
cutting
into the cones and walls of rock, excavating and carving rupestrine
houses.
storerooms, churches and monasteries, many of them elaborately
sculptured
and adorned with vivid and imaginative frescoes capturing the religious
visions
of medieval Byzantine Christianity.
Urgup and most other
villages in
this
part
of Cappadocia are either perched on spires of rock or hollowed out of
precipices
or gigantic cones, with the doors and windows of their dwellings giving
the
appearance of a huge honeycomb or dovecote. Even the free-standing
houses
have been built of volcanic rock, and many of them have handsome
arcades
with facades and portals decorated with carved and sculptured designs;
while
some Cappadocians burrow into the hillsides and live like modem
cavemen,
but far more comfortably. For the apparently arid soil is incredibly
fertile,
and the local residents live very well on the abundant produce of their
vegetable
gardens, orchards and vineyards. The wine of the region is deservedly
famous,
with a heady aroma like a whiff of brimstone.”

Ten
minutes
from
our
hotel in Urgup is Uchisar, a village on the edge of the enormous
erosion
basin of the Goreme valley. A medieval fortress is carved into the
great
rock at the top of the hill (it looks like a piece of Swiss cheese 200
feet high), and from the top of the fortress you can see all of
Cappadocia. A
few miles northeast is Goreme, where the rock churches are displayed in
an
“open-air museum”; unfortunately, beginning in 1989 the local
organization which runs the site insists that all tourists be
accompanied by a guide and
they charge exorbitant prices. The most spectacular “fairy chimneys”
are
at Zilve, and we’ll make frequent stops to look around and take
pictures. The most interesting town (and the best shopping) in
Cappadocia is Urgup, where we’ll have lunch and spend the afternoon.
Unless one has a special
interest
in medieval Anatolian iconography, the decorations in the rock churches
can
be disappointing. The architecture, however, is striking, especially
since
the process of construction is opposite the usual; whereas a
conventional
church architect would begin with an empty space and proceed to fill
part
of it with columns, walls, etc., the Cappadocian architect starts with
a
solid mass and his task, in effect, is to create empty space. In any
case,
even if there were no churches or cave-dwellings at all in this area,
the
extraordinary “lunar landscape” is one of the strangest and most
spectacular
sights in the world.
It’s not known when the
Cappadocian
monastic movement started, but it may be as early as the 4th century;
the
monasteries flourished, especially after the 9th century, until the
Osmanli
and Mongol incursions of the 13th century. Even after they had been
abandoned
for religious purposes, the rock churches and dwellings continued to be
used
as shops and homes, and some are still lived in today.
Our next stop will be at the
underground
city of Kaymakli, one of several such sites in this area (one other is
open
to the public, the city of Derinkuyu to the south). Beginning around
the
7th century, these enormous subterranean labyrinths were created to
provide
shelter for whole populations against attack by Arab raiders. Kaymakli
and
Derinkuyu each could hold 12-15,000 people in at least eight connected
levels
of living quarters, storerooms, kitchens, and chapels. Ventilation
shafts
provided air, water came from interior wells, and the entrances could
be
blocked off with great round stones (like millstones) in case of
danger.
The walk along the marked path takes about 30 minutes.
OCT 16 Hattusas & Ankara
We’ll leave early for
the
drive north to Hattusas, ancient capital of the Hittite empire. At
Hattusas
there are really two sites, about 1 mile apart: Yazilikaya, the Hittite
religious
sanctuary, and Hattusas itself. We’ll begin at Yazilikaya, an open-air
shrine
known for its relief carvings of the Hittite pantheon.
Only the foundations remain
of
the buildings in front of the sanctuary: a propylaion, a temple with
annex,
and a smaller gateway. Entrance to the large gallery was from the
temple,
entrance to the small gallery was from the smaller gateway. The large
gallery
contained relief sculptures of the Hittite gods and goddesses, with
gods
on the west wall and goddesses on the east; the division is not
precise,
however, since three goddesses are included on the west and one god is
portrayed
on the east. The north wall (between contains the chief divinities, the
weather
god Teshub, his wife Hepatu, and their son Sharruma. At the end of the
line
of goddesses is a large relief of King Tudhaliya IV (note that gods
wear
cone-shaped caps, while kings wear skull- caps).

As the
small
gallery seems to
be a mortuary chamber the two animal-headed figures at its entrance are
probably
demons to scare away intruders. The east wall of the small gallery has
a
Sword-God and a wonderful relief of the god Sharruma holding King
Tudhaliya
in his left arm. The west wall holds a procession of 12 cone-head gods.
It is thought that the
temple and
the reliefs of deities in the large gallery were built by Hattusili III
(1275-1250)
and that his son Tudhaliya IV (1250-1220) enlarged the temple and built
the
small gallery and the self-portrait. In other words Tudhaliya had
his
own tomb constructed while he was still alive, perhaps as a kind of
apotheosis.
There seems to be an identification in which the god Teshub, his wife
Hepatu.
and their son Sharruma are parallel to King Hattusili III, his wife
Puduhepa,
and their son Tudhaliya IV.
The name Hattusas is a
Hittite form of Hattus, the name of the city under the Hattites. The
Hattite city was destroyed by the Hittite king Anitta around 1800, but
shortly after became
the Hittite capital. The lower city was built on the site of the
Hattite
city, where there also had been an Assyrian trading colony: the upper
city
was built during the Empire period (1450-1180) and the whole city was
destroyed
with the downfall of the Empire in 1180.
The sheer size of the site
(as
well as a lot of barbed wire fences) compel us to drive around it,
alighting
at certain select places. As we drive down and around from
Yazilikaya
, we pass first the site of the Assyrian trading colony and then the
great
temple of the Storm-God. Taking the right fork we continue on the
road
uphill to our first stop, the Lion Gate. Each of the three gates
in
the southern fortification wall at the highest point of the city is
named
for the relief sculptures beside the gate; the others are the Sphinx
Gate
and the King’s Gate (misnamed). The tunnel under the Sphinx Gate
is
240 feet long and is thought to have been a sally port. The other
structures
whose foundations we see as we drive through the upper city are four
temples,
the New Castle, and the Yellow Castle. Returning to the lower
city
we come first to the South Citadel and then to Buyukkale, the Great
Citadel.
One of the buildings on the Great Citadel seems to have been an
archives
storeroom, the oldest library in history; over 3000 inscribed clay
tablets
were found in it. Our last stop is at the main temple; it was
apparently
dedicated to both the Storm God (Teshub) and the Sun Goddess of Arinna
(Hepatu),
and their twin statues may have stood in two rooms of the ritual annex
to
the temple.
The temple itself is a
series of
rooms around a courtyard, with the ritual annex of 12 rooms on the
northeast, and it stood in turn in a courtyard formed by storerooms and
offices on all
four sides. In two rooms thousands of cuneiform tablets
were
found in 1907. The main entrance seems to have been through a
gate.
Opposite the paved road on the south side of the temple complex is
another
set of rooms and buildings around a courtyard, in which a mysterious
blue-green
stone (an altar?) stands. This complex may have served the
administrative
structure of the temple, and the same may be true for the many rooms on
a
lower level west of the temple.
Because of the sloping
ground, the rooms surrounding the temple were on three floors on the
north side, two
floors elsewhere. Only the lower part of the temple and these
other
structures were built of stone, the upper part being of sun-dried
brick.
At many places you can see regular circular holes on the top of the
stone
blocks; these held bases for the wooden framework of the brick
sections.
We'll eat lunch near the
site,
then drive on to Ankara.
OCT 17 Ankara & Istanbul
Ankara, Turkey’s capital
since
1923, is a large (well over 3 million) but very pleasant city, built on
a
hilly landscape with many trees and parks. As in Istanbul, the
first
impression is the teeming mass of people—the chief difference is that
in
Ankara all these people look like they have a good middle-class job.
The major attraction of
Ankara,
perhaps of all Turkey, is the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, one of
the
world’s truly great museums. Even if there were nothing inside,
the
building itself is worth a visit; it is the restored bazaar built in
1464-1471
by Mahmut Pasha, the Grand Vizier of Mehmet the Conqueror. The
museum
is just below the ancient citadel of Ankara, and from the front terrace
you
have a superb view looking down on the city.

Ankara Museum: Hattite standard and idol
The museum, recently renovated, is
arranged chronologically,
going anti-clockwise from the entrance. The first exhibits are
Palaeolithic (before 7000 b.c.) and Neolithic (7000-5500), and include
striking wall-paintings, fertility figurines, and a restored sanctuary
from Catalhuyuk. Next comes the Chalcolithic (bronze implements
are
beginning to appear) period (5500-3000) with tools and weapons, painted
pottery,
and many more goddess figures. The second half of the west hall
is
devoted to the first half of the Bronze Age proper (3000-2000) and
contains
(in my opinion) the most amazing objects of all, the Hattite bronzes
(especially
the symmetrical stags with colossal branching antlers) and fertility
idols
in gold, silver, and electrum. DO NOT MISS the relief sculpture
of
a helmeted warrior, perhaps the god Teshub, next to the door leading
into
the central hall; it is from the King’s Gate at Hattusas and is the
finest
example of Hittite relief sculpture. The first half of the south
(back)
hall has finds from the Assyrian Trading Colony period (1950-1750);
most
are from Kultepe, the city near Kayseri. Here you’ll see
cuneiform
tablets written in Old Assyrian, the earliest example of writing in
Anatolia.
The rest of the south hall has pottery and hieroglyphic inscriptions
from
the Old Hittite Kingdom (1700-1450). At this point you should
turn
and enter the central hall, where are kept the sculptures, mostly
orthostatic
reliefs, from the Hittite Empire (1450-1180) and the Neo-Hittite period
(1180-700).
Returning to the perimeter halls, the east hall has antiquities from
the
Urartian period (900-600, from east Turkey around Lake Van), the
Phrygian
period (750-550, from central and west Anatolia), and a few from the
Greek
and Roman periods.
From the museum we’ll go for
lunch
in a restored mansion in the Old Town of Ankara, then drive around the
most
interesting monuments and neighborhoods of Ankara to the hilltop
mausoleum
of Ataturk; besides the big neoclassical temple which holds only his
sarcophagus,
there is also a small museum of Ataturk’s personal effects and various
other
displays (his cars, for example).
We’ll leave Ankara for the
drive
west to Istanbul. The formerly long drive has been shortened by
the
completion of a super-highway, and there is some gorgeous alpine
scenery
around Bolu. We’ll arrive in Istanbul early evening.
OCT 18-21 Istanbul
While in Istanbul, as
a group we'll see Aya Sofia, Topkapi Palace, Kariye Museum, the
archaeological
museums, and take a private cruise of the Bosphorus; there'll be free
time
for other things like the imperial mosques and the Grand Bazaar.
Istanbul, Archaeological Museum: frieze from the "Alexander"
sarcophagus
Istanbul, Archaeological Museum: Diana
Istanbul, Museum of the Ancient Orient: :fragment of Ishtar Gate,
Babylon
Istanbul: Rumeli
Hisar
Istanbul:
Sulemaniye
Mosque
Istanbul:
Topkapi
Palace, Harem
OCT 22
Departure
|