Alanya,
which has one of the most remarkable views on Turkey's south coast, lies
on a rocky peninsula jutting into the sea. It possesses interesting houses,
sheer precipices, and fortification walls. The first known settlement
founded on the site of present day Alanya was Coracesium,
meaning rock. This city was sometimes included in the province
of Cilicia, sometimes in Pamphylia.
Strabo, proceeding west to east in his description of Cilicia, starts
with Coracesium, describing it as a castle set on a steep cliff.
Due to its ideal harbour and eminently defensible
situation, this site served in almost every period as a pirate's or rebel's
den. For this reason it was the only Cilician city to resist Antiochos III
in 199 B.C. A half century later, Diodotos Trypon, the local ruler, also refused to remain
allied with Antiochos VII. Piracy in the Mediterranean in the first century B.C. was a
great economic and political problem for the Roman Empire; the seizure of grain ships by
pirates reached such proportions that it threatened even Rome with widespreaad hunger. For
this reason, Puplius Servius was sent to Cilicia in 78 B.C., and organized a series of
campaigns against the pirates, but the was ultimately unsuccessful. Next he was empowered
by the Roman Senate in 65 B.C., and he subdued all of the pirate strongholds by attacking
them both by land and by sea. Coracesium, was the last to fall, and in the process not
only was the pirate fleet destroyed, but the city's fortification walls were pulled down
and the stones pitched into the sea.
During the Roman imperial era, Coracesium must have become
a large city, for in the second century it began for the first time to mint coinage in its
own name.
Not much is known about Coracesium in the first centuries
of Christendom and the early Byzantine period. Together with its neighbours Cilicia and
Pamphylia, it must have accepted Christianity at an early date.
This period, too, witnessed a change in the name of the
site; it became known as Kalonoros or Beautiful
Mountain. This name continued to be employed in various permutations well
into the Middle Ages. Even after its conquest by the Turks, the city was known by the
Venetians, Genoese, and Cypriots under the rubric Candelor, Scandelore, or Galenorum.
As soon as the Rum Seljuk sultan
Alaeddin Keykubad I (reigned 1220-1237) ascended the throne,
his first strategic ploy was to move against this castle. On securing
its surrender from its ruler Kyr Vard, he affixed his own name to the
town, calling it Alaiye. Its proximity to the
Seljuk capital of Konya as well as Alaeddin's
harbour improvements, assured the town's rapid development. Because the
sultan wintered in Alanya, the town witnessed much construction activity,
and was provided with the wonderful buildings we see today.
After the collapse of the Seljuk state, this area passed
into the control of the Karaminids and was sometimes administered by local rulers swearing
allegiance to them. Often the Lusignan kings of Cyprus tried to lay hands on Alanya, and
the Turks and the Egyptians used it as a base from which to invade Cyprus. With the rise
of the Ottoman Empire, commerce in the eastern Mediterranean
declined, and Alanya lost most of its former importance. Today, Alanya is one of the best
preserved of all Seljuk cities.
The eastern section of the Alanya castle
borders the sea and is protected at the site of its conjunction with the
northern wall, by a large octagonal tower known as Kizil Kule,
or the Red Tower. This tower is 29 metres in
diameter and 33 metres high. Despite its simple exterior, the tower's
interior consists of a series of defensive systems combined with a complex
five-storey plan. The two lower storeys of the upper portion is built
of reddish bricks, giving rise to the tower's name. Inscriptions record
that this tower was built for Alaeddin Keykubad in 1226 by the architect
Abu Ali of Aleppo. The tower was restored between
the years 1951 and 1957.
Some 150 metres to the south of the Red Tower, lies the
sole surviving Seljuk tersane or naval yard.
The total area of 57x40 metres is divided by walls into five vaulted spaces. Each one of
these is connected to the others by four doorways with pointed arches; these interior
spaces were large enough to serve as construction areas for medieval ships. The tersane is
entered from the direction of the Red Tower. The entrance carries a five-line inscription
attributing the construction of the naval yard to Alaeddin Keykubad in the year 1227. The
first line reads, "Victory for God and early conquest"
(Koran LXI, 13). A small room to to the right of the entrance may have been used as a
storeroom, or perhaps a mosque for workmen in the naval yard, although there is no mihrab
niche present to indicate the direction of Mecca. A room to the left is lit by daylight
and was probaly used as an office.
To the south of the naval yard rises a two-storey
tower (called today the Tophane) designed to protect it from landward or
seaward attack. This square tower; 19 metres in height, was erected on a high cliff. The
ground floor is divided into four vaulted rooms by interior walls. The upper floor takes
the form of an open room surrounded by vaulted bays.
The north walls, starting from the Red Tower, stretch up to
a fortified area known as the Ehmedek. Built on the ruins of
earlier Hellenistic fortifications, two structures, each possessing three towers, form a
highly irregular plan. The principal entrance is from a large gate to the east. From here
one climbs stairs to a small tower. Immediately inside the entrance lies a large amorphous
open area with cisterns. Further on are three large rooms. Scratched in the plaster near a
window of the eastern room are representations of pre-contemporary sailing boats. The
middle room probably served as a residence hall, and the small domed room in north-west
corner was its bath. The north face of the base tower of the Ehmedek contains a beautiful
inscription dating to 1227, during the reign of Alaeddin Keykubad.
If one goes due south from the Ehmedek, one encounters the Süleymaniye
mosque. This mosque is divided into two main areas; a square main chamber
surmounted by a dome, and in front of it, a porch with three domes separated by arches.
The domes are made of brick, and the walls of ashlar masonry as well as brick. At the
north-west corner of the mosque rises a duodecagonal minaret.
South from the mosque is a caravanserai
consisting of a wide courtyard surrounded by rooms for travellers and merchants. The wide
vaulted section behind the rooms was used for animals.
The Aksebe Türbe
or tomb lies above the caravanserai. The principal building was a single-domed
until build of reddish brick. Adjacent to the domet space and along its
eastern face lie another similar domed area and a vaulted room. A small
minaret decorated with blue tiles rises to the north-east of the door
to the structure.
The citadel lies at the highest point of the castle and is
in the form of an irregular rectange 180x150 metres. The original buildings of this area
were built against three sides of the surrounding fortification wall. The western side
required a less substantial wall because of its proximity to a sheer drop. Two big
cisterns built of brick lie in the middle of this space. If one takes into account the
castle's historical importance, a place should have existed in this area, but so far no
such building has been found among the ruins evident in the citadel. If it did exist,
however, it was most probably situated in the south-east corner, since this area contains
much collapsed building debris and traces of painted frescoes. A Byzantine
church can also be seen here in the citadel, undisturbed by the construction
around it. The church has a cross-shaped plan, surmounted at the crossing by a high dome
on pendentives. A few remains of frescoed figures are still to be seen in the side apses
and on the pendentives.
A small chapel built on the
southern fortification wall bears witness to the three principal phases of occupation at
Alanya. This structure, known today as Arap Evliyasi (Arab
Saint), was built during the Byzantine period on top of the ruins of a Hellenistic tower.
In Seljuk times the church was incorporated into the defensive wall, with a crenelated
parapet carefully built above it. The church, entered from the east, is surmounted by a
low dome made of brick, and can be dated on stylistic grounds to the eleventh century A.D.
This structure was subsequently used as a mosque.
This gigantic county , soon become a city itself , is the
most important touristic center of the Mediterranean region.
It will be preferable to take Alanya in two parts as Eski
(the Old) and Yeni (the New) Alanya.
Eski Alanya was founded on the
top and sides of the high peninsula dividing the county into two. As for the castle
overviewing the town on both sides, it is probably the most attractive spot. The castle
walls going up for 6,5 km to the Inner Castle on the hill was initially built during the
Hellenistic period but raised further, fortified and furnished with 110 towers during the
Seljukid period.
As for Yeni Alanya , it extends
towards both the east and west of the peninsula. The beac beginning in Antalya direction
and interrupted for a while by the peninsula extends further for many kilometers in
Gazipaşa direction. This strech constitutes the main zone of construction in Alanya.
Tremendously increased particularly during the last decade,
hotels, pensions and private residences are lined side by side on the main road parallel
to the beach and connected with transverse streets and avenues to the main road.
The Historical Town Center
It would be most becoming to start the tour in the
historical town center of Alanya from the harbor.
Starting a tour from Kizil Kule
(the Red Tower), you can make your way towards the Shipyard,
the middle part of the castle and the inner castle on the top.
Kizil Kule (Red Tower)-The
Shipyard
Regarded as the most attractive architectural
structure of Alanya and almost a symbol of the town , Kizil Kule was commissioned
by Alaeddin Keykubat , the Seljukid Sultan in 1226, and called Kizil Kule
for the red (Turkish : kizil) bricks used in the construction. Kizil Kule
is 33 m. High having an octagonal plan with five storeys.
The bottom floor of the tower, where one pays an entrance
fee, is used as an annex of Alanya Museum for exhibition of ethnographic works of art. You
can see costumes of the Ottoman period, hand-woven textiles of the region and looms where
these handicrafts were produced among the works of art exhibited. leaving the tower
behind, follow the pathway by the walls for a further 200 m after going down the stairs;
you will reach the shipyard, again built during Sultan
Keykubat's period. The shipyard was built two years after the tower and is the only
remaining shipyard from the Seljuks. It has five docks each of 7 m. Widht and 43 m. Depth
all opening to the sea.
Alanya Castle
After Kizil Kule and the Shipyard, Alanya
Castle follows as part of the tour. It takes 45 minute walk to climb up
the castle.
Don't miss to see Arap Evliyasi
which was built as a church in the 11th century and then converted into
a mosque; the Süleymaniye Mosque, the Bedesten
(market place) beside the mosque, resored and now used as a restaurant,bar
and hotel, Ehmendek where the commander of the
castle resided, little houses of Alanya remaining from the Seljuks and
the Ottomans, Akşebe Sultan Masjid and Tomb.
You can then go up the Inner Castle. Entrance
to the Inner Castle is charged. The entrance gate opens to the large courtyard
where on the left side you will see the big cistern vaulted with red bricks
on the top. This cistern is the biggest of 400 cisterns existing on various
parts of the castle and is still in use. One of the most important works
of art present in the inner castle is the Byzantine Church
(Aya Yorgi), once used as a Masjid during the Seljuks's period, standing
in quite strong and good condition.
The stairs right behind the church will lead
you to a place which we can call exactly a viewing terrace. You should
view the fascinating panorama of the town in three directions, especially
at sunset. Adam Atacagi Tower is the last spot
of the inner castle tour. It is related that the prisoners of the Roman
times were made to play a similar gamble. They were given three stones
and one who managed to throw the stone into the sea was released whereas
those who could not were thrown into the sea through a catapult. The name
Adam Atacagi (=Man Thrower) is given for that
reason.
Damlatas Cave
After the Castle tour , the second route climbing down
leads you to the entrance door of Damlatas Cave which lies to the west of the peninsula.
The Damlatas beach is also named after this cave. Adorned with alluring stalactites and
stalagmites of various colours, the cave has a constant temperature of 22-23 degrees
Celsius. It is said that the atmosphere of the cave has a healing effect on
asthma except the allergic type and rheumatism
with a humidity of 90-100 % and very high rate of carbon containing some radioactivity.
The section where stalactites and stalagmites are seen is a
cavity of 13-14 m. Width and 15 m. Height. Tours to the cave are scheduled in two
different types: Sight seeing as well as health tours.
Caves
Join one of the excursions to cover the Alanya
Peninsula from the sea, and to see Kizil Kule, Tersane
and Alanya Castle. During this excursion, your
vessel will call at three caves. The first stop is the Pirate's
Cave. The second is the Asiklar Magarasi
(cave) and the third one is Fosforlu Magara
(cave). Vessels are able to enter the caves. Once inside, the water shines
almost as if phosphorescently . Hence, the name : "Fosforlu Magara".
Swimming here is an enjoying experience.
Alanya Museum
Alanya is a rich historic site. The museums of the town
gives a clear idea of the wealth. Alanya Museum comprises of three sections. The first is
employed to display archaeological finds belonging to the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine
periods. There are finds dated to prehistory, too. The bronze statue of
Heracles in this section is remarkably impressive. There are ethnographic
objects in the second section. Majority of the works are manuscripts, Korans and
calligraphy. Also inside the museum a sample Alanya Home can be
seen. The pieces displayed in the courtyard, comprise the third section. Sarchophagi and
similar archaeological objects are displayed here. |