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Eminonu Square

Nestled at the tip of Istanbul’s Old City, Eminönü Square sits where the Golden Horn meets the Bosphorus and the Sea of Marmara. This broad, sunlit plaza is flanked by centuries-old mosques and bustling markets. To the north it spills onto the famous Galata Bridge, which links Eminönü to the modern districts of Karaköy and […]
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Myra Ancient City

Perched on the fertile coastal plain of Lycia in southwestern Turkey, ancient Myra lies adjacent to the modern town of Demre. This once-mighty city is especially celebrated for its rock-cut Lycian tombs, a monumental Roman theatre, and as the 4th-century seat of St. Nicholas (the original Bishop of Myra). In fact, Turkey’s Ministry of Culture […]
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Tlos Antik Kenti

Located on a rocky spur above the Xanthos River valley, the ruins of Tlos command a sweeping panorama of the Lycia region. Here, Greco-Roman stone theatres and tumulus tombs co‑exist with Ottoman castle walls, each layer of architecture speaking to different chapters of a 4,000-year history. Overlooking craggy mountains and fertile plains, the site feels […]
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Kusadasi Castle (Pigeon Island)

Kuşadası’s iconic island castle—known as Güvercinada (“Pigeon Island” in Turkish)—dominates the town’s harbor with a blend of ancient stones and sweeping sea vistas. Perched on a rocky islet connected by a narrow causeway, the fortress serves as a serene counterpoint to Kusadası’s colorful markets and beaches. It delivers a remarkably varied experience in a compact […]
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Knidos Ancient City

Knidos crowns the rugged tip of the Datça Peninsula, poised on Cape Tekir at the junction of the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas. From high terraces the sharp salt breeze and the scent of pine greet visitors, blending sea and land in a scene that enchanted antiquity’s writers. Its dramatic geography – with two harbors carved […]
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Hierapolis (Pamukkale) Ancient Theater

Perched directly above the gleaming white travertine terraces of Pamukkale, the Hierapolis Ancient Theater conveys a remarkable duality of function and symbolism. Its semicircular cavea, carved into a limestone escarpment, once hosted dramatic spectacles, religious ceremonies, and aquatic performances that underscored the city’s identity as both a cultural nexus and a revered healing sanctuary. From […]
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Kaunos Ancient City

Kaunos is a name that resonates softly in the lore of antiquity, yet the site itself offers a loud and clear invitation to the traveler. Resting at the delta of the Dalyan River in southwestern Turkey, this once-thriving Carian port city stretches across terraced hillsides and along a now-silted harbor. The ruins – a theater, […]
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Ancient City of Dara

The Ancient City of Dara (Greek: Daras; Turkish: Dara Antik Kenti) was a fortress-city of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire in northern Mesopotamia. It occupied a strategic hilltop just north of the fertile Mesopotamian plain, near the modern village of Oğuz in Mardin Province, Turkey. The region of Dara had been contested for centuries. In […]
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Rumkale

Rumkale (literally “Roman Castle” in Turkish) rises on a rocky promontory where the Merzimen Stream joins the Euphrates. Its sheer cliffs and tapering tongue of land create an almost otherworldly fortress, a citadel “in legend” according to one local report. Over thousands of years this remote stronghold has faced Assyrian armies, sheltered Byzantine bishops, housed […]
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RAMS Park

Rams Park – officially the Ali Sami Yen Spor Kompleksi – is a modern all-seater football stadium in Istanbul. Owned and operated by Galatasaray S.K., it opened in January 2011 as the club’s new home. It immediately replaced the old Ali Sami Yen Stadium, which by the late 2000s had only about 24,354 seats after […]
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Ani Ancient City

Situated on a windswept plateau near Turkey’s border with Armenia, Ani today lies silent and magnificent amid ruins and wild grasses. Rising abruptly from the Arpaçay gorge, this legendary medieval capital was long known as “the City of 1001 Churches,” a nickname reflecting its once prodigious number of religious buildings. In reality, scholars today count […]
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Terrace Houses of Ephesus

Beneath the famed façades of Ephesus – the Celsus Library and the vast theatre – lie the Terrace Houses, an extraordinary complex of Roman residences built into the hillside. These so-called “Slope Houses” (Yamaç Evleri) were the private villas of Ephesus’s wealthiest citizens. They stand on the northern slope of Bülbüldağı (Mount Nightingale), above Curetes […]
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Showing 181 to 192 of 340 results
Showing 181 to 192 of 340 results
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