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ABOUT KUSADASI
Kusadasi,
which means "bird island", is set in a
superb gulf in the
Aegean region of
Turkey and
is known for its turquoise sparkling
water of the Sea,
broad sandy beaches, bright sun and
large marina
with a capacity for 600 boats. A
glorious ancient city stands beside it,
Ephesus
with hundreds of thousands of visitors
from tours
each year. The town is not far from
Adnan Menderes
Airport, Izmir
(only 80 km). Numerous holiday villages
and hotels line its shores and hundreds
of restaurants serves food from all
around the world and, of course,
Turkish Cuisine,
which is one of the largest cuisines of
the world. We mustn't forget discos,
bars, cafes, pubs and "Turkish Nights";
all those to cater holiday-makers.
Kusadasi
has retained a certain earthiness to it
and inexpensive meals and pensions can
still be found in town. Many shops do a
brisk trade with passengers from
hundreds of cruise ships that dock for a
day or two, allowing enough time for a
trip to Ephesus
and a shopping expedition.
The
tiny Güvercin Adasi (Pigeon Island) is
connected to the mainland with a
causeway. Its romantic setting includes
a well-maintained flower garden which
surrounds the restored 14th or 15th
century fortress housing a restaurant
and disco frequented by lovers or those
hoping to find one by the night's end.
Beaches
close to town tend to get quite crowded
during summer. If you prefer more
serenity, head for Dilek Peninsula
National Park,
known locally as Milli Park about 28 km
(17 miles) from Kusadasi.
It is also possible to get to Greek
island Samos by regular daily ferries.
History
Around
2000 BC. people coming from Lelek,
Caria and
Lydia had
settled down as a society to the slopes
of Pilav Mountain. Later one by one with
the unit settlements
Pigale,
Maratheson, Neopolis and Panionion came
to life; Ionians and later Romans by
Ephesus
coming into the dominance of Rome, had
lived in these lands.
Today's
Kusadasi is founded in 16th century by
Venetians as a colony. The castle on the
small island was built for the purpose
of observation in
Byzantine times. In the Middle
Ages Kusadasi was ruled by Venetians and
Genoese which had taken the name of
Scala Nova.
The city was surrounded with castle
walls for being protected from the
violence of pirates, very common in the
Mediterranean
those centuries. It's known that there
is an Ionian
Region of Kusadasi. This had taken an
important harbor mission on Asia -
Europe trade road
for many years.
In
the period of Scala Nova, the Armenians
dominant to trade, Greeks and
Jews had
joined to former nations. With the
Manzikert (Malazgirt) War in 1071
Seljuk Turks
had started to spread in
Anatolia
and during the process of Turkish
principalities formation, in 1304 Sasa
Bey had been the authority of Kusadasi
and surroundings. Mehmet Bey had
connected this vicinity to Aydinogullari
after Sasa's death.
Kusadasi is a harbor town and
Turks had
kept this in mind. Although they were
nomads from
central Asia and far away from maritime
business, they had learnt maritime as
well as the Ephesians in a short time.
They had lived comfortably with the
spoils they caught at naval battles.
Kilic Arslan added this town to
Selcuk government
and Scala Nova again had become the
exportation gate of
Anatolia in
1186. The Ottoman
sultan
Yildirim Beyazit had joined
Ayasulug (in Selcuk town) to his
principalities and the city became
Ottoman in
1390. Tamerlane (Timurlenk) decided to
take whole of
Anatolia under his sovereign, but
when he could not take Ayasulug he put
the castle on fire in
which
Ottoman soldiers
resisted, and St. Jean's Church was
damaged very badly. With Çelebi Mehmet I
Kusadasi had gathered to the
Ottoman Empire
and became a district.
With the vicinities passing to
Ottomans,
Turks
entered into societies in these areas.
At the end of 1st World War
Ottoman Government
had overcome, so Kusadasi was given to
Italians with a
treaty, and under their rule, the
town was filled with
Turks,
Greeks, Jews,
Armenians. Most of those minorities left
the country on 7th September 1923 after
the victory of War
of Independence led by
Atatürk.
Lands between Güzelcamli and Selcuk, the
estates of Greeks which went back during
the agreement to exchange minorities
between Greece and
Turkey, were given to Turkish
immigrants in return to their properties
there; the same was done by the Greek
government. This migration was between
1941 and 1955.
Kusadasi
is living parallel to
Ephesus in
history and the settlements around it.
The places that have
historical
and tourist values are:
Panionian
Agora, Roman Bath, Ilica Hill, Scala
Nova, Pygale, Kadi Castle, Andiz Tower,
Neopolis, Aquaducts, Ania, Melia,
Kursunlu Monastery, Öküz Mehmet Pasha
Caravanserai,
The Castle on Pigeon Island, Ramparts
surrounding the City, Kusadasi Houses,
Kaleici, Mosques,
Turkish Baths,
Yacht Harbor
and Dilek National
Park.
Pygale
Pygale is
located about 3 kilometers north of
Kusadasi town. According to Xeonophon,
one of the authors of 5th c BC, Pygale
was assembled by the king
Agamemnon
of Myknai and Argos. In the 14th volume
of Strabon's
geography book it is told that
Pygale was established by
Agamemnon
and he settled large amount of his
soldiers there who made good use of
boiling healing water in the land.
According to Strabon again, there was a
temple made for the moon goddess Munkyia
in Pygale. During the period of
Trojan Wars
that continued ten years, Pygale was
used for curing soldiers
and repairing ships.
After
the Granikos Wars, Pygale was also used
as an entertainment and treatment center
for Alexander the
Great's soldiers. Written
inheritance of the whole past and visual
inheritance going over today prove us
that one of the first cities established
on purpose of
health in the world was in
Kusadasi known with its name "Pygale".
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