![]() |
|
![]() |
EPHESUS: Well-known from
earliest times, this city was established on the delta of what is now
called the Lesser Menderes River. The sheltered harbor of that period
was the beginning of a royal road the ended at the gate of Susa, the capital
or the Persian Empire, which secured the city its importance. It became
the capital of the Roman province of Asia under Augustus and had a population
of perhaps 200,000 in the second and first centuries BC. In the 6th century
BC science, art and culture were prominent here along with Miletus. The
famous philosopher Heraclitus, interpreter of dreams Artemidorus, the
poets Callinos and Hipponax, grammarian Zenodotus and the doctors Soranus
and Rufus were all from Ephesus. CANAKKALE (GALLIPOLI & TROY &
ANZACS): Troy existed more than 4000 years as the center of ancient
civilization. For many years, it was commonly believed that Troy was a
myth, the product of fertile imaginations such as Homer’s, who made
Hector, Helen, Achilles, Paris, Agamemnon and Priam so famous. That changed
in 1822, when the city’s remains were discovered by Charles Mclaren.
Still many wondered if the Trojan War really happened. Did Helen of Troy
exist? Was there a real wooden horse? PAMUKKALE (HIERAPOLIS): A spectacular natural wonder of the world are the calcified waterfalls of Pamukkale, which means "Cotton Castle". Thermal springs waters, laden with calcium carbonate running off the plateaus edge, have formed this sparkling white petrified cascade of basins ringed bystalagtites
|
| © 2006 - Holiday-Turkey.Org | Press CTRL+D to bookmark page. SiteMap |