Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Journey to Kars

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Journey to Kars

    Journey to Kars

    TDN
    Tuesday, May 31, 2005

    .. and lots of other interesting places .
    An archaeologist escorts ex-pats and Turks to rarely visited historic
    sites in eastern Anatolia

    Susanne Fowler

    ANI, Turkey


    The sun was beating down on the blustery plateau at Ani, the deserted
    ancient city on the Turkish side of the Armenian border, as archaeology
    professor Geoffrey Summers led an international group of 40 on a tour
    of the historic landscape.

    The Istanbul Friends of ARIT (American Research Institute in Turkey)
    organized the recent trip to Urartian, Armenian and Seljuk sites in
    rugged eastern Anatolia. Highlights included a morning hike through
    the ruins at Ani, a stop at Akdamar Island on Lake Van and a visit
    to the Ishak Pasha Palace in the hills above Dogubeyazit. Our group
    departed by air from Istanbul on a Thursday morning and landed in
    Van after circling overhead for about 20 minutes because of a storm
    passing over the city.

    Wasting no time, Summers, a professor of archaeology at Middle East
    Technical University in Ankara, introduced the travelers to Urartian
    carvings and other artifacts at the Van museum. Then, it was back on
    the bus to reach the ruins of an Urartian fortress in Anzaf, north
    of Van. The region was part of the kingdom of Urartu almost 3,000
    years ago.

    After a hearty kebab lunch, the group trudged up slippery rocks to
    get a closer look at the Van citadel and the cuneiform inscriptions
    on the outer stonewalls of the fortress.

    The next day began with stops at an Urartian citadel at CavuĊ~_tepe
    and a medieval castle at HoĊ~_ap.

    Following a lunch of grilled trout, the group boarded a ferry to
    examine carvings on the 10th-century Armenian Church of the Holy Cross
    on Akdamar Island in a postcard-like setting on turquoise Lake Van. A
    few hearty participants even went swimming off the rocky shore.

    Day three saw a scary stroll across a wooden footbridge -- worthy
    of an Indiana Jones movie -- to check out the Muradiye waterfalls. A
    drive afterward to the windswept Ishak Pasha Palace found it crowded
    with holiday weekend visitors.

    The drive to Kars offered great views of Mt. Ararat, its peak clearly
    visible thanks to minimally cloudy skies.

    Our tour wrapped up with a scenic drive through emerald valleys and
    rust-colored gorges to Erzurum and onto our way home.

    One of the treats of the trip was having access to Summers,
    a personable expert. Some of the travelers eventually had their
    fill of ruins, however, and adjusted their Sunday schedule to spend
    more time wandering around the streets of Kars in search of places
    mentioned in Orhan Pamuk's novel "Snow."

    --Boundary_(ID_+1GP276lRkA9bN8RPnH/Xw)--
Working...
X