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Destination
: Turkey - Tourist
sites
Most visits to Turkey start
in Istanbul, the gateway to the
Orient. The city is also known under its
former name of Constantinople, the
Rome of the East, and later the capital of
the Ottoman Empire, the mightiest Islamic
empire of all times.
The trip then continues
alongside the sunny Mediterranean
beaches, where Homers Troy lies,
but also Ephesus, the New York of
the Greek-Roman world. There are more
ancient ruins here than in continental
Greece and their beauty matches
everything else that can be found in the
ancient world. Furthermore, most of these
ruins are scarcely visited so that it is
still possible to enjoy and admire them
without having to share them with herds
of tourists. There are more tourists on
the western coast, but deserted
and idyllic beaches and bays abound
everywhere. In the virtually unspoiled
mountain areas there are no
tourists at all. During the springtime it
is even possible to ski in the mountains
during the morning and to swim in the
warm water of the Mediterranean in the
afternoon.
Those who decide to go
inland will discover a landscape
of vast plains and salt deserts that can
be found nowhere else in Europe. Perhaps
one of the greatest wonders of nature in
Turkey is the very surrealistic turf
stone landscape of Cappadocia with
its thousands of cave dwellings and
hundreds of churches in the rocks. And of
course, no one should miss the beautiful
(but very busy with tourists) calcium
terraces of Pamukkale.
And then there is the
adventurous Eastern Turkey. No
lack in nomads tents here ! Everywhere in
the wilderness are scattered the remains
of lost civilizations. A beautiful
example is the Nemrut mountain
(2.150 m) with its mysterious idols or
the ghost city of Ani close to the border
with the former Soviet Union. The
blue-green waters of the Van lake,
surrounded by snowcapped mountains and
grazing herds of cattle, are reminiscent
of Central Asia, the true land of birth
of the Turks. When crossing the
Kars-Erzurum line, one arrives in the
area of the little Caucasus or the
Pontic Alps, a region which is almost
never visited and which is never
mentioned in tour guides. The mountains
are covered with dense forest and with
Balkan-like little villages and long
forgotten basilicas. A visit to Turkey
can then be closed off by a beautiful
boat trip on the Black
Sea.
Already after a few days, it
should be possible to answer the question
that every Turk will ask "How do you like
Turkey ?" - "Turkiye ? Çok Güzel !" "
Turkey ? Very beautiful !".
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