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Roots in the Early History
The city of Alanya
has a very long history, even if the exactly date of the beginnig is dissappeared
in the dark of the years. It is said, that already in prehistoric time
cavemen have spent the summertime in this area. Thousands of years old
Bones and fossils where found in a cave near the village Oba - the fossils
are dated for the early Paleolithic age, in a time between 20.000 and
17.000 v. Chr. At this time existed hardly stationary settlements, the
early people wandered in search of food and mild weather conditions far
over the country.
Already about 1820
v.Chr. refugees from the First Troy War should have been accepted here,
but in the 14th century v. Chr. occured the Hethits Pamphylia and Cilicia
and should have killed thousands of persons.
First
Mention of the City
The beginning of the
first settlement in the today´s area of Alanya is not exactly known.
The first mention was in the 4th century v.Chr. by Greek named Scylax
who wrote from a city "Coracaesium". Then the city sinks back
again for a long time into the darkness of the history. since the historian
known at that time and historian Strabon, between 63 and 24 v. Chr. lived
which described city as a hardly accessible and impregnable settlement.
In the eventful history(story) belonged Coracesium to Pamphylien, to Cilicia.
Even if there were long periods in which the historians wrote nothing
about the city, may be supposed that there were few quiet and peaceful
times for Coracesium because of the strategically positive position.
The
Romans and the pirates
When Antiochus III
in the year 199 v. Chr. occured Cilicia, he established the long tradition
of the pirates in Coracesium. The People who lived there didn´t
accept living whith an conqueror, so they went to the Sea and made the
Mediterranean insecure. Probably that's why the siege of Coracaesium failed
and Antiochos III renounced the conquest and devastation of the city.
Just 10 years later he was defeated by the Romans. In this time a political
"no-man's-land" developed itself in the coastal towns, which
made this region to a notorious rebel and pirate base.
One of these feared
pirate's captains, Diodotos Tryphon, made Coracesium to his headquarter.
He used the caves as treasuries and also held in custody his hostages
up to payment of a ransom. In the year 142 v. Chr. he explained himself
to the king the Seleukids and ruled during 3 years, before King Antiochos
VII. brought his dominion to an end - but - the pirate´s tradition
didn´t stop, but it grow bigger and bigger. In this time the pirates
from Coracesium did work together with the city of Side, where one of
the biggest slave markets of this time has found its place - if a family
couldn´t (or didn´t want to) pay no ransom, the kidnapped
people were sold there as slaves. Because the Roman empire was occupied
at this time by several wars, the pirates could follow profession with
no disturbance.
In the year 75 v.
Chr. did the pirates a crucial mistake: they kidnapped Julius Caesar!
This was a very big failure, because after the payment of the ransom the
Romans immediately started a retaliation campaign against the pirates.
But it was during until the year 70 v. Chr., when General Pompejus got
an exceptional command and for the first time sufficient ships, soldiers
and competence to defeat the pirates. He conquered Coracesium in short
time and let drag the city walls.
The
most famous Love Story at the Turkish Riviera
With the murdering
of Caesar in the year 44 v. Chr. and the division of the Roman empire
attained Marcus Antonius the dominion of the East-Roman Empire. In the
year 41 v. Chr. began one of the most famous love stories of the History
which also had direct influence on the region around Alanya: the love
of the Egyptian queen Kleopatra and Marcus Antonius .... 4 years later
Marcus Antonius presented the city and the region to Kleopatra as an wedding
gift. At that time 100 days their honeymoon should have lasted in Coracesium.
However, afterwards Kleopatra allowed to clear the woodes region at that
time and transport the precious cedars to Egypt for the building of her
navy. After the lost war and the suicide of the pair Oktavius took over
the dominion about the whole area.
Later the walls were
rebuilt which where destroyed by Pompejus. Even today we can find examples
in good condition of this building activity in the inside castle of Alanya.
In the first centuries of the Christian era the city was christian, some
churches form this time are just existing - so for example the Byzantine
chapel on the Castle hill. Coracesium received at this time the name "Kalonoros"
what means "beautiful mountain".
Time
of prosperity under the Seldschuks
In the year
1207 Antalya was conquered by the Seldschuks - they already had
established a state with Konya as its capital in central Anatolia.
So the access to the Mediterranean was guaranteed and a unparalleled
time of prosperity in the region began.
One of the biggest
sovereigns of the Seldschuks was Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad I., who
recognized the strategic importance of the city of Kalonoros very
soon, He started his first campaign after his accession to the throne
to this city and conquered it. At this time Kalonoros was controlled
by the Christian family of the Kyr Vart. Two months he was resisting
the siege of the Seldschuks, before he resigned to prevent a massacre.
Bizarre legends curl round the conquest of the castle. They say
the sultan had a dream how to conquer the castle of Alanya with
the help of Allah: He ordered to collect all goats and cattle from
the farmers around, let them put burning straw bundles to the horns
and let them run up the mountain, followed by his soldiers with
"Allah! Allah!" shouting out loud.
Kyr Vart as a result was frightened to death and cried craven on
the condition, that no one in the caslte would come to harm. This
was guaranteed to him and he went to Konya where the sultan married
later the daughter of the Kyr Vart who passed to the Islamic belief
and was called Mah-Peri.
Sultan
Keykubat named the city of "Alaiye", she did his(its) winter quarters
and the second capital of the Seldschukenreiches - she was the access the
Hautpstadt Konya to the sea. By his(its) various cultural interests he did
Alaiye a flowering culture city and commercial town. Two of the markantesten
landmarks of the city, the red tower and the Seldschukische shipyard, appeared
in this time. After the decline of the seldschukischen empire the region
1471 to the Ottoman empire was attached. Also the Janitscharen-Regimenter
which played sultan the Murat I. among Christian boys constraint-recruited,
a roll(role) in Alaiye. With Tarsus together she belonged 1571 to Cyprus,
in 1864 again to
Konya and since 1868 to Antalya or to this province.
Alaiye
- Alanya
To their(her)
current name came Alanya by a small anecdote: in 1933 toured Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk the Turkish coast. On an autograph a radio officer
translated the Morse symbols for "Alaiye" wrongly into
"Alanya" this name liked the statesman so well that he
asked by his(its) visit in the city to maintain this name in future.
Begining
of Tourism
The modern tourism
was founded by a chance discovery and the foresight of a man(husband):
in 1948 the Damlatas cave was discovered at harbour works. A citizen Alanyas,
Galip Dere led the first examinations. This had belonged from Germany
of the healing effect of the caves air and allowed to execute corresponding
examinations which operated the healing effect on the respiratory system.
He got the permission to increase the input area and to attach and afterwards
sent photos newspapers in whole Turkey. With it Galip Dere is the real
founder of the tourist tradition in Alanya, longest on the Turkish Mediterranean
coast.
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