Tonight finds us at an Otopark in Ipsala, on Turkey's border with Greece. The Aegean is a mile or two away, and the winds are buffeting us just as at Sultanahmet. But it is dry and pleasant, short-sleeve temperatures.
This is our 68th and final day in Turkey. We came here with a little apprehension and also high expectation. We have never met anyone who visited Turkey and did not absolutely love it. We can now join that group. Been there, loved that. It is one of the most varied and interesting places we have been, historically, culturally, geographically; exotic, but comfortably exotic; friendly and welcoming too. I am sure I will post some more about Turkey, and Vicki's "practical highlights" on Turkey will appear on our website soon. We have some more of the world still to see, but we'd love to return to Turkey.
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Last Days in Istanbul
Thus were our last few days in Istanbul, favorite places, the Spice Market, a dinner at Develi, more shopping, another visit to the archaeological museum, more walking around, just appreciating the great city.
Develi restaurant in Samatya
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A last look at the Blue Mosque
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And the incredible Hagia Sophia
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Mosque of Suleiman the Magnificent
One of the loose ends--it was still closed for renovations in October--was to see Istanbul's greatest mosque, that of Suleiman the Magnificent, the 16th century sultan who saw the empire reach its zenith in most every way. It was designed by Sinan the Architect, buried nearby, one of the 131 mosques he designed in his 97 years. Most interestingly, this mosque was the center of a huge social services center, soup kitchen for the poor, housing for travelers, baths, hospital, school, library, etc. I wonder if they had free wifi. Anyhow, I liked this mosque, far more than the blue one: there was a simplicity of design and decor here that added to the sense of height and massiveness.
Hemmed-in as it is, both by its own campus
and courtyard and then city buildings all
around, it is difficult to get a picture with
even most of the mosque in it |
Interior
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Great dome, 52m up there
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Beautiful Islamic glass
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More interior
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One of the four minarets
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Larger exterior view
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Sultanahmet Again
After Gallipoli, we turned back east and drove to within 50 miles or so of Istanbul, stopping at a beach-side lay-by. We had decided to spend our last few days in Turkey back in Istanbul, a city we enjoyed so much when we arrived here, to attend to a last few loose ends in sight-seeing, shopping, and eating. We drove into the big city about 9AM and were settled at our old campground on Kennedy Caddesi in Sultanahmet by 10. We spent the rest of the day at the Grand Bazaar, again, and in the neighborhoods surrounding it. We buy very little, but find these Turkish bazaars endlessly interesting.
There were only a few RVs at the "campground," a few Germans, a few French;
as you can see in the background, the wind and sea were really kicking up at this point |
Really kicking up
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We thought about seeing the latest Harry Poppins movie, but,
alas, it was dubbed in Turkish |
In the bookstalls adjacent to the Grand Bazaar, a cat surveys
the literary crowd; what do cats think about? |
Beyazit Square and the entrance to Istanbul University
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In the Square, what we dubbed the "old mens' market"
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For example
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Next afternoon, one of many BBQs going on along the sea-wall and in the park
near us; Turks will grill just about anything, anytime |
This one got out of hand: the old rail station, across the Golden Horn; it was a
gift of the Kaiser to the Sultan way back when... |
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Gallipoli
We spent much of Friday touring the Gallipoli peninsula, the northern side of the Hellespont and thus the traditional water gateway to Instanbul and beyond. In WWI, the British, under their First Sea Lord Winston Churchill, elected to try what no other navy had ever done--force the Dardanelles, proceed to Istanbul, and take the Ottoman Empire out of the war, thus relieving ally Russia. The combined British and French fleet was driven back from the Hellespont by shore batteries and mines. Later, the Allies landed on both Gallipoli and at Canakkale, across the strait. Gruesome WWI trench warfare ensued. A second landing, of Australian and New Zealand Commonwealth troops, took place in April, 1915, but had the very bad luck of arriving at just the place that a divisional commander named Mustafa Kemal--later Ataturk--had expected them. Four months later he led the counter-attack that eventually drove the Allies from the Dardanelles. Churchill resigned as First Sea Lord, and the war went on another three years, in other theatres. There were 500,000 casualties in the Dardanelles campaign.
From our campsite Thursday night, near the narrowest part
of the straits
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The great monument at Abide, near the end of the Gallipoli
peninsula
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In the Abide memorial courtyard
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It is a huge cemetery for Turkish soldiers killed in the
Gallipoli campaign, some 86,000 of them
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Gallipoli was largely a matter of trench
warfare and the attendant terror, rot, and
disease; Bernieres' Birds Without Wings
captures it as well as any of us can imagine
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With lines and trenches literally within ear-
shot of one another, the "Johnnies and
Mehmets" (Ataturk's expression) had other
relations than enmity alone
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Vicki takes a picture for some Jandarma in the area; this must
be holy ground for them
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I am so proud: she has gotten really good at identifying
gun emplacements, tank obstacles, pill-boxes, etc., and often
sees them before I do....
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Thanksgiving, 2010: Turkey, Turkey Everywhere...
Thanksgiving Day for us was a pretty big travel day--the Baths at Alexandria Troas, Troy, and then the Hellespont. We are always mindful of how fortunate we are in being able to do all this. We stopped for the night in a parking lot of one of the huge World War I Gallipoli museums outside Eceabat. The Jandarma checked us out about bed-time, but didn't have anything to say.
Thanksgiving, 2010, was another memorable holiday. Away from home, family, and friends, again, but still memorable. In 2009, we were at Mt. St. Michel, feasting on French dindin. In 2008, we were on Koh Samui, in the Gulf of Thailand, and our dinner was at the cooking school there I attended. No dindin, but lots of other great stuff. We had hoped to find turkey in Turkey. It is called hindi. Much of the lunch meat I have eaten here is jambon-flavored hindi. But, despite a concentrated search, we found no turkey in Turkey and had to settle for roast chicken, albeit with the usual fixins, including Vicki's special lime bavarian (aka green slime). We subsequently learned that turkey is the national dish in Turkey on New Year's Day, but that's beyond our scope.
Thanksgiving, 2010, was another memorable holiday. Away from home, family, and friends, again, but still memorable. In 2009, we were at Mt. St. Michel, feasting on French dindin. In 2008, we were on Koh Samui, in the Gulf of Thailand, and our dinner was at the cooking school there I attended. No dindin, but lots of other great stuff. We had hoped to find turkey in Turkey. It is called hindi. Much of the lunch meat I have eaten here is jambon-flavored hindi. But, despite a concentrated search, we found no turkey in Turkey and had to settle for roast chicken, albeit with the usual fixins, including Vicki's special lime bavarian (aka green slime). We subsequently learned that turkey is the national dish in Turkey on New Year's Day, but that's beyond our scope.
Actually, we did find turkeys in Turkey, and briefly considered sacrificing one to the gods at the Red Hall in Pergamon; but concluded that would be too messy in the camper |
Vicki preparing Thanksgiving dinner in our little galley at Gallipoli |
Of course, we had Trojan wine to go with the roast chicken; it was, um, epic... |
A modest but memorable Thanksgiving dinner, 2010, in turkey-less Turkey |
We have much to be thankful for beside our travels. Daughter Rebecca and husband Jeremy, who were married last June, are expecting a baby girl in April. The prospective grand-parents are thrilled. And daughter Rachel became engaged to Will Sehestedt earlier this month, putting us way over the top in parental pride. They are planning an August wedding in Missoula.
Hellespont
We drove on, viewing the Hellespont from a variety of angles, stopping in Canakkale to board our ferry back to Europe; well, European Turkey.
Entrance to the Hellespont, the narrow strait leading to the Sea of Marmure,
to Istanbul, the Bosphorus, and then the Black Sea; an historic place, as long as there has been history |
Traffic is always brisk
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Traffic on the road to Canakkale was interesting, varied...
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Our ferry, the Good Ferry Ezine, about to arrive in Canakkale
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It's been more than a year since the Grey Wanderer's last boat ride, across the
English Channel; the weather this day was balmy, calm |
Farewell, Canakkale, and Asia, again
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Our crack satnav, Tom, ever keeping track of us; we think this might have been
his first trip to Anatolian Turkey |
Hello, Eceabat, the Gallipoli Peninsula, the Dardanelles, and Europe
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Saturday, November 27, 2010
Troy
We drove on to Truva, modern-day Troy. The story of the German-American Heinrich Schliemann's 1870s discovery of Troy, following Homer's literary leads, is well enough known. Schliemann was an adventurer, made his money in the California gold rush, a treasure-hunter and relentless self-promoter, who savaged the place, but got what he was looking for. What he never fully realized was that he had uncovered a site that included as many as nine distinct cities, one atop another, going back 5,000 years. Homer's Troy, if there was such a thing, and if this is it, is conjectured to be either Troy VI or Troy VII, that is, end of the Bronze Age, 13th century BCE or so. The site was well enough known in antiquity. Xerxes sacrificed a thousand oxen there prior to crossing the Hellespont to invade Greece. The Romans reverred the place, as they did anything Greek, but especially so since they thought (after Virgil) they were descended from the Trojan Aeneas. Only in the middle ages was it "lost." Anyhow, it is one of Turkey's most popular sites, one of its many World Heritage Sites, and, like the Eiffel Tower or the Great Wall or the Taj Mahal, something you just can't miss. I think the state has done a good job with it, as complicated and dug-over as it is. But if your interests are strictly Homeric, you're not going to be pleased. Troy museum artifacts are in Canakkale, which we skipped, Istanbul, which we saw, and in Berlin, which was closed when we were there in spring of 09.
More beautiful landscape along the way
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Most-photographed item at Troy
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Most-photographed pose
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Famous photo of Schliemann's wife wearing
"Priam's gold"--well, someone's gold
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Most of the place looks like this
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Northeast citadel, Troy VI
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Schliemann's original trench; it says
something about the place that this would
be memorialized...
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This, I thought, was the most compelling scene at Troy:
showing all 9 layers...
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To wit...
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Troy VII structure
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Odeon--Roman Troy
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Pillars thought to be part of Priam's palace...
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South gate, Troy VI-VII
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Two red squirrels, Hector of the gleaming helmet and
swift-footed Achilles, fight it out before the walls of Troy; well, actually, on the walls of Troy |
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