THROUGH HISTORY'S EYES : ALANYA

Alanya on the Mediterranean once nestled amidst
citrus and banana orchards, but when this picturesque town became
a popular holiday resort, hotels gradually took the place of the
luxuriant groves. However, although Alanya has changed, it is still
beautiful, with its mediaeval castle and tower, sand beaches and
sapphire sea, palm trees, traditional houses and narrow lanes. And
beyond the town in both directions are numerous lovely bays and
beaches.
Alanya lay along the borders between the ancient lands of Pamphylia
and Cilicia. Studies carried out at Kadiini Cave by Professor Dr
Kiliç Kökten in 1957 revealed that there were prehistoric
settlements here during the Late Paleolithic (20,000-17,000 BC).
The oldest known name of the town was Coracesium, by which we find
it recorded in the 4th century BC, and in Byzantine times it was
named Kolonoros. The Anatolian Seljuk ruler Alaeddin Keykubad (1220-1237)
captured the castle in the 13th century and called the town Alaiye.
This was changed to Alanya by Atatürk when he paid a visit
here in 1935.
The
sheltered harbour attracted pirates to Coracesium, which in the
mid-2nd century BC became the stronghold of a notorious pirate chief
named Trython. The pirates were expelled by Antiochus VII in 139
BC, and again, this time for good, in 65 BC by the Roman general
Magnus. Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad marched on this strategic port
from his capital Konya 200 kilometres inland, and the Christian
ruler of Colonoros, Kyr Vart, surrendered in 1221 when he realised
that there was no hope of holding out against the attacking army.
Sultan Keykubad married the daughter of Kyr Vart, who was converted
to Islam and took the Muslim name Mah-Peri. After the death of Sultan
Keykubad the town declined along with Seljuk power as a result of
the Mongol invasion of 1243, followed by the Egyptian Memluk invasion
of 1277. In 1300 the Seljuk state broke up into several principalities,
one of which, the Karamanogullari, gained control of Alanya. In
1427 the Karamanogullari sold Alanya to the Memluk sultan for five
thousand gold sovereigns, and in 1471 it became part of the Ottoman
Empire under Mehmed II.

In 1571 Alanya, along with Tarsus, became part of
the province of Cyprus. In 1871, after briefly becoming a sub-province
of Konya, Alanya became a district of Antalya.
The old town is surrounded by walls 6.5 kilometres in length, with
140 towers, which protected the town and harbour for centuries.
Inside the walls are nearly 400 cisterns which provided the townsfolk
with water during the long dry summers. This area is like an openair
museum of Seljuk architecture. The land and sea walls join at the
imposing Red Tower on the harbour edge, and enclose the neighbourhood
known as Ehmedek and the Içkale (Inner Castle), before passing
the high platform of Adam Atacagi above the cliffs overlooking the
craggy Cilvarda promontory below. The walls then circle past the
towers of Arap Evliyasi and Esat, Tophane and the Seljuk shipyards
back to the Red Tower. Although the town's history goes back to
Hellenistic times, most of the fortifications and historic buildings
here date from the Seljuks.

Two Seljuk period brick cisterns in the inner castle
are still in use today. There is also a small 11th century Byzantine
church here, showing that this part of the town was inhabited long
before the construction of the castle. The Red Tower is a superb
example of Seljuk architecture and the town's principal landmark.
An inscription on the north side records the name of the architect,
Ebu Ali of Aleppo. The tower was restored by Turkish experts between
1951 and 1953, and is now an ethnographic museum.
Alanya was the first Mediterranean port to be taken by the Seljuks,
and they built the shipyard which can still be seen today, consisting
of a row of five vaulted docks. Here Alaeddin Keykubad constructed
his fleet, thanks to which he became known as Sultan of Two Seas.
o
By ISMAIL KARAMUT*
Photos MURAT TANER / PRINT PHOTOBANK TURKEY
* Dr Ismail Karamut is Director of Alanya Museum
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