NAME THAT COUNTRY Episode 126

The so-called Green Mausoleum is located in the city of Bursa, in the northwest of our mystery country, across the Sea of Marmara from the country’s largest and most famous city. Bursa was the first capital of the Ottoman Empire and the Green Mausoleum is the tomb of the fifth Ottoman sultan Mehmed I. The city is known for its Ottoman architecture, including a number of beautiful mosques.

Can you name that country? 
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Pilgrimage

As long as humans have found transcendent meaning in earthly places, they have made special journeys to those places. Traditionally, a pilgrimage is an act of religious devotion, but lately the word is used to describe a trip to any place that is especially inspiring to the traveler. Continue reading

NAME THAT COUNTRY Episode 116

The Chora Museum (originally a church, then a mosque) is a wee bit removed from the most famous sites (i.e. Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace…) of our mystery country’s largest city, but well worth the effort to visit. The existing 11th-century structure was built on the remains of a 4th-century Byzantine church. When the original church was built, it was outside the city walls, hence the name Chora, which means “country” in ancient Greek. Most of the frescos and mosaics are from the 14th century. After the Ottoman conquest, the church was converted to a mosque and the figurative art, not allowed in Islam, was covered in plaster. Restoration of the mosaics and frescos began in the 1940s.

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NAME THAT COUNTRY Episode 107

Even with only about 15% uncovered, Ephesus is one of the most extensively excavated Greco-Roman sites in the world. The city was established as a Greek colony in the 10th century BCE. By the Roman period, Ephesus was the 2nd largest city in the empire, with a population of 250,000. After Alexandria, it was the 2nd largest port in the eastern Mediterranean. The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus was one of the 7 wonders of the ancient world.

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Gallipoli

In honor of Memorial Day here in the U.S., an encore posting ~

the Gallipoli Peninsula and the Dardanelles Strait

I’m currently reading a book, The Daughters of Mars by Thomas Keneally (author of Schindler’s List). I can’t give it an enthusiastic recommendation (a solid B, based on the grading system of my book club) but if you’re interested in a unique perspective on the First World War, do check it out. At the center of the story are two young Australian nurses, also sisters, who volunteer early in the war.

They are initially posted to a hospital ship treating casualties of the prolonged Gallipoli campaign. Here is the relevance for this blog. Gallipoli is a peninsula in European Turkey, on the northern side of the Dardanelles, the straight that connects the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara, which connects to the Bosphorus Straight, which connects to the Black Sea. It has been a coveted waterway for millenia. During World War I, the Allies, namely the U.K., France and Russia, sought entry to the Dardanelles as a supply route to Russia, with access to Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire, a strong motive as well. The Central Powers – Germans, Austro-Hungarians and Ottomans – blocked and mined the straight and held off the Allies at Gallipoli.

ANZAC Cove, where the Australia New Zealand Army Corps landed on April 25, 1915

ANZAC Cove, where the Australia New Zealand Army Corps landed on April 25, 1915

After an initial British naval assault failed, fighting raged on land for eight months, from April 25 to mid December of 1915, when the Allies began retreating, having gained nothing. Allied and Turkish casualties together, including dead, wounded, and sick from rampant infectious disease, numbered over 500,000.

Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli

Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli

Australia and New Zealand remember their losses at Gallipoli (as well as those lost in other wars and peace keeping missions) on April 25th each year, ANZAC Day (ANZAC stands for Australia New Zealand Army Corps). The campaign was pivotal in the national identities of both countries.

Lone Pine Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Lone Pine Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Ataturk Monument and New Zealand Memorial at Chunuk Bair, Gallipoli

Ataturk Monument and New Zealand Memorial at Chunuk Bair, Gallipoli

Chunuk Bair battle site

Chunuk Bair battle site

Cape Helles Memorial, where British and French forces landed on April 25, 1915

Cape Helles Memorial, where British and French forces landed on April 25, 1915

Among Turks, Gallipoli is strongly associated with the birth of their independent Republic and is memorialized each March 18th, the anniversary of the defeat of the Allied naval attack. The father of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, was a commander at Gallipoli and distinguished himself as a great leader there.

In 1934, Ataturk addressed the following to the ANZACs: “Those heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives … you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours… You, the mothers who sent  sons from far away countries, wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land, they have become our sons as well.” It’s inscribed on memorials at Gallipoli and in Canberra, Australia.

Turkish Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Turkish Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Canakkale Martyrs Monument, Gallipoli

Canakkale Martyrs Monument, Gallipoli

Canakkale, a short ferry ride across the Dardanelles, makes a good hub for visiting Gallipoli. The Gallipoli National Park encompasses dozens of memorials, cemeteries and tombs spread out over 125 square miles. A few hours is enough time to see some of the memorials and soak up the solemn atmosphere and beautiful scenery. Those with special interest can spend days walking the peninsula. Even a short visit leaves a lasting impression.

NAME THAT COUNTRY Episode 88

The Cemberlitas Hamam is one of many historical bath houses in our mystery country, as well as thoroughly modern ones, usually in luxury hotels. Cemberlitas dates from 1584 and was designed by the great Ottoman architect, Sinan. 

Towel-clad bathers are separated by gender and can do their own douse-lather-scrub-douse treatment or pay a bit extra to have an attendant do it for them. Traditionally, the hamam has been as much a place to socialize as to get clean; and lounging about on the central platform is part of the experience.

Can you name that country? What about the city?
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