Santa Claus
Demre,
lying on the shore of the Mediterranean is a very important center of Christianity. There
is a church here called the Church of St.Nicholas. Two conflicting suppositions are made
of this St.Nicholas. The first of these is that this St.Nicholas was the actual founder of
the Russian Empire. The second supposition and one believed by many westerners is that
this St. Nicholas is the saint known as Santa Claus. According to excavations this
structure dates to the sixth century and consists of a basilica shaped building with naves
divided by pillars and with the middle nave divided into three large square areas. Side
naves are again divided into even small areas. In the eighth century the church known
today was built over the remains of the earlier structure while benefiting from some of
the materials and parts of the first. In 1862 the Russians hired a German architect to
restore this building. In place of the traditional Byzantine dome, he roofed the structure
with an altogether untypical ribbed arch. Recently, a new segment of the original
structure was found under a layer of mud at the entry of the building; in niches of this
room archaeologists discovered various decorated crypts. It is believed that one of these
is the tomb of St.Nicholas, or Santa Claus. Some element of frescoes and round floor
mosaic were also discovered on the walls of the church during the course of excavation.
Another center of Byzantine culture in this region was Ksantos near present-day Fethiye.
Among the ruins of this then highly-populated area are ruins of a church. There is also
the ruin of a large monastery at the site of the town's ancient Roman acropolis. The
sacred site of Letoon lies on the further banks of the Ksantos River and a few miles
inland from the sea.
Archaeologists have also uncovered the remains
of another Byzantine city in Kumlucu, to the east of Finike. Illegal excavations made here
by local villagers have resulted in the foreign abduction of many artifacts. The artifacts
(primarily items from a church treasury) that were found by archaeologists are on exhibit
at the Antalya Museum. A basilica which was built over the remains of antique ruins can be
found in present day Antalya, the ancient city of Pamphilia. It is believed that this
church was built in the name of Mary; this structure was converted into a mosque and has
been known as the Kesik Minare, the Korkud Camii, and the Cuma Camii. Although the ruin is
unroofed today, it is believed that the middle nave was covered with a tower-like dome.
The remains of two large basilicas can also be
found in the site of the ancient city of Perge, today known as Aksu. One of these
basilicas is 75 meters long, including its atrium, and each of its naves were divided by a
row of eleven columns. The second basilica is important for its very large size, as it is
thirty meters wide and fifty meters long, excluding its atrium. The basilica at Perge is
strongly reminiscent of the architectural style of southern Anatolia.
It is known that in the fifth century a large
basilica was built directly in front of the temples of Athena and Apollo in Side, lying to
the East of Antalya. The church was destroyed in the Arab invasion of the seventh or
eighth century, and the local people demolished it completely in the ten or eleventh
century and built a small, four-columned church over the middle nave of the original
structure. A small domed Byzantine church which was built in the clover plan is situated
at the upper end of the Alanya Tower. Scientists believe that this structure was probably
built over the remains of a magnificent basilica which preceded it. The interior of the
small church contains faded frescoes and stones and bricks constructed in various styles.
This Byzantine church was later given the name of the Arab Saint and it is thus known
today.
There are many other Byzantine ruins to be found
in small settlement areas of this region. There is a quite interesting basilica in
present-day Uzuncaburc towards the north of Silifke; this was once the site of the
important Roman city of Diokaisareia. This basilica was constructed in the Byzantine
period by tearing down a temple dating to the very early periods. The Alacahan Monastery
is found on a terrace dug out of the rocks of a mountain near the ancient city of
Claudiopolis; today's Mut which lies along the Karaman-Silifke road. This complex consists
of graves cut out of the rock in rows, a cave-chapel, a basilica dedicated to the four
apostles who wrote the gospels, a baptistery and a very large church. All of these
structures are interjoined by a ceremonious path. The traveler Evliya Celebi visited this
site in 1671 and when he noticed the workmanship of the stone masonry, he wrote that
" this is a masterpiece which has just left the architects hand."
To the east of Silifke are two large gorges. The
largest of these was called korikos during the antiquity and a Temple of Zeus was erected
in it. The Byzantines then converted this structure to a basilica. A small church was
built at the very bottom of this gorge and dedicated to the Virgin Mary, as she had
reputedly given birth to Jesus in a cave. There are also the remains of a bath found on
the coast that dates to the fourth century. The floor of the bath is decorated with a
painting portraying the nude, Three Beauties. These three beauties are known as the
daughters of Zeus-Aglaia, Eruphrosyna, and Thalia
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