Journal — Page 2
Ephesus — History and Visitor Context
Ephesus is one of those sites where every guide has to make choices about what to show. The history spans three thousand years, the ruins cover a hillside, and the city moved four times before it finally stopped.
Göbekli Tepe — History and Visitor Guide
Göbekli Tepe is not what you expect. The world's oldest known temple complex sits on a quiet hilltop near Şanlıurfa — no grand entrance, no visible grandeur from the road. What lies under the surface is what changed archaeology.
Hagia Sophia — From Cathedral to Mosque to Monument
Hagia Sophia carries fifteen hundred years of construction, collapse, repair, and conversion in one structure. The dome alone has fallen, been rebuilt, and been reinforced so many times that the building is as much a history of engineering under pressure as it is a place of worship.
Mount Nemrut — Kommagene's Summit
At 2,150 metres, the colossal stone heads of Mount Nemrut sit in the debris of a king's ambition. Antiochos I built his tomb here to face the sunrise — and the gods he claimed as ancestors.
Pamukkale and Hierapolis — History and Site Guide
Pamukkale's travertine terraces and the ruins of ancient Hierapolis form one of Turkey's most layered sites — thermal waters that have drawn visitors for millennia, and a Roman city built on unstable ground.
Troy and the Trojan War
Troy is smaller than visitors expect. That is part of what makes it worth seeing — a citadel whose fame outgrew its walls three thousand years ago and never stopped.
City of Istanbul: History, Monuments, and Districts
Istanbul connects Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman heritage in one living city. This guide covers its key monuments, neighbourhoods, and historical layers — from the Hippodrome to Topkapı, from the Grand Bazaar to the mosaics of Kariye.