Amasya
The city of
Amasya, Turkey, demonstrates both, offering visitors an opportunity
to see its progress, albeit slow, but also retaining some of its historical
image. Blend these with Turks’ overwhelming hospitality to strangers, and
travelers will come away with wonderful memories of Amasya.
Tourists likely
will be disappointed in Amasya’s industrial area but certainly not its old
section, located in a valley with the Yesilirmak (Green) River flowing through
its middle. Sheer rock walls on both sides of this narrow valley rise hundreds
or so feet nearly perpendicularly.
Hewed into these
walls on one side are the tombs of Pontic kings (333 to 44 B.C.), some of which
are nearly 40 feet high, easily visible from the valley floor. Three of the
tombs can be entered via a not-too-steep hike. At night these sheer-walled
tombs often are illuminated.
Past to present
The Amasya area of Turkey became a Hellenized Persian state, reaching its
zenith during the reign of its last king, Mithradates VI (115 – 63 B.C.), but
his expansive programs later brought him into conflict with Rome, ultimately
leading to the end of the Pontic kingdom. The kingdom became a Roman province
in the first century, A.D.
Amasya was later
captured by Seljuks in 1071, then fell to the Ottomans in 1392. During the
Middle Ages this city prospered, rivaling Baghdad before it declined.
Fortunately, the city’s architectural heritage survived, though much was
damaged by earthquakes, floods and fires during succeeding centuries.
The 1915 fire and the 1935 earthquake severely damaged most of Amasya’s
beautiful timbered homes, providing locals the option of building a concrete
mass of new construction to meet the needs of Turkey’s exploding population.
Instead, during
our walks throughout the old section of Amasya, we observed and heard the
sounds of hammers, etc., restoring many of the old homes, especially those with
balconies overlooking the Yesilirmak River. Renovations are gradual, but these
are proud craftsmen. Though we don’t speak Turkish, a friendly smile got us
inside a couple of the damaged homes being renovated.
Late in the afternoon of our second day in Amasya, we slowly walked again with
locals throughout the old section of town. The pace was slow, permitting us to
again inhale the sights while perusing shops, sampling ice cream, admiring the
city’s many monuments (i.e., a statue of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of
modern Turkey) and meditating with the faithful in the city’s beautiful
15th-century Beyazid Camii (mosque).
This handsome
mosque, built in 1486, has a wonderful setting among trees on the riverbank.
Outside the mosque, in the sun’s fading shadows, three elderly gentlemen
treated us each to a glass of steaming-hot Turkish tea with the customary two
cubes of sugar. What a great ending to a perfect day in a lovely city!
Some cities may
have more fascinating ruins or history, but none we’ve visited in Turkey have a
more picturesque setting. Sheer rock walls and the rapidly flowing river
embellish its historical and more recent structures. The old section of Amasya
retains the essence of its past, not one that has given itself up to
21st-century concrete.
• The Web notes
two 3-star hotels in Amasya. However, when visiting there several years ago we
stayed in the currently unrated Turban Amasya Hotel overlooking the Yesilirmak
River (Turban management has since withdrawn its operation). We found the hotel
rooms satisfactory and the cuisine good.