Kyrenia Castle Walking Tour - CYPRUS
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- Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
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Kyrenia Castle (Greek: Κάστρο της Κερύνειας Turkish: Girne Kalesi) is a 16th-century castle built by the Venetians over a previous Crusader fortification. Within its walls lies a twelfth-century chapel showing reused late Roman capitals, and the Shipwreck Museum.
History
Kyrenia has existed since the 10th century BC. Excavations have revealed Greek traces that date back to the 7th century BC, but the site was developed into a city under Roman rule.
Research carried out at the site suggests that the Byzantines built the original castle in the 7th century to guard the city against the new Arab maritime threat. The first historical reference to the castle occurs in 1191, when King Richard I of England captured it on his way to the Third Crusade by defeating Isaac Comnenus, an upstart local governor who had proclaimed himself emperor.
After a short period, Richard sold the island to the Knights Templar who could not control it because of peasant revolt, and then to his cousin Guy de Lusignan, the former king of Jerusalem. This began the 300 years of the Frankish Lusignan Kingdom of Cyprus (1192-1489). Initially the castle was quite small. John d'Ibelin enlarged it between 1208 and 1211. The castle's main function was military and the improvements consisted of a new entrance, square and horseshoe-shaped towers, embrasures for archers, and dungeons.
The castle was subjected to several sieges. A Genoese attack in 1373 almost destroyed the castle, and the longest amongst the sieges, in the 15th century, lasted nearly four years and reduced the unfortunate occupants to eating mice and rats. By 1489 the Venetians had taken control of Cyprus and in 1540 they enlarged the castle, giving it its present-day appearance. The chief changes, such as the addition of thick walls and embrasures for cannons, were adaptations to changes in warfare in the form of gunpowder artillery. The Venetians also installed gun ports at three levels so that they could direct cannon fire against attackers from the land. Inside the castle, they built huge long ramps so as to be able to drag artillery up on the walls. When the work on the castle was finished, its walls also encompassed the small church of St. George, which the Byzantines may have built in the 11th or 12th century.
In 1570, Kyrenia surrendered to the Ottomans. The Ottomans too made changes to the castle, but the British removed these during their occupation. The castle contains the tomb of the Ottoman Admiral Sadik Pasha. The British used the castle as a police barracks and training school. They also used the castle as a prison for members of the Greek Cypriot EOKA organization.
The Kyrenia Department of Antiquities took over custodianship of the castle in 1950, though it reverted to British control during the EOKA turmoil. The Department regained control in 1959 and since 1960 the castle has been open to the public. However, during the period from 1963 to 1967 the Cypriot National Guard used the castle as a military headquarters. Following the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, in 1974 the Girne Department of Antiquities and Museums took over responsibility for the castle's preservation and use. The Department is keeping icons that were collected from churches in the Kyrenia area pre-1974 and has stored them in the castle's locked rooms for safekeeping. Some of these are now on display in the Archangel Michael Church.
Current features
The moat on the landward side of the castle was full of water prior to the 14th century AD and served as a harbour to the castle. One enters the castle through its north-west entrance, which opens on a bridge spanning the moat. From the first gate, lying to the north west of the fortified wall that the Venetians built, one comes to a vaulted corridor that leads to the entrance of the Lusignan castle. A passage to the left of the corridor gives entry to the cruciform Church of St. George. The dome of this church rests on marble columns with Corinthian capitals that were salvaged from an older building elsewhere and placed here.
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Kevin MacLeod adlı sanatçıya ait Easy Jam, Creative Commons Atıf 4.0 kapsamında lisanslanmıştır. httpscreativecommons.orglicensesby4.0
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Sanatçı httpincompetech.com
Çok keyifliydi izlemesi daha fazla böyle içerik görmek isterim 👏
Hiç görmediğim yerler gerçekten canlı görmek isterdim ve huzur veriyor resmen
Gidemediğimiz yerleri bizlere getirmeye devam ediyorsunuz. Girme kalesini de gezmiş oldum sizinle.
Kibris gercetken güzel bir yer görmediğim yerleri sizin sayenizde gördüm
İlk defa duydum ismini böyle güzel bir kalenin olması harika sayeniz de bizler de gezip görmüş gibi oluyoruz 👏🏻
İzlemesi çok güzel gerçekten mükemmel yerleri bizlere gösterdiğiniz için teşekkürler kolay gelsin emeğinize sağlık
Her herzamanki gibi masallahiniz var gercekten
Çok merak edipte gidemediğim bir yerdi. Sayenizde iyice tanıdım
Oooo süper yerler videolarınızın her biri çok anlamlı geziler keşke buralarda olabilsem çok şanslısınız
Ne kadar güzel olmuş bende gezmiş teşekkür ederim hocam emeğine sağlık
Çok güzel bir gezinti olmuş
Çok etkileyici güzel yerler
Kıbrıs i hiç görmedim ama hayran kaldım şuan ❤
Çok güzel yerler bir gün gitmek isterim
Çok güzel yerler ya. Keşke ben de gezebilsem
Gerçekten çok güzel bir yermiş gidip görmek lazım
Nasip olur mu be Kıbrıs'a gitmek var bir hayalimiz ✨
sayeniz de oraları da gördüm
Ben Kıbrısı ayrı bir severim çünkü babamdan çok dinlenmişligim var
Kibrissa gitmek istiyorum aama tam emin degilim nasil gidilir nasil gidecegim bilmiyorum yardımcı olurmusunuz
hocam gıttıgınız yer ucretlı mı acaba bılgı verır mısnız