Travel Guide
Turkey proudly sits astride
two continents: a position that has given rise to a culture that reflects both
East and
West. It is a country where European aspirations sit comfortably alongside Asian traditions and the volatile atmosphere of the
Middle East morphs seamlessly into the relaxed outlook of the Mediterranean world.
Turks have only lived here since medieval times when they arrived as land-hungry nomads from Central Asia. Before that it was
Byzantine territory and Istanbul - then Constantinople - was the political centre of a vast Christian empire.
Romans,
Persians,
Lycians and
Phrygians were former occupants of the same territory, and earlier still,
Hittite tribes had built an Anatolian empire before collapsing around the time of the Trojan Wars.
Such a rich history has left an indelible mark and
Turkey abounds with
historic sites and
archaeological wonders set in a varied and beautiful landscape. The
Mediterranean coastline is punctuated with well-preserved
Greco-Roman cities such as Pergamom and Ephesus, while the austere and rugged
Anatolian plateau has cave churches hidden away in the improbable
fairytale landscape of Cappadocia.
Istanbul, still very much the pulse of the nation, has even more to offer, with Roman aqueducts, Byzantine churches and Ottoman mosques and palaces.
With history at every turn, it is tempting to portray
Turkey as a quaint, time-locked country that adheres to tradition but this is far from the truth. The modern republic's first leader,
Kemal Atatürk, saw to it that
Turkey was reinvented as a modern secular state following the demise of the
Ottoman Empire. What you see today, thanks to Atatürk's comprehensive modernisation, is a healthy combination of ancient tradition and contemporary outlook. This outlook sees little contradiction in having
modern European ways tempered by
Islam and time-honoured traditions of hospitality.