War Museum Gallipoli, Gallipoli Peninsula, Çanakkale Province, Turkey, Europe
The War Museum Gallipoli in Turkey will be remembered forever, the heroic story and to convey the Gallipoli spirit to the new generations and this was our President's visit has been designed to contribute to the development of the soul was opened to service our visitors on June 7, 2012. Our quality center carrying a first in Turkey; advanced simulation techniques and eleven different animation rooms are displayed in three dimensions. In three separate rooms, important sections of Çanakkale Wars with moving platforms are told to our guests with a 63 minute display. There are also seven separate loudspeakers (English, German, French, Russian, Japanese, Italian and Arabic) for foreign travel. 8.600 square meters indoor use area, our exhibition hall consists of two cattles exhibiting materials and dioramas used in the Gallipoli Wars, a library of artifacts related to the Gallipoli Wars, masjids designed to serve both male and female autobus, gift section It is located. The conference hall, which is composed of 142 people capacity and two floors, serves to our guests with technical equipment that will enable the display of conferences and thematic films related to the Gallipoli Wars. Ministry of Culture and Tourism The Gallipoli Historical Area Presidency in the Gallipoli Wars is far more than a museum with all its means. Because at Çanakkale DestanıTenim Merkezi; thanks to the innovations brought by the technology, many ambitions, ambition, ideals are knotted politically, which is the brightest page of the Turkish Nation's history full of innumerable victories, glory and honor; in military obsession, in the world history of human history, in which the human power, the majesty, the beliefs, the beliefs, the beliefs of the enemy, against the enemy against the enemy, collided shoulder to shoulder with the hearts of the enemy, we are witnessing a little bit of the lives of our Mehmetçiklerimizin who fought at the cost of their lives to join the day and defend their country. The mine ship that changed the course of the war from its current position in the Ottoman Empire was taken from Nusret to the bombing of our wounded places where the wounded Mehmetçiklerimizin was treated from the 215-pound bullet, which was impossible to be removed, with the help of Niğdeli Ali, you will be in every moment of your life and your heart will be in your mouth, while your tears will pass through our center.
Best Attractions and Places to See in Canakkale, Turkey
Canakkale Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Canakkale. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Canakkale for You. Discover Canakkale as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Canakkale.
This Video has covered Best Attractions and Things to do in Canakkale.
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List of Best Things to do in Canakkale, Turkey
Canakkale Sehitleri Aniti
Athena Temple
Canakkale Naval Museum
Behramkale
Canakkale Truva Heykeli
Kilitbahir Castle
Zeus AltarI
Troy (Truva)
Adatepe Olive Oil Museum
Conk Bayiri Mehmetcik Park Aniti Kemalyeri Yaziti
Çanakkale Deniz Müzesi Naval Museum Gezimiz....
» Çanakkale Deniz Müzesi, Çanakkale savaşın 67. yıl dönümünde yani 1982 yıllında ziyaretçilerine açılmıştır. ... » Burada Çanakkale savaşında kullanılan silah, top, gemi ve birçok askeri obje sergilenmektedir. 2003 yıllında çıkarılan bir kanunla bu müze Anıtkabir Müzesi gibi 1. sınıf Askeri Müze statüsüne alınmıştır.
Turkey - Canakkale - Travel Video
Canakkale is a great place to stay on your way to Troy or the Gallipoli battlefields.It is on the route of the Dardanelles car ferries. Sights to see are Cimenlik Fortress, Naval museum, Military museum and the Archeological Museum.
Music by Kevin Macleod
Barco projection for award-winning interactive museum Çanakkale Center in Turkey
- The Çanakkale Legend Demonstration Center in Turkey is unique in the country in that it uses simulation and 3D technology to offer its visitors an interactive experience. With Barco's F32 projectors, which ensure the best possible image quality and brightness, the center can perfectly animate the history of Turkey, leaving a great impression on the minds of visitors. The Çanakkale project received the InAVation Visitor Attraction Award at ISE 2014.
ÇANAKKALE Turkey - walk, walking tour / walk-through (Kordon - Troy Horse - Marina) [4K UHD HDR]
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This walking tour / walk-throughof of Çanakkale (Dardanelles) seaside / bankside (Kordon) takes you through Golf tea gardens, cafes , pubs, restaurants, Atatürk statues, Piri Reis map, aquatic water show, 18 Mart 1915 memorial, attractions for kid sand families, state gallery of fine arts (Madame Hettie house), people feeding seaguls with simit, Piri Reis bust, Piri Reis museum, Troyan / Troian / Trojan Horse (from the Troy move of Warner Bros), and finally fisher boats marina, etc. On the far shore, you see Eceabat, Kilitbahir, Dur Yolcu memorial and historic battlefields of Gallipoli Campaign.
Timeline for this walking tour:
00:00:00 Gallipoli peninsula, Eceabat and Kilitbahir, small fisher boats by the Dardanelles sea
00:00:05 Fisherman by the seaside
00:00:15 Golf tea garden, Necip Pasa Cami - in the background
00:01:20 Fisherman statue
00:01:40 Pigeons feeding and flying by
00:03:05 Giant compass (on the pavement floor)
00:03:20 360 degree panoramic view from the wooden decked terasse,
00:06:30 View towards Çanakkale Marina and seaguls on the water
00:06:35 Piri Reis Bust & Ship (on the left)
00:06:55 Gallery of Fine Arts (Madame Hettie House / Necip Pasha Mansion)
00:07:00 People feeding saeguls from the shore by hand
00:08:50 Piri Reis Museum & Piri Reis Statue
00:09:10 Çanakkale Marina and traditional Aegean fisher boats
00:09:40 Trojan / Troyan Horse of the Troy movie (seen from far)
00:09:45 Çanakkale Marina and traditional Aegean fisher boats
00:10:00 View over Çanakkale Kordon (Seaside / Bankside)
Çanakkale is a travel essential to see and visit, with its rich cultural heritage and historic sites.
2018 was the year of Troy / Troya / Troia. Troy is world’s second-most known heritage site. The archaeological site of Troy was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1998. Troy made famous thanks to Illiad by Homeros, which tells about Trojan War. Though, the antique city of Troy dates back to 3000 BC.
Çanakkale (Dardanelles) is the home of peace and freedom. The city is named after its fortress and ceramics. Çanakkale is also home to world famous local and heritage ceramics.
Çanakkale (Dardanelles) is the batleground of Gallipoli Campaign, also known as the Dardanelles Campaign, the Battle of Gallipoli, or the Battle of Çanakkale (Çanakkale Savaşı). Wikipedia says that: The Allied powers Britain and France, sought to greatly weaken the Ottoman Empire by capturing control of the straits that provided a supply route to their ally Russia. The invaders launched a naval attack followed by an amphibious landing on the peninsula. They hoped to capture the Ottoman capital of Constantinople.[12] The naval attack was repelled and after eight months' fighting, with many casualties on both sides, the land campaign was abandoned and the invasion force was withdrawn. It was a costly and humiliating defeat for the Allies and for the sponsors, especially Winston Churchill.
Piri Reis, was an Ottoman admiral, navigator, geographer and cartographer. He was born in Gelibolu, Çanakkale. He is primarily known today for his maps and charts collected in his Kitab-ı Bahriye (Book of Navigation), a book that contains detailed information on navigation, as well as very accurate charts (for their time) describing the important ports and cities of the Mediterranean Sea. He gained fame as a cartographer when a small part of his first world map (prepared in 1513) was discovered in 1929 at the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul. His world map is the oldest known Turkish atlas showing the New World, and one of the oldest maps of America still in existence anywhere.
Enjoy the video in 4K UHD in HDR. HDR enables further dynamic range and thus further details in high dynamic range and high contrast situations. It's advised to watch on compatible 4K TVs and 4K displays of Sony, Panasonic, LG, etc.
Walked on 23/12/2018 and shot with Huawei Mate 20 Pro. It might be a good reference for ectreme low light, whether you are considering Huawei Mate 20 Pro vs Huawei Mate 30 Pro, or perhaps vs iPhone 11 Pro.
© Can Burak Bizer . All rights reserved. Please, contact for licensing enquiries.
Australia donates Gallipoli artifacts to Çanakkale
Australia has presented three artifacts from the 1915 Battle of Gallipoli to a Turkish military museum as a “gesture of friendship.”
The Australian War Memorial donated a unit banner, a folding periscope and a hand grenade to the Çanakkale Naval Museum in northwestern Turkey.
Addressing a ceremony at the museum, Australian Governor-General Peter Cosgrove said the handing over of the artifacts was “an appropriately significant gesture of the friendship and goodwill we share and a sign of the importance of the 100th anniversary of the campaign to our two countries.”
Cosgrove thanked the Turkish Navy and the Çanakkale Naval Museum for being consistent and supportive partners of Australia. “The Çanakkale Naval Museum, like the Australian War Memorial, plays an important part in preserving the military history of the nation and ensuring that future generations are informed and educated about the sacrifices of those before them,” he said.
About the three artifacts, Cosgrove said, “The standard of the 2nd Division Train Australian Army Service Corps AIF shows the battle honors of Egypt, Gallipoli, France and Belgium.”
He added the periscope, which was used by Lieutenant Colonel J.C. Robertson, who was possibly one of the first men ashore on Gallipoli, was a rare example of a folding periscope used to observe the battlefield from a trench.
Cosgrove also said that the hand grenade used by the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps forces was commonly referred to as a “cricket ball.”
“[The name] perhaps helps explain why a number of them were able, on occasion, to successfully catch the grenades and return them before they exploded,” he said. “I am very pleased to be returning this one to its original owners in a much more peaceful manner and in much happier circumstances,” he added.
Cosgrove and an accompanying delegation also visited the museum after the ceremony
Çanakkale Savaşı - own composition
The Allied landing and subsequent campaign on the peninsula during World War I is usually known in Britain as the Dardanelles Campaign and in Turkey as the Battle of Çanakkale. In Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Newfoundland, the term Gallipoli alone is used to describe the 8 month campaign.
In early 1915 Russia was fighting a multi front war against Germany, Austria/Hungary, and Turkey. While it had a sizable army it struggled to deliver sufficient supplies to the troops. The landings at Gallipoli were an Allied attempt to clear a supply path through the Dardanelles to Russia. This would also assist them by putting pressure on Turkey by threatening Constantinople (now Istanbul). On April 25, 1915, after failed attempts to force a passage through the Dardanelles by naval forces alone, a force of British Empire and French troops landed at multiple places along the peninsula. The battles over the next 8 months saw high casualties on both sides due to the exposed terrain, weather and closeness of the front lines. The invasion forces were successfully blocked by the Turkish troops and the subsequent Allied withdrawal meant the Russians would not be receiving supplies through the Dardanelles.
The battle is often referred to for its successful stealthy evacuation which was completed with minimal casualties. The ANZAC forces completed evacuations by December 19, 1915 and the remaining British elements by January 9, 1916.
Overall, there were around 140,000 Allied casualties and 250,000 Turkish casualties. This campaign has become a founding myth for both Australia and New Zealand, and Anzac Day is still commemorated as a holiday in both countries. In fact, it is one of those rare battles that both sides seem to remember proudly. The Turks consider it a great turning point for their (future) nation and Australians and New Zealanders see it as the beginnings of the ANZAC spirit.
Many mementos of the Gallipoli campaign can be seen in the museum at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, Australia, and at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in Auckland, New Zealand. This campaign also put a dent in the armour of Winston Churchill, then the First Lord of the Admiralty, who had commissioned the plans to invade the Dardanelles. He talks about this campaign vividly in his memoirs.
The Gallipoli campaign gave an important boost to the career of Mustafa Kemal, who was at that time a little-known army commander, but was later promoted to Pasha. Kemal halted and eventually repelled the Allied advance, exceeding his authority and contravening orders to do so. His famous speech I do not command you to fight, I command you to die. In the time it will take us to die we can be replenished by new forces shows his courageous and determined personality. He went on to found the modern Turkish state after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
The Sinking of Nusrat and First Dive (Underwater History Museum in Turkey)
A replica of Nusrat, that served as a minelayer to the Ottoman Navy during the Gallipoli Campaign, was sunk for the first underwater history museum project in the world. The replica was brought to the Gulf of Saros from Samsun, Turkey.
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Nusrat'ın batırılması ve ilk dalış...
Dünyanın ilk su altı tarih müzesi özelliği taşıyan projenin bu etabında, Samsun’dan İbrice Limanı’na getirilen ve Nusrat Mayın Gemisi’ne benzetilen eski Sahil Güvenlik gemisi, Saros Körfezi’nde İbrice Limanı açıklarında 1 Eylül '14 tarhinde planlandığı gibi batırıldı.
Gelin hep beraber geminin batırılma anını ve batığa yapılan ilk dalışı beraber izleyelim.
DENİZ MÜZESİ ÇANAKKALE
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Çanakkaleyi gezmek 1 Deniz Müzesi :Denizin huzur verdiği Çanakkalede bir değişiklik yapıp Deniz Müzesini gezdik deniz sesini duyabildiğiniz bu videoda daha önce Çanakkaleye gidemeyen yada Çanakkaleyi özleyen izleyicilerimizi mutlu etmeyi amaçladık.
Video bizim tarafımızdan biraz amotörce çekilde umarım beğenirsiniz.
Videolarımızı beğeniyorsanız like atmayı kanalımıza abone olmayı unutmayın.İyi seyirler.
Australia donates Gallipoli artifacts to Turkish museum
Australia presented three artifacts from the 1915 Battle of Gallipoli to a Turkish military museum on Friday as a “gesture of friendship”.
The Australian War Memorial donated a unit banner, a folding periscope and a hand grenade to the Canakkale Navy Museum in northwestern Turkey.
Addressing a ceremony at the museum, Australian Governor-General Peter Cosgrove said that the handing over of the artifacts was “an appropriately significant gesture of the friendship and goodwill we share and a sign of the importance of the 100th anniversary of the campaign to our two countries”.
Cosgrove thanked the Turkish Navy and Canakkale Navy Museum for being consistent and supportive partners of Australia. “The Canakkale Naval Museum, like the Australian War Memorial, plays an important part in preserving the military history of the nation and ensuring that future generations are informed and educated about the sacrifices of those before them,” he said.
He added that the periscope, which was used by Lieutenant Colonel JC Robertson, who was possibly one of the first men ashore on Gallipoli, was a rare example of a folding periscope used to observe the battlefield from a trench.
Cosgrove also said that the hand grenade used by the Anzac (the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps’) forces was commonly referred to as a “cricket ball”.
“[It] perhaps helps explain why a number of them were able, on occasion, to successfully catch the grenades and return them before they exploded,” he said.
“I am very pleased to be returning this one to its original owners in a much more peaceful manner and in much happier circumstances,” he added.
Cosgrove and an accompanying delegation also visited the museum after the ceremony.
More than 43,000 Australians and New Zealanders had applied to attend this April’s main annual commemorations but just 10,000 places were available.
My visit to V beach, Gallipoli
Yesterday I took a trip to the Gallipoli beach where my grandfather landed 101 years ago, in one of the most futile missions of WW1.
I had little appetite to cycle, but it turned out to be a beautiful ride. From Kilitbayir the road curves around bays of blue-green sea, then turns inland through a landscape of olive and pine trees and scrubby, herby ground cover. I enjoyed the absence of 5 or 6 kg of luggage and felt that tremendous tailwind at my back.
I stopped at Namazgah, where a small museum has been established in a castle / artillery battery. Looking across the narrow straits of the Dardanelles between here and Çanakkale, you appreciate the importance of control of this passage into the Black Sea and with it access to Russia, Ukraine and the middle east. The allies intended to inflict decisive damage on Turkish defences with a naval attack in March 1915, but the mission was the worst-kept secret, the Turks were prepared with artillery and mines, and allied ships suffered heavy losses. The museum gave a flavour of the 'rightness’ of Ottoman control of this waterway, which had historically been seized by Greek, Persian and Macedonian invaders, and so nearly lost to Russia in the Crimean war.
Continuing on to Seddülbahir I reached the area of V beach, where my grandfather and namesake Robert Jordan was disgorged on April 25th 1915, from a converted, armoured coal barge, the River Clyde, along with around 1000 troops of Munster, Dublin and Hampshire regiments. In that hail of bullets some 600 were immediately killed. Bob Jordan somehow survived, we know not how.
There was a big restoration project going on at V Beach with No entry, no photos signs. I thought it was going to be a futile visit, but I made a fuss, showed my photo of Grandpa Jordan to the man on the gate (who spoke no English) and told him I had cycled from England to see this. He shrugged and said no way but I just hung around and he phoned a few people and eventually an archeologist, Matt, who spoke some English came out and said he would take me around due to my special situation. Matt was quite interested in my story, and showed me some finds and photos.
As it turned out, the area under restoration was the Turkish fort overlooking the landing beach. The beach itself is free to access. But still I'm glad a made a fuss because it was very interesting to see the beach from the perspective of the Turkish defenders, as well as the landing invaders. There is a couple of years work to complete this restoration, it will be a fascinating visit when finished.
Moving on to the beach itself, I saw the small spit of rocks at the end of which the River Clyde beached, leaving the troops 20 or 30 metres of water to wade or swim across, fully laden with packs and under fire. Those who made it to the shore had the benefit of a small sandbank, no more than 1 metre high, for cover. There they waited for darkness and regrouped for further advance.
There were advances and small gains over the next few months, but no breakthrough, and ultimately the Allies evacuated (ironically the evacuation was considered a masterpiece of military planning and execution, unlike the invasion).
I was lucky to grow up with three living grandparents; Bob Jordan was the one I never knew, as he died in his fifties shortly after the end of WW2. Sitting on that beach in the Turkish sun, I felt some kind of connection to that young man, sent fearful into a foreign land by reckless politicians and generals.
Çanakkale Tır Müzesi Fındıklı'da
Turkish Travels - Troy & Museum ( Truva ) 2019 [ English Version ]
Troy was a city in the far northwest of the region known in late Classical antiquity as Asia Minor. Troy was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1998. English Version 2019 Tourist Information. Tanıtma Filmi, Çanakkale, Turkey.
Turkey - Istanbul / Canakkale / Pamukkale / Capoddochia / Ankara Part 2
in the part two of my journey as we continue to the ancient city of troy to acropolis as well as the house of mary and also finally ending up with some turkish delights.
Çanakkale Savaşı - 1915
HEROES OF GALLIPOLI - Imperial War Museums
British and Australian forces at Anzac, Cape Helles, and Suvla, Gallipoli, July-September 1915.
Anzac Beach in July 1915 (not May, a month after the landing. See Notes - Summary). Men of the ANZAC Corps help build Watson's Pier. Further up the beach, caves and shelters have been dug into the hillside. Bridges' Road leads up to MacLaurin's Hill, and men bring supplies up it. A runner hands in a message at a headquarters tent. While one man watches with a trench periscope another uses a periscope rifle or sniper's rifle. June at V Beach, Cape Helles. The camera is on the beached SS River Clyde, still used as a headquarters. The fortress of Sedd-el-Bahr is visible in the distance, and a tented camp, probably of 29th Division, in the foreground. On high ground horses graze from shelter with men looking after them. British troops, again probably 29th Division, march up to the front. A Rolls-Royce armoured car of the Royal Naval Division stands hidden in a shelter trench, with its machine guns removed. It emerges from the trench past an RNAS lorry, and is checked over by men of the division. The Suvla operation in August starts with a view of a British bombardment falling on the Suvla positions. The harbour at Imbros island is full of old wrecks and men swimming. Troops of IX Corps and horses wait on the quay for the boats to take them over for the landing. Men of the Egyptian Labour Corps, and Turkish prisoners of war used for labour, walk around the quay. Among the wrecks in the harbour is the unidentifiable wreck of a seaplane. The men continue to wait. At Anzac the heights leading up to Plugge's Plateau are shown. Signallers lay lines along the tracks. Back at Imbros the British board their transports and lighters, which approach Suvla Bay. The Australian Naval Bridging Train is shown on 7th August on the beach helping the second line transport to land. The wounded are taken on stretchers back to the ships. Cranes and ropes are used to move stores and mules from the ships to the lighters. British officers sit in an open-air mess talking and eating. Back at Anzac, Australians patrol the trenches on Walker's Ridge. Shellfire, filmed from the beach, falls on the Turkish position of The Chessboard. During the attack on Sari Bair Australian troops fire out from their newly-held trenches; Ashmead-Bartlett, at the far end of the trench, rushes back to the camera as the fire starts. The view from the beach of Turkish shells falling on the 1st Australian Division position at Lone Pine.
Çanakkale, Visit By African Students In Kocaeli (Çanakkale, Afrikalı Öğrenciler Gezisi)
African Student in Kocaeli went on a one day trip to Çanakkale to visit sites of great value to Turkish history. The millitary bases, hospitals and war veterans resting places.
Çanakkale is a city in northwestern Turkey in the Marmara region, on the Dardanelles Strait. It’s a gateway to the Gallipoli WWI battlefields, north of the narrow strait. On the grounds of the 15th-century Çimenlik Castle, Çanakkale Naval Museum Command contains historical artillery. The archaeological site at Troy, including an ancient theater, is southwest of the city.
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Deniz Müzesi - Turkish Naval Museum [Mersin]
Deniz Müzesi - Naval Museum [Mersin]
TRT'de bile yok bu kadar detay gençler;)
tabi çok büyük bir müze olmamasına rağmen, hızlı hızlı geçerek bazı bölümleri atlamama rağmen on dakikadan uzun bir video oldu.
Özellikle son kısımda görebileceğiniz bölüm olan, Ertuğrul Fırkateyni ile ilgili bölüm son derece etkileyici bir bölüm.
Mersin'e yolunuz düşerse mutlaka gezmenizi ve hatta en az 2 saat ayırarak, detaylı biçimde gezmenizi öneririm. Çocuklarımıza da bu tür zenginliklerimizi gösterip öğretelim, hem bilgilensinler hem de heveslenip denizci olmak isteyebilirler belki. =))
Müzeye yetişkin giriş ücreti 2018 itibari ile 8.5 lira ama 65 yaş üstüne, çocuklara, öğrencilere ücretsiz.
Ayrıca gemicilik ve gemi adamı olmak isteyen arkadaşlar için özel olarak bir vlog planlıyorum, piyasadaki çok sayıda dolandırıcıya karşı eski bir denizci olarak kendi tecrübelerimi paylaşacağım.
İlgilenenler abone olup takipte kalabilirler.
1000 Aboneyi geçince vlog ve kendime ait çalışmaları da ekleyeceğim, şimdilik test yayınındayız, bu tür deneysel çekimler, ürün incelemesi, kaza bela, spor vb. videoları ekliyorum.
Fakat yine de yabancı diller veya gemicilik ya da havacılık ile ilgili merak ettiğiniz konular varsa sorabilirsiniz, biliyorsam elimden geldiğince yardımcı olmaya çalışırım.
Bir sonraki videoda görüşmek üzere.
The Gallipoli Campaign
See the accompanying free teacher resource:
From March 1915 to January 1916 the Gallipoli peninsula on the Turkish coast captured the world’s attention as soldiers from dozens of countries fought to control it. For Britain and France it would represent a military disaster. Australia and New Zealand would find a new sense of identity on this battlefield, whilst Turkey remembers this battle as a fight for it’s very independence.
IWM learning resource for schools –
Turkey: Celebrations mark 100 years since Gallipoli campaign victory
Turkey marked the 100-year-anniversary of the Gallipoli Campaign in Canakkale Wednesday, when British-French naval forces attempting to capture Istanbul were repelled by the Ottoman army, forcing the Allies to stage a land campaign that Ottoman forces would defeat in a months-long battle.
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