Sinop Archeology and Ethnography Museum in Turkey
Sinop Hakkında Bilgiler ve Gezilecek Yerler
Karadeniz’in güzel ve görmeye değer şehirlerinden bir olan Sinop nasıl bir yerdir. Bir gün yolunuz Sinop’a düşerse nereleri gezebilirsiniz. Sinop’un doğal ve tarihi güzellikleri. Sinop’un müzeleri. Hepsi hakkında geniş bilgi edinebileceğiniz bir videodur.
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Disco Ultralounge - Kevin MacLeod
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The 49th Street Galleria - Chris Zabriskie
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Meditation Impromptu 02 - Kevin MacLeod
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Bu videolar ilginizi çekebilir:
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Sinop Penitentiary Project for Sinopale First Sinop Biennial, Sinop, Turkey 2006, Nobuho Nagasawa
Located in an old penitentiary built originally as the city's fortress in B.C 2000 adjacent to the Black Sea, and used as a shipyard during the Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk, and Ottoman periods, the installation took place in 6 spaces of the historic Sinop penitentiary during
the first Sinop Biennial which commissioned artists to select sites and work in response to the social history and context of the city.
Bird Calling (Room with feathers)
This installation took place in the children’s section of the Sinop Penitentiary. The installation consisted of light, shadows, and the sounds of birdsongs. A few hundred blue feathers hung from the ceiling and were lit by spotlights, projecting shadows of the feathers on the stonewall. As viewers walked between the hanging feathers, the shadows cast by their own bodies overlapped the feathers that moved in the air. The only light that came into the harsh stone room was through the punched holes of a rusted steel plate that covered the three windows. Songs of the local Turkish birds enveloped the space, evoking the desire to be free from confinement.
Crossing Point (Room with a quill)
An old table found in the penitentiary was placed in the center of a dark room. Salt from the Black Sea covered the surface of the table. A large feather hung from the ceiling like a quill. The movement of the people wandering through the room caused the feather to move slowly across the salt, erasing the names of the prisoners written on the salt, while the low murmur of the local Turkish birds filled the room.
Balancing Act (A scale by the staircase)
As visitors exited the room to ascend the staircase, they noticed an old scale hung from the ceiling. One plate contained a small mound of salt from the Black Sea, and the other contained figs, which were picked from a tree located on the prison grounds. The fig is one of the oldest fruits (more than 11,000 years old), and has been regarded as sacred by many cultures. The ancient Hebrews looked upon the fig tree as a symbol of peace and plenty. Buddha attained his Awakening under the fig tree. Mohammed’s followers called it the Tree of Heaven. The many seeds in the fig are supposed to signify unity and the universality of true understanding, knowledge and faith. Salt symbolizes life (as in the expression “salt of the earth”), as well as sorrow and pain. The fig and the salt are weighed against one another, as they are juxtaposed on the scale.
Birdhouse (Hallway & Large room with speaker cabinets)
Upon ascending the staircase and passing through the hallway, the bird songs emerged again from the far end of the large rooms. The woofers and tweeters were removed from the speaker cabinets, leaving them to look like birdhouses. Eight speaker cabinets were installed in the hallway, leading visitors to two of the largest rooms in the children’s prison. Tarpaper covered all the windows of one room, which made this space pitch dark, and the other was left with windows open which allowed the people to overlook the outer wall of the prison to the Black Sea beyond. A total of seven empty speaker cabinets were installed in the large room, filling the bright space with the sound of the bird songs. Birds cannot enter, nor can the children escape the room.
Out of the Blue (Room with a birdcage and a ladder)
From the bright hallway, viewers entered the darkened room on the second floor of the children's prison, and noticed a tall ladder positioned against the wall. The windows of this large room were covered with tarpaper. An old birdcage hung from the ceiling, containing a silhouette of a bird in flight, cut out of a Mylar sheet. The movement of people walking inside the pitch-dark room swayed the birdcage in very slow motion. A cobalt blue LED was installed inside the birdcage, which was programmed to pulse slowly, resembling a human heartbeat. A slight movement of the cage made a silhouette of a bird to appear and disappear as a large shadow on the concrete wall as the light emitted a dark blue color. Furthermore, the light pulsation made a small birdcage cast a large shadow, filling the wall and the ceiling with a shadow of a birdcage, creating a haunting image of confinement, while the sounds of local Turkish birds filled the space.
Counting with the Moon (Medical Room)
In the waiting room of the medical facility of the prison, an image of the artist’s hands holding a moon was printed on vinyl and hung in front of the window, casting the shadow of the window’s bars from behind, similar to a large light box. Opposite the image was a TV monitor, representing an image of a moon held between the artist’s lips. The moon rotated twenty-eight times in a loop, suggesting the phases of the moon. Since the Islamic calendar is based on the lunar calendar, this piece is about time and the endless counting prisoners must endure as they wait in the prison, especially in a medical facility, where this piece is installed.
KANİŞ KARUMU
KARUM OF KANESH
Belgesel/ Documentary - YÖNETMEN Ali CANLAR
Dünyanın İlk Ticaret Merkezi Olan Kayseri Yakınlarındaki Kültepe Höyüğünün Ve Kaniş Kentinin Tarihi
Piece Of Jesus Cross found in Turkey, archaeologists say
After digging for four years, a group of Turkish archaeologists believe they have found a piece of the cross of Jesus Christ, an artifact that could become an instant icon of Christianity..
While excavating the ancient Balatlar Church, a seventh-century building in Sinop, Turkey, on the shores of the Black Sea, they uncovered a stone chest that contained objects that may be directly.
Piece of Jesus Cross Found in Turkey SINOP Turkey Video Archaeologist at Balatlar Church Professor Gülgün Köroğlu August 2013 God Jesus Gift of Visions Joel 2 28 Faith in God It.
Sinop gezisi
Türkiye'nin en mutlu insanlarının yaşadığı Sinop gezi videosundan merhabalar. Uzunca zamandır planladığımız Sinop gezisi ile karşınızdayız.
İki gün için epey yoğun bir program olsa da, ünlü filozof Diyojen'in doğduğu topraklar olan Sinop bugüne kadar gördüğüm en güzel şehirlerimizden bir tanesi.
Peki iki günde Sinop'ta nereleri gezdik, neler yaptık❓
Sinop şehrini ve şehir içerisindeki Arkeoloji Müzesini, Alaattin Camii'ni, Balatlar Kilisesini gezdik, orada Sabahattin Ali'nin yattığı Sinop cezaevine geçtik. Diyojen heykelini görüp Anadolu'nun en kuzey ucu olan İnceburun'a geçtik. Ertesi gün Erfelek'de bulunan Tatlıca şelalelerine uğrayıp oradan sakin şehir ünvanı almış Gerze'ye geçtik. Ve en son Hamsilos koyunda bol bol fotoğraf ve video çekip gezimizi sonlandırdık.
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SELÇUKLU'DA ŞEHİRLERİMİZ HANGİ UNVANLARA SAHİPTİ? ANKARA, SAMSUN, KONYA, KAYSERİ, MALATYA
Bu anlatımımızda Türkiye Selçuklu Devleti şehirlerinin bir unvanla, bir lakapla anılmasının adet olduğundan, bu şehirler ve unvanların neler olduğundan, hangi şehirlerin Selçuklu sınırlarında yer aldığından, Anadolu Selçuklu Devleti'nin komşularından bahsediyoruz. Ahlat, Aksaray, Amasya, Ankara, Antalya, Bayburt, Denizli, Erzincan, Kayseri, Konya, Malatya, Niğde, Samsun, Sinop, Sivas, Tokat.
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Sinop, Turkey | Wikipedia audio article
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Sinop, Turkey
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The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Sinop (Greek: Σινώπη, translit. Sinṓpē, historically known as Sinope ) is a city with a population of 36,734 on the isthmus of İnce Burun (İnceburun, Cape Ince), near Cape Sinope (Sinop Burnu, Boztepe Cape, Boztepe Burnu) which is situated on the most northern edge of the Turkish side of the Black Sea coast, in the ancient region of Paphlagonia, in modern-day northern Turkey. The city serves as the capital of Sinop Province.
Archeology Museum in Mersin Turkey (Arkeoloji Müzesi)
The museum is located near the coast in south of the Muğdat mosque in the Yenişehir district.
The Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age artifacts are exhibited at the end of the Neolithic House. In addition, the interactive phases of Amphora storage vessels, which are extensively found in the antiquity of the olive oil in antiquity and in the antiquity as a large port and commercial city, were exhibited under the sea.
At the end of the lower floor exhibition hall, there is an ethnographic artifact and the works of the native nomadic culture of the myrtle and interactive images.
On the top floor of the iridescent history and BC. The artifacts of Yumuktepe mound dating to 7000 years, artifacts from the ancient city of Soli and works from Ayaş Elausse Sebaste excavations are on display.
In our museum building, 1435 pieces of archeological, ethnographic and coin are exhibited and our museum is exhibited in the exhibitions and warehouses.
muze.gov.tr
Piece Of Jesus' Cross Found In Balatlar Church In Turkey, Archaeologists Claim (3-8-2013)
While excavating the ancient Balatlar Church, a seventh-century building in Sinop, Turkey, on the shores of the Black Sea, they uncovered a stone chest that contained objects that may be directly connected with Jesus Christ. Excavation head Professor Gülgün Köroğlu definitively stated: 'We have found a holy thing in a chest. It is a piece of a cross, and we think it was [part of the cross on which Jesus was crucified]. This stone chest is very important to us. It has a history and is the most important artifact we have unearthed so far. The stone chest has been taken to a laboratory for further testing. However, the appearance of the chest suggests that it was a repository for the relics of a holy person, according to the team, who showed reporters at the site a stone with crosses carved into it.'
Many churches claim to possess relics of the so-called true cross, though the authenticity of the items is not fully accepted by scholars and scientists. Protestant theologian John Calvin noted that, if all the pieces that could be found were collected together, they would make a big ship-load, referring specifically to the cross. On the other hand, the 19th-century French archaeologist Charles Rohault de Fleury supposedly said that all of the catalogued relics would only make up less than a third of the mass of a roughly 12-foot-high cross. But what originally happened to Jesus' cross, and why has it turned up now? Legend says that Emperor Constantine's mother, Helena, found the cross in Jerusalem and distributed pieces of the wood to religious leaders in Jerusalem, Rome, and Constantinople.
Balatlar Church, built in 660, has proved an especially rich dig site, as Köroğlu mentioned that in addition to the stone chest, her team has found the ruins of an ancient Roman bath and more than 1,000 human skeletons since they started working in 2009.
Wintertime in eastern Turkey - Van
Wintertime in eastern Turkey - Van
Van is beautiful city with its lake like a sea, history like a legend and rare beauty.
Van City Guide
Taking place at the Eastern Anatolia Region, Van is bounded by Iran Country at east and by Van Lake at west. The city is a tourist place through its cultural and natural beauties, its transportation facilities and its four season climate conditions. The city is famous with its Van Cat.
Tourist Attractions
With a history tracing back to 5000 B.C., Van was the capital of Urartu in the hisory. There has been a significant settlement area throughout the history as a consequence of rising on the historical Silk Road. In addition to its cultural and historical aspects, the scenic and natural beauties available in the city transform it into a natural heaven.
Archeological tourism is fairly developed at Van. A great deal of castles are available within the borders of the city. Van Castle at the centrum is one of the alluring ones left from Urartus. Cavustepe Castle at Çavuştepe is a glorious structure from 1960s. Agarti, Ayanis, Kef, Below and Above Zifistan, Hiset, Kalecik, Muradiye, Yoncatepe, Mukus Castles and more are existed in the city. You should experience these historical artifacts.
Tilkitepe, Karagunduz and Dilkaya Tumuluses are the main constructions from the historical heritage of the city. Karagunduz Mound at Karagunduz Village turns up as an island at the coast of Ercek Lake.
Van Museum, Kizlaragasi Cave, Altintepe, Menusa Water Carrier and Meher Kapi, Pagan Kaya Nisi and Anali Kiz Open-air Sanctuaries are just some of the other historical structures that you should not miss. Also, many historical churches, mosques, madrasahes, Turkish bathes and public houses are existed in the city. Ulu Mosque, Kayacelebi Mosque, Husrev Pasa Mosque, Horhor Mosque, Akdamar Church, Seven Church, Yanal Church, Husrev Pasha Madrasah, Hasan Bey Madrasah, Husrev Bey Madrasah, Van Cifte Hamam (Turkish Bath), Hosap Ickale Hamam and Hosap Bey Public House are just some examples. You will live the history itself when traveling these places.
The city is breemed over with innumerable rivers. lakes and streams. Van Lake giving its name to the city is the biggest lake in Turkey and the 5th biggest one in Europe. Bendihami Stream, Hosap Stream, Catak Stream, Karasu Stream, Memedik Sream, Ercek Lake, Akgol Lake, Sultan Lake, Kazli Lake and Muradiye Cascade are among the natural benefactions at Van.
Η αρχαία Έφεσος - Ancient Ephesus
Η αρχαία Έφεσος
Ancient Ephesus
Η αρχαία Έφεσος (ο σημερινός αρχαιολογικός χώρος) κατά την αρχαιότητα ήταν πολύ πλησίον της θάλασσας, λεγόμενη μάλιστα και θαλασσοθέα, πλην όμως οι συνεχείς προσχώσεις του ποταμού Καΰστρου ανάγκαζε τους κατοίκους κατά μακρά διαστήματα να μετακινούν τους οικισμούς του δυτικότερα. Παρά ταύτα η αρχαία πόλη οικοδομήθηκε στις χαμηλές πλαγιές των λόφων Κορησός και Πρίων οπού στη συνέχεια αυτών εκτεινόταν η εύφορη πεδιάδα της Εφέσου το λεγόμενο Εφέσιο πεδίο. Ο ναός της Εφεσίας Αρτέμιδος βρισκόταν ακριβώς στη πεδιάδα αυτή απέχοντας 1 μίλι (δέκα στάδια) από την πόλη. Η δε γονιμότητα της πεδιάδας της Εφέσου καθώς και η θέση της πόλης της Θαλασσοθέας σε κομβικό σημείο της φυσικής οδού επικοινωνίας της θάλασσας του Αιγαίου με την Μικρασιατική ενδοχώρα συνέβαλαν κατά μέγιστο λόγο στην ακμή της πόλης.
η Έφεσος φερόταν να κατοικήθηκε κατά τους προϊστορικούς (μυθικούς) χρόνους από τις Αμαζόνες που φέρονταν να κινήθηκαν από την περιοχή του Καυκάσου κάνοντας επιδρομές στη Μικρά Ασία καταλαμβάνοντας διάφορες περιοχές - πόλεις που πήραν το όνομα των ικανοτέρων εξ αυτών, οι οποίες και ήταν μεταξύ άλλων η Έφεσος, η Σμύρνη, η Κύμη, η Μύρινα και η Σινώπη.
Ο Στράβων, αναφέρει επιπρόσθετα επί των παραπάνω ότι σε μεταγενέστερους χρόνους οι πόλεις αυτές λάτρευαν τις επώνυμες αυτών ηρωίδες Αμαζόνες και έκοβαν ακόμα και νομίσματα με παραστάσεις Αμαζόνων. Οι Εφέσιοι συγκεκριμένα κατά τον 5ο αιώνα π.Χ. θέλοντας να τιμήσουν την επώνυμη Αμαζόνα Έφεσο προκήρυξαν διαγωνισμό μεταξύ των διασημότερων γλυπτών της εποχής τους για την κατασκευή αγάλματος προκειμένου να το τοποθετήσουν στο ναό της Εφεσίας Αρτέμιδος.
Ancient Ephesus
Ancient Ephesus (today's archaeological site) was very close to the sea in ancient times, also called thalassothea, but the continuous floods of the Kastro River forced the inhabitants to move their settlements further west. Nevertheless, the ancient city was built on the low slopes of the hills Korissos and Prion, which then extended the fertile plain of Ephesus to the so-called Ephesian field. The Temple of Ephesus Artemis was located exactly on this plain, 1 mile (ten steps) from the city. The fertility of the plain of Ephesus as well as the position of the city of Thalassothea at a focal point of the natural route of communication between the Aegean Sea and the Asia Minor hinterland contributed greatly to the city's prosperity.
Ephesus was allegedly inhabited during the prehistoric (mythical) times by the Amazons, who allegedly moved from the Caucasus to raids in Asia Minor, occupying various areas - cities that were named after the most prominent of them, including Ephesus, Smyrna, Kymi, Myrina and Sinope.
Strabo further states that in later times these cities worshiped these surnamed Amazons and even minted coins with Amazonian representations. The Ephesians in the 5th century BC in particular. wanting to honor the surname Amazon Ephesus, they announced a competition among the most famous sculptors of their time to make a statue to place it in the Temple of Ephesus Artemis.
Egypt's Atlantis Sunken Cities to go on show 1,000 years Waters of the Nile Delta
Egypt's Atlantis Sunken Cities to go on show 1,000 years Waters of the Nile Delta Lost artefacts from sunken cities dubbed the Atlantis of Egypt are to be together for the first time after laying submerged for more than thousand years.Enormous statues, golden jewellery and hieroglyphic tablets which were feared lost forever have been reclaimed from the sea, and are to be put on public display next year in a major exhibition by British Museum.The treasures belong Heracleion and Canopus,cities built on the shifting ground of the Nile delta, which are now buried beneath three metres of silt.Ancient texts record the existence of the settlements, which were the gateway to Egypt before lexandria rose to prominence. But the two trading hubs were literally lost to sands of time until a chance discovery in 1996.Divers the mouth the Nile unearthed the treasures,and have spent almost two decades since painstakingly dredging the treasures out the deep. The exhibition,called Sunken Cities:Egypt's Lost World,will run from May to November next year.It will combine items from the Museum's own archives with items on special loan from Egyptian authorities, who rarely let the artefacts leave their country.More than 300 items will be put on display. One of the most impressive is a 5.4m granite statue of Hapy,divine figure who represents Nile's flood.A 5.4m granite statue of Hapy,divine personifi cation of the Nile's flood. Officials at the museum said the exhibition will be especially rich in material from the Ptolemaic period, when Greek and Egyptian cultures intermingled.
Amazing,,,, The Lost City Found After 1200 Years
Amazing discovery of an Ancient Egyptian City Heracleion, who for centuries it was thought to be a legend, a city of extraordinary wealth mentioned by Herodotus, visited by Helen of Troy and Paris, but apparently buried under the sea. It is believed Heracleion served as the obligatory port of entry to Egypt for all ships coming from the Greek world.
The city, also called Thonis (by the Greeks), vanished from the earth about 1200 years ago, and is now found. The city is located within an overall research area of 11 by 15 kilometres in the western part of today’s Aboukir Bay, Egypt.
They found:
The remains of more than 64 ships buried in the thick clay and sand that covers the sea bed
– Gold coins and weights made from bronze and stone
– Giant 16-ft statues along with hundreds of smaller statues of minor gods
– Slabs of stone inscribed in both ancient Greek and ancient Egyptian
– Dozens of small limestone sarcophagi believed to have once contained mummified animals
– Over 700 ancient anchors for ships
Read more:
20110923 Türkiye, Teos Arkeoloji kazıları
We do the thirty minutes walk to Teos Archeologial Site from our Club Resort Atlantis near Sıǧacık, west of İzmir (Turkey).
Beautiful sights on the blue Aegean. Splendid houses on top of the hill looking out on the bay. A nice place to live here.
Half way at a restaurant we check directions with the lady who doesn't speak a west European language. But asking Bir kilometer? iki kilometer? she answers with a hesitating Bir kilometer and makes a cutting movement half over one of her fingers. So Teos will be half a kilometre from here.
Approaching the site enjoy the sight on the rough landscape with dramatically shaped olive trees. Teos appears to be at the beginning of a giant excavation of a forlorn Greek city. It will take decades to have all those ancient cities 'back'. Turkey has a great potential in this respect. What a treasure of findings and insight will it evoke! Which secrets are still waiting to be unveiled! So keep an eye on this part of the world for the coming years. And better: plan your holidays in this region and see how the search is developing.
We stroll between the debris of the Temple of Dionysus which seems to be an enormous puzzle to reconstruct. All parts are provided with a number. To my opinion every part should be scanned and digitally stored in 3D in order to fit the pieces together in a computer program before the actual reconstruction can take place. No matter that modern materials and techniques will be applied. The result will draw herds of archaeologists, students and tourists.
On our way back we stop by the quiet restaurant for an ice cream and sitting on the terrace we enjoy the sea sight with its passing boats.
See more on youtube.com/channel/UCpF7tiJa3SExPqbaOLFXVyw/videos?view=1&feature=guide
Video Almanac #10: Year 1994. Turkey. Istanbul. Movie # 10 a
Video Almanac #10: Year 1994. Turkey.30 years with the camera around the world. In the Movie #10 a you will be introduced, observation of the beautiful cities of Turkey: Continuation of Cappadocia National Park, which included Zelve and Greece Open Air Museums, also brilliance of the Green Mosque in Istanbul, accompany with Bella’s well done comments of the trip. Devoted to Bella Veksenfeld, my lovely wife
Epiphany celebrated in Istanbul
(6 Jan 2017)
The Greek Orthodox Christian community in Istanbul celebrated Epiphany on Friday with the traditional blessing ceremony.
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians, led the liturgy at the St. George Cathedral commemorating the baptism of Jesus Christ.
The liturgy was followed by the blessing of the waters ceremony on the shore of Istanbul's Golden Horn.
The Patriarch threw a blessed cross into the waters as the Orthodox faithful jumped into the sea in order to retrieve it.
All eight participants were presented with a chain and crucifix by Bartholomew.
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