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Derinkuyu underground city

Derinkuyu (Turkish pronunciation: [dɛrˈɪnkuju]) also known as Elengubu, Cappadocian Greek: Μαλακοπή Malakopi; Turkish: Derinkuyu Yeraltı Şehri) is an ancient multi-level underground city near the modern town of Derinkuyu in Nevşehir Province, Turkey, extending to a depth of approximately 85 metres (280 ft). It is large enough to have sheltered as many as 20,000 people together with their livestock and food stores. It is the largest excavated underground city in Turkey and is one of several underground complexes found throughout Cappadocia.

A passage in the underground city.

Features edit

The underground city at Derinkuyu could be closed from the inside with large rolling stone doors. Each floor could be closed off separately.[1]

 
The room with the barrel-vaulted ceiling, possibly a school

The city could accommodate up to 20,000 people and had amenities found in other underground complexes across Cappadocia,[2][3] such as wine and oil presses, stables, cellars, storage rooms, refectories, and chapels. Unique to the Derinkuyu complex and located on the second floor is a spacious room with a barrel-vaulted ceiling. It has been reported that this room was used as a religious school and the rooms to the left were studies.[4]

Starting between the third and fourth levels are a series of vertical staircases, which lead to a church on the lowest (fifth) level.[5]

 
A deep ventilation well in the city

The large 55-metre (180 ft) ventilation shaft appears to have been used as a well. The shaft provided water to both the villagers above and, if the outside world was not accessible, to those in hiding.[citation needed]

History edit

Caves might have been built initially in the soft volcanic rock of the Cappadocia region by the Phrygians in the 8th–7th centuries BCE.[6] When the Phrygian language died out in Roman times, replaced with the Greek language,[7] the inhabitants expanded their caverns to deep multiple-level structures adding the chapels and Greek inscriptions.[8][a]

The city at Derinkuyu was fully formed in the Byzantine era, when it was heavily used as protection from Arab Muslims during the Arab–Byzantine wars (780–1180 CE).[8][9][b] The city was connected with another underground city, Kaymakli, through 8–9 kilometers (about 5 miles) of tunnels.[10] Some artifacts discovered in these underground settlements belong to the Middle Byzantine Period, between the 5th and the 10th centuries.[citation needed]

These cities continued to be used by the Christian natives as protection from the Mongolian incursions of Timur in the 14th century.[11][c][12][d]

After the region fell to the Ottomans, the cities were used as refuges (Cappadocian Greek: καταφύγια) by the natives from the Turkish Muslim rulers.[12](p 16)[e]

As late as the 20th century, the local population, Cappadocian Greeks and Armenians, were still using the underground cities to escape periodic persecutions.[12] For example, Richard MacGillivray Dawkins, a Cambridge linguist who conducted research from 1909 to 1911 on the Cappadocian Greek-speaking natives in the area, recorded such an event as having occurred in 1909: "When the news came of the recent massacres at Adana, a great part of the population at Axo took refuge in these underground chambers, and for some nights did not venture to sleep above ground."[8][12]

In 1923, the Christian inhabitants of the region were expelled from Turkey and moved to Greece in the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, whereupon the tunnels were abandoned.[8][13][f][14][g]

In 1963, the tunnels were rediscovered after a resident of the area found a mysterious room behind a wall in his home while renovating. Further digging revealed access to the tunnel network.[15]

In 1969, the site was opened to visitors,[16] with about half of the underground city accessible as of 2016.[citation needed]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "The area became an important frontier province during the 7th century when Arab raids on the Byzantine Empire began. By now the soft tufa had been tunneled and chambered to provide underground cities where a settled if cautious life could continue during difficult times. When the Byzantines re-established secure control between the 7th and 11th centuries, the troglodyte population surfaced, now carving their churches into rock faces and cliffs in the Goreme and Soganli areas, giving Cappadocia its fame today. ... At any rate here they flourished, their churches remarkable for being cut into the rock, but interesting especially for their paintings, relatively well preserved, rich in coloring, and with an emotional intensity lacking in the formalism of Constantinople; this is one of the few places where paintings from the pre-iconoclastic period have survived. Icons continued to be painted after the Seljuk conquest of the area in the 11th century, and the Ottoman conquest did not interfere with the Christian practices in Cappadocia, where the countryside remained largely Greek, with some Armenians. But decline set in and Goreme, Ihlara and Soganli lost their early importance. The Greeks finally ending their long history here with the mass exchange of populations between Turkey and Greece in 1923." — Darke (2011)[8]
  2. ^ "None the less, at the beginning of the 20th century, Greek still had a strong presence in Silli, north-west of Konya (ancient Ikonion), in Pharasa, and other villages in the region drained by the Yenice river (some 100 km south of Kayseri, ancient Caesarea), and in Cappadocia proper, at Arabison (Arapsu/Gulsehir) north-west of Nevşehir (ancient Nyssa), and in the large region south of Nevşehir as far down as Nigde and Bor (close to ancient Tyana). This whole area, as the home of St Basil the Great (329–379), his brother St Gregory of Nyssa (335–394) and his friend St Gregory of Nazianzos (330–389), was of great importance in the early history of Christianity, but is perhaps most famous today for the extraordinary landscape of eroded volcanic tufa in the valleys of Goreme, Ihlara and Soganh, and for the churches and houses carved into the ‘fairy chimneys’ to serve the Christian population in the middle ages. Many of the rock cut churches, which range in date from the 6th to the 13th centuries, contain magnificent frescos. Away from the valleys, some of the villages have vast underground complexes containing houses, cellars, stables, refectories, cemeteries and churches, affording protection from marauding Arabs in the days when the Byzantine empire extended to the Euphrates, and serving later as places of refuge from hostile Turkish raiders. The most famous of these are at Kaymakli and Derinkuyu, formerly the Greek villages of Anaku (Inegi) and Malakopi (Melagob), where the chambers extended down over several levels of depths of up to 85 metres." — Horrocks (2010)[9]
  3. ^ "Its inhabitants were Cappadocian Greeks, who may have found a refuge here, perhaps from Roman, from Iconoclast, or later from Turkish and Mongol threats. Urgup itself was the Byzantine Prokopion; the Emperor Nicephoros Phocas is said to have passed this way, after his Cilician campaign; and the neighborhood was populous enough to support, at different times, a number of bishoprics." — P.B. Kinross (1970)[11]
  4. ^ "... these excavations are referred to as long ago as the campaigns of Timour Beg, one of whose captains was sent to hunt out the inhabitants of Kaisariyeh, who had taken refuge in their underground dwellings, and was killed by an arrow shot through the hole in one of the doors." — Dawkins (1916)[12](p 17)
  5. ^ "... their use as places of refuge in time of danger is indicated by their name καταφύγια, and when the news came of the recent massacres at Adana [in 1909], a great part of the population at Axo took refuge in these underground chambers, and for some nights did not venture to sleep above ground." — Dawkins (1916)[12](p 16)
  6. ^ "The tenth-century historian Leo the Deacon records a journey to Cappadocia made by Nikephoros Phokas shortly before he became emperor. Perhaps to recapture the attention of readers beginning to tire of troop movements he also offers a scrap of information about a curiosity of the region to which the emperor was heading: its inhabitants were once called troglodytes, because ‘they went underground in holes, clefts and labyrinths, as it were in dens and burrows’. This brief note was probably not based on first-hand knowledge but it might have been prompted by an awareness of the vast number of rock-cut cavities in an area to the west and southwest of Kaisareia (Kayseri of modern Turkey). Had Leo been more inclined to garrulous digression (or perhaps just better informed), he might have supplied more details of the troglodyte region and the task of bringing scholarly order to the hundreds of rock-cut monuments and other cavities in the area might have been much similar. ... At this time the region was still inhabited by a mixed population of Turkish-speaking Moslems and Greek-speaking Christians. The latter group left for Greece in the early 1920s, during an exchange of population of minorities that was part of the radical social re-ordering initiated by Kemal Atatürk; they were replaced by Turks from Greece, mostly from Thrace. In the two decades before this upheaval, however, members of the local Greek population acted as guides to Guillaume de Jerphanion, who made several visits to the volcanic valleys and wrote his meticulous descriptions of many painted Byzantine rock-cut churches." — Rodley (2010)[13]
  7. ^ "On May 1st, 1923, the agreement on the exchange of the Turkish and Greek minorities in both countries was published. A shock went through the ranks of the people affected – on both sides. Within a few months they had to pack their belongings and ship them or even sell them. They were to leave their homes, which had also been their great-grandfathers’ homes, they were to give up their holy places and leave the graves of their ancestors to an uncertain fate. In Cappadocia, the villages of Mustafapasa, Urgup, Guzelyurt and Nevşehir were the ones affected most by this rule. Often more than half the population of a village had to leave the country, so that those places were hardly able to survive… The Greeks from Cappadocia were taken to Mersin on the coast in order to be shipped to Greece from there. But they had to leave the remaining part of their belongings behind in the harbor. They were actually promised that everything would be sent after them later, but corrupt officials and numberless thieves looted the crammed storehouses, so that after a few months only a fraction of the goods – or even nothing at all – arrived at their new home ... . Today the old houses of the Greek people are the only testimony that reminds us of them in Cappadocia. But these silent witnesses are in danger, too. Only a few families can afford the maintenance of those buildings ... ." — Oberheu & Wadenpohl (2010)[14]

References edit

  1. ^ "Ancient underground city once housed 20,000 people". Dusty Old Thing. 2 September 2019.
  2. ^ . National Geographic. March 26, 2015. Archived from the original on February 21, 2021.
  3. ^ "Derinkuyu underground city". cappadociaturkey.net. January 26, 2014.
  4. ^ . nevsehir.gov.tr. Nevşehir Provincial Government. Archived from the original on 2007-01-09.
  5. ^ Truman, Geena. "Turkey's underground city of 20,000 people". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 2023-10-27.
  6. ^ Yalav-Heckeroth, Feride (21 December 2022). "The story behind the underground cities in Turkey". theculturetrip.com. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  7. ^ Swain, Simon; Adams, J. Maxwell; Janse, Mark (2002). Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language contact and the written word. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 246–266. ISBN 0-19-924506-1.
  8. ^ a b c d e Darke, Diana (2011). Eastern Turkey. Bradt Travel Guides. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-1-84162-339-9.
  9. ^ a b Horrocks, Geoffrey C. (2010). Greek: A History of the Language and Its Speakers. John Wiley & Sons. p. 403. ISBN 978-1-4051-3415-6.
  10. ^ Martin, Anthony J. (2017-02-07). The Evolution Underground. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-68177-375-9.
  11. ^ a b Kinross, P.B. (1970). Within the Taurus: A journey in asiatic Turkey. J. Murray. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-7195-2038-9.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Dawkins, R.McG. (1916). Modern Greek in Asia Minor: A study of dialect of Silly, Cappadocia, and Pharasa. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–17. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  13. ^ a b Rodley, Lyn (2010). Cave Monasteries of Byzantine Cappadocia. Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-521-15477-2.
  14. ^ a b Oberheu, Susanne; Wadenpohl, Michael (2010). Cappadocia. BoD. pp. 270–1. ISBN 978-3-8391-5661-2.
  15. ^ "8 Mysterious underground cities". History.com. 2016-12-14.
  16. ^ Nývlt, Vladimír; Musílek, Josef; Čejka, Jiří; Stopka, Ondrej (2016-01-01). The study of Derinkuyu underground city in Cappadocia, located in pyroclastic rock materials. World Multidisciplinary Civil Engineering-Architecture-Urban Planning Symposium 2016, WMCAUS 2016. Procedia Engineering. Vol. 161. pp. 2253–2258. doi:10.1016/j.proeng.2016.08.824. ISSN 1877-7058.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Cavetowns and gorges of Cappadocia
  • Underground Cities of Cappadocia - Myth and Truth(in German)
  • Derinkuyu Underground City
  • Derinkuyu & The Underground Cities of Cappadocia Sometimes Interesting. 9 May 2014

38°22′25″N 34°44′06″E / 38.3735°N 34.7351°E / 38.3735; 34.7351

derinkuyu, underground, city, derinkuyu, turkish, pronunciation, dɛrˈɪnkuju, also, known, elengubu, cappadocian, greek, Μαλακοπή, malakopi, turkish, derinkuyu, yeraltı, şehri, ancient, multi, level, underground, city, near, modern, town, derinkuyu, nevşehir, p. Derinkuyu Turkish pronunciation dɛrˈɪnkuju also known as Elengubu Cappadocian Greek Malakoph Malakopi Turkish Derinkuyu Yeralti Sehri is an ancient multi level underground city near the modern town of Derinkuyu in Nevsehir Province Turkey extending to a depth of approximately 85 metres 280 ft It is large enough to have sheltered as many as 20 000 people together with their livestock and food stores It is the largest excavated underground city in Turkey and is one of several underground complexes found throughout Cappadocia A passage in the underground city Contents 1 Features 2 History 3 See also 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksFeatures editThe underground city at Derinkuyu could be closed from the inside with large rolling stone doors Each floor could be closed off separately 1 nbsp The room with the barrel vaulted ceiling possibly a schoolThe city could accommodate up to 20 000 people and had amenities found in other underground complexes across Cappadocia 2 3 such as wine and oil presses stables cellars storage rooms refectories and chapels Unique to the Derinkuyu complex and located on the second floor is a spacious room with a barrel vaulted ceiling It has been reported that this room was used as a religious school and the rooms to the left were studies 4 Starting between the third and fourth levels are a series of vertical staircases which lead to a church on the lowest fifth level 5 nbsp A deep ventilation well in the cityThe large 55 metre 180 ft ventilation shaft appears to have been used as a well The shaft provided water to both the villagers above and if the outside world was not accessible to those in hiding citation needed History editCaves might have been built initially in the soft volcanic rock of the Cappadocia region by the Phrygians in the 8th 7th centuries BCE 6 When the Phrygian language died out in Roman times replaced with the Greek language 7 the inhabitants expanded their caverns to deep multiple level structures adding the chapels and Greek inscriptions 8 a The city at Derinkuyu was fully formed in the Byzantine era when it was heavily used as protection from Arab Muslims during the Arab Byzantine wars 780 1180 CE 8 9 b The city was connected with another underground city Kaymakli through 8 9 kilometers about 5 miles of tunnels 10 Some artifacts discovered in these underground settlements belong to the Middle Byzantine Period between the 5th and the 10th centuries citation needed These cities continued to be used by the Christian natives as protection from the Mongolian incursions of Timur in the 14th century 11 c 12 d After the region fell to the Ottomans the cities were used as refuges Cappadocian Greek katafygia by the natives from the Turkish Muslim rulers 12 p 16 e As late as the 20th century the local population Cappadocian Greeks and Armenians were still using the underground cities to escape periodic persecutions 12 For example Richard MacGillivray Dawkins a Cambridge linguist who conducted research from 1909 to 1911 on the Cappadocian Greek speaking natives in the area recorded such an event as having occurred in 1909 When the news came of the recent massacres at Adana a great part of the population at Axo took refuge in these underground chambers and for some nights did not venture to sleep above ground 8 12 In 1923 the Christian inhabitants of the region were expelled from Turkey and moved to Greece in the population exchange between Greece and Turkey whereupon the tunnels were abandoned 8 13 f 14 g In 1963 the tunnels were rediscovered after a resident of the area found a mysterious room behind a wall in his home while renovating Further digging revealed access to the tunnel network 15 In 1969 the site was opened to visitors 16 with about half of the underground city accessible as of 2016 citation needed See also editAvanos Churches of Goreme Turkey Eskigumus Monastery Ihlara Valley Kaymakli Underground City Mokissos Nooshabad underground city Iran Ozkonak Underground City Petra Population exchange between Greece and Turkey Zelve Monastery Gobekli TepeFootnotes edit The area became an important frontier province during the 7th century when Arab raids on the Byzantine Empire began By now the soft tufa had been tunneled and chambered to provide underground cities where a settled if cautious life could continue during difficult times When the Byzantines re established secure control between the 7th and 11th centuries the troglodyte population surfaced now carving their churches into rock faces and cliffs in the Goreme and Soganli areas giving Cappadocia its fame today At any rate here they flourished their churches remarkable for being cut into the rock but interesting especially for their paintings relatively well preserved rich in coloring and with an emotional intensity lacking in the formalism of Constantinople this is one of the few places where paintings from the pre iconoclastic period have survived Icons continued to be painted after the Seljuk conquest of the area in the 11th century and the Ottoman conquest did not interfere with the Christian practices in Cappadocia where the countryside remained largely Greek with some Armenians But decline set in and Goreme Ihlara and Soganli lost their early importance The Greeks finally ending their long history here with the mass exchange of populations between Turkey and Greece in 1923 Darke 2011 8 None the less at the beginning of the 20th century Greek still had a strong presence in Silli north west of Konya ancient Ikonion in Pharasa and other villages in the region drained by the Yenice river some 100 km south of Kayseri ancient Caesarea and in Cappadocia proper at Arabison Arapsu Gulsehir north west of Nevsehir ancient Nyssa and in the large region south of Nevsehir as far down as Nigde and Bor close to ancient Tyana This whole area as the home of St Basil the Great 329 379 his brother St Gregory of Nyssa 335 394 and his friend St Gregory of Nazianzos 330 389 was of great importance in the early history of Christianity but is perhaps most famous today for the extraordinary landscape of eroded volcanic tufa in the valleys of Goreme Ihlara and Soganh and for the churches and houses carved into the fairy chimneys to serve the Christian population in the middle ages Many of the rock cut churches which range in date from the 6th to the 13th centuries contain magnificent frescos Away from the valleys some of the villages have vast underground complexes containing houses cellars stables refectories cemeteries and churches affording protection from marauding Arabs in the days when the Byzantine empire extended to the Euphrates and serving later as places of refuge from hostile Turkish raiders The most famous of these are at Kaymakli and Derinkuyu formerly the Greek villages of Anaku Inegi and Malakopi Melagob where the chambers extended down over several levels of depths of up to 85 metres Horrocks 2010 9 Its inhabitants were Cappadocian Greeks who may have found a refuge here perhaps from Roman from Iconoclast or later from Turkish and Mongol threats Urgup itself was the Byzantine Prokopion the Emperor Nicephoros Phocas is said to have passed this way after his Cilician campaign and the neighborhood was populous enough to support at different times a number of bishoprics P B Kinross 1970 11 these excavations are referred to as long ago as the campaigns of Timour Beg one of whose captains was sent to hunt out the inhabitants of Kaisariyeh who had taken refuge in their underground dwellings and was killed by an arrow shot through the hole in one of the doors Dawkins 1916 12 p 17 their use as places of refuge in time of danger is indicated by their name katafygia and when the news came of the recent massacres at Adana in 1909 a great part of the population at Axo took refuge in these underground chambers and for some nights did not venture to sleep above ground Dawkins 1916 12 p 16 The tenth century historian Leo the Deacon records a journey to Cappadocia made by Nikephoros Phokas shortly before he became emperor Perhaps to recapture the attention of readers beginning to tire of troop movements he also offers a scrap of information about a curiosity of the region to which the emperor was heading its inhabitants were once called troglodytes because they went underground in holes clefts and labyrinths as it were in dens and burrows This brief note was probably not based on first hand knowledge but it might have been prompted by an awareness of the vast number of rock cut cavities in an area to the west and southwest of Kaisareia Kayseri of modern Turkey Had Leo been more inclined to garrulous digression or perhaps just better informed he might have supplied more details of the troglodyte region and the task of bringing scholarly order to the hundreds of rock cut monuments and other cavities in the area might have been much similar At this time the region was still inhabited by a mixed population of Turkish speaking Moslems and Greek speaking Christians The latter group left for Greece in the early 1920s during an exchange of population of minorities that was part of the radical social re ordering initiated by Kemal Ataturk they were replaced by Turks from Greece mostly from Thrace In the two decades before this upheaval however members of the local Greek population acted as guides to Guillaume de Jerphanion who made several visits to the volcanic valleys and wrote his meticulous descriptions of many painted Byzantine rock cut churches Rodley 2010 13 On May 1st 1923 the agreement on the exchange of the Turkish and Greek minorities in both countries was published A shock went through the ranks of the people affected on both sides Within a few months they had to pack their belongings and ship them or even sell them They were to leave their homes which had also been their great grandfathers homes they were to give up their holy places and leave the graves of their ancestors to an uncertain fate In Cappadocia the villages of Mustafapasa Urgup Guzelyurt and Nevsehir were the ones affected most by this rule Often more than half the population of a village had to leave the country so that those places were hardly able to survive The Greeks from Cappadocia were taken to Mersin on the coast in order to be shipped to Greece from there But they had to leave the remaining part of their belongings behind in the harbor They were actually promised that everything would be sent after them later but corrupt officials and numberless thieves looted the crammed storehouses so that after a few months only a fraction of the goods or even nothing at all arrived at their new home Today the old houses of the Greek people are the only testimony that reminds us of them in Cappadocia But these silent witnesses are in danger too Only a few families can afford the maintenance of those buildings Oberheu amp Wadenpohl 2010 14 References edit Ancient underground city once housed 20 000 people Dusty Old Thing 2 September 2019 Massive underground city found in Cappadocia region of Turkey National Geographic March 26 2015 Archived from the original on February 21 2021 Derinkuyu underground city cappadociaturkey net January 26 2014 Derinkuyu underground city nevsehir gov tr Nevsehir Provincial Government Archived from the original on 2007 01 09 Truman Geena Turkey s underground city of 20 000 people www bbc com Retrieved 2023 10 27 Yalav Heckeroth Feride 21 December 2022 The story behind the underground cities in Turkey theculturetrip com Retrieved 23 June 2023 Swain Simon Adams J Maxwell Janse Mark 2002 Bilingualism in Ancient Society Language contact and the written word Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 246 266 ISBN 0 19 924506 1 a b c d e Darke Diana 2011 Eastern Turkey Bradt Travel Guides pp 139 140 ISBN 978 1 84162 339 9 a b Horrocks Geoffrey C 2010 Greek A History of the Language and Its Speakers John Wiley amp Sons p 403 ISBN 978 1 4051 3415 6 Martin Anthony J 2017 02 07 The Evolution Underground Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 68177 375 9 a b Kinross P B 1970 Within the Taurus A journey in asiatic Turkey J Murray p 168 ISBN 978 0 7195 2038 9 a b c d e f Dawkins R McG 1916 Modern Greek in Asia Minor A study of dialect of Silly Cappadocia and Pharasa Cambridge University Press pp 16 17 Retrieved 25 October 2014 a b Rodley Lyn 2010 Cave Monasteries of Byzantine Cappadocia Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 521 15477 2 a b Oberheu Susanne Wadenpohl Michael 2010 Cappadocia BoD pp 270 1 ISBN 978 3 8391 5661 2 8 Mysterious underground cities History com 2016 12 14 Nyvlt Vladimir Musilek Josef Cejka Jiri Stopka Ondrej 2016 01 01 The study of Derinkuyu underground city in Cappadocia located in pyroclastic rock materials World Multidisciplinary Civil Engineering Architecture Urban Planning Symposium 2016 WMCAUS 2016 Procedia Engineering Vol 161 pp 2253 2258 doi 10 1016 j proeng 2016 08 824 ISSN 1877 7058 Bibliography editKostof Spiro 1989 Caves of God Cappadocia and Its Churches Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 506000 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Underground City of Derinkuyu Cavetowns and gorges of Cappadocia Underground Cities of Cappadocia Myth and Truth in German Derinkuyu Underground City Derinkuyu amp The Underground Cities of Cappadocia Sometimes Interesting 9 May 2014 38 22 25 N 34 44 06 E 38 3735 N 34 7351 E 38 3735 34 7351 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Derinkuyu underground city amp oldid 1214688586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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