Alanya is a touristic centre on Turkey's Mediterranean
coast, 135 kilometers east of
Antalya.
Excavations have shown that the Alanya area was inhabited as early as
prehistoric times. Alanya first appears in the 2nd century B.C. as a
pirate lair and it was known then as Korakesion. The
Romans
later captured the town in their campaign to suppress piracy in the
eastern Mediterranean. It came under
Byzantine rule
after 395
In 1220 the Seljuk sultan Alaeddin Keykubad I
took the city and had the great castle and dockyards built. Known then as
Alaiye, a name derived from that of the sultan, the city was used by the
Seljuks as their naval base in the Mediterranean and it remained an
important military post in Ottoman times. A
century later the Arab traveller Ibn Battuta visited Alanya and described
it thus: The city of Alaiye is a large town on the seacoast. It is
inhabited by Turkomans and is visited by the merchants of Cairo,
Alexandria, and Syria. The district is well-wooded and wood is exported
from there to Alexandria and Damietta, whence it is carried to the other
cities of Egypt. There is a magnificent and formidable citadel, built by
Sultan Alaeddin at the upper end of the town.
The "magnificent and formidable citadel" was built by
Alaeddin Keykubad I in 1226 on the site of an earlier fortress. (Strabo
refers to one being here in Roman times.) It consists of three sections:
an inner keep, the central castle, and an external redoubt.
The inner keep contains cisterns, the ruins of a Seljuk palace, a
fresco-decorated courtyard, military fortifications, and a Byzantine
chapel in the middle. At the northwestern corner is a place where
prisoners condemned to death were hurled over the precipice by means of
catapults.
The central castle contains a masjid built in 1230 by Aksebe Sultan as
well as her tomb. Suleymaniye Mosque was originally constructed in 1231
but was rebuilt during the reign of Suleyman the Magnificent when an
Ottoman arasta (row of shops) was added. There is also a 17th century
Ottoman khan. Located on the outer walls of the castle is Kizil Kule (Red
Tower), so called because of the red bricks used in its construction. This
octagonal structure was built in 1227 and stands in all its magnificence
even today. (It is particularly impressive when illuminated at night.)
Adjacent to the tower are the dockyards where five vessels could be worked
on at a time. Next to the dockyards is a tower called Tophane Kule
(Arsenal Tower) where cannons were cast during Ottoman times.
Nearby close to the seashore is a cave called Damlatas. The humid air
inside this cave is supposed to be good for those suffering from asthmatic
problems. Alanya's archaeological museum contains numerous interesting
works and is well worth a visit. Owing to its vital importance as a naval
base, Alanya was connected by roads that went east and west and into the
hinterland. (The Seljuk capital was up country in Konya.)