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Aqueducts   |   Ayasuluk Castle   |   Belevi Mausoleum   |   Canakkale   |   Church of St. John   |   Dilek National Park   |   Ephesus
Hierapolis   |   House of Virgin Mary   |   Isabey Mosque   |   Izmir   |   Cave of Seven Sleepers   |   Miletos   |   Pamukkale
Pergamon   |   Priene   |   Sirince Village   |   The Oracle of Apollo  |   The Temple of Artemis

Canakkale

The province of Canakkale lies on both sides of the Dardanelles which connects the Sea of Marmara to the Aegean Sea. Its shores touch both Europe (with the Gelibolu Peninsula) and Asia (with the Biga Peninsula) and there are ferries here between the two sides. The well-equipped Canakkale Marina, besides those of Karabiga, Gelibolu, Bozcaada and Kucukkuyu, hosts the colourful yachts which pass through the strait and make a stopover at Canakkale, to see this historical and mythological-rich area-homeland of many widely known legends. The province has witnessed two very important battles in history. One of them is the mythological war of Troy, which Homer immortalized in his Iliad. Archaeological digs in Troy (Truva) have proved that there had been nine separate periods of settlement. (3000 BC-AD 400). Here, one can see the ruins of city walls in addition to the Wooden Horse of Troy. The other one is the Battle of Canakkale which took place during World War I when Turkish troops under the command of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk maintained the defence of the region against enemy forces and Canakkale has taken its place in history as "Canakkale; impassable". To honour the 500,000 soldiers who gave their lives at Gelibolu (Gallipoli), this peninsula has been made a national park of remembrance. There are memorial monuments here in surroundings of natural beauty.