The ancient city of Aphrodisias, once the capital of the province of Lydia, is located near the village of Geyre in the district of Karacasu 38 km south of Nazilli.In ancient times, the attractive marble buildings of Aphrodisias no doubt shone out, as they do now, from amidst the rich vegetation of the Dandalaz valley with its almond, pomegranate and poplar trees.
The ancient city of Aphrodisias
The ancient city of Aphrodisias
The ancient city of Aphrodisias, once the capital of the province of Lydia, is located near the village of Geyre in the district of Karacasu 38 km south of Nazilli.In ancient times, the attractive marble buildings of Aphrodisias no doubt shone out, as they do now, from amidst the rich vegetation of the Dandalaz valley with its almond, pomegranate and poplar trees.
The ancient city of Aphrodisias, once the capital of the province of Lydia, is located near the village of Geyre in the district of Karacasu 38 km south of Nazilli.In ancient times, the attractive marble buildings of Aphrodisias no doubt shone out, as they do now, from amidst the rich vegetation of the Dandalaz valley with its almond, pomegranate and poplar trees.
Tetrapylon - The ancient city of Aphrodisias
Tetrapylon - The ancient city of Aphrodisias
One
of the most attractive features of Aphrodisias is the ornamental gate constructed in the
middle of the 2nd century. The name Tetrapylon refers to its being composed of four groups
of four columns.
The Temple of Aphrodite - Aphrodisias
The Temple of Aphrodite - Aphrodisias
Located in the northern section, in ancient times the Temple of
Aphrodite formed the centre and nucleus of the city. All that remains of
the ancient temple consists of fourteen of the over forty Ionic columns
that once surrounded it and the foundations of the cella section.
Uzungöl - Trabzon
Uzungöl - Trabzon
This beautiful highland lake is not longer the virgin hideaway it was 20 years ago. A tourist- town of about 30 chalets and pansiyons has grown pell-mell on the southern edge of the lake, and a new mosque has been built to rival the Grand Mosque of Shangri-La.
The overall effect, though, is more pleasing then most new Turkish resorts. The air has a miraculously clear quality, and the smell of the maize fields after rain remains intoxicating. Off the other end of the lake, brick and concrete have made few inroads into the old village of Uzungöl (Şerah).
Above the lake is stil virgin territory. One road continues west of the lake to the Soğanlı (Hopşera) yayla, affording stupendous mountain views along the way. Another road climbs through the hotel district to the Demirkapı (Haldizen) yayla, located immediately below the peak of Mt Haldizen (3376 m). A driveable road continues along a series of glacer lakes to a mountain pass at 3100 metres, where a dramatic panorama of a half- dozen mountain ranges springs to view on the South.
This is splendid hiking territory, and we are told it is possible to walk’in three or four hours from Demirkapı to the roadhead on the İkizdere side (see Ovitdağı pass, next page). It is also possible to drive on to either İkizdere or Bayburt, but you must reckon on losing your way many times in the trackless high yayla.
The overall effect, though, is more pleasing then most new Turkish resorts. The air has a miraculously clear quality, and the smell of the maize fields after rain remains intoxicating. Off the other end of the lake, brick and concrete have made few inroads into the old village of Uzungöl (Şerah).
Above the lake is stil virgin territory. One road continues west of the lake to the Soğanlı (Hopşera) yayla, affording stupendous mountain views along the way. Another road climbs through the hotel district to the Demirkapı (Haldizen) yayla, located immediately below the peak of Mt Haldizen (3376 m). A driveable road continues along a series of glacer lakes to a mountain pass at 3100 metres, where a dramatic panorama of a half- dozen mountain ranges springs to view on the South.
This is splendid hiking territory, and we are told it is possible to walk’in three or four hours from Demirkapı to the roadhead on the İkizdere side (see Ovitdağı pass, next page). It is also possible to drive on to either İkizdere or Bayburt, but you must reckon on losing your way many times in the trackless high yayla.
Hierapolis - Castabala - Bodrum Castle
Hierapolis - Castabala city
A beautiful, little visited site. A powerfull mediaeval castle (the local name Bodrum Kale is a corruption of Petrium, the Castle of St Peter) dominates the Roman ruins of ancient Castabala/Hierapolis. A colonnaded road leads to the Temple Plain, where there is a theatre and traces of an ancient sanctuary. The site is not excavated, and there are no modern intrusions within sight.
Castabala was the capital of ancient Clician Kingdom, which ruled under Roman aegis just before and after year o. Cicero, the Roman orator, was briefly proconcul here. His hand-picked king of Clicia, Tarcondimotus, betrayed Pompey in his war against Caesar. Lucan makes him deliver a long speech about political morality in his Pharsalia.
Hierapolis - Castabala : Kesmeburun Village, Osmaniye , Turkey
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
Some 40 spectacular castles between Anamur and Maraş are the memorials of that brief episode of medieval vitality in Cilicia.
After the fall of the Crusader states in Antioch and Jerusalem, Cilicia was doomed. It lasted another century in shifting subjection to the Mongols, the Turks, the Egyptians and Lusignan kings of Cyprus. Its 40 castles changed hands with astonishing celerity and inconsequence among various feudal cousins.
ın 1375, the Egyptians took Sis and put an end to the last Christian kingdom in the Middle Eastern mainland. The great sea castle of Corycus (Kızkalesi near Silifke) remained the possession of the Latin kings of Cyprus until 1448.
When Byzantium put end to the Armenian kingdoms of the Northeast, it invited the dispossessed kings and their men to resettle the Byzantine borderlands depopulated by centuries of Arab wars.
Some ended up in the mountains of Cilicia. The Turkish victory of 1071 cut them loose from Byzantine ties; the Crusade of 1098 saved them from being swallowed up by the Turks.
Several Armenian baronies came into existence around this time. One of them, the Rubenians of the castles of Anazarba and Sis (mod. Kozan), exploited the Crusader connection to their greatest advantage.
The Rubenian Leo II (1186-1219) became an ally of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and supplied troops for Richard the Lionheart in the battle of Acre. He was rewarded by being named King of Armenia by the Pope, who sent an envoy to present the crown.
The kingdom flourished in the 13th century, a period of greatly expanded east-west trade. The Venetians and Genoese were granted trading concessions. Marco Polo, who visited Ayas (mod. Yumurtalık), reported a thriving city that served as a Mediterranean terminus for the silk and spice caravans of Asia.
The kingdom flourished in the 13th century, a period of greatly expanded east-west trade. The Venetians and Genoese were granted trading concessions. Marco Polo, who visited Ayas (mod. Yumurtalık), reported a thriving city that served as a Mediterranean terminus for the silk and spice caravans of Asia.
Some 40 spectacular castles between Anamur and Maraş are the memorials of that brief episode of medieval vitality in Cilicia.
After the fall of the Crusader states in Antioch and Jerusalem, Cilicia was doomed. It lasted another century in shifting subjection to the Mongols, the Turks, the Egyptians and Lusignan kings of Cyprus. Its 40 castles changed hands with astonishing celerity and inconsequence among various feudal cousins.
ın 1375, the Egyptians took Sis and put an end to the last Christian kingdom in the Middle Eastern mainland. The great sea castle of Corycus (Kızkalesi near Silifke) remained the possession of the Latin kings of Cyprus until 1448.
Mokissos - Nora – Cappadocia - Turkey
Mokissos; The ruins of an early mediaval city spread across a volcanic field behind the town of Helvadere, 12 km south of Ihlara. It is called either Mocissus/Mokissos or Nora depending on sources you belive.
The site is unsigned. Getting there involves a half-hour clamber across boulders, but the setting and the views fully reward the effort. The perfect volcanic cone of the Hasandağı rises in the back. Vast armies of sheep march past in the evening. There is not a trace of the modern world in evidance.
The city was destroyed by an eathquake after the 9th century. There is much standing, though the shells of several churches (31 of them according to the shepherds) are recognisable.
Further up, the flanks of the mountain are covered by a forest surprising thick for this part of Turkey. You may drive up 5 km to the recreation area at Bozkurt yaylası ("Pastures of Brown wolf"), and use the footpath to walk down to the ruins.
Tags: Mokissos,volcanic field,Helvadere town,Ihlara,Mocissus,Mokissos ,r Nora ,Hasandağı,Bozkurt yaylası ,Pastures of Brown wolf,Turkey travel,Cappadocia Turkey,Cappadocia, Turkey
Uçhisar – Cappadocia – Turkey
In the centre of Uçhisar stands the
tallest fairy chimney of all, a 40 meter cone of perforated rock looking
like a giant block of Swiss cheese. The whole population of the town
once lived in this “Uçhisar Castle“. Climbing it is one of the highlights of Cappadocia.
At the foot of the cone is the Tekeli
District, a perfectly unspolied collection of cave houses clinging to
the steep hillside. Mostly abandoned in the’80s, the neighbourhood was
brought back to life by a French architect who converted a dozen of the
derelict houses into holiday accommodations of great aesthetic verve.
Imitators follewed, and Uçhisar now competes with Ürgüp as the best town to spend a night-or a second life- in Cappadocia
Tags: Cappadocia, highlights of Cappadocia, Uçhisar, Uçhisar Cappadocia, Uçhisar Cappadocia Turkey, Uçhisar Castle
Göreme - Cappadocia
The classic Cappadocian tourist village,
a bazaarville set in a fantastic landscape of fairy chimneys and
strangely shaped rock. Grown in the backpacking 70s,göreme has found it
hard to shed its downbudget image. A number of classy recent additions
point the way to change.
The upper sections hide some
surprisingly quiet and picturesque nooks, which reward a stroll if you
can slip the persistent squands of carpet sellers and self-appointed
guides.
Monastery Valley
A 10- minute walk up from the village centre is the entrance to the Göreme Cave Churches Open Air Museum,
the chief tourist sight of Cappadocia. The fenced-in valley once hosted
a community of Byzantine monks, who settled into a magnificent cluster
of fairy chimneys.
They build more than 20 churches, of
which about 12 retain their paintings. Some are barely large enough for
20 people. In the summer they receive an avarage of 7000 visitors a day.
Most frescoes date from the 11th and
12th centuries. Their style varies from church to church: some betray
the influence-or the presence-of imperial artist sent down from
Costantinople. The finest are in the so-called Dark Church , which
reopened in 1998 after many years in restoration, and the Tokalı Church,
which is located opposite the parking outside the main museum area. The
Hidden Church, also a short distance outside, first cane to light in
the 1950s.
Love Valley
Located immediately behind Monastery Valley
on the southwest, this valley obtains its popular name from the shape
of giant natural pillars grouped together nears it entrance. It is a
quiet and impressive place when tour groups are not present. The
walkpath skirts grapevines and walnuts, all of which are full of fruit
in early autumn.
Tags: Cappadocian, Dark Church, dark Church in göreme, Göreme, Göreme Cave Churches, Göreme Cave Churches open Air Museum, Göreme Love Valley, Göreme open Air Museum, Hidden Church, Hidden Church in göreme, Love Valley, Monastery Valley, natural pillars, open Air Museum, Tokalı Church, Tokalı Church in göreme
Çavuşin - Zelve - Avanos - Cappadocia
The valley of Kızılçukur (Red Hollow) starts 3 km. north of Ürgüp on the Avanos road, and requires 1,5 hours to walk to lovely village square of Çavuşin.
It is a popular hiking destination. The path runs across a perfectly
sculpted lanscape of pink tufa pock marked with pigeon grids.
The cave church of St John the Baptist in Çavuşin, dated to the 5th century, is the oldest identifiable in Cappadocia. Paintings in the Güvercinlik Church
commemorate a visit by the Byzantine Emperor Nicephorus Phocas II
(963-969), a native of the region. Pigeon were cultivated in the past
for their droppings. Industrial fertilizers are now preferred.
Zelve
ucked away in the pink hills 4 km east
of Çavuşin is Zelve, the largest deserted cave community in Cappadocia.
The settlement spreads along three valleys separated by narrow ridges;
secret passageways give access from valley to valley.
Zelve started as a monastic community around the same time as Göreme. It was later taken up by the peasants who continued to live here until evicted by the government in 1952. Some indemnity suits resulting from that action still drag on in courts.
Avanos
Avanos is a local market town and
handicrafts centre. Set on the right bank of the Kızılırmak (Red River),
the old town is full of quaint balconied houses and shops emulating Ali
Baba’s treasure trove for the benefit of tourists. Most famous is the
manufacture of pottery from the red mud of the river. Some workshops are
located in labyrinth-like underground chambers. They can be toured on
request.
Tags: Ali Baba's treasure, Avanos, Byzantine Emperor Nicephorus Phocas II, Cappadocia, Cappadocia Red Hollow, Çavuşin, Güvercinlik Church, handicrafts centre, Kızılırmak, local market, Nevsehir, pigeon grids, Red Hollow, Red River, St John the Baptist, travel guide, turkey, turkey travel, turkey travel guide, village square of Çavuşin, Zelve
Ürgüp - Cappadocia
A lively market town, Ürgüp is unoffical capital of tourists Cappadocia. The newer part is uninteresting, but the Old Town, in several clusters at the foot of Temenni Hill,
is an outstanding labyrinth of caves and old-style Cappadocian stone
houses. Some of the finest small hotels of Turkey are cut into rock in
this unlikely setting.
An entire cave neighbourhood in the Kayadibi district is now being overhauled in a cultural recyling project on massive scale
Living in Rock
A typical house has a frontage built in
more or less elegant masonry. In the back, it blends into cave rooms cut
into the crazily undulating cliff. Further up the hill, where the poor
lived, the masonry disappears altogether.
Some caves are several hundred years
old. Most are fashioned with sculpted niches, columns, buried ovens
(tandır) and wine pressing basins. Some have private chapels.
Cave living went out of fashion after
the ’60s, when modernity demanded moving on and up into cement. More
recently, urban (and expatriate) trend-setters have rediscovered it with
glee. A few hollows of Ürgüp rock, with a small courtyard in front, now
sell for 100.000 dollars and up. Carving them into a comfortable house
costs another 100.000 or so.
The result is often brillant-cosy,
embracing, strangely soothing houses that a cave is the natural dwelling
of man. The absence of all tremor is a revelation. Having a mountain on
one’s back gives an unexpected sense of security. The imagination soars
when freed from the dictatorship of straight walls.
Tags: buried ovens, Cappadocia, Cappadocian, Cappadocian stone houses, cave rooms, central Anatolia, Central Anatolia travel, labyrinth of caves, Living in Rock, Nevsehir, Old Town, soothing houses, stone houses, Temenni Hill, Ürgüp
Cappadocia – An Introduction
Historic Cappadocia
was a large country that covered much of east-central Anatolia, with
Kayseri as its capital. In modern travel talk the name refers to a much
smaller area bounded by the towns of Aksaray, Özkonak, İncesu, Yeşilhisar, and Niğde. Its hub is a 15 by 15 km triangle formed by Nevşehir, Ürgüp and Avanos.
The land
The fantastic landscape is the product of three volcanoes – the Erciyas, Melendiz and Hasandağı – whose prehistoric eruptions covered the earth with a blanket of ash.
The top sights- the monastery valley of Göreme, the cave village of Zelve, the castle of Uçhisar, and the underground towns of Kaymaklı or Derinkuyu – are on everybody’s seelist; so they are permanently crowded with tourist.
Mercifully, plenty of other highlights
remain almost undiscovered. Many lie in a compact area that is barely a
half hour’s drive from end to end.
Hiking is a good way to begin to fall in love. Choices range from a half-hour stroll in Love Valley to a full 6-hour trek along the Ihlara Gorge (Ihlara Valley). Another way to make sure you leave your heart behind is to go hot-air ballooning.
Cappadocia is advertised as one of the world’s best terrains for that
activity, and several companies are there to let you take advantage.
when to go to cappadocia
Summer is hot and crowded, and winter
can be bleak. May and June are delighful, thogh noting, in our opinion,
beats the turing of the leaves in late Semtember and early October.
Where to stay in Cappadocia
Ürgüp, Göreme, Uçhisar and Avanos
are lively towns that offer some lovely accommodation-mostly in caves
or even inside fairy chimneys-in addition to interesting shoping and a
few decent restaurants. They are your obvious chois for headquarters,
though you may also want to spend a night or two in the quieter settting
of out-of-the-way towns like Mustafapaşa or Güzelyurt.
Checklist
Here’s a highly un-objective list of our personal favourites. You may be totally alone at several of them.
Love Valley near Göreme
Church of St Theodore in Yeşilöz
The back way to İbrahimpaşa from Ortahisar.
Mustafapaşa town
Soğanlı
Erdemli Valley
Gümüşler Monasatery near Niğde
Güzelyurt and the Red Church
Ihlara Valley
Mokissos/Helvadere
Tags: Aksaray, Avanos, Cappadocia, castle of Uçhisar, central Anatolia, Church of St Theodore in Yeşilöz, east-central Anatolia, Erdemli Valley, Göreme, Gümüşler Monasatery, Güzelyurt, Helvadere, Hiking the Kızılçukur Valley to Çavuşin, Historic Cappadocia, hot air ballooning in turkey cappadocia, hot-air ballooning, Ihlara Gorge, Ihlara Gorge cappadocia, Ihlara Valley, Ihlara Valley cappadocia, İncesu, Love Valley, Love Valley cappadocia, Love Valley near Göreme, Mokissos, Mustafapaşa, Mustafapaşa town, Nevsehir, Niğde, Özkonak, Soğanlı, The back way to İbrahimpaşa from Ortahisar, the Red Church, turkey, underground town of Kaymaklı, underground towns, underground towns of Cappadocia, underground towns of Derinkuyu, underground towns of Kaymaklı, Ürgüp, ürgüp or göreme, when to go to cappadocia, when to go to cappadocia Turkey, when to go to Turkey, where to stay in cappadocia, where to stay in cappadocia urgup or goreme, where to stay in göreme, where to stay in ürgüp, where to stay in ürgüp or göreme, Yeşilhisar, Zelve
Walks around Göreme
Walks around Göreme
Göreme village is surrounded by the magnificent Göreme National Park. A handful of valley are easily explored on foot; each needs about one to three hours. Most are interconnected, so you could easily combine several in a day, especially with the help of the area's many dolmuşes (minibuses).
For example, you can walk to the Göreme Open-Air Museum and have a look around, then catch a Belediye Bus Corp otobus to Ürgüp, which stop outside the museum at 10 minutes past every even hour, to Zelve (TL2). Ask the driver to stop there or he may head straight to Avanos on the main road.
It may be possible to get off further on at Aktepe (for Devrent valley). Walk back to Göreme from Zelve via Paşabağı, Çavuşin and Meskendir valley. Rose valley and Red valley. Don't forget a bottle of water and sunscreen!
Some of the most interesting and accessible valleys:
Bağlıdere (White valley) from Uçhisar to Çavuşin.
Güllüdere (Rose valley) Connecting Çavuşin and Kızılçukur viewpoint.
Güvercinlik (Pigeon Valley) Connecting Göreme and Uçhisar; colorful dovecotes.
İçeridere (Long Valley) Running south from Rock Valley Pension.
Kılıçlar Vadisi (Swords Valley) Running off the Göreme Open-Air Museum road
Kızılçukur vadisi (Red Valley) Superb dovecotes and churches with frescotes.
Meskendir Valley Trail head next to Kaya Camping: tunnels an dovecotes
Zemi Vadisi (Love Valley) West of the Göreme Open-Air Museum, with some particulary spectacular rock formations.
Tags: Bağlıdere, White valley,Uçhisar,Çavuşin,Güllüdere ,Rose valley,Kızılçukur viewpoint,Güvercinlik,Pigeon Valley,Göreme,İçeridere,Long Valley,Rock Valley Pension,Kılıçlar Vadisi ,Swords Valley,Göreme Open-Air Museum,Kızılçukur vadisi,Red ,churches,frescotes,Meskendir Valley,Kaya Camping, tunnels ,dovecotes,Zemi Vadisi,Love Valley,Aktepe,Devrent valley,Zelve ,Paşabağı,Göreme National Park,Avanos
Bandırma
Bandırma
An undistinguished 20th-century betonville (concrete city), the port town of Bandırma marks the junction between ferries across the Sea of Marmara from İstanbul and İzmir-bound trains.
Taking a ferry from central İstanbul to Bandırma is a quick and pleasant way to get to Anatolia, or to the Gallipoli Peninsula via Çanakkale.
Gökçeada
Gökçeada
Just north of the entrance to the Dardanelles, rugged, sparsely populated Gökçeada (Heavenly Island) is one of only two inhabited Aegean islands belonging to Turkey.
Measuring 13km from north to south and just under 30km from east to west, it is by far the nation’s largest island. Gökçeada is a fascinating place, with some dramatic scenery packed into a small area, and a Greek feel to it throughout. It’s a great place to escape to after visiting Gallipoli.
Gökçeada - Sleeping & Eating
Gökçeada - Sleeping & Eating
The old fashioned ev pansiyonu (home pension), which has virtually died out elsewhere, is still alive and kicking on Gökçeada.
It's not unusual for locals to approach and offer you a spare room in their house, for considerably less than the prices charged by pensions and hotels.
Gökçeada town
Restaurants are clustered around the main square.
Otel Taşkın (HOTEL)
(Phone: 887 3266, www.taskinotel.com, in Turkish; Zeytinli Caddesi 3; s/d TL30/60)
In the quiet backstreets southwest of the main square. Hotel Flood has a brown-tiled exterior (including a mosaic of a gület - a wooden yatch) and spacious, good-value rooms with TV, balcony and lots of light. Breakfast takes place in the front courtyard.
Gül Hanım Mantı evi (Restaurant)
(Phone: 887 3773, Atatürk Caddesi 23; mains TL6)
The mantı steals the show, but moussaka and chicken and spinach are also recommended at this simple home-cooking eatery.
Asmalı konak birahanesi (Cafe-bar)
(Phone:887 2469; mains TL7)
At this femaile-friendly side-street bar, the menu includes calamari, köfte, meze and fish netted by the proprietor.
Meydani Cafe (Patisserie)
(Phone:887 4420; Atatürk caddesi 35)
For excellent snacks and shop-made desserts, this big, airy cafe attracts a young crowd.
Kaleköy
Club Masi Hotel (Boutique Hotel)
(Phone: 887 4619; www.hotelmasi.com; Eski bademli; TL125/175)
Located above the Gökçeada-Kaleköy road, the country cousin of İstanbul's Hotel Masi has stylish,modern rooms with some of island's best views.
The terrace with its outdoor pool, jacuzzi, sun loungers and bar, gazes at kaleköy castle and the Agean.
Kalimerhaba Motel (Pension)
(Phone:887 3648; erayda@msn.com; Barbaros caddesi 28; s/d TL50/70)
On Kaleköy's water-front, Kalimerhaba has some of Gökçeada's smartest, cleanest budget rooms, entered from a big, light reception and vine-covered terrace.
Asmalı konak birahanesi (Cafe-bar)
(Phone:887 2469; mains TL7)
At this femaile-friendly side-street bar, the menu includes calamari, köfte, meze and fish netted by the proprietor.
Meydani Cafe (Patisserie)
(Phone:887 4420; Atatürk caddesi 35)
For excellent snacks and shop-made desserts, this big, airy cafe attracts a young crowd.
Kaleköy
Club Masi Hotel (Boutique Hotel)
(Phone: 887 4619; www.hotelmasi.com; Eski bademli; TL125/175)
Located above the Gökçeada-Kaleköy road, the country cousin of İstanbul's Hotel Masi has stylish,modern rooms with some of island's best views.
The terrace with its outdoor pool, jacuzzi, sun loungers and bar, gazes at kaleköy castle and the Agean.
Kalimerhaba Motel (Pension)
(Phone:887 3648; erayda@msn.com; Barbaros caddesi 28; s/d TL50/70)
On Kaleköy's water-front, Kalimerhaba has some of Gökçeada's smartest, cleanest budget rooms, entered from a big, light reception and vine-covered terrace.
Kaleköy - Gökçeada
Kaleköy - Gökçeada
Although the views are dented by the presence of the military, the Gökçeada Resort Hotel and a large yatch marina, Kaleköy (formerly Kastro) exudes an infectious seaside contentment.
Above the tiny public beach and rocks are a hillside old quarter, a lovely whitewashed former Greek church and the remains of an Ottoman-era castle.
The coastline between Kaleköy and Kuzulimanı forms a Sualtı milli parkı (National marine park)
Greek villages - Gökçeada
Greek villages - Gökçeada
Heading west from Gökçeada town, you'll pass Zeytinli (Aya theodoros) after 3km, Tepeköy (Agridia), another 7km on, and Dereköy (Shinudy), another 5 km west.
All were built on hillsides overlooking the island's central valley to avoid pirate raids.
Hapimag Resort Sea Garden - Bodrum hotels
Bodrium Boutique Resort & Spa - Bodrum hotels
Bodrium Boutique Resort & Spa - Bodrum hotels
From under $130
Hotel amenities
Bar/Lounge
Business Center
Fitness Center
Free Breakfast
Free High-Speed Internet
Free Parking
Restaurant
Room Service
Shuttle Bus service
Suites
Swimming Pool
Number of rooms: 56
Address: Buyuk Iskender Cad 13,
Bodrum 48400, Turkey
Phone: +90.252.311 03 60
From under $130Hotel amenities
Bar/Lounge
Business Center
Fitness Center
Free Breakfast
Free High-Speed Internet
Free Parking
Restaurant
Room Service
Shuttle Bus service
Suites
Swimming Pool
Number of rooms: 56
Address: Buyuk Iskender Cad 13,
Bodrum 48400, Turkey
Phone: +90.252.311 03 60
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