Turkey’s land of fairy chimneys

Cappadocia, a dreamy slice of central Turkey dotted with ancient rock formations, has a history every bit as remarkable as its landscape.

Cappadocia, a dreamy slice of central Turkey dotted with “fairy chimneys” (rock formations), has a history every bit as remarkable as its landscape.

Volcanic eruptions created this surreal moonscape. The lava flows formed tuff rock, which wind and rain sculpted into sinuous valleys with curvy cliff faces and pointy fairy chimneys. Cappadocians chiselled homes in the soft rock, paving the way for cave-dwelling hippies and today’s boutique fairy-chimney hotels.

The area’s most extraordinary phase was during the medieval era, when the valleys were a refuge for Byzantine Christians. The religious troglodytes established monastic settlements and their cave churches add a Biblical solemnity to the Flintstones-like region. The Göreme Open-Air Museum, a World Heritage site, has the best collection of chapels and living quarters, most dating around the 11th Century.

Byzantine frescoes
Despite centuries of weathering and vandalism, many of the frescoes (or more accurately seccos, which are painted on dry rather than wet plaster) are glorious, colourful sights. The Dark Church has the best examples: multicoloured angels cover the pillars and vaulted ceilings, along with scenes such as the birth of Jesus, with an ox and donkey poking their noses into the manger. As the church’s name suggests, the lack of light has preserved the paintings, which still look fresh and vivid after a millennium.

Other monastic complexes nestle in the valleys, many recalling Star Wars-like backdrops (but do not believe mischievous guides who claim Chewbacca was ever here). The most popular for a stroll is Ihlara Valley, filled with riverside greenery, birdsong and a string of churches cut into the base of towering cliffs.

Underground cities
The local Christians were persecuted, first by the Romans and then raiding Muslims, and they often had to hide from hostile forces. When they heard hoof beats, they would abandon the cave churches and go underground – quite literally. Beneath Cappadocia’s rock formations is a network of subterranean cities, which housed up to 10,000 people each. The largest discovered are almost 10 levels deep, with narrow passages connecting the floors like hamster tunnels.

Touring the cities, you pass stables with handles used to tether the animals, churches with altars and baptism pools, walls with air circulation holes, granaries with grindstones and blackened kitchens with ovens. The ventilation shafts were disguised as wells, and chunky rolling-stone doors served as last lines of defence. Not many artefacts remain – the inhabitants took their possessions when they returned to the surface – but the cities give a sense of life continuing in tough conditions.

Live like a troglodyte
Staying in Cappadocia today does not involve any hardship or subterranean chambers. Many cave dwellings and fairy-chimney chapels have been converted into boutique hotels, where you can live the troglodyte life in luxury. Features include cave hamams (Turkish baths), rock-cut arches, walls patterned with volcanic colour-banding and panoramic terraces surveying the valleys. You will quickly discover what the locals have known for centuries: the tuff rock keeps rooms cool in summer and warm in winter.

The allure of tourist dollars has tempted many Cappadocians away from agriculture. The pigeon houses riddling the rock faces, traditionally used to collect the birds’ droppings for use as fertiliser, mostly stand empty. Nonetheless, village life continues and vestiges of the fabulous past remain – including the local wine. Cappadocia has one of the world’s oldest wine industries, which stretches back some 4,000 years to the Hittites, the first to recognise the volcanic soil’s viticultural qualities, and to carve rock cellars. As you sample the Anatolian grape, there is certainly a great deal of history to reflect on in this land of fairy chimneys and Byzantine remains.

How to
Turkish Airlines flies from Istanbul to Nevşehir, Cappadocia. It also flies to nearby Kayseri from Istanbul, as does Anadolu Jet, while Pegasus Airlines flies from both Istanbul and Izmir and Sun Express flies from Germany. Daily buses from Istanbul take about 11 hours (normally overnight).

To bypass the tour groups, visit the churches and underground cities early in the morning, at midday or near closing. A guide is beneficial, particularly at the underground cities, as they can explain what happened in the bare stone chambers.

The article ‘Turkey’s land of fairy chimneys’ was published in partnership with Lonely Planet.

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