Myra features some of the most impressive and well preserved
Lycian monuments in the country. These include an excellent collection of rock
tombs and an imposing 2nd century theater.
Many of the
tombs have log cabin features carved into the rock, presumably reflecting the domestic architecture of the period.
A few easily accessible ones have inscriptions in the
Lycian language. Carvings above are mostly in poor repair but the overall effect of this jumble of the architecture of death is dramatic.
The theater, like many others in major
Roman cities, was later converted into an arena for gladiator fights and wild animal shows.
Many carvings and inscriptions in the theater are still visible, and cavernous tunnels and access ways to the side have been cleared.
While much of the seating is intact, the stage building is partly collapsed. A macabre set of three carved masks, presumably from the frieze, lies among the jumble of remains in the approach to the theater.
Today
Demre is an important agricultural town on the Mediterranean coast of Anatolia.
Around
Demre there are also
ruins of Andriake on Cayagzi
beach and
Kekova,
Simena and
Teimussa which are accessible by a short boat ride or some car driving.
Some people believe that Santa Claus did not exist but truth is that old Father Christmas did in fact exist as a historic personality.
He did not come from beyond the North Pole where Reindeers roam, but lived under the warm
Lycian sun as Bishop of Myra.
His church and ex-
tomb continue to exist as places of pilgrimage in the
Turkish town of
Demre (known also as Kale, near
Antalya).
Saint Nicholas was born in
Patara, was elected bishop during Diocletian's persecutions, and died in Myra around the year 350.
This stories of his charitable acts took on legendary dimensions during the following centuries.
One of these stories concerned three boys who were hacked into pieces by a greedy butcher, who salted and pickled them for sale in his shop. Nicholas miraculously restored the boys to life.
On another occasion, on hearing that the daughters of a poor Myran could not marry for lack of a dowry, Nicholas stole under the man's window at night and left a bag of gold for each girl.
This act earned him the reputation of secretly delivering gifts in the black of night.
By the 10th century Nicholas had become the most popular folk saint in the
Byzantine realm, counting as the patron of children, poor virgins, innocent prisoners, sailors and Russians.
His
tomb in Myra became the object of pilgrimages. A church was built around it in the 6th century.
After it was destroyed in an Arab raid, the church was rebuilt in its present form with the help of Constantine IX and Empress Zoe in 1043.
The fame of St. Nicholas was brought to the west by Teophano, a
Byzantine princess who married Otto II of Germany.
In 1087 some Italian merchants broke into the
tomb and removed the bones of Santa Claus to Bari, where the famous church of San Nicola di Bari was built.
Miraculously, enough other bones were found in Myra and transferred to the
Antalya Museum.
The church of St. Nicholas fell into disuse in
Turkish times. In 1862 Czar
Alexander I bought the edifice and began restoring it. Further restorations were carried out in recent years by the
Turkish government, which also promoted the annual festivities which take place on the saint's feast day.
Thousands of pilgrims from Italy,
Greece and other countries come to Myra each year on December.
Byzantine scholars and church historians meet to discuss the life and deeds of Santa Claus.
Unfortunately there is no resident Christian community in Myra
today, so the
Greek Orthodox Bishop of Myra holds office in Istanbul.
Other interesting sites in
Turkey are:
Antalya,
Kemer,
Phaselis,
Olympos,
Demre,
Kekova,
Simena,
Aperlai,
Kas,
Kalkan,
Patara,
Xanthos,
Letoon,
Tlos,
Pinara,
Oludeniz,
Fethiye,
Gocek,
Knidos,
Caunos,
Ekincik,
Gokova,
Marmaris and
Bodrum.