• +90 542 441 2 444
  • [email protected]
  • 0

Myra Kekova


Total: 1 tour .    Showing 1 - 1 view all

Search for Tour

Not what you're looking for? Try your search again

There are no available activity for this location, time and/or date you selected.

    Total: No activity found .    view all

    Search for Activity

    Not what you're looking for? Try your search again

    Loading Maps
    View
    Normal Midnight Family Fest Open dark Riverside Ozan
    My Location Fullscreen

    Plajlar

    Santa Claus (St Nicholas) Museum

    An 11th-century church in Demre, now the Santa Claus Museum (Noel Baba Müzesi), once held his earthly remains, but in 1087 most of his bones were taken by force to Bari in Italy, and the remainder taken to Venice in 1100. (Churches were built in both cities to preserve the purloined relics. In 2009 the Turkish government demanded the return of the relics to Demre.

    Nicholas was born in nearby Patara, became a priest, rose to the rank of bishop, and did much of his good work here in the Roman town then called Myra, a name derived from myrrh.

    Legend has it that he’d drop small bags of gold coins down the chimneys of houses with poor girls who were old enough to marry, but had no dowry. Another story says he’d leave gold coins in the shoes of the poor who put them out for him. Sanctified for his good works, he became the patron saint of virgins, sailors, children, pawnbrokers and Holy Russia.

    Roman Myra

    Today the Santa Claus Museum (Noel Baba Müzesi) is Demre’s most visited site, but there are other things to see in this small coastal Mediterranean town. About 2 km (1.2 miles) inland are the ruins of Roman Myra, with a well-preserved theater and impressive rock-hewn tombs.

    Roman rock tombs at Myra (Demre), Turkey

    Rock-hewn Lycian tombs at Demre, similar to those at nearby Dalyan, Fethiye and Kaş. The person inspecting the tomb in the white circle gives you a sense of scale.

    Çayağzı (Andriake)

    Çayağzı, 5 km (3 miles) west of Demre just off the coastal highway, was called Andriake in Roman times, and has ruins of a plakoma, harbor, baths, churches and synagogues, as well as a decent, small beach, and several small restaurants.

    Here in 2009, archeologists from Akdeniz University discovered the ruins of a 1500-year-old Roman synagogue atop a hill overlooking the harbor. A marble tablet inscribed with a menorah, shofar and bugle, palm tree and lemon tree helped to identify the building.

    The 7-room Hadrian granary (129 AD) is now the Museum of Lycian Civilizations, with displays including a 16-meter-long (52-foot) Roman-era boat.

     

    DEMRE MYRA

    Demre (Myra), 50 km (31 miles east of Kaş and 80 km (50 miles) southwest of Çıralı (map), is the town where Santa Claus (Noel Baba in Turkish) first brought joy.

    Actually, it was St Nicholas, a 4th-century Bishop of Myra, who lived and worked here, and who was later transmuted into the jolly Christmas elf called Sinterklaas in Holland (and similar names in other European countries), and later Santa Claus in North America.