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DREAMING
BLUE WATERS:LAKE BEYSEHIR
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2001
/MART
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The
Fasillar Monument is a 7.5 metre high granite
block off the Konya road about 17 kilometres from
Beysehir. The uncompleted carving depicts a male
figure, thought to be a god, dressed in long robes
with his hands across his chest, standing between
two lions. The Hittites were succeeded by the
Phrygians, Lydians, Persians, Macedonians and
Romans, and the area was an important centre of
Anatolian Seljuk culture in mediaeval times. Following
the collapse of the Seljuks, Beysehir became capital
of the Turkish Esrefogullari Principality, declining
in importance in Ottoman times.
The most important historic buildings in Beysehir
date from the Esrefogullari period and include
Esrefogullari Mosque, thought to date from the
13th century. This is Turkey's largest columned
mosque with a flat ceiling and wooden roof, and
the stone and wood carving, tiling and mosaic,
are exquisite examples of Seljuk-style decoration.
Also not to be missed in the city are the Esrefoglu
Kumbet mausoleum, Ismail Aka Medrese, Kurucesme
Han, and the Bedesten bazaar. |
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