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THROUGH HISTORY'S EYES : ALANYA
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2001 / JULY
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sheltered harbour attracted pirates to Coracesium,
which in the mid-2nd century BC became the stronghold
of a notorious pirate chief named Trython. The
pirates were expelled by Antiochus VII in 139
BC, and again, this time for good, in 65 BC by
the Roman general Magnus. Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad
marched on this strategic port from his capital
Konya 200 kilometres inland, and the Christian
ruler of Colonoros, Kyr Vart, surrendered in 1221
when he realised that there was no hope of holding
out against the attacking army. Sultan Keykubad
married the daughter of Kyr Vart, who was converted
to Islam and took the Muslim name Mah-Peri. After
the death of Sultan Keykubad the town declined
along with Seljuk power as a result of the Mongol
invasion of 1243, followed by the Egyptian Memluk
invasion of 1277. In 1300 the Seljuk state broke
up into several principalities, one of which,
the Karamanogullari, gained control
of Alanya. In 1427 the Karamanogullari
sold Alanya to the Memluk sultan for five thousand
gold sovereigns, and in 1471 it became part of
the Ottoman Empire under Mehmed II. |
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