Known
in Turkish as "Beautiful Izmir" the city lies
at the head of a long and narrow gulf furrowed
by ships and yachts. The climate is mild and
in the summer the constant and refreshing sea
breezes temper the sun's heat. Behind the
palm-lined promenades and avenues which follow
the shoreline, the city, in horizontal
terraces, gently ascends the slopes of the
surrounding mountains. Izmir is the third
largest city in Turkey and its port is second
only to Istanbul.
A
cosmopolitan and lively city all year round,
Izmir bursts with an added vibrancy during the
International Arts Festival (June/July) and
the International Fair (August/Sept). The
original city was established in the third
millennium B.C. (at present day Bayrakli), at
which time it shared with Troy the most
advanced culture in Western Anatolia. By 1500
B.C. it had fallen under the influence of the
Central Anatolian Hittite Empire In the first
millennium B.C. Izmir, then known as Smyrna,
ranked as one of the most important cities of
the Ionian Federation.
During this period, one of the city's most
brilliant, it is believed that Homer resided
here. Lydian conquest of the city, around 600
B.C. brought this period to an end. Izmir
remained little more than a village throughout
the Lydian and subsequent sixth-century B.C.
Persian rule. In the fourth century B.C. a new
city was built on the slopes of Mt. Pagos (Kadifekale)
during the reign of Alexander the Great.
Izmir's Roman period, beginning in the first
century B.C., was its second great era.
Byzantine rule followed in the fourth century
and lasted until the Seljuk conquest in the
11th century. In 1415, under Sultan Mehmet
Celebi, Izmir became part of the Ottoman
Empire. |