Deep in the heart of Anatolia lies a world of powerful and strange, slightly unreal, beauty: a land of "fairy chimneys" and rock formations. It is one of the world’s most surreal and picturesque landscapes all formed from a very soft, volcanic stone. The region is transformed as the sun moves across the sky and casts moving shadows on the dramatic sculptural forms.
 
 
Cappadoccia, as this region is known, has been inhabited continuously for at least 4,000 years. It has some 40 underground cities - some were big enough to house 30,000 people in times of danger. These extensive cities, tunnels that linked them and the countless caves carved into the soft, volcanic stone were ideal hiding spots for the (Eastern Orthodox) Christians who have inhabited Cappadoccia for the last 2,000 years.
 

Perhaps even more spectacular is the art inside the caves in which they dwelled and worshipped. The cave churches - there are nearly 1,000 in Cappadoccia - were carved by hand from solid rock. Artisans sculpted soaring domes and vaults, columns and other architectural ornamentation. They were then frescoed with elaborate representations of events from the Bible (many of which took place on Turkish soil). Most spectacular is the collection of 30 frescoed churches, over 1,000 years old, which comprise the Goreme Open Air Museum.

 

Life goes on, much as it has for centuries in this traditionally-isolated region. Although tourism has impacted the region and many of the cave houses have been abandoned for more modern dwellings, some are still used as residences and even have electrical power brought to them.

The rock cut pigeon holes are still used for agriculture. Local wine is still produced (try some) and the Cappadoccian horses - famous throughout Central Asia - are still bred as they have been for centuries.

 
 
KONYA
Between Cappadoccia and the Turquoise Coast is Konya, one of the most traditional cities in Turkey and home to the famous whirling dervishes, a mystical Sufi group who is able to reach a trance-like state through certain dances.
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