Fortress Erzurum (Uc Kumbetler) description and photos - Turkey: Erzurum

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Fortress Erzurum (Uc Kumbetler) description and photos - Turkey: Erzurum
Fortress Erzurum (Uc Kumbetler) description and photos - Turkey: Erzurum

Video: Fortress Erzurum (Uc Kumbetler) description and photos - Turkey: Erzurum

Video: Fortress Erzurum (Uc Kumbetler) description and photos - Turkey: Erzurum
Video: Turkey/Erzurum (Castle of Erzurum “Three Tombs”) Part 6 2024, May
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Erzurum fortress
Erzurum fortress

Description of the attraction

Erzurum is an ancient city located on a high plateau in eastern Turkey. It originated from the Byzantine fortress of Theodosiopolis. The location of the city on the route that ran from Persia to the Black Sea contributed to its development. Throughout history, the city was owned by the Byzantines, Seljuk Turks, Armenians, Arabs.

The oldest building in Erzurum is a partially preserved fortress, built by Theodosius in the fifth century. It was this fortress that the Russians seized during the Russian-Turkish wars, Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin also visited here, after which he wrote one of the first traveller's diaries in the literature: "Travel to Erzurum."

The Erzurum fortress, which has a passage along the top of the wall, stands as a guard in the center of the Old City on a hill. It was restored in 1555 by Suleiman the Great and was rebuilt a couple of times at different times. Inside the fortress walls there is a small 12th century mosque with three separate minarets and a conical roof. A neo-baroque gallery was added to the minaret in the nineteenth century. This minaret later became known as Saat Kulezi, which translates as "clock tower", if you wish, you can climb it. The clock on the tower was donated by Queen Victoria.

Moats run around the fortress. Iron gates, double; they cross them over bridges, between these two gates there are ten cannons (bal-emez). From the side of the Tabriz gates there was only one row of walls, as high as the gates themselves, which connected with the fortress. They were very strong and well fortified (covered with cannons, "like a hedgehog").

Outside, there is a high tower that rises above the fortress and rushes into the heavens, which is like a stone minaret. This tower is covered with boards and is known as Kesik-kule. In it, ten beautiful cannons (sarakhs) have been preserved, which in the old days did not allow even a bird to approach the plains stretching from the fortress in all directions.

Also in the fortress there were two thousand eighty loopholes. All loopholes and battlements had special embrasures. In total, there were about one thousand seven hundred houses inside the citadel. They were all old buildings and covered with clay.

The main system of Erzurum fortifications are rugged mountains, which are very skillfully equipped with powerful fortifications. The fortress wall is a pile of stones faced with stone, fastened with mortar. The bas-relief of the fortress reminds of the heroic past.

The fortress changed hands many times, each new conqueror rebuilt the walls destroyed as a result of the assault, so the exact date of the current construction is unknown.

In the last couple of hundred years, the fortress of Erzurum most often had to feel the strength and power of the Russian armies. Erzurum was captured by Russian troops three times. The first seizure of the Erzurum fortress was carried out in 1829 by General Ivan Paskevich, who had vast military experience: participation in Borodino and many other battles with Napoleon's army. General Paskevich brilliantly defeated the Turkish troops on the eve of the storming of Erzurum. In this regard, the city surrendered almost without a fight.

The second attempt to capture Erzurum by the Russians was made in October 1878. This time the Turks organized a very good defense of the fortress, so General Gaiman could not take it on the move. Erzurum was handed over to Russia only as a result of an armistice signed in 1879. And the Russians conquered the Erzurum citadel for the third time in 1916 during the First World War. However, this conquest was meaningless, since the Russian Empire ceased to exist a year later.

Photo

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