10 REASONS TO VISIT EDIRNE

10 REASONS TO VISIT EDIRNE

Mon, 09/01/2008 - 12:55

Bridges, oil wrestlers, abandoned synagogue and more...

bridge.jpg

1. Edirne Bridges

The Ottoman Turks were not famous for their roads. They preferred bridges – in fact, they were obsessed with them. If the Bosporus hadn't been so huge, they would have built bridges across it as well. The Maritsa and the Tundzha, which flow through Edirne, were simultaneously narrow enough to make bridges possible and wide enough to make their construction a feat of engineering. The result is several bridges whose stone arches rise with dignity and grace above the broad, calm waters of the rivers. Most were built according to wishes of sultans – Edirne was the capital city from 1361 until the capture of Constantinople in 1453. Traces of the Ottoman rulers live on in the central bridge over the Maritsa, which the Turks call Meriç. The sultans would watch military and artisan parades from the stone alcove in the middle. The bridge continues to be used as an everyday transport artery.

2. Balkan Wars Martyrdom Museum

Balkan Wars Martyrdom Museum

Since written history began, Edirne has been the site of at least 15 major battles and sieges. The Turks decided to dedicate a whole museum to the last of them – the Bulgarian siege of 1912-13. The supposedly impregnable Edirne Fortress, which Bulgarians captured on 13 March 1913, is now full of photos, weapons, maps and captivating dummies telling the story of General Mehmed Şükrü Paşa's epic defence. Even the Bulgarians recognised his valour – the general was forced to surrender only after Istanbul delayed sending reinforcements several times. Bulgaria's King Ferdinand himself returned the sword of the defeated pasha – a moment immortalised in several paintings in the exhibit.

3. Old train station

 Old train station

During the First Balkan War of 1912-13 Bulgarians fought fierce battles to break through the defensive lines in the Karaağaç neighbourhood, where Edirne's old train station is located. Now they, and all the other tourists, can freely enter the station's courtyard to admire the magnificent combination of European and Ottoman architecture. Built in 1890, it houses the Trakya University Chancellor's Office.

4. Selimiye Mosque

Selimiye Mosque

The Selimiye Mosque is universally recognised as a masterpiece of the Islamic architecture, and the man who built it, Mimar Sinan, was the greatest architect to build for the Ottoman sultans. Some say it resembles Haghia Sophia in Constantinople. In fact, Sinan copied the famous cathedral right down to the dome's dimensions. There is, however, one basic difference between the two buildings: Twenty-one years after the church's completion in 537, Haghia Sophia's cupola collapsed following an earthquake. The dome of Selimiye – the mosque was built between 1568 and 1574 – lasted until 1912, when it was hit by Bulgarian artillery shelling the city in the First Balkan War. Luckily, the damage to the dome and the frescoes was minimal. Kemal Atatürk refused to allow repairs, leaving the damage to serve as a reminder of the horrors of war. Even today you can spot the small stain on the dome.Once you enter and your initial awe passes, go to the little spring in the centre of the mosque. Believers think that the water there is zemzem, or coming from Mecca. On one of the columns next to it you'll find Selimiye's most famous image – the tulip drawn upside-down.

5. Old houses

Old houses

Edirne preserves something that Bulgaria is losing as quickly as it is losing its pristine coastline – well-preserved traditional urban architecture. Bulgarians proudly refer to this as their national Revival Period style, but don't be fooled. You can find fantastic late-19th Century houses all over the former Ottoman Empire – from western Greece to the eastern parts of Turkey. Edirne is the closest place to Bulgaria to see them.

6. Sculptures

Sculptures

Residents of every Turkish city erect sculptures to honour what they consider their biggest local pride. In Van, there is a memorial to the Van cat; Diyarbekır has immortalised its huge watermelons; and in Edirne they've dedicated a monument to pehlivani, or oil wrestlers. The statue greets all travellers arriving on the highway from Istanbul. In the centre of the city, in front of the Selimiye Mosque, you'll find also a statue of Mimar Sinan. Across the street there's a statue of tulips – red, of course.

7. Kırkpınar's wrestlers

Kırkpınar's wrestlers

Take that, Olympics! Wrestling contests in Edirne's Kırkpınar neighbourhood are older than the quarter itself. They have been held since 1361 – earning a mention in the Guinness Book of World Records as the oldest continuous sporting event in the world. Hopefuls looking to win the title of baş pehlivan, or wrestling champion, gather every year during the first weekend of July.The sight of men naked to the waist, wearing leather pants, doused in oil and wrestling as an ensemble of zurni, or folk oboes, and tapani, or bass drums, primes the crowd is thrilling.

Kırkpınar's wrestlers

Even the French Empress Eugenie was intrigued to watch the pehlivani Sultan Abdülaziz brought with him on a visit to Paris in 1867.Two of Sultan Murad I's soldiers began the tradition during the 1361 siege of Edirne. The oily fight started as a joke, but when no clear winner emerged, the friendly match turned into a test of honour. In the end, both wrestlers collapsed in exhaustion – still tied. Forty springs appeared where they fell – hence the name Kırkpınar. Even now, the wrestlers, who come from all over Turkey, take defeat hard – some cry when they lose.

8. People

People

Edirne is as cosmopolitan as you would expect any city on Europe's most important trade routes to be. During the 19th Century the number of ethnic Bulgarians living there was second only to that in Istanbul. The 1905 census showed that out of 80,000 residents, only 30,000 were Muslims – including Turks, Albanians, Gypsies and Caucasians. The rest were Greeks, Bulgarians, Armenians and Jews. One century, two Balkan and two World Wars later things are different. Now many Edirne citizens will pick up at least a little Bulgarian, probably because the city is close to Bulgaria and cross-border shopping is de rigeur. Some pomatsi – a community that are the successors of Christian Bulgarians who converted to Islam during the Ottoman rule – who were resettled here from either southern Bulgaria or northern Greece after the First World War, still survive, and speak some Bulgarian. So do their offspring.

9. Health Museum

Health Museum

The dummies at the Health Museum in Kırkpınar tell a more peaceful story – of medicine and psychiatric treatment in the Ottoman Empire. Here you won't find European "healing techniques," like immersion in cold water, starvation or chains, which were popular until the 19th Century. Ottoman doctors followed Arabic psychiatric traditions and prescribed treatments including music, work and even floral aromas. The exhibit is in a very appropriate spot – the hospital and medical school opened by Sultan Bayezid II in 1488.

health museum

10. Synagogue

With its collapsed roof, the thick weeds that do more to keep out trespassers than the fence, the "Keep out!" sign and the padlock on the door, the Edirne synagogue looks like something out of a Caspar David Friedrich painting or a spooky movie. When Edirne's Jews built it in 1906, it was the largest synagogue in the Balkans. The local Jewish community had lived in Edirne since the time of the Roman Empire. In fact, it was Edirne's Rabbi Yitzhak Sarfati, at the beginning of the 15th Century, who called upon his fellow Jews in Christian Europe "to seek safety and prosperity in Turkey." At that time Spain and Portugal had already expelled Sephardic Jews and anti-Semitism was gaining ground.

Synagogue

Jews lived in the Ottoman Empire undisturbed, and Turkey's neutrality during the Second World War saved them from the Holocaust. The dream of Israel, however, was too powerful to resist. During the second half of the 20th Century most Jews left Turkey, and Edirne was no exception. The only traces left of the city's Jewish quarter are the name and the synagogue. The synagogue functioned until the 1970s, but a storm in 1997 destroyed the roof and three of its walls. It still stands now, in a state of magnificent dereliction, a voiceless witness to Edirne's turbulent history.

Issue 24 Turkey

Commenting on www.vagabond.bg

Vagabond Media Ltd requires you to submit a valid email to comment on www.vagabond.bg to secure that you are not a bot or a spammer. Learn more on how the company manages your personal information on our Privacy Policy. By filling the comment form you declare that you will not use www.vagabond.bg for the purpose of violating the laws of the Republic of Bulgaria. When commenting on www.vagabond.bg please observe some simple rules. You must avoid sexually explicit language and racist, vulgar, religiously intolerant or obscene comments aiming to insult Vagabond Media Ltd, other companies, countries, nationalities, confessions or authors of postings and/or other comments. Do not post spam. Write in English. Unsolicited commercial messages, obscene postings and personal attacks will be removed without notice. The comments will be moderated and may take some time to appear on www.vagabond.bg.

0 comments

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

Discover More

John Lennon's Wall in Prague
VAGABOND'S INTERNATIONAL WALK OF FAME
You went to LA, okay. You think you've seen it all – and walked over it: the pinkish stars on the pavement of Hollywood Boulevard with names of actors, musicians and celebrities, many of whom long forgotten, but immortalised in the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Залезът на Санторини
#VISITGREECE
Ако сте от хората, които лягат и стават с Instagram, Гърци

athos monastery
ОТКРИЙТЕ МИСТИЧНА ГЪРЦИЯ
Гърция е земя не само на приятни плажове,

Santorini sea
ДЕСЕТ ГРЪЦКИ ОСТРОВА
Може да са 1200. Може да са и 6000. Точният брой на островите в Гърция може да варира според това как броите и както смятате за остров.

Sarti Beach, Halkidiki
НАЙ-ДОБРОТО ОТ ХАЛКИДИКИ
Защо почивате на Халкидики? Всеки има своя отговор. Но когато обобщим, откриваме, че можем да подредим най-доброто от Халкидики в пет категории.

Halkidiki-AMMOYLIANI ISLAND-East-Coast copy.jpg
ТОП 10 НЕЩА, КОИТО ДА ПРАВИМ НА ХАЛКИДИКИ ПРЕЗ ЛЯТОТО
Щом сте тръгнали за Халкидики, ясно е, че основната ви цел е да се установите възможно най-близо до морето и да прекарвате основната част от времето на плажа.

tel aviv.jpg
5 MUST-VISIT PLACES IN ISRAEL
It is impossible to cover all the wonders that you will discover once you set foot in Israel, but here are five of the most astonishing ones.

Barbayanni is one of the best known brands of Lesvos ouzo
DISCOVERING OUZO
The pines cast a dappled shade on our table and the cool sea is lapping at our feet, the rumble of pebbles drowned by the ecstatic chirping of the cicadas.

table with a view_i523856186_560.jpg
ТОП 10 ХРАНИ И НАПИТКИ, КОИТО ОПРЕДЕЛЯТ ВКУСА НА ГЪРЦИЯ
За нас е станало всекидневие да използваме гръцки зехтин у дома или да си поръчваме панирани калмари в ресторанта, но истината е, че гръцката кухня е несравнимо по-вкусна, когато сме в Гърция.

ТОП 10 СКРИТИ СЪКРОВИЩА НА ГЪРЦИЯ
Всеки интелигентен човек е способен да изброи поне пет места и забележителности в Гърция със световна слава (особено, ако следва популярните инфлуенсъри в социалните мрежи). Но страната предлага много повече от Акропола, Санторини, Корфу, Делфи и Миконос.
open.jpg
10 ГРЪЦКИ ОСТРОВА, КОИТО ДА ПОСЕТИМ ПРЕЗ 2020
Гърция нямаше да бъде Гърция, ако ги нямаше островите. Разпилени сред сините води на Егейско, Средиземно и Йонийско море, те са мозайка от различни истории, култури, пейзажи и кулинарни традиции, които са се преплитали на тях през вековете.