KONYA: The City of Rumi
‘Iconium’ of the Roman times, is 263 km from Ankara. The land appears as a wide plateau, and has been continuously inhabited even since the 8th millennium BC.
Çatalhöyük is an ancient city of that period, which is considered to be one of the first settlement areas in the world, accommodating the earliest human communities. Made up of mud houses, which were entered through holes in the roofs, this site is a real place of interest, where you can feel the uppermost closeness to the life prevailing, long years ago. The finds from the district, including the cult figures of the famous temple and the mother goddess, together with old frescoes, are now on display in the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara.
In the environs of Konya, there also exist remains from the Hittites. Ivriz is one, 168 km east of Konya, which comprises one of the finest Neo-Hittite reliefs in the country, representing a king and the fertility god of the time. Eflatun Pınar is another important site, which is a monumental fountain of the Hittite age, constituting a holy place of the period.
When the Byzantines came into rule, Konya became an independent province, and was given the name “Lycanoia”. Belonging to those times, is a Byzantine church and several rock chapels filled with beautiful frescoes, which can be seen in the town of Sille, 8 km northwest of Konya.
During the 12th and 13th centuries, the city acted as the capital of the Seljuk Turks, and advanced rapidly to become a great cultural center.
The most famous building here, is the Green Mausoleum of Mevlana Celaleddini Rumi, the great Turkish philosopher and poet. He is the founder of the sect of Whirling Dervishes, the seminary of which was attached to the mausoleum. It is now converted into a museum housing Mevlana’s works, and accoutrements related to his sect. Every year in December, ceremonies are held in Konya for the Commemoration of Mevlana and the Whirling Dervishes. In this Dervish Festival, the ‘Sema’ dance is performed by men dressed in white robes, whirling and rotating around the floor. This dance, in which the dancer with the great love of God is believed to attain divine unity, is an event well worth seeing.
Karatay Madrassa, constructed in 1251, stands to the north of this hill, and now is a museum which holds the best examples of Seljuk tiles and ceramics. The ince Minareli Medresse with its fascinating monumental portal, the Sırçalı Medresse, and the Iplikçi Mosque are other Seljuk works in the city.
The various museums, comprising rich collections of historical finds, are other interesting sights in Konya. Especially the Archeological Museum should be visited for its charming pieces, including the Sidemara Sarcophagus. The Ethnographical Museum and Atatürk’s House are also at the service of history lovers.