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Turkey Diary: An open-air museum of marvels in Goreme, Cappadocia

Goreme is one of the most famous tourist destinations in Cappadocia, a mystique-laden land of curious rock formations and caves. Being here is like standing in a gigantic open-air museum.

A church among the caves in Goreme, Cappadocia, Turkey

Imagine yourself standing in front of a giant earth pyramid with gaping holes in it that look like windows and doors to a netherworld. Now pan your head from left to right and see yourself surrounded by these tall pillars and cones that seem to have mushroomed everywhere around you. The holes look larger as they open into a world that was once homes and hiding places, churches and caves where monks once lived.

I am in Goreme in Cappadocia and this is what they call an open-air museum.

In Cappadocia, I realize words have a meaning of their own. Fairy chimneys are, for instance, not man-made but chiselled and shaped by nature to look like mushrooms or camels -- or whatever you imagine them to be. Here men lived and built underground cities or created homes and churches in these rock spires at heights of 40 feet or more. Their troglodyte homes are set in a tableau of yawning valleys, which are not green but pink or ochre, creating a lunar landscape.

Goreme is one of the tourist destinations in Cappadocia. You find hotels and shops carved inside these fairy chimneys. They take you back to the days of yore when they were once dwellings of people. Here, an entire city was built underground while troglodyte villages were inhabited as early as the 4th century. In the open-air museum rock-hewn pinnacles, some with knobbled peaks, tower around me. Mounds and hillocks are everywhere while dark chambers carved inside them lead you to mysterious worlds. Scaling up to 100 feet, these hoodoos are magical shapes that rise from the ground and give a surreal touch to the landscape.

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The Goreme Open Air Museum is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and actually refers to a vast monastic complex with eleven churches carved in these rocks filled with some of the most beautiful frescos of the Byzantine period. Dated between the 10th-12th centuries, these cave chapels were sites of religious refuge. Monks who had settled here were probably the artists or had worked with them.

The names of these churches tickle my curiosity and the stories around them are fascinating. We stop at the Apple Church, also referred to as Elmali Kilise, which I thought had a mythical connection to the Biblical story of Adam and Eve. However, I learnt that it was a red orb in the hand of Archangel Michael that one can see in the dome of the apse which gave the church its name. My guide, however, says that it could also refer to an apple orchard that grew close by. Built around the 11th century, its four pillars are carved with the sign of a Greek cross. Amidst other paintings, you can also see the Last Supper.

Goreme had been a Christian sanctuary where monks dwelled or even hid during persecution. The churches here have highly figurative paintings drawn from the life of Christ and stories from the Bible. The Barbara Church is right behind the Apple Church and it is called the Azize Barbara Kilisesi. This is a church dedicated to the Egyptian martyr who was killed by her own father. Among other frescos in this 11thcentury church is, on the dome, a depiction of Christ on the Throne.

We visit the Snakes Church or Yılanlı Kilise to see a fresco that depicts the killing of the Snake by St George and St Theodore, while opposite the entrance is a painting of Christ with a book in hand. At the Çarıklı Kilise or the Church with Sandals, one can see two footprints below the Ascension fresco, painted right at the entrance .

However, the most spectacular of the churches is the Dark Church or Karanlık Kilise, which takes you inside through a narrow tunnel. There are paintings everywhere, on the walls, and on the dome depicting scenes from the New Testament, Nativity, Last Supper, Betrayal of Judas, and Crucifixion among others. My guide tells me that after the Turks invaded the region, it became a pigeon house and it was restored rather recently after cleaning out the pigeon droppings.

Interiors of the intriguing cave churches of Goreme in Cappadocia, Turkey.
Interiors of the intriguing cave churches of Goreme in Cappadocia, Turkey.

As we leave, my guide points to the Tokali or Buckle Church that lies away from the museum complex. This is the largest church in Goreme. It has four chambers -- the old church built in the 10th century, the New Church added in the next century, the Paracclesion, and the Lower Church. The church also has a crypt underneath the nave. Stunning paintings in rich indigo decorate the walls of the four main chambers, depicting in detail in vivid hues the Life of Christ and the twelve apostles. Outside is a nunnery which rises up six storeys high, although tourists are not allowed beyond the second storey.

We hop inside the van. A truck carrying a hot air balloon whizzes past us. I wonder what is most spectacular - the fairy chimneys carved by nature due to erosions or the homes and churches built in these rocky pyramids painted with such dazzling frescos.

Fact file

Cappadocia is one of the famous tourist destinations in Turkey and it can be easily accessed from Istanbul by air. Set aside at least three days to see some of the best sights in the region. Turkish Airlines connects directly to Istanbul from India.