Sailing in Turkey also allows visitors to experience the hospitality of the people in the coastal villages and towns. The tempered winds blowing from west and northwest make the long summers ideal for yachting, and seem to encourage an appreciation of nature. From some of the turquoise coast's unspoilt and sheltered bays you can see mountain peaks rising to almost 3000 meters above sea level.

Monday, August 27, 2018

BARKA SHIPYARD REFIT & MAINTENANCE

Didim D-Marin - Aydın - Turkey

GPS : 37°00'44.3"N 27°27'01.0"E / 37.012303, 27.450277



If you are considering refitting or just doing winter maintenance on your yacht, it will be our pleasure to discuss your options and requirements, and explain with all details how we can assist you effectively and efficiently. Wheather your yacht needs a major refit or simply a routine maintenance; our dedicated technical team will assist you with the maximum of attention for your full satisfaction.

OUR REFIT SERVICES & FACILITIES

Launching & Hauling
Wood Construction
Wood Works
Teak Deck Renewal & Repair
Furnishing
Mechanical Works
Hydraulic Works
Steel Processing for Construction & Renewal
Stainless Steel Works
Metal Works
Shaft, Propeller & Rudder Works
Main and Auxiliary Machinery
Plumbing & Domestic Systems
Fiberglass Works
Shrinkwrap Boat Cover
Hatch Replacement and Repair
Ventilation Works
Insulation Works
Electric and Electronic Works
Air-conditioning Works
Refrigeration Works
Equipment Servicing
Spray / Brush Painting & Repairs
Sand Blasting
Antifouling
Osmosis Treatment
Interior & Exterior Varnishing
Rigging & Sails
Designing Works
Wash Down Service

For any further information relevant to the above, in connection with specific port regulations etc, please do not hesitate to contact us.

DİDİM REFIT CENTRE

The facility is laid on 60.000 m2 dry-docking area, including two climate controlled 1.000 m2 sheds which are 11, 20 meters high,14 meters wide and 60 meters in length. Each shed has two 5 tonnes travelling overhead cranes, all accessible by 400 tonnes travel lift.

DİDİM D-MARIN MARINA
Didim - Aydın - Turkey
GPS : 37°20'14.5"N 27°15'53.7"E / 37.337372, 27.264919
VHF Channel : 16 / 72
Call Sign : " dmarin didim "
Main Breakwater Lighthouse
Light : R.FI.5.0 sn (1.0 + 4.0)
GPS : 37°20'13.4"N 27°15'55.8"E / 37.337047, 27.265499
Inner Breakwater Lighthouse
Light : G.FI.5.0 sn (1.0 + 4.0)
GPS : 37°20'13.3"N 27°15'50.2"E / 37.337024, 27.263953

Our superyacht services and extensive dry dock facilities including 350 storage sheds and two hangars with 24-hour security and winter maintenance are unparalleled. D-Marin Didim has fast become the preferred Superyacht Homeport marina in Turkey.

With superyacht services, ample yacht-lifting capacity, extensive dry dock facilities, 350 storage sheds and two hangars – all protected 24 hours a day by professional security personnel, D-Marin Didim is fully equipped to deal with all of your repair and maintenance needs. At D-Marin Didim you will find the exemplary level of service, expertise and professionalism which characterize all D-Marin Marinas. Our friendly staff provide the level of quality service with flexibility and reliability that boat owners expect and appreciate.

Marina Total Area : 287.000 m2
Capacity At Sea : 625 Berths
Drypark : 600 Yachts
Travel Lift : 400 tonnes and 100 tonnes
Hauling Draft : 6 meters
Max. Water Depth : 10 meters
Max. Length : 50 meters
Yard Trailer Capacity : 40 – 100 tons


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WEB SITE : Barka Shipyard Refit - Maintenance

MORE INFO & CONTACT
E-Mail : info@barkashipyard.com
Phone : +90 252 316 4204
Mobile/Office : +90 532 612 9984
Fax : +90 252 316 9 53

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GEBEKSE COVE ANCHORAGE

Bozburun, Marmaris, - Muğla - Turkey

GPS : 36°42'11.9"N 28°13'52.4"E / 36.703294, 28.231225



PHOTOGRAPHS ALBUM

Gebekse is a small, well protected and isolated cove just 1 Nm W of Çiftlik. It is easy to anchor here and go to Çiftlik with the dinghy for dinner. This is the perfect place to spend a few hours before you motor around to Çiftlik for dinner.

Gebekse Koyu lies by İnceburun Peninsula, between points; Akyar Burnu and Çiftlik Adası. İnceburun Peninsula is connected to shore with a narrow isthmus and extends to the E for about 0.5 Nm and protects Gebekse from breeze. The depths in the bay gradually shelve ashore. The bottom is weed at the entrance and becomes clear sand.

Boats can be pushed off or anchored with a line ashore. Gebekse Koyu affords sheltering from breeze. The slopes are covered by olive trees. The ruins ashore are from Byzantine era. This anchorage gets crowded by the tripper boats from Marmaris, but it is quite after 16:00.

Drop an anchor and take a line ashore. If you drop anchor in this bay you will find yourself in a little piece of paradise, although it does not have room for many yachts to swing to anchor, there is plenty of room stern to. The best place is deep down on the port side in 5-10 metres.

Jump overboard for a swim in clear blue sea and it's well worth swimming ashore to explore the Byzantine ruins. Gerbeske has some of the best snorkelling in the area with many varieties of tiny fish here.

On the point of this cove in the sand you will see archaeological remains. The Gebekse ruins are believed to be of a church. There is a small beach and an open air restaurant. You will get great pleasure from swimming with goggles and seeing the wonderful colours beneath the water.

You can also go to Gebekse Cove, next to Çiftlik, on a boat, in order to dive or swim. At the end of the bay, there are ruins which are considered to belong to a church. Blue Voyage yachts moor here, rather than daily tour boats. The cove with a tiny strand and harbour-like restaurant offers thousands of colours to divers under the sea.

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GELİBOLU LIGHTHOUSE MUSEUM

Gelibolu - Çanakkale - Turkey

GPS : 40°24'35.8"N 26°40'53.1"E / 40.409934, 26.681426



Gelibolu lighthouse is located on a promontory on the northwest side of the strait. This lighthouse marks the northern entrance to the narrow portion of the Dardanelles. This lighthouse marks the northern entrance to the narrow portion of the Dardanelles. Gelibolu (Gallipoli) was the scene of an unsuccessful siege by Allied troops in 1915, during World War I.

Construction Date : 01.01.1856

Location : Located on a bluff in Gelibolu, on the northwest side of the strait. This lighthouse marks the northern entrance to the narrow portion of the Dardanelles. Site open, tower closed

Building : Round cylindrical masonry tower with lantern and gallery, attached to a 1-story masonry keeper's house. Lighthouse painted white.

Focal Plane : 34 mt (112 ft)
Tower Height : 9 mt (30 ft)

Character : W. FI. 5.0 Second
Flashing Character : 0.5 + 4.5
Visibility Range : 15 nautical miles
Fog Signal : Siren - 2 blasts every 30 seconds.

Illuminate Type : AGA LBUA 375 mm
Lighthouse System : Devvar
Flasher Type : -
Electric Lamp :  500 W
Bulb Type : 220 Volt
Energy : Electricity

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Sunday, August 19, 2018

SEDİR ISLAND ANCHORAGE

Ula - Muğla - Turkey

GPS : 36°59'39.7"N 28°12'26.6"E / 36.994373, 28.207395



PHOTOGRAPHS ALBUM

The islands between points Çapa Burnu and Domuz Burnu are known as Şehir Islands. The largest island is called as Sedir Island. Sedir Island is located on The Gulf of Gökova on the 18 km north of Marmaris. Sedir Adası, also known as Cleopatra Island, is a small island in the Gulf of Gökova of southwestern Aegean Sea off the coast of Ula, part of Muğla Province of Turkey.

PROTECTION
As a passionate gesture, her lover Marc Anthony shipped a boat of sand from Egypt and together they swam in the crystal blue waters and walked the sandy beach that reminded her of home. Hence, the name of Cleopatra’s island and for many years, nobody challenged the myth until science proved that although there is no other sand like it in Turkey, its unique formation is actually caused by dissolving seashells.

It has one of the most special beaches in the world which is famous for its beach made from seashells. It is said that this organic sand was brought by ships from the Red Sea especially for Cleopatra. Each grain of sand is a perfect sphere, for this reason the beach is heavily protected by the government to prevent any sand being removed from the beach.

Under protection of the government, strict rules were enforced including making it illegal to remove any sand from the area. Beach towels and bags are not allowed and people are requested to shower before leaving. Most of the sandy beach is also under restricted access.

PUBLIC BEACH
After disembarking from the boat at the jetties on Sedir Island, a short walk through rocky olive groves brings you to the “sandy” beach. The beach itself is about 100 m long and visitors are only allowed on a narrow strip about 2 - 3 m deep. It is said that sufferers of rheumatic aliments find that lying on this 'sand' significantly eases their complaints.

APPROACH
There is a clean passage between the land and the Saray island, when you arrive from southwest to the land. Of land depth is between 5 - 7 meters, in the hard sand. Because of the waves that come from the west, this cove is incompatible for passage, especially at night. There is a second northern passage to this passage, between the land and the tiny island Saray. It is the widest and cleanest passage, but be careful from the shallow water northern to Şehir island.

Ördek Rocks : Care is needed for a sea-level rock extending to W from Sedir Adası. This rock-bounded area is marked by a metal pole with W cardinal.

LANDING SEDIR ADASI
A custodian patrols the island, who will charge you a fee to step ashore. Visiting the island is controlled by ticket and you are not allowed to visit at night.

PIER
There is a pier by Sedir Island, occupied by tripper boats. It gets very crowded in summer. The settings are very attractive, but extreme care is needed while anchoring here.

There are 3 meters depths of the pier. Boats may drop anchor and get a line to the pier at night.  The bottom is sand but you must be sure your anchor is dug well. With strong winds, there are gusts and confused sea and considerable swell penetrates right in the cove itself. The shore on the north of Sedir Island, extending like a tonque, provides better sheltering from breeze with a line ashore. The cove is open to northerly blowing winds. The wind direction is liable to change in the evening from N to NE.

BUFFET
There is a small Buffet on the island with fairly reasonably priced drinks and snacks. The beach closes at 7 pm and it's best to visit the island in the morning, as early as possible, because the beach gets overcrowded especially after 1 pm during the high season.  There is little shade so it's a good idea to bring plenty of water.

EAST COVE
GPS : 36°59'34.0"N 28°12'35.0"E / 36.992778, 28.209722
Visiting boats anchor at swing in calm weathers. A cove on the east is a safer anchorage. Drop anchor in the depths of 8 - 12 meters and take a line ashore. Care is required on approaching to the east, because of rocks of anchient mole, lying for about 75 meters on the northern tip of Sedir Island.

It has a better spot for anchoring in the east which is sheltered from western breeze. Since it's pier is being used by daily boats, it is better to stay on anchor. During strong nights it gets some swell. It is also possible to anchor and take a long line ashore. The depths fall off quickly into the middle of the bay.

SOUTH COVE
GPS : 36°59'28.0"N 28°12'26.0"E / 36.991111, 28.207222
There is another cove on the southern part of the island, providing adequate sheltering from northerlies. Drop anchor in 6 - 9 meters and get a line ashore.

GÖKOVA YACHT CLUB JETTY
GPS : 36°59'37.6"N 28°12'20.5"E / 36.993782, 28.205695

KEDRAE
Sedir Island, known in ancient times as Kedreae, features an amphitheatre and some other Greek/Roman ruins shadowed by the silvery green olive trees. However, its biggest claim to fame is its Cleopatra Beach, with golden sands virtually non-existent anywhere else in the Eastern Mediterranean, accompanied by milky turquoise waters of the cove.

Called Kedreae in ancient times, present day myths refer to when the exotic queen of Egypt, Cleopatra spent time in the region. Although the natural landscapes and turquoise-blue sea captivated her, she was missing her homeland.

Kedreai was an important Carian settlement in the Rhodian Confederacy. Mykenails first settled here 1400 B.C., and together with Knidos and Halicarnassus they built the confederation of Heksapolis. This site had a fortified enclosure with towers. The remains of the Doric temple of Apollo were converted into a church. The city’s theatre is still in good condition.

This important settlement, paid taxes to the sea pact of Attik- Delos. By the year of 450 b.c, it is occupied the island by Lisander from Isparta, and the inhabitants were sold as the slaves. Later on, they became part of the kingdom of Rhodes. By the year of 129 b.c it is occupied by the Romans which established the east province. In its eastern side, there is a palace, situated next to it are remnants of walls dated back to the Greeks and the Romans. The best preserved antiquities are of the little theater. Later on, the Dorians built a sanctifies to the god Apollo, which several hundred years later, served as infrastructure for a Christian basilica.

Even though the beach is a popular attraction, there are other notable historical structures worth visiting. The beginnings of Sedir Island are estimated to date from the fourth century BC when the Greek Spartans ruled it. Following them, the island fell under Roman rule and it is from this era that several historic structures exist including an agora, ampitheatre, temples, churches, baths, and harbour ruins. Full excavations have not yet taken place and historians are eager to receive more funding to continue their work.

Even though the beach is a popular attraction, there are other notable historical structures worth visiting. The beginnings of Sedir Island are estimated to date from the fourth century BC when the Greek Spartans ruled it. Following them, the island fell under Roman rule and it is from this era that several historic structures exist. You can follow a path from the beach to the well preserved ruins of an amphitheatre on the island.

Near the top of the hill are the ruins of a temple (converted into a church by the Byzantines). Running parallel along the eastern shore are ancient city walls and towers that have stood the test of time. The Agora, containing stones carved in the shape of hearts is a delightful attraction and also offers a panoramic view of the surrounding mountains.

ORTA ADA
There are 5 meters depth in the passage between Sedir and Orta Ada and 185 m from the north of Sedir Island.  The cove on the east of Orta Ada affords sheltering from breeze. Strong northerlies send swell in. There are reefs in the depth of 4 m, running out 500 m on the north of Orta Ada.
GPS : 36°59'55.6"N 28°12'19.9"E / 36.998766, 28.205522

Orta Ada Lighthouse
Fl 10s 15 m 9M
GPS : 36°59'55.5"N 28°12'19.9"E / 36.998762, 28.205519

KÜÇÜK ADA
Küçük Ada  stands on the south of Orta Ada. The passage between Orta Ada and Küçük Ada is shoal water.
GPS : 36°59'49.9"N 28°12'40.2"E / 36.997184, 28.211179

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NURI'S BEACH AND JETTY

Limanağzı, Kaş - Antalya - Turkey

GPS : 36°10'21.3"N 29°39'00.8"E / 36.172594, 29.650217



PHOTOGRAPHS ALBUM

JETTY
Jetty service is free for all boats.
Electricity and water using are free.
Showers, WC and changing cabinets arw free.
Wi-Fi connection is free.

RESTAURANT
At Limanagzi bay's turquoise sea with plenty of fishes and caretta carettas, in the shadow of Lycian royal tombs on the one side and spectacular Kaş view on the other side , we serve you best meals and appetizers of Mediterranean and Turkish cuisine prepared with our own virgin olive oil in our Restaurant.
We have free internet (wi-fi) all around our facility.

ROOM
Our bungalows are designed to offer you all the comfort you desire. By staying at our facility you will not waste your time and money everyday for coming to Limanağzı. You can jump to the beautiful sea right after waking up and then have your breakfast with the companion of fishes swimming in their natural habitat. So let the holiday begin as soon as you wake up. Also you wont be away from Kaş with our free shuttle boat service for our accommodation customers.

You can find a different thing you like at each of our rooms, and you can become regular for some of them. Do not forget to check out our luxury bungalows. You can enjoy nature, sun, silence and privacy with these bungalows few steps away from the sea with private piers.

BEACH
Bar & Beach
In our beach where the sun stays longest at Limanağzı, while ensuring your comfort with our umbrellas, sunbeds, lodges and hammocks; we want your pleasure for sun and sea to be perfect with our rich variety of fruit cocktails, frozens and snacks.

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WEB SITE : Nuri's Beach And Jetty

MORE INFO & CONTACT
E-Mail :  info@nurisbeach.com
Phone : +90 242 836 3816
Mobile : +90 538 899 3272

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DEVEBOYNU LIGHTHOUSE RESTAURANT

Deveboynuburnu, Datça - Muğla - Turkey

GPS : 36°41'12.2"N 27°21'49.1"E / 36.686729, 27.363626



It was constructed in Knidos region of Datça. Deveboynu Burnu (Camels' Neck Point) is the farmost point of Anatolia towards the Mediterranean Sea is also the border between the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas at the tip of the long and narrow Datça peninsula. Its name "Deveboynu" (Camel’s Neck) was given to the fact that its geographical situation represents the form of a camel neck.

Knidos or Cnidus was an ancient Greek city of Caria and part of the Dorian Hexapolis, in south-western Asia Minor, modern-day Turkey. It was situated on the Datça peninsula, which forms the southern side of the Sinus Ceramicus, now known as Gulf of Gökova. By the 4th century BC, Knidos was located at the site of modern Tekir, opposite Triopion Island. But earlier, it was probably at the site of modern Datça (at the half-way point of the peninsula).

It was built partly on the mainland and partly on the Island of Triopion or Cape Krio. The debate about it being an island or cape is caused by the fact that in ancient times it was connected to the mainland by a causeway and bridge. Today the connection is formed by a narrow sandy isthmus. By means of the causeway the channel between island and mainland was formed into two harbours, of which the larger, or southern, was further enclosed by two strongly built moles that are still in good part entire.

The extreme length of the city was little less than a mile, and the whole intramural area is still thickly strewn with architectural remains. The walls, both of the island and on the mainland, can be traced throughout their whole circuit; and in many places, especially round the acropolis, at the northeast corner of the city, they are remarkably perfect.

Accessible by a hike of about 1 km (0.6 mi) from the end of the road. Site and tower opened to public visits.

Construction Date : 01.01.1931

Location  : It was constructed in Knidos region of Datça in 1931. This location of situation which is the farmost point of Anatolia towards the Mediterranean Sea is also the border between the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas. Its name "Deveboynu" (Camel’s Neck) was given to the fact that its geographical situation represents the form of a camel neck. Accessible by a hike of about 1 km (0.6 mi) from the end of the road.

Building : Round cylindrical masonry tower with lantern and gallery, attached to a 1-story masonry keeper's house. Entire lighthouse painted white. Lighthouse and guardian house is being under protection as national heritage by General Directorate of Coastal Safety and Salvage Administrations.

Focal Plane : 104 mt (341 ft)
Tower Height : 9 mt (30 ft)

Character : W.FI.(2) 10.0 Second
Flashing Character : 0.5 + 2.0 + 0.5 + 7.0
Visibility Range : 12 nautical miles

Illuminate Type : TIDELAND TRB 300 mm
Lighthouse System : Devvar
Flasher Type : TIDELAND TF -3B
Electric Lamp : 35 Watt
Bulb Type : 12 Volt Halogen
Energy : Sun Battery

Light : Oil lamp has primarily been used and then high intense filament lamps work with LPCo as a light source and it is currently provided an illumination with the electric lamp of 35 W by solar powered. In order to be seen from the long distance by strengthen the light source, three pieces cotodiyoptric cylinder lenses which has optical distance of 375 mm as a optic system had been used.

Quadrangle optical panels had placed on circular platform which float on bath of mercury. Fixed light source illuminates on focus and when the optic is rotated on the platform it will give out four flashes during the period of rotation. Clockwork mechanism and optical panels has been under protection in Istanbul. Nowadays it is operated with electrical flash lantern 300 mm.

Knidos Excavation Area

Knidos was a Hellenic city of high antiquity. According to Herodotus' Histories (I.174), the Cnidians were Lacedaemonian colonists; however, the presence of demiurges there argues for foundation or later influence by other Doric Greeks, possibly Argives. Diodorus Siculus claimed that Cnidus was founded by both Lacedaemonians and Argives. Along with Halicarnassus (present day Bodrum, Turkey) and Kos, and the Rhodian cities of Lindos, Kamiros and Ialyssos it formed the Dorian Hexapolis, which held its confederate assemblies on the Triopian headland, and there celebrated games in honour of Apollo, Poseidon and the nymphs.

The city was at first governed by an oligarchic senate, composed of sixty members, and presided over by a magistrate; but, though it is proved by inscriptions that the old names continued to a very late period, the constitution underwent a popular transformation. The situation of the city was favourable for commerce, and the Knidians acquired considerable wealth, and were able to colonize the island of Lipara, and founded a city on Corcyra Nigra in the Adriatic. They ultimately submitted to Cyrus, and from the battle of Eurymedon to the latter part of the Peloponnesian War they were subject to Athens. During the hellenistic age, Knidos boasted a medical school; however, the theory that this school already existed at the beginning of the classical age is an unwarranted extrapolation.

In their expansion into the region, the Romans easily obtained the allegiance of Knidians, and rewarded them for help given against Antiochus III the Great by leaving them the freedom of their city. During the Byzantine period there must still have been a considerable population: for the ruins contain a large number of buildings belonging to the Byzantine style, and Christian sepulchres are common in the neighbourhood.

Eudoxus, the astronomer, Ctesias, the writer on Persian history, and Sostratus, the builder of the celebrated Pharos at Alexandria, are the most remarkable of the Knidians mentioned in history. Artemidorus, a minor character in the Shakespeare play “Julius Caesar”, was also from Knidos.

Bishop Ioannes of Cnidus took part in the Council of Chalcedon in 451 and was one of the signatories of the letter that in 458 the bishops of the Roman province of Caria, to which Cnidus belonged, wrote to Byzantine Emperor Leo I the Thracian after the murder of Proterius of Alexandria. Bishop Evander was at the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 and Bishop Stauratius at the Second Council of Nicaea in 787. No longer a residential bishopric, Cnidus is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.

Excavation history
British archaeologist Charles Newton, in 1857 he wrote the diary while Knidos excavation: "... a monumental tomb, the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus be proud of, a monumental bronze sculptures cast from Rhodes Helios, if any; Knidsos small town in the same way there is a statue of Aphrodite can be proud of. He is the statue; Bithynia (north of the Aegean Region) King Nicomedes, revealed the city's entire income in return, Knidos was clear all debt, but in vain ... "

Sculptor Praxiteles today could not be found naked statue of Aphrodite of Knidos, though his base to be seen. The first Western knowledge of the site was due to the mission of the Dilettante Society in 1812, and the excavations executed by C. T. Newton in 1857–1858.

The Classical site of Cnidus had been the subject of multiple British archaeological projects in the 19th and 20th centuries.  However, before Ian Jenkins relocated the ‘Sanctuary of the Muses’ in 1997, which now took the form of a goat pen and herdsman’s hut, this part of the ancient city had not been visited for over a century.  In conjunction with R. Ögan, the director of the Cnidos excavation, Ian Jenkins initiated a project to better understand the context of the many finds recovered there (now housed in the British Museum).

In 1999, there was a preliminary photographic survey to prepare for an excavation, at which point it was photographed and prepared for future work.  In 2000 work was continued on the sanctuary.  Publications from Newton’s survey in the 1850s were informative, and showed that some of the masonry found by him had been smashed in the construction of the goat pen, though his site plan differed in detail from what the new team found, and a corrected plan was undertaken.  The sanctuary had originally been built near a spring of fresh water, and displayed evidence of terracotta pipes.

In the third season, in 2001, the top of a Classical foundation was partially excavated below where a modern wall had been constructed. A space believed to be a baptistery (filled by the spring) was also found. A new area was explored to the south of the courtyard with the aim of finding the entrance and establishing the level of the Classical pavement. Finds included a glass game piece, a partial inscription, and a bone comb. At the season’s close, the sanctuary was tentatively re-dated to the late fourth or early third century BC. The Sanctuary of Demeter, another nearby site, was also visited and planned.

In 2002 excavations continued, focusing primarily on the sanctuary’s stylobate, courtyard, courtyard wall, and some nearby streets. In the middle of the courtyard a cistern shaft was found and excavated nearly 6.5 m downwards. The fourth season’s work was helpful for clarifying the sanctuary’s layout and date. Some of the finds, as well as its location itself – near a spring and grottoes – pointed towards Nymph worship, rather than the Muses.

In 2003, the fifth season of work allowed an accurate site plan to be established, and the sanctuary (now better classified as a Nymphaeum) was dated and put into the context of Newton’s British Museum finds.  The statuettes found by Newton were nude, which also fit better as nymphs, and some marble relief fragments showed nymphs dancing with Pan.  The pottery pointed to construction sometime around 300BC.  It continued to function into the Roman period, though it may have fallen into disuse during late Pagan and early Christian times.  The later pottery is indicative of the transformation of the sanctuary into a church at the end of the fifth century AD.  It may have been used for a few centuries before being abandoned.  Two structures were found unexpectedly, known as the “Gymnasium” and “Roman building”.

In 2004 attention was focused on the east side of the site and on part of the ancient high street of town.  The original street entrance was found in the course of clearing the area, and a well-preserved mosaic pavement was found.  A complex called the gymnasium by Newton was also investigated, though its function remained unclear.  Researchers from the University of Konya conducted their own excavations, centring on the harbour terrace.

Ill health prevented Jenkins from continuing the excavation in Turkey in 2005, and so work instead was carried out in the British Museum.  An inscription from the so-called gymnasium was studied, and found to record information about a notable citizen, probably the famous Cnidian Artemidoros, who allegedly attempted to warn Caesar of the plot against this life.

Excavation was resumed in the so-called gymnasium and harbour terrace between 21 August and 10 September 2006.  The ‘gymnasium’ yielded three terraces, with three rooms and a possible veranda.  One of the mosaics can be dated sometime before 250BC.  Steps were cleared from the street in the corner of the terrace, revealing a second entrance and uncovering a cistern.

Knidos sundial
The agora, the theatre, an odeum, a temple of Dionysus, a temple of the Muses, a temple of Aphrodite and a great number of minor buildings have been identified, and the general plan of the city has been very clearly made out. The most famous statue by Praxiteles, the Aphrodite of Knidos, was made for Cnidus. It has perished, but late copies exist, of which the most faithful is in the Vatican Museums.

Gold vase found off the sea near Knidos dating to 25BC- 50AD now in the British Museum.

Lion of Knidos on display in the British Museum, London
In a temple enclosure Newton discovered the fine seated statue of Demeter of Knidos, which he sent back to the British Museum, and about three miles south-east of the city he came upon the ruins of a splendid tomb, and a colossal figure of a lion carved out of one block of Pentelic marble, ten feet in length and six in height, which has been supposed to commemorate the great naval victory, the Battle of Cnidus in which Conon defeated the Lacedaemonians in 394 BC. The Knidos Lion is now displayed under the roof of the Great Court in the British Museum.

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