20 March 2014

An ancient Armenian ghost town in Kars


Ella Morton has a Slate article about Armenia:
On the Turkish-Armenian border, scattered in the plains among the wildflowers, are the crumbling remains of a once mighty city. In the eleventh century, Ani was home to over a hundred thousand people. Situated on a number of trade routes, the city became the capital of the Kingdom of Armenia, an independent state established in 884.
Ani was attacked by the Byzantines during the empire's 1045 takeover of the Armenian Kingdom. Two decades later, Seljug Turkish invaders captured the city, murdered and enslaved its inhabitants, and sold the whole place to a Kurdish dynasty known as the Shaddadids.
The attacks continued in the thirteenth century, when the Mongols made two attempts— one thwarted, one successful— to capture the city. An earthquake in 1319 caused significant damage to Ani's many eleventh-century churches. The city stumbled onward, but was much smaller by the mid-seventeenth century, and completely abandoned by 1750.
Today Ani (photo) is a grand but ruined ghost town. Tensions between Turkey and Armenia have contributed to its neglect— it is an Armenian city but lies within Turkish borders, making conservation and restoration difficult. To visitors, Turkey omits all mentions of Armenia from descriptions of Ani's history and focuses on the city's Turkish and Muslim influences.
Rico says that he has an old friend, George Gananian, dating back to the Apple days, who's Armenian by descent...

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