Troy

Marita3
Mark & Helen Syrett
Wed 27 Mar 2013 17:38
We left Istanbul early on Monday morning having booked a five day tour which was no more expensive than a diy tour and saved us uncertainty and carting bags around.
We were collected from the hotel and taken, along with eight others, on a five hour journey to Eceabat on the Gallipoli pennisula.
We had lunch in the hotel, the ''not so grand'' Eceabat Hotel and then set off to Troy. The mini bus went onto the ferry and crossed the Dardanelles Strait to Canakkale.
This is the entrance to the Sea of Marmara, which leads to the Bosphorus at Istanbul and then into the Black Sea. There are about 4,000 shipping movements every year in this narrow stretch of water famous for the Gallipoli campaign of the First World War.
We had decided not to do the tour of the battlefields but there were plenty of Aussies and New Zealanders doing the ''ANZAC tour''.
The following photographs of the bronzes tell the story of the loss of 130,000 lives of which a third were Allied forces (British, French, Australian and New Zealanders) and two thirds Turkish----no further comment required.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Having crossed the strait we saw the Trojan horse used in the film, Troy, made in 2004
The drive to Troy took about an hour and we arrived at this historic World Heritage Site and sure enough the urns, tile drains and stones were in abundance
 
but the excellent guide was very enthusiastic and made the place come alive with his story of the evolution of the site
 
There have been nine cities of Troy and as one was destroyed by an earthquake another was built.There are therefore nine layers of foundations.
It was built here as it was an ideal place for a trading post which depended on the infrequent southerly wind to blow the square sailed trading boats northwards.