Ortahisar, Nevşehir Explained

Type:municipality
Ortahisar
Province:Nevşehir
District:Ürgüp
Population Total:3086
Population As Of:2022
Elevation M:1200
Postal Code:50650
Leader Party:AKP
Leader Name:Mustafa Ateş

Ortahisar (Turkish: Middle Castle), previously known by its Byzantine name Potamía (Greek: Ποταμία), is a town (belde) in the Ürgüp District, Nevşehir Province, Turkey.[1] Its population is 3,086 (2022).[2] Ortahisar is located about 20 km east of the provincial capital, Nevşehir.

Until the mid-2010s Ortahisar was rather off-the-beaten-track when it came to Cappadocian tourism. It is now much better known and many boutique hotels have been created out of its fine old stone houses.

In the early 1970s a young Scottish man named Craig Mair spent a year living in Ortahisar and wrote a book about his experiences called A Time in Turkey.[3]

Castle and churches

The small town is dominated by a 90adj=midNaNadj=mid rock-castle in the centre of the town, which is called Sivrikaya by the inhabitants. It is an extraordinary example of the rock-cut architecture which is typical of the region and is believed to have served as a refuge from attackers in Byzantine times. The town also contains the Cambazlı Kilise ('Church of Acrobats'), a cross-in-square church with 13th-century wall paintings which is now used as a storehouse.

Aside from the rock-cut buildings in the centre of the town, Ortahisar is characterised by a series of ld stone houses. The upper floors are made of blocks of tuff, mostly without mortar. These buildings which were only used for the storage of food in earlier times, are generally one or two stories high. The upper floor is often accessed by an exterior staircase made of tuff-stone slabs. The more recent buildings are all made from the same kind of stone, but are made of regular blocks. The exterior walls are covered with white limestone and capped with simple cornices.[4]

Northeast of Ortahisar is a rock-cut monastery complex called Hallaç Manastırı which consists of a courtyard closed on three sides but open to the south. The gathering of rubble over time means that the ground level is one and a half metres higher than it was when the structure was built, so the entrances to the monastic rooms are lower than the courtyard. After the monastery was abandoned, the locals walled up the entrances and decorated the windows with coloured paint so that they could be reused as pigeonhouses for the production of guano as fertiliser.[5]

A little outside the town is a fairy chimney which contains the Üzümlü Kilise ('Grapevine Church') dating from the 8th or 9th century AD. It contains frescoes with grapevines and an image of Mary enthroned with the baby Jesus in the apse. Also near Ortahisar is the Sarıca[6] church.

Economy

Ortahisar is a centre for fruit storage. The tuff-stone local caves, with a constant temperature of 10 °C in summer and winter, are used to store citrus fruits, potatoes, apples and onions, some of it transported north from Mersin. After fattening in the caves for up to nine months, the produce is transported onwards to other parts of Turkey, to Europe and to Russia.[7]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. https://www.e-icisleri.gov.tr/Anasayfa/MulkiIdariBolumleri.aspx Belde Belediyesi
  2. Web site: Address-based population registration system (ADNKS) results dated 31 December 2022, Favorite Reports. 22 May 2023. TÜİK. en. XLS.
  3. Book: Mair, Craig . A Time in Turkey . John Murray . 1973 . 0719528364 . 1st . London . English.
  4. Kappadokien. Casa Editrice Bonechi, Florence (1996) p. 11.
  5. Web site: Borges . Jason . 2020-04-16 . Hallaç Monastery . 2022-09-10 . Cappadocia History . en.
  6. Web site: Borges . Jason . 2020-05-22 . Sarıca Church . 2022-09-10 . Cappadocia History . en.
  7. Web site: www.researchgate.net . 2023-09-16 . Cold storage facilities in Turkey .