Urgup, a lively
tourist center at the foot of a rock riddled with old dwellings. serves as
an excellent base from which to tour the sights of
Cappadocia. In
Urgup
itself you can still see how people once lived in homes cut into the rocks.
If you wish to buy carpets and kilims, there is a wide selection available
from the town's many carpet dealers. These characters are as colorful as
their carpets, offering tea, coffee or a glass of wine to their customers
and engaging in friendly conversation. If sightseeing and shopping havent
exhausted you, the disco welcomes you to another kind of entertainment. At
the center of a successful wine producin gregion,
Urgup hosts an annual
International Wine Festival in October.
Leaving
Urgup and
heading south, you reach the lovely isolated Pancarlik Valley where you
can stop to see the 12th century church with its splendid frescoes, and
the Kepez church, which dates from the 10th century. Continuing on to the
typical village of Mustafapasa (Sinasos), traditional stone houses with
carved and decorated facades evoke another age.
Still traveling in a
southerly direction, just past the village of Cemil, a footpath on the
west side of the road leads to Keslik Valley where you will find a
monastery complex and the Kara Kilise and Meyvali churches, both decorated
with frescoes. Back on the mainroad you find the village of Taskinpasa
where the 14th century Karamanid Mosque and Mausoleum Complex, and the
remains of a medrese portal on the edge of town, make for a pleasant
diversion. The next village is Sahinefendi where the 12th century
Kirksehitler church, adorned with beautiful frescoes, stands at the end of
a footpath 500 meters east of the village.
Fairy Chimneys
Soganli, 50 km south
of Urgup, is a picturesque valley of innumerable chapels,churches, halls,
houses and tombs. The frescoes, from the 8th to the 13th centuries, trace
the development of Byzantine painting.
Four kilometers north of Urgup is the wonderful Devrent Valley, where the
weather has eroded the stone into peaks, cones and obelisks called fairy
chimneys.
Two kilometers west, in the Catalkaya Valley, the fairy chimneys have a
peculiar mushroom like shape, which has been adopted as a symbol of the
town.