We had booked the Best of Ephesus Tour for Monday which was great. We were the only two who had booked so we actually ended up on a private tour with our guide Mehmet.
Our first stop was at a big statue of the Virgin Mary.
After that we headed to Meryemana, the House of the Virgin Mary, which is about 6 km (3.7 miles) from Ephesus and 17 km (11 miles) from Şirince. The house is surrounded by pine and olive trees. It's a Catholic shrine and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Two expeditions completed in 1891, discovering the match between the location and the nun's visions. While the Roman Catholic Church has never officially proclaimed the validity of the site, multiple popes have given blessings and visited the house. Each year on 15 August, pilgrims come to celebrate Mary's Assumption. In 2004, Pope John Paul II beatified Anne Catherine Emmerich.
On the way to the shrine, you pass a key hole-shaped baptismal pool.
Outside of the house is a "wishing wall" where people write their wishes on paper or fabric.
There is a spring under the house which pilgrims believe to have healing properties. There are fountains that people can drink from.
Ephesus was built in the 10th century BC. It was one of the 12-member cities of the Ionian League and became part of the Roman Republic in 129 BC. It's believed that the Gospel of St. John may have been written here.
The city was conquered by numerous empires over the centuries and it was completely abandoned by the 15th century. Ephesus is home to one of the largest Roman archaeological sites in the Eastern Mediterranean and the ruins were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2015.
The most impressive ruin has to be the Library of Celsius. It was built in around 125 AD in memory of Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus who served as governor of Roman Asia. He paid for the library from his own money and he is buried in a sarcophagus beneath it. The library was the third-largest in the Greco-Roman world and was home to 12.000 scrolls.
The library was no longer in use after 400 AD. The facade was damaged by an earthquake in the 10th or 11th century but archaeologists re-erected it from 1970 to 1978.
As it was just the two of us, our guide Mehmet used the opportunity to show us everything in great detail. It would never have been possible with a larger group.
Temple, mosque, basilica, and fortress |
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