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The Ancient Armenian City Of Ani Attracts More Visitors

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  • The Ancient Armenian City Of Ani Attracts More Visitors

    THE ANCIENT ARMENIAN CITY OF ANI ATTRACTS MORE VISITORS

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/03/12/the-ancient-armenian-city-of-ani-attracts-more-visitors/
    15:23 12.03.2013

    The ancient Armenian city of Ani in the eastern province of Kars
    continues to attract more tourists each year. In 2012, a total of
    43,657 people visited the site close to a third of the visitors are
    from foreign countries, according to tourism officials, the Hurriyet
    Daily News reports, noting that "Ani has long been regarded as one
    of Turkey's most impressive tourist sites."

    Speaking to Anatolia news agency, Kars Culture and Tourism Manager
    Hakan Doganay said there were a total of 21 main cultural treasures
    in Ani. "In fact, we call Ani an iceberg because we know there is a
    lot to discover and excavate at Ani."

    Experts know that Ani was a trade center in the past, said Doganay,
    adding that the ancient city was a cultural mosaic. The cultural
    manager further said that if excavations were completed at the site,
    it could become one of the country's leading tourism sites.

    The planned excavation work will involve creating a detailed map of
    the site, which was once the center of a powerful Armenian empire and
    possessed a population of between 100,000 and 200,000 over a millennium
    ago, making it one of the biggest cities in the world at the time.

    The Hurriyet daily News reminds that Ani was once the capital of a
    medieval Armenian kingdom that covered much of present-day Armenia
    and eastern Turkey.

    Dubbed the "City of 1,001 Churches," Ani stood on various trade routes,
    and its many religious buildings, palaces, and fortifications were
    among the most technically and artistically advanced structures in
    the world at the time, according to specialists.

    The site occupied 78 hectares of land and was surrounded by
    4,500-meter-long ramparts. In addition to its numerous churches, the
    site also features the remains of an inn, a public bath, one of the
    first mosques in Anatolia and other buildings. The site was located
    on the historic Silk Road and formed the first gate connecting the
    Caucasus to Anatolia before a sea route was discovered.

    "Ani is a city of universal religions. We call it a world city
    since people from all nations, cultures, and races live there," he
    said. "It is essential to bring this world city to light and give it
    to the world as soon as possible. Our work is ongoing in a planned
    and systematic way."

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