MUSTAFA PASA was inhabited by Greek Orthodox families
until the beginning of the 20th century. The houses dating
back to the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th
centuries display fine examples of stonework.
DAMSA lake is an example of the hard work of local men
and women in building a Dam across the lake.
CEMIL means "Pretty Village" here is where the
Greek people lived.
KESLIK this Archangels Monastery is about two kilometers
south of Cemil. The monastery compiles a church chapel,
refectory, hall, and other chambers, all hollowed out
of a group of broad based cones.
SOGANLI fractured and collapse during an earthquake that
added to erosion resulting in deep valleys and canyons.
Soganli valley, which is divided into two, has been occupied
since the Roman period. The rock cones found on the sides
of the valley were used as graves by the Romans, and later
as churches by the Byzantines. Here you will see local
women making bread in outside ovens.
TASKINPASA this was Byzantine Tamisus, seat of a bishopric,
originally known to the Turks as Damas. The town takes
its present name from Taskin Pasa, a Karamanid emir who
ruled here in the fourteenth century. The will hold another
Panoramic view.
Price: USD 45 Per Person
(Lunch, Transportation, Guiding,
Entrance Fees,Tax Included)
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