Cappadocian Stone Churches

Anatolia belongs to the earliest Christian areas. Under the Ottoman sultans it was nearly impossible to build new churches. This changed around 1830 and ended with WW I and the Greek-Turkish peoples exchange in 1923.

The Eski Cami-i (= old Mosque) in Özlüce had been built in 1849 as a Greek church and 1935, after the Turkish-Greek peoples exchange, it became a mosque. Like the Meryem Ana church in Nevsehir, this one has a turnable "pillar" next to the entrance...
Small mosque in the Cappadocian village Suvermez. Until 1923 many Greek people lived in the village and the mosques architecture indicates that it was originally a Greek church. - If you have any information about the church or the village etc., p...
In the middle of the 19th century, after several hundred years, the Greek and the Armenian people in Turkey got the permission to build new churches. Especially in the central Anatolian region of Cappadocia there are still many of them visible. Si...
One of many churches from the 19th century. After the Christians had left the country, it was used as a quarry, store room or in a different way. Here you find many frescoes inside the church. - If you have any information about the church or the ...
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia. The walls show some fragments of the historic wallpaintings.
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia with the volcano Hasan Dag in the background.
View from a cave to the ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia.
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia. Visible in the background is the extinct volcano Mt. Hasan (3268m).
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia.
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia with the volcano Hasan Dag in the background.
Ruin of the Canli church (11th century) in Cappadocia with the volcano Hasan Dag in the background.