Hidden gem in ancient Phrygian Valley become alternative tourist destination in western Turkey
Üçlerkayası village in Ihsaniye district of Afyonkarahisar province is a "hidden paradise," according to Tanju Tetik, head of the Phrygian Culture Foundation.
- Turkey
- Published Date: 04:49 | 01 July 2021
- Modified Date: 05:08 | 01 July 2021
Tetik said the village carries traces of Phrygian, Hellenic, Galatian, Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman civilizations.
Noting that there are many Phrygian artifacts in their village, he said more tourists are visiting the region with the increased tourism investments under the leadership of Afyonkarahisar Governor Gökmen Çicek.
The village offers a glimpse of the lives of Phrygians with open-air temples, rock tombs, living areas in single and multi-story rock-carved houses, wine cellars, dungeons, king's tombs and fairy chimneys which are as old as 3,000 years.
"We can call here the mysterious village of the Phrygians. Recently, this mystery has started to slowly disappear," Tetik said.
Saying that the area has become well-known by the people, he added that Emre Lake and Ayazini village in the region are also famous.
"Local and foreign tourists stop by Üçlerkayası village when they see the rock settlements on the way while visiting these areas. The number of tourists coming to our village is increasing day by day," he said.
Aziz Ahmet Özdemir, who runs a restaurant and boutique hotel in the village, said there is a large number of European visitors coming to the region.
"Natural habitats, villages and historical places top people's lists due to the [coronavirus] pandemic," Özdemir said.
Inscribed tentatively on the UNESCO World Heritage List, the Phrygia Valley spreads across the capital Ankara and central Eskişehir as well as its neighbors in the Aegean region, Kütahya and Afyonkarahisar.
According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Phrygia is a civilization that existed in 800 B.C. and dominated central Anatolia from the Mediterranean Sea to the south and Black Sea to the north.