Welcome to Bodrum!

A popular Turkish
coastal city which is world
renown for its scenic beauty & historical & cultural settings

Bodrum is one of Turkey's liveliest resort areas, attracting world famous celebrities, writers, singers, artists and tourists.
In order to help provide visitors with an overview of Turkey's unique southwestern peninsula, Bodrum-Turkey.Org has organized a selection of websites and photographs to provide useful information.
We hope these links and photographs will enable visitors to gain a better understanding of the region.
Here on our "Welcome" page, we would like to present first time visitors with a short history of Bodrum. It is then up to you to begin exploring and discovering all that modern-day Bodrum offers.
The History of Bodrum
It was here that the historian Herodotus (484-420 BC) was born
The waters of the Salmacis fountain were said to have relaxing properties.
Rumor had it that the water, though excellent to drink, had the effect of
making men soft and effeminate, sometimes even impotent. These claims
resulted in the legend of Hermaphrodite.
The teenaged son of Aphrodite, the Goddess of Beauty, was said to have spent
a day swimming in a lake formed by the fountain. Salmacis, the nymph of the
lake, fell in love with him and begged the gods to allow them to live
together in a single body. They granted her wish, creating the half-man
half-woman figure of Hermaphrodite.
Herodotus wrote that Halicarnassus became increasingly aligned with a group
of inland inhabitants, the Ionians. This upset the other members of
Hexapolis, and the misconduct of a Halicarnassian is considered a pretext
for the city's expulsion from the group's alliance. All six cities competed in games
celebrated annually at Tropium in honor of Apollo. One Halicarnassian named
Agasides won a bronze trophy one year and refused to follow the custom of
dedicating it on the spot to Apollo. He instead hung it on the wall of his
house, inciting the wrath of the other Dorian cities and giving them an
excuse to cut off ties with Halicarnassus.
By the Fifth Century BC Halicarnassus appeared purely Ionian in character.
Both Herodotus and his uncle Panyasis, the epic poet, wrote in Ionian. No
inscriptions from this period show any trace of the Doric dialect.
In 546 BC the Persians overran the Greek cities of the coast, and
Halicarnassus fell with the rest. A series of dynasties then ruled in the
interests of the Persians, the most famous of these was that of Artemisia I,
which began in
480 BC.
Herodotus referred to this remarkable woman in his writings. Of her
unnecessary enlistment in the fighting ranks of Xerxes navy when he was
invading Greece, he wrote, "..... her manly daring sent her forth to the war
........(her) participation in the attack upon Greece, notwithstanding that
she was a woman, moves my special wonder." She commandeered a battleship
with such prowess that Xerxes was said to have remarked, "My men have shown
themselves women and my women, men."
Artemisia's son Psyndalis succeeded her as ruler of Halicarnassus (as well
as Cos and several other islands). While historians have little to say about
the reign of Psyndalis, his son, Lydamis II, is remembered as a cruel and
oppressive ruler. Herodotus left his homeland for the island of Samos,
unable to tolerate the whims of this tyrant. In 1856 the archaeologist Sir
Charles Newton found an inscription of a law enforced by Lydamis II which
details his total intolerance of opposing political views.
We do not know who succeeded Lydamis II or why the tyrant fell, but great
changes are known to have occurred by the Fourth Century BC. Sometime during
the previous century the harness of Persian control was thrown off, but soon
the "King's Peace" treaty between Athens and Persia again put the cities under Persian control. Persia divided the region into 'satrapes' and by
377 BC King Mausolus ruled as Satrap or Governor of Caria and Halicarnassus.
Until Mausolus' rule Halicarnassus was a fairly small city, but Mausolus had
a flair for ambitious projects and he recognized the area's natural
advantages for fortification and commerce. He transferred his capital there
from Mylasa (site of present-day Milas) and built long lines of massive
walls around Halicarnassus, parts of which still stand today. To populate
the large new area he forcibly transplanted the residents of six other
nearby cities. Mausolus taxed his subjects heavily to pay for these and
other grand scale projects, and even imposed a levy on hair longer than
shoulder length. One of his projects stands as the only surviving structure
from Classical Age Bodrum, the Antique Theater. Located on the southern
slope of Mt. Goktepe just above the middle of Bodrum, this theater is one of
the oldest in Anatolia. A Turkish team restored it in the 1960's and today
the people of Bodrum still use the theater for festivals and concerts.
The visitor will find the theater a comfortable place to sit and contemplate
Bodrum while watching boats leave and enter the harbor. Interesting features
of the theater include a stone altar once used before plays for sacrifices
to Dionyus, and several holes cut through some of the seats, probably used
for sun shades. Allowing 40 cm of space per person, the theater could seat
13.000. A short climb further up Goktepe brings one to several rock-cut
tombs. Dating from the Roman and Hellenistic period, these excavated tombs
once carried several sarcophagi, as well as mementos buried with the dead
(some which are on display in the Castle Museum).
One type of memento found in several graves were small 'tearcups'. These
thimble-sized cups were to collect tears from mourners, then left in the
tomb at burial. The more cups a person had, the more popular he was.
Mausolus died in 353 BC, succeeded by his wife-sister, Artemisia II.
She ruled for only three years, but she managed to accomplish two memorable
feats. The first was to continue construction of one of the Seven Wonders of
the Ancient World, the Tomb of King Mausolus (from which the word
'mausoleum' is derived). The second was a brilliant battle success rivaling that of
Artemisia I.
Pliny and other ancient writers agreed that the mausoleum was a true wonder
to behold. Easily visible from a good distance at sea, it stood about as
high as a 20-story building. Visitors to the mausoleum site today will have
to use their imagination to recreate its splendor. Although it stood intact
for at least 1500 years, an earthquake finally reduced it to ruins. Then the
Knights of St. John arrived and used the remains to construct parts of their
castle.
The generally agreed upon appearance of the mausoleum envisions it as oblong
shaped and comprised of four parts; first, a solid base, then above this a
colonnade of 36 columns, then a pyramid with 24 steps on top of which rested
an immense chariot occupied by statues of Mausolus and Artemisia and drawn
by four horses. All four sides were full of sculptured friezes by the finest
artists of the day, and it was mostly the abundance and magnificence of
these works which made the mausoleum such a spectacular sight. Fragments of
them were shipped to the British Museum in the Castle's Museum, but
otherwise little more than a few blocks and column bases remain (many of
which are visible in the Castle's walls).
Artemisia's second memorable feat was the capture of Rhodes. The Rhodians
considered dealing with a woman Carian ruler an indignity (as well as,
perhaps, an opportunity), so they sent a fleet out to overthrow her.
Artemisia received word of this plan and hid her own forces in a secret
harbor near the main harbor. When the Rhodians landed and went ashore,
Artemisia had her own men sail the Rhodian ships back out to sea. The
Rhodian soldiers were surrounded and slaughtered in the marketplace while
the Carians used their ships to sail to Rhodes. The Rhodians, thinking their
men were returning victorious, welcomed the enemy soldiers and soon their
city fell into Carian hands. Artemisia was followed by a series of less than
noteworthy successors.
Alexander the Great began plundering Anatolia with remarkable speed and by
the time he reached Halicarnassus in 334 BC the Queen Orontabatis, Satrap of
Caria, was ready for him. This city was the last chance for the Persians to
make a stand against Alexander in the Aegean area, so Orontabatis had
assembled a large Persian force, bolstered by Greek mercenaries. Historians
Diodius and Arrian note that both sides fought fiercely, with the
Halicarnassians putting up an obstinate resistance much resented by
Alexander. His forces finally penetrated the city's walls and he ordered it
sacked and burned (though he spared the inhabitants) as punishment for such
bothersome resistance.
The imported citizens of the six inland cities were sent back to their
original homes, while Orontabatis and her Persian partner, Memnon, held on
in castles at Salmacis and Zephysia on the east and west ends of the main
harbor. They maintained these positions for about a year, with the remainder
of their navy occupying Cos. When they fell Alexander restored power to Ada,
a former Satrap who had previously been overthrown.
Halicarnassus never regained its stature after Alexander's conquest. The
history becomes less detailed for a while, but we know that in the Third
Century BC it came under control of Ptolemy II of Egypt, who had warships
built there. When Rome conquered it in 190 BC Halicarnassus became a free
city. This independence lasted until 129 BC when Rome included Caria in its
reorganization of Asia.
By 400 AD, with the fall of Rome and the rise of Christianity, Halicarnassus
had developed into a Diocese connected to the Archbishopric of Aphrodisias.
Meanwhile the Byzantine Empire prospered with its capital, Constantinople,
located where Istanbul now stands. This sprawling empire soon included North
Africa, Italy and Spain, but the days of global prominence were over for the
Bodrum area. Historians make little note of it again until the 11th Century,
when the Turks took over the region. The Byzantines captured it during the
first Crusade in 1096, but the Turks retook it three years later.
Towards the end of the 13th Century the region known as Caria became the
Province of Menteshe and was annexed to the Ottoman Empire by Sultan Beyazit
in 1392. Meanwhile the Knights of St. John had their castle at Symira
(present-day Izmir) destroyed by the Mongol leader Tamerlane in 1402 and
demanded land from Turkish Sultan Mehmet Celebi as compensation. They were
given Halicarnassus, built a new castle there, and controlled the town
(which they called Mesy) for over a Century.
In 1523 the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent,
expelled the Knights from Bodrum.
In 1523 Suleyman the Magnificent,
expelled the Knights and the Ottoman Empire flourished during Suleyman's 40
year reign, but a long period of internal crisis and decline followed.
Bodrum itself suffered a shelling by the Russian Navy in 1770 and it was
used as a Turkish Naval Base during the Greek revolt of 1824. During the
First World War the French battleship "Duplex" fired on Bodrum and tried to
make a landing, but the feisty inhabitants prevented this. The Ottoman
Empire lost the Bodrum area to Italy, however, and Italian forces occupied
the town in 1919. The imminent success of the Turkish War of Independence,
led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
drove the Italians out by 1922 and Bodrum finally became what its beautiful surroundings seem meant for, a place to relax and enjoy
life.