• Live Broadcast
  • How to Listen
  • Site Map
  • Contact
  • English
  • Հայերեն
facebook
rss
twitter
youtube
email
Australian politician hits back at Gallipoli ban threat, says it “diminishes Turkey’s credibility and reputation”
Nuclear energy workshop in Yerevan
Europe Day marked by information and cultural events in Armenia
Genocide-era insurance claims again in the spotlight of Armenian attorneys
No ceasefire violation registered during OSCE monitoring
Oklahoma tornado damage could top $2 billion
Syrian Armenian intellectual Hagop Mikaelyan kidnapped in Apello
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Economics
  • Analytics
  • Region
    • Armenia
    • Azerbaijan
    • Georgia
    • Karabakh
    • Iran
    • Russia
    • Turkey
  • World
  • Culture
  • Sport

Ruined city of Ani set for new excavations

13:49 27.10.2012
news
0
Ani

Ani, a ruined and uninhabited Armenian city situated in the eastern Turkish province of Kars on the Armenian frontier, will be the subject of new academic work to better present site to visitors.

Archaeologists are planning renewed excavations next year in Ani, an ancient Armenian city in the eastern province of Kars, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Academics from Pamukkale University in Denizli have applied to lead the excavation works and are currently conducting negotiations with the Culture and Tourism Ministry, according to Hakan Doğanay, the Kars culture and tourism director.

There are two application programs and three projects for the ruins that are right on the border with Armenia, he said, noting that the work was expected to finish by the end of 2013.

The 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.

Ani was once the capital of a medieval Armenian kingdom that covered much of present-day Armenia and eastern Turkey. Ani is protected on its eastern side by a ravine formed by the Akhurian River and on its western side by the Bostanlar or Tzaghkotzadzor valley. The Akhurian is a branch of the Araks River and forms part of the current border between Turkey and Armenia.

Dubbed the “City of 1001 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. Unearthing the ruins at Ani would shed light on the past, Doğanay said.

Doğanay said 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, a mosque and other buildings, Doğanay said.

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 on the World Cultural Heritage List. “Ani is a city of universal religions. We call it a world city since people from all nations, cultures, and races live there,” Doğanay said.

“It is essential to bring this world city to light and give it to the world as soon as possible. Our workings are ongoing in a planned and systematical way,” Doğanay said.

In 2011, 21,460 people visited Ani. Sixty percent of them were foreign, while 40 percent were locals. “We think they were attracted since Ani is a world city,” the cultural official said, the Hurriyet Daily News says.

Share!
  • Myspace

  • Tweet

Comments

comments

About the Author

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

*
*

captcha *

Recent News

Australian politician hits back at Gallipoli ban threat, says it "diminishes Turkey’s credibility and reputation"

17:33 23.05.2013
0 Comment

Nuclear energy workshop in Yerevan

17:21 23.05.2013
0 Comment

Europe Day marked by information and cultural events in Armenia

17:07 23.05.2013
0 Comment

Genocide-era insurance claims again in the spotlight of Armenian attorneys

15:53 23.05.2013
0 Comment

No ceasefire violation registered during OSCE monitoring

13:52 23.05.2013
0 Comment

Oklahoma tornado damage could top $2 billion

13:21 23.05.2013
0 Comment

Syrian Armenian intellectual Hagop Mikaelyan kidnapped in Apello

13:12 23.05.2013
0 Comment

View all news

We are on Facebook

News in pictures

Australian politician hits back at Gallipoli ban threat, says it "diminishes Turkey’s credibility and reputation"

Nuclear energy workshop in Yerevan

Europe Day marked by information and cultural events in Armenia

Genocide-era insurance claims again in the spotlight of Armenian attorneys

No ceasefire violation registered during OSCE monitoring

Categories

  • Analytics (23)
  • Culture (130)
  • Economics (204)
  • Politics (1040)
  • Region (148)
    • Armenia (60)
    • Azerbaijan (31)
    • Georgia (13)
    • Iran (8)
    • Karabakh (37)
    • Russia (4)
    • Turkey (42)
  • Society (702)
  • Sport (139)
  • Top (1647)
  • World (301)

Twitter

  • Twitter feed loading

Popular news

Representatives of the Armenian and Turkish civil society to come together at a conference in Istanbul

0 Comment

Who are the descendants of Caucasian Albanians? A two-day conference in Yerevan

0 Comment

Armenia, Costa Rica explore ways for cooperation

0 Comment

British Minister is about to release a pop album

0 Comment

Freedom House notes progress in the freedom of press in Armenia

0 Comment

Liverpool eye Henrikh Mkhitaryan move

0 Comment

Contact us

Republic of Armenia
Yerevan 25, Alex Manukyan 5
Tel. 00 37410 551143
Fax 00 37410 554600

Reproduction on full or in part is prohibited without reference to Public Radio of Armenia.
For more information and questions concerning our website contact us on the following address [email protected]
If you like to insert an advertisment into our website write on the following address [email protected]

Website old verion http://old.armradio.am

PageRank Checking Icon
website security
© 2003-2012 Public Radio of Armenia