IMAGES OF WESTERN TURKEY 

©David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D.
Professor of Biology and Chemistry
University of Cincinnati Clermont College,
Batavia OH 45103
 Temple of Athena,
at sunrise, Assos

This page has been accessed Counter times since 19 September 2003. 
Created 19 September 2003
The Suliman Mosque
(Blue Mosque) faces the
Hagia Sofia in Istanbul

These pictures were taken during a whirlwind eight days in Western Turkey, starting in Bodrum in Southwest Turkey and working our way up to Istanbul.  It was especially exciting to see many of the sites which were seminal in the early history of science, such as Cos, Samos, Miletus, the Meander River, Ephesus, Pergamon, Lesbos, Assos and Troy.
Jill Fankhauser, a historian of science, served as an excellent guide to these sites, and we gathered many pictures which should be valuable to her History of Science class. The actual images are large, and are linked to separate index pages listed below.  We will have MUCH more to say about our experiences, but I must first say that the Turkish people are marvelously hospitable, warm, helpful and attractive.  Their culture is among the most ancient in the Western world, and we felt privileged to be able to spend some time in this land with its fantastically rich history.
 

Assos
Troy, site of the
ancient city
overlooking 
the Dardanelles
Bergama (known as
Pergamum in 
ancient times)

Biga, on the South
side of the Sea of
Marmara
The Acropolis
of Bergama

Izmir, very large
crowded city
Aesclepion of
Bergama

Bodrum, on the
South-West 
corner of
Turkey
Ephesus
Istanbul
Selcuk
Mosques of
Istanbul
Selcuk Cheese
Factory
       Sailing on
the Bosphorus

or
Go to David Fankhauser's Main Page

Send Email to: FANKHADB@UC.EDU