Girne / Kyrenia - a short history of the city
- Written by Portal Editor
Wilbrand of Oldenburg, at the time Bishop of Paderborn and Utrecht, was very close to Emperor Otto IV, when between 1211-1212, he was send to prepare another crusade to the Holy Land, where he especially explored Cilicia and Cyprus.
He has documented lot of details he discovered during his trips into his itinerary which was used lateron for the preparation of the crusade. He was accompanied by a master of the Knights and the Master of the Teutonic Order, Hermann von Salza, elected into office in 1210.
Keryneia/Girne became one of the new city kingdoms
But let us have a look to the ancient times first, because in the 10th to 9th century BC Kyrenia / Girne was one of nine city-kingdoms of Cyprus. Excavations close to modern Girne shows an originally Neolithic settlement called Ayios Epiktitos Vrysi / Çatalköy, lying on a small promontory which appeared as if it could fall into the sea. Kyrenia itself was first mentioned in the 4th century BC.
In 312 BC the dynastic system was disbanded in Keryneia by Ptolemy and the city together with its territory came under the control of the Salami African king Nicocreon, a former comrade of Alexander the Great in the battle of Tyros.
Used as a cemetery in Roman times
The rocky plain of Chrysokava in Roman times was used as a cemetery and then as a limestone quarry. Under the Roman Emperor Claudius, the city may have received an aqueduct; the city is also mentioned in an inscription from the Flavian period. Whether it held the status of a civitas, is not assured. In early Christian times the city was a bishopric under the name of Kyrenia.
Under the Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, the castle was greatly expanded. After the island had declared itself independent from Byzantium in 1185, the English King Richard the Lionheart conquered the island in 1191 and captured the treasury of Kyrenia.
The Venetians extended the fortifications of the city in 1540 massively to defend the island against the Ottomans. Nevertheless they could conquer the island between 1570 to 1571. Kyrenia surrendered after Efgenios Synglitico (Zeno the younger), Count of Rocca, the leader of the Venetian troops, together with his brother Tommaso, the viscount of Nicosia, had been killed.
The leader of the 1765 revolt was Khalil Agha
Leader of the uprising of 1765 was Khalil Agha, whose more than 5,000 followers began to dissolve in June in the fight emitted by Ottoman troops, so that there were only 200 men left at his disposal.
They were besieged in Kyrenia, Khalil had to give up.
1974 the Operation Atilla with the establishment of a bridgehead (Atilla I) began in the Bay of Pentemili, 8 kilometers west of Kyrenia. 3,000 Turkish troops landed. using landing craft at Escape beach. At the end of Operation Atilla I, these troops controlled 3% of the island, including Girne. The Greek population of the town fled to the South of the island. Resettled Turkish Cypriots from the south of the island settled among others in Girne. Today some sites remember both the bridgehead and the advance of Turkish troops.
Please read as well:
St Hilarion - the Crusaders Castle
Northern Cyprus - Hiking along stations at Besparmak Trail
https://www.alaturka.info/en/cyprus/kyrenia/3278-girne-kyrenia-a-short-history-of-the-city/amp?layout=default%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp%2Famp#sigProId5419c1caa3