The charming fishing town of Foça near Izmir
- Written by Portal Editor
The idyllic fishing town of Foca, just 70 kilometres from Izmir, is a popular holiday destination with beautiful and clean sandy beaches, well-kept restaurants, accommodation and several other attractions.
Foça has two natural bays (Büyükdeniz and Küçükdeniz) and boasts of its offshore islands; one of them, the "Siren Island", was mentioned in many Greek mythologies.
Today's Foça has been largely spared from foreign mass tourism and is instead a popular weekend and holiday destination for the residents of Izmir. The reason for this is primarily that the Turkish military is stationed in a bay directly adjacent to the new port and thus the expansion of the town on the coast was largely prevented.
The specialty in many fish restaurants - papalinas
The fish species, which is translated as papal sprat, is found everywhere in the shallow waters of the Mediterranean, but here it has a special taste due to the influx of abundant fresh water.
In winter, the sprat's preferred habitat is in the shallow coastal waters, while in summer the habitat changes towards the estuaries and into deeper waters, sometimes up to 150 meters deep, most commonly between 30 and 70 m deep.
In the picturesque harbour of Foça - fish restaurants dominate the picture
If you are on holiday for a longer period of time, you should prefer Yenifoça, about 20 km north, which is not as spectacular in terms of scenery, but offers enough hotels and holiday resorts for domestic and foreign tourists.
The Siren Island - described by Homer in his Odyssey
For this reason, the Siren Islands can now only be viewed from a distance. They are uninhabited and are used by the local population to release a small number of goats, which can feed on the very sparse vegetation and the morning dew as liquid, as the islands have no natural water supplies.
But it's not just the coast with its beautiful beaches and the deep blue waters of the sea that make Foça so popular, but also the wonderful landscape of the hinterland. Wide olive groves extend inland and give the area its own unique flair.
Historical development of the city of Phokaia under the Ionians
Phocaia was one of the twelve cities of the Ionian League - the Greek Dodecapolis in Asia Minor - along with Chios, Klazomenai, Kolophon, Ephesus, Erythrai, Lebedos, Miletus, Myus, Priene, Samos and Teos. Although these cities were united in a league, they only had very loose connections with each other. This put them in a weak position when, from the 7th century B.C. BC had to compete against enemy powers (the Lydians, the Cimmerians and especially the Persians under Cyrus II from 546 BC)
Remains of the Theatre of Phokaia
The sculptor Telephanes who, according to Pliny (Naturalis historia XXXIV, 68) is said to have been for the kings Darius I and Xerxes I, possibly came from Phokaia.
Phocaean colonies
Massalia (Marseille)
Auenion or Aouennion (Avignon)
Agathe Tyche (Agde)
Aigitna (Cannes)
Antipolis (Antibes)
Nikaia (Nice).
Alalia or Allalia (Aléria)
Hyele (Elea)
Emporion (Empúries/Ampurias)
Tauroeïs (Le Brusc)
Olbia (Sardinia)
Destruction of the city
Phocaea was inhabited until the end of the Byzantine period in Asia Minor in the 14th century, but still exists. It is now called Foça and is commonly called Eski Foça (Old Foça) because there is also a Yenifoça (New Foça) which is around 20 km away.
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