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Santa Claus Turkey
Santa Claus Turkey
Demre,
lying on the shore of the Mediterranean is a very
important center of Christianity. There is a church here
called the Church of St.Nicholas. Two conflicting
suppositions are made of this St.Nicholas. The first of
these is that this St.Nicholas was the actual founder of
the Russian Empire. The second supposition and one
believed by many westerners is that this St. Nicholas is
the saint known as Santa Claus. According to excavations
this structure dates to the sixth century and consists of
a basilica shaped building with naves divided by pillars
and with the middle nave divided into three large square
areas. Side naves are again divided into even small
areas. In the eighth century the church known today was
built over the remains of the earlier structure while
benefiting from some of the materials and parts of the
first. In 1862 the Russians hired a German architect to
restore this building. In place of the traditional
Byzantine dome, he roofed the structure with an
altogether untypical ribbed arch. Recently, a new segment
of the original structure was found under a layer of mud
at the entry of the building; in niches of this room
archaeologists discovered various decorated crypts. It is
believed that one of these is the tomb of St.Nicholas, or
Santa Claus. Some element of frescoes and round floor
mosaic were also discovered on the walls of the church
during the course of excavation. Another center of
Byzantine culture in this region was Ksantos near
present-day Fethiye. Among the ruins of this then
highly-populated area are ruins of a church. There is
also the ruin of a large monastery at the site of the
town's ancient Roman acropolis. The sacred site of Letoon
lies on the further banks of the Ksantos River and a few
miles inland from the sea.
Turkey
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