| Izmir |

Izmir
is Turkey's third largest city and second most important port.
Turkey's
Aegean shores are among the loveliest landscapes in the country. The
magnificent coastline,
lapped by the clear water of the Aegean Sea,
abounds in vast and pristine beaches surrounded by olive groves, rocky
crags and pine woods. A city of palm-lined promenades, avenues and
green parks set in sweeping curves along a circular bay, Izmir has an
exceptionally mild climate and many fine hotels, popular holiday villages, and the remains of
ancient civilizations.
The original city was established in
the third millenium B.C., and at that time shared with Troy the most
advan ced culture in Western Anatolia. By 1500 B.C. it had fallen under
the influence of Central Anatolia's Hittite Empire. In the first
millenium B.C., Izmir, then known as Smyrna, ranked as one of the
important cities of the Ionian Federation; during this period -- one
of the city's most brilliant -- it is believed that Homer lived here.
The Lydian conquest of the city, around 600 B.C., brought this period
to an end, and Izmir remained little more than a village throughout
the Lydian and the subsequent 6th century B.C. Persian rule. In the
fourth century B.C. a new city was built at the instigation of
Alexander the Great on the slopes of Mount Pagos Kadifekale. Izmir's
Roman period, from the first century B.C., gave birth to its second
great era.
Byzantine rule followed in the fourth century and lasted
until the Seljuk conquest of the 11th century. In 1415, under Sultan
Mehmet Celebi, Izmir became part of the Ottoman Empire.
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