GOREME OPEN AIR MUSEUM
The Goreme Open-Air Museum resembles a
vast monastic complex composed of scores of refectory monasteries placed
side-by-side, each with its own fantastic church.
It is obviously the
first sight to be visited by any traveler in Cappadocia, standing as it
does in the very center of the region with easy access from all directions. It
is only 15 minutes walk (1.5km, 1 mile) from Goreme village center. It contains
the finest of the rock-cut churches, with beautiful
frescoes (wall paintings) whose colors still retain all their
original freshness. It also presents unique examples of rock hewn architecture
and fresco technique. The Goreme Open Air Museum has been a member of
UNESCO World Heritage List since 1984, and was one of the first
two UNESCO sites in Turkey.
The area covered by this Open Air Museum
forms a coherent geographical entity and represents historical unity. There are
eleven refectories within the Museum, with rock-cut churches tables and benches.
Each is associated with a church. Most of the
churches in Goreme Open
Air Museum belong to the 10th, 11th and 12th centuries.
The
entrance fee to the museum is 15 TL per person. In summer, it
is better to visit the museum early in the morning or late afternoon, instead of
mid-day. There are many churches and chapels in Goreme Open Air Museum but the
most important ones are:
NunneryThe 6-7 storey rock
mass to the left of the museum entrance is known as "the Nunnery". The dining
hall, kitchen and some rooms on the first floor, together with the ruined chapel
on the second level, can still be visited. The church on the third storey, which
can be reached through a tunnel, has a cruciform plan, a dome with four columns
and three apses. The templon on the main apse is rarely found in Goreme's
churches. Besides the fresco of Jesus, painted directly onto the rock, designs
painted in red can also be seen. The different levels of the monastery are
connected by tunnels, and "millstone doors", such as those found in the
underground cities, and were used to close off these tunnels in times of danger.
St. Barbara
ChurchThis church is situated behind the rock housing Elmali
(Apple) Church. It has a cruciform plan, with two columns. The north, south and
west arms of the cruciform are barrel vaulted, and the center, the east arm, and
the east corners are domed. There are a main, central apse and two side apses.
Motifs were painted in red directly onto the rock. The walls and the dome are
decorated in a variety of motifs including geometrical patterns, mythological
animals and military symbols. The walls also have motifs resembling stonework.
This church dates back to the second half of the 11th century.
Apple (Elmali)
ChurchOne of the most prominent buildings in the area with its
vivid colors, the church is a groin-vaulted structure with cross-in-square plan,
having four columns and a central dome. It has beautiful frescoes dating to the
11th and 12th centuries. And where these have fallen off, you can see simple
red-painted ornaments from the iconoclastic period. The frescoes are narrating
scenes from the Bible and the life of Christ, the Hospitality of Abraham and
Three Hebrew Youths. The building derives its name from the apple orchard
collapsed a long time ago, in front of the main entrance.
Snake (Yilanli) ChurchThis church has a linear
plan, consisting of two chambers. The front section is barrel-vaulted, while the
back one has a flat ceiling. The red ochre ornaments imitate hewn stone plait.
Frescoes dated to the 11th century, are painted directly on the wall. Opposite
the entrance, there is an image of Christ with a book in his hand, and at his
left, on both sides of a large cross, are Emperor Constantine and Helena. Right
next to it, the Killing of the Snake by St. George and St. Theodore is depicted.
On the opposite wall, Onophrios can be seen with a sapling in front of him, also
the Apostle Thomas, and the founder of the building, St. Basileios holding a
book in one hand and sanctifying with the other.
Dark Church (Karanlik Kilise)The
entrance to this church is from the north through a winding tunnel which opens
into a barrel-vaulted narthex. You have to pay an extra admission fee (8 TL per
person) but it is surely worth it. In the south of the narthex there are three
graves, two of which are big and the other, small. The church has a cross plan,
the arms of the cross having a diagonal vault. The templon of the main apse has
been destroyed. This Church dates to the end of the 12th century. Some of the
scenes on the walls are Deesis, Annunciation, Journey to Bethlehem, Nativity,
Baptism, Raising of Lazarus, Transfiguration, Entry into Jerusalem, Last Supper,
Betrayal of Judas, the Crucifixion and Anastasis.
Carikli
(Sandals) ChurchThis two columned church (two other columns being
in the form of pillars), is cross vaulted, and has three apses and four domes.
The well preserved frescoes show the life of Jesus, Hospitality of Abraham, and
images of the saints and the donors of the church. Although it resembles both
the Karanlik (Dark) and Elmali (Apple) Churches, the scenes of the Way of the
Cross and the Descent from the Cross make this church different from the others.
The figures are generally large. The footprints under the Ascension scene give
the church its name, which means "with sandal". The church dates back to the end
of the 12th and the beginning of the 13th centuries. The center dome houses a
picture of Jesus the Pantocrator with the busts of angels in the insets. On the
central apse is Deesis, on the north apse Mary and the Baby Jesus, and on the
south apse, a picture of St Michael.
Buckle (Tokali)
ChurchEven though Tokali church is located down the museum around
50 meters, you can visit the church with the same ticket that you used for
Goreme Open Air Museum. It is a complex made up of 4 main chambers. The entrance
to the New Church having a rectangular plan with longitudinal axis is made
through the barrel-vaulted single-naved Old Church. This rock settlement is
divided with arches into three sections. Containing the most important samples
of paintings, the building has been decorated in various periods.

In the Old Church section, frescoes dated to early 10th
century, painted in bands of rich red and green, represent scenes from the
Bible. The indigo dominating the main chamber frescoes in the New Church, is a
feature discerning the structure from the others. Among the rock churches in
Cappadocia, Tokali has the best paintings narrating the life of Christ in the
most detail. The church is decorated with the Infancy (childhood of Christ),
Ministry and Passion cycles, with several episodes from the life of St.
Basileios.
We offer
private tours to Goreme Open Air
Museum at any time you prefer. The rate of the
tour is 50 Euro per
person including transfer to/from your hotel in Goreme, entrance fees
(both for the museum and Dark Church) and licensed guide. The tour takes around
2 hours.
Please contact us for further information and booking
Goreme Open Air Museum tour.