Home
> Going
Out > Historical
Places > Kyrenia > Kyrenia Castle
Kyrenia Castle
The
castle is thought to have been constructed to protect the
town against the Arab raids in the 7th century. Like the Kantara
Castle, it played an important role in the Lusignan period.
In this period the castle underwent a lot of changes due to
restoration work. The restoration work was interrupted briefly
in 1373, because of the Genoese siege but went on afterwards.
When
the castle was first built, the fortifications were constructed
with the armoured knights and archers in mind. When the Genoese
took control of the castle in 1489, they reconstructed the
fortifications taking the Ottoman artillery into consideration.
They added the northwestern and the southeastern towers as
an extra precaution. In spite of all this, however, following
the fall of Nicosia in 1570, they surrendered the castle to
the Ottomans without putting up any resistance. The entrance
to the castle is via a bridge built over a wide ditch. This
ditch was full of water until the 14 hundreds. The Lusignan
insignia of three lions on the vault of the inner gate has
been brought here from another building.
Inside
the castle there is a Byzantian church (St. George) thought
to have been constructed in the 11 hundreds. The tomb of the
Ottoman Admiral, Sadik Pasha the Algerian, who was killed
during the conquest of Cyprus by the Ottomans in 1570 is also
in this castle.
The other sections of the castle are: the Venetian Towers
of the Northwest, Southwest, and Southeast; the guards room,
the big hall, various dungeons, and rooms
used as depots belonging to the Lusignan period; a tower belonging
to the Byzantine period; the Venetian defence platform; a
cistern; an arsenal, and a cannon parapet belonging to the
Venetian period; and the shipwreck museum. The Department
of Antiquities created the atmosphere of an open-air museum
in the castle by personifying different historical characters
and by using site-animation.
|