Friday, December 08, 2006

Next Stop - Ephesus, Turkey


Lisa and I were fortunate enough to be able to go to ancient Ephesus, Turkey, of Biblical fame. Enjoy! Posted by Picasa

Dur in the name of the law

Their stop signs say DUR. This is odd because usually they say STOP. Posted by Picasa

The Virgin Mary's house

 
 
 
Lisa and I were able to visit the house where the virgin Mary is thought to have spent her last years. The Pope recently visited the same site. This place also holds the distinction of the single best view from a male restroom that I have personally encountered. Posted by Picasa

The Law

One neat thing they did was to carve the city law on a building. When you were coming into town, you knew what was off limits. Posted by Picasa

Ancient Toilet

Marble warms up if you sit on it for a while. Posted by Picasa

The Library of Celcius

This is the most famous site in ancient Ephesus. Posted by Picasa

Christian Symbol

This symbol was carved in the street leading from the colosseum to the Arcadian Way. You can see all the Greek letters for Christ in the circle, IXOYE, which are abbreviations for Jesus, Christ, God, Son, and Savior Posted by Picasa

The Colosseum

 
This is the audience seating where people sat when St. Paul preached to the Ephesians. Posted by Picasa

Too good to pass up

"Look Honey! I got a genuinely fake Rolex!" Posted by Picasa

Genuine Humor

This is funny whereever you are. There is a museum, in Italy I believe, that houses the heads and arms of all the other statues. Posted by Picasa

Topographic Map of Turkey

We were on the far western coast of Turkey. In contrast, the capital, Anakara, is approxmiately where the drumstick would go if Turkey, the country, were Turkey, the bird. Posted by Picasa

St John's Church and Tomb

 
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St. John's Baptistry

 

This is the baptistry at St. John's church. Posted by Picasa

Turkish Grub

 
 
 
In Turkey, I learned that "Farmer's plate" means good eatin' in any language. Posted by Picasa

Rug Shop Racket


Each tour guide we had on every port of call had a "special shopping stop" where they were in with the owners for a cut of the profits. In Ephesus, it was the rug shop. They were very nice people with very nice rugs. The problem was, they were also very expensive and heavy. Also you couldn't return them if they were stained or failed to fly as promised. Posted by Picasa

Turkish Brother


This is Lisa's Turkish Brother. After visiting the racket rug shop, we were snagged into a T-Shirt shop by a guy who wisked us away (two streets over) to another rug shop where things were "much cheaper". After the obligatory free drink, we parted ways with a new member of the family. Posted by Picasa

Next Stop - Crete

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