The last remaining Byzantine church in Ankara, Turkey, is fighting to survive as the crowded city continues to spread.
The Orthodox Church of Saint Clement, built at least 1,000 years ago,
is in ruins and is quickly disappearing amid office buildings in the
Altındağ district. Despite being of cultural and historical importance,
the church can only be visited by walking down an office fire escape
with express permission from the owners.
Although the church was registered with the High Council of Immovable
Heritage Items and Movements (GEEAYK) on April 12, 1980, it now is
struggling to survive due to lack of care.
Believed to have been built between the fourth and ninth centuries,
all that is now left of the church is the interior facade of a wall and
some marble blocks.
"Nowadays you can only see a few walls and a little marble pillar", was how one visitor described the ancient site.
During the time of the Ottoman Sultan Murad II, a mosque and madrasah
were built on top of Saint Clement's by Ahmed Bin Hızır Yeğen Bey.
However both buildings were burnt by fires in 1917 and only a remnant
remains.
Saint Clement was a bishop born in Ankara in 283. He worked to spread
Christianity throughout modern day Turkey before being martyred by the
Roman Emperor Diocletian during his purge of Christianity in 303.
Later declared a saint by the Orthodox Church, the church named after Saint Clement was built in the Byzantine era.
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