KYRENIA CASTLE
The restoration work of Kyrenia Castle was
interrupted briefly in 1373, because of the Genoese
siege but went on afterwards. 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.
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
Northwester and the southeaster 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 Byzantine 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. Kyrenia castle one of the famous
views in Kyrenia City. |