jump to navigation

Othello’s Cypriot citadel on the brink of ruin June 16, 2007

Posted by grhomeboy in Cyprus Occupied.
trackback

Occupied Famagusta, Ammochostos in Greek, Cyprus > An ancient Cypriot port city which inspired Shakespearean tragedy and was famed in medieval times for its architecture and wealth is on the brink of ruin because of neglect, conservationists warn.

In its Venetian heyday Famagusta was one of the richest cities in the region, and a seat for the crowning of Lusignan Kings of Jerusalem. Fictionally, it marks the spot where Shakespeare’s Othello, blinded by jealousy, smothered his beloved Desdemona, then took his own life.

Thick fortifications encasing the city protect a community of some 300 churches, and a stunning 14th century gothic cathedral which some art historians compare to Notre Dame of Rheims, but in miniature.

In a biannual review of world heritage sites, the privately run World Monuments Foundation (WMF) has listed the city as one of 100 world sites most at risk from conflict, alongside such world landmarks as the Church of Nativity in Bethlehem, and what has been left of the Buddha statues at Bamiyan in Afghanistan. Those campaigning for the protection of the city hope the status will galvanise much-needed conservation.

“It will act as a conduit through which specialised scholarship and expertise can be channelled in an attempt to protect, preserve and plan for the future of the historic town,” said professor Michael Walsh, one of two academics instrumental in drawing WMF’s attention to the walled city.

But, borrowing a line from Othello, occupied north Cyprus is neither here nor there. Shunned by the international community, this small enclave with no direct links with the outside world is unrecognised by all but Turkey, which props up the Turkish Cypriot community economically.

Every part of Cyprus bears testament to the cultures which have touched it over the centuries, from the Greeks to the Romans, and in more modern times, the Venetians, the Ottomans and the British. Modern Cyprus’s priceless monuments have been caught in the crossfire of bitter ethnic division between Greek and Turkish Cypriots, separated in a Turkish military invasion in 1974 resulting the occupation of the northern area of the Republic of Cyprus.

The internationally recognised Greek Cypriot government does not have access to the occupied and Turkish military controlled north area of the Republic, and generally frowns on any intervention in antiquities which is not officially sanctioned by them.

Underscoring sensitivities, the head of the government’s Antiquities Department was quoted as saying Famagusta’s appearance in the WMF list was “adverse”. “The Antiquities Department and the Foreign Ministry are working together to find the best solution,” Department Director Pavlos Flourentzos told the Cyprus Weekly newspaper.

cyprus_occupied_famagusta.jpg  The gothic citadel of St. Nicholas Cathedral, which today, after the occupying illegal regime changed its name to Lala Mustafa Pasha Mosque and converted into a mosque, bears testament to the neglect.

“No serious work has been done there since the British times. Stones are falling from it and damp is rising up from the sea damaging it from below,” Turkish Cypriot archaeologist Muge Sevketoglu told Reuters. “The citadel is like an aged person who is in need of constant care.” Archaeologists say the political situation prevents proper conservation work on artefacts. Under the Hague Convention, archaeologists working in occupied northern Cyprus are breaking the law, as they are working without the consent of the internationally recognised Cyprus government.

“That has traditionally meant the archaeologists who work here will no longer be able to work in Greece or south Cyprus,” said Sevketoglu, referring to the territory under Greek Cypriot control. Which does not solve the problem of occupied Famagusta.

“Many of the buildings are in danger and need architects to come and work and make them structurally sound,” said Allan Langdale, who worked alongside Walsh in filing the application to the WMF. But whether it will manifest itself in better preservation remains unclear. “It is one thing for the WMF to recognise the need for protection and restoration. Its another for it to defy the embargo and provide funds,” Langdale said.

Comments»

No comments yet — be the first.