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Once home to civilizations, fabled Antioch left in ruins after powerful earthquake

Antakya earthquake

A aerial photograph taken on February 11, 2023 shows the destroyed mosque Habib-i Neccar in the historic southern city of Antakya. Rescuers pulled out children on February 10, 2023, from the rubble of the Turkey-Syria earthquake that struck on February 6, 2023, as the toll exceeded 35,000 people and a winter freeze compounded the suffering for nearly one million people estimated to be in urgent need of food. Yasin AKGUL / AFP

The smashed dome of the ancient mosque, considered to be Turkey’s oldest, covers rubble that used to be a prayer hall.

Once a home to myriad civilizations, the southern city of Antakya lies in ruins after last Monday’s 7.8-magnitude earthquake.

Fourteen centuries of history were ravaged in less than two minutes in Antakya, a fabled ancient Greek center known throughout most of its history as Antioch.

Erected in AD 638, the Habib-i Neccar was “the first mosque built within modern-day Turkey’s borders,” according to the government’s culture website.

Only its walls have survived, leaving delicate yellow, red and blue paintings and calligraphy exposed to the winter sky.

“A bit of the Prophet Muhammad’s beard was once preserved in a box” at the mosque, said Havva Pamukçu, a 50-year-old woman wearing a headscarf.

“I’m heartbroken,” she said.

A few hundred meters away, a Greek Orthodox church erected in the 14th century — and rebuilt in 1870 after another earthquake — is also gone.

A white cross that once stood on its peaked roof now lies atop shattered walls and broken pieces of wood.

“All the walls have fallen. We’re in despair,” said Sertaç Paul Bozkurt, a member of the council managing the church.

‘Soil full of history’

Antakya is in Hatay, a province tucked between the Mediterranean Sea and Turkey’s border with Syria.

It was one of the worst affected by the earthquake and its aftershocks, which have claimed more than 35,000 lives across the region.

In the old city, several streets are still inaccessible, blocked by buildings flattened like pancakes and cars trapped under the debris.

Across more than two millennia, the city was home to the Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Persian, Arab and Ottoman empires.

It was even placed under a French mandate between the end of World War I and 1939, when the city became part of modern-day Turkey.

A former general of Alexander the Great founded Antioch in 300 BC.

The city has suffered several earthquakes — almost one every 100 years — and is no stranger to rebuilding.

There were devastating quakes in 37 BC, AD 115 and AD 458.

A quake in AD 526 is thought to have killed 250,000 people. In 1054, 10,000 are thought to have died.

“Antakya is the cradle of several historical events,” said Hakan Mertkan, a doctoral student at the University of Bayreuth in Germany and author of a book on Antakya.

But it’s also “a cradle of earthquakes, its soil full of history,” he added.

Crossroads of civilizations

Turkey, like Syria, is on one of the world’s most active fault lines.

But the region is also “at the center of much of humanity’s shared ancient history,” said Aparna Tandon, senior program leader at the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property.

The area impacted is home to six UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Like Aleppo in Syria, Turkey’s “crossroads of civilizations” was already “60 percent destroyed in 1822 after an earthquake,” said Youmna Tabet, of the World Heritage Convention.

Fortunately, there does not seem to be as much damage at Turkey’s other heritage sites, said Maria Liouliou, Tabet’s colleague.

The fortress in Diyarbakir seems to have suffered only moderate damage, she said.

But the dangers are far from over now that the worst aftershocks have faded, experts warn.

What look like “simple cracks” to the “layman’s eyes” can weaken a monument and cause it to collapse weeks later, said Samir Abdulaç, who works at the International Council on Monuments and Sites, which seeks to protect historical places.

The experts AFP spoke to all insisted the “priority” was to save lives first. Safeguarding historical monuments must come later.

This was clear when AFP encountered a local official in Antakya, one of many families devastated by the disaster.

“I just lost my two brothers and a nephew. I am evacuating my wife and daughter today,” said the official, who preferred to remain anonymous.

“I have no money, nothing. Frankly I have other priorities than cultural heritage.”

© Agence France-Presse

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