Alanya Archaeology Museum
In the first section of the museum, which has 14 indoor and one outdoor exhibition halls, archaeological artifacts are exhibited. You can see numerous artifacts belonging to the prehistoric and posthistoric Phrygians, Lydians, Greeks and Byzantines, as well as coins of various eras issued by many kings and emperors on their behalf, and the bronze statue of Heracles from the II century AD, which is the symbol of the museum. In the second section, where ethnographic artifacts are exhibited, artifacts from the Seljuk and Ottoman periods and an old Alanya house room are worth seeing. In the museum garden, where Bronze Age, Urartian, Phrygian and Lydian artifacts, Hellenistic pottery and rich Roman archaeological artifacts are exhibited, you can see the interesting flora of the Mediterranean climate, flowers and fruit species while sipping your cold soft drink.
Kizilkule Ethnographic Museum
This monumental structure, built in 1226 for military purposes and to keep the harbor under control, is one of the unique examples of Seljuk art and is the symbol of Alanya. After being repaired in 1951-1953, in 1979, ethnographic artifacts such as carpets, rugs, clothes, kitchen utensils, weapons, weighing instruments, lighting instruments, weaving looms and tents reflecting the nomadic culture were exhibited on the ground floor of the building and the building was given the function of an ethnographic museum.
Atatürk House Museum
On February 18, 1935, the house where the Great Leader Atatürk stayed during his visit to Alanya was turned into a museum and opened to visitors. In the first floor rooms of the museum, Atatürk’s personal belongings, photographs, a telegram written by Atatürk to the people of Alanya and other historical documents are exhibited. In the other rooms on the second floor, a typical Alanya house is recreated and examples of ethnographic items specific to the environment are exhibited.
Kizilkule Ethnographic Museum
This monumental structure, built in 1226 for military purposes and to keep the harbor under control, is one of the unique examples of Seljuk art and is the symbol of Alanya. After being repaired in 1951-1953, in 1979, ethnographic artifacts such as carpets, rugs, clothes, kitchen utensils, weapons, weighing instruments, lighting instruments, weaving looms and tents reflecting the nomadic culture were exhibited on the ground floor of the building and the building was given the function of an ethnographic museum.
Atatürk House Museum
On February 18, 1935, the house where the Great Leader Atatürk stayed during his visit to Alanya was turned into a museum and opened to visitors. In the first floor rooms of the museum, Atatürk’s personal belongings, photographs, a telegram written by Atatürk to the people of Alanya and other historical documents are exhibited. In the other rooms on the second floor, a typical Alanya house is recreated and examples of ethnographic items specific to the environment are exhibited.
Source : Haşim yetkin Alanyakitabı