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History of Alanya

The first village of Alanya was in fact on the small peninsula with the Taurus Mountains on the north, the Mediterranean sea on the south. Because it was in fact on a line between Old Pamphylia and the actual Kilikya boundary, sometimes it was referred to as town of Kilikya and some occasions Pamphylia.

Following the Fourth Crusade's assault on the Byzantines, the Christian Armenian Empire of Cilicia periodically held the port, and it was from an Armenian, Kir Fard, that the Turks took sustained control in 1221 once the Anatolian Seljuk Sultan Alaeddin Kayqubad I captured it, assigning the previous leader, whose daughter he married, to the actual governance of the area of Aksehir. Seljuk rule witnessed the golden years of the area, and it can be considered the wintertime capital of their empire. Construction projects, such as the  citadel, city walls, arsenal, and Kizil Kule, made it a major seaport for western Mediterranean business, in particular with Ayyubid Egypt as well as  Italian city-states. Alaeddin Kayqubad I additionally created several gardens and pavilions outside of the walls, and several of his works could still be seen in the area. Most of these were likely funded by his own treasury and by  local emirs, and developed by the building contractor Abu 'Ali al-Kattani al-Halabi.


Modern day living

Despite the seaside location, a small number of people make their living in relation to the sea, and fishing is not a major sector. In the early 1970s, when fish stocks happened to run lower, a program of rotating access was designed to preserve the sector. This particular ground breaking strategy was an element of Elinor Ostrom's research on financial governance that resulted in her '09 Nobel Prize in Economics. In 2007, locals protested the actual establishment of some bigger chain grocery stores and clothing stores, which have launched offices throughout Alanya.

Beginning in 2004, with the provisional removal of limitations on land purchases by non-nationals, the housing industry in the city has grown to be very rewarding with many cutting edge private homes and condos being constructed for European and Asian part-time residents. Sixty-nine per cent of properties purchased by overseas nationals throughout the Antalya Province and 28. 9% in all of Turkey are actually in Alanya. New home buyers are largely individuals, instead of investors. This amazing real estate growth put strain on the city's numerous gecekondu homes and establishments simply because property values increase and real estate sales to locals fall. A height limitation in all of the area limits the majority of buildings to twenty one feet (6. meters). This will keep high rise resorts in the east and west of the area, conserving the important skyline at the cost of greater tourism potential. The fringes of this city though have seen uncontrolled expansion.

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properties in Alanya