Two tributaries of the Bakır Çayı river (the ancient River Kaikos) pass on either side of the Pergamon acropolis: to the west the Bergama Çayı (the ancient Selinus) which flows through Bergama (see map below, and gallery page 3 and page 8); and to the east the Kestel Çayı (the ancient Ketios) which was dammed in 1992 below the acropolis to form an artificial U-shaped lake (see also next page).
Little mention is made of the Kestel Dam (Turkish, Kestel Barajı) in travel guides, which is strange when one thinks of it as an engineering achievement. But dam-building has recently become a touchy and controversial subject all over the world, from China to Spain and Turkey. The growth of cities, mass tourism and intensive farming has increased the demand for water and hydroelectric energy. For politicians and business people dams are also prestige projects.
However, many people are becoming increasingly concerned about their effect on the natural and cultural environments. Recent political protests about the Yortanlı Dam project, which threatened to flood the important archaeological site of Allionoi, 18 km northeast of Bergama, caused an international outcry, especially among intellectuals. Despite appeals in Turkey and worldwide to save the ancient spa and health centre by the public, academics, non-government organizations, ICOMOS, UNESCO and the European Union, the construction of the dam continued and the site was submerged on 31 December 2010. It now lies at the bottom of the dam reservoir (see the article on the gallery 1, page 35).
This whole business makes us wonder what archaeological secrets lay beneath this dam reservoir in Bergama. It has to be admitted though, that it it is a pretty stretch of water and appears to add something to an impressive landscape which has anyway been reshaped by humans over thousands of years.
See a photo of a relief on a sarcophagus rescued by archaeologists during the Kestel Dam salvage excavation, undertaken just before the valley was flooded, on gallery 2, page 10. |
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