Cradle of Christianity
Die Wiege des Christentums – Antiochien, Tarsus und die Ursprünge der Kirche
Diese Route führt zu den Ursprüngen der christlichen Kirche in der Türkei: Antakya (Antiochia), wo die Jünger erstmals Christen genannt wurden (Apg 11,26), Tarsus, Geburtsstadt des Paulus, und Istanbul, Sitz des Ökumenischen Patriarchats.
Beste Reisezeit
April-May and September-October are optimal. Cappadocia is spectacular with wildflowers in April-May and golden autumn colour in October. Avoid July-August (35-38°C in the south; less unpleasant in Cappadocia at altitude). Winter visits to Cappadocia are atmospheric (snow on the fairy chimneys, fewer tourists) but balloon flights are weather-dependent and many smaller sites have reduced hours. The 4 December feast of Saint Barbara (a Cappadocian saint) and the 1 January feast of Saint Basil the Great (Cappadocia's greatest Father) are quiet local liturgical occasions.
Budgetschätzung
| Category | Budget | Mid-Range | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flights (Europe origin) | €280 | €500 | €1200 |
| Accommodation per night | €35-55 | €80-130 | €200-400 |
| Food per day | €12-20 | €35-55 | €80+ |
| Transport (7 days) | €150 | €350 | €700 |
| Sites, balloon, guides | €100 | €280 | €600 |
Packliste
💡 Packliste
- Modest layered clothing for church and mosque visits
- Sturdy walking shoes for Cappadocia volcanic terrain
- Headtorch for the underground cities (Derinkuyu, Kaymakli)
- Refillable water bottle
- Warm layer for sunrise balloon flight (Cappadocia at 800m altitude — cold mornings)
- Universal power adapter (Type C)
- Light scarf for women entering active mosques
- Cash in TRY (rural Cappadocia is cash-friendly)
- Sun hat and sunscreen (the volcanic landscape reflects sun)
- Camera for the fairy chimneys and frescoed cave churches
- Pocket New Testament with Acts 11, 13-14
- Light rain jacket for Cappadocia spring or autumn
Empfohlene Lektüre
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Acts of the Apostles, especially 11:19-30 and 13:1-3 | The foundation passages: Antioch as the first Christian city, and Paul's commissioning. Read these chapters before departure and again at the Saint Peter's Cave at Antakya. |
| On the Holy Spirit (Saint Basil the Great) | The greatest Cappadocian Father's masterwork. The theological foundation of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. Surprisingly accessible — read at least the first ten chapters. |
| The Cappadocians: Fathers of Faith (Anthony Meredith) | Short, accessible academic introduction to Basil the Great, Gregory of Nazianzus and Gregory of Nyssa — the three architects of Trinitarian theology in the 4th century. |
| Antioch: A History (Andrea De Giorgi) | The standard modern history of ancient Antioch from foundation to the medieval period. Strong on the city's role as the cradle of Gentile Christianity. |
Frequently asked questions
Empfohlene Route
Standard 7-day: Day 1 arrive Adana; Day 2 Tarsus + Adana cathedral; Day 3 Antakya day (verify current advisory); Day 4 fly to Kayseri, transfer to Cappadocia; Day 5-6 Goreme Open Air Museum, Derinkuyu, Ihlara Valley; Day 7 sunrise balloon, fly out.
Stationen dieser Route
Antakya / Antioch
Where the disciples were first called Christians (Acts 11:26)
Antioch on the Orontes - modern Antakya - is the place where, according to Acts 11:26, 'the disciples were first called Christians.' From here Paul and Barnabas were commissioned for the first missionary journey (Acts 13:1-3); here Paul publicly rebuked Peter over the inclusion of Gentiles (Galatians 2:11-14); and here the first major Gentile Christian community took shape after the Hellenist refugees of Acts 11:19-20.
Tarsus
Birthplace of Saint Paul the Apostle
Tarsus, in ancient Cilicia, was the birthplace of Saul of Tarsus - Paul the Apostle, Roman citizen, tribe of Benjamin (Acts 22:3; Philippians 3:5). It was a major Hellenistic city, home of one of the leading philosophical schools of the Roman world, and Paul returned here several times across his life (Acts 9:30, 11:25, 21:39).
Cappadocia
Rock-hewn churches of the Cappadocian Fathers
Cappadocia, named in Acts 2:9 and 1 Peter 1:1, became one of the most important monastic landscapes of late antiquity. In the 4th century the three Cappadocian Fathers - Saint Basil the Great of Caesarea, Saint Gregory of Nazianzus and Saint Gregory of Nyssa - decisively shaped Trinitarian theology against Arianism and laid the foundations for Eastern Orthodox monastic life.
Biblischer Bogen
- Acts 9:1-31 - Paul's conversion
- Acts 11:19-26 - Antioch and the name 'Christian'
- Acts 13:1-3 - Commissioning
- Acts 14 - Lystra, Iconium, Derbe
- Galatians 2:11-14 - Paul rebukes Peter at Antioch
- Acts 2:9; 1 Peter 1:1 - Cappadocia in the New Testament