The Battle of Nihriya: When the Hittites Faced Assyrian Might
I remember the first time I stood on the ruins of Hattusa, the Hittite capital in central Anatolia. The wind carried whispers from three thousand years ago. As a history…
The Merchants of Kanesh: 4,000-Year-Old Business Letters from Anatolia
Imagine holding a 4,000-year-old clay tablet in your hands, still crisp with the impression of cuneiform. You’re not reading a royal decree or a religious hymn—you’re reading a business letter.…
The Forgotten Kingdom of Urartu: Anatolia’s Lost Mountain Empire
When Mountains Whispered of a Lost Empire I first stumbled upon the name Urartu while hunched over a map in a dusty Ankara bookshop. It was 2015, and I was…
The Battle of Dazimon: The Forgotten Disaster That Shook Byzantium
The Morning That Changed Everything On July 22, 838 AD, the sun rose over the Dazimon plain in what is now central Turkey, near the modern city of Tokat. Emperor…
The River of No Return: Lucullus’s Forgotten Victory at the Rhyndacus
Imagine standing on the banks of a river that no longer carries the name it once had—a sleepy stream in western Anatolia, barely a footnote on modern maps. Yet here,…
Puduhepa: The Forgotten Hittite Queen Who Shaped History
Imagine a world where the most powerful diplomat was a woman. A queen who traded letters with Pharaohs, commanded armies from a remote palace, and reshaped the political order of…
The 1909 Counterrevolution That Almost Undid the Young Turks
Imagine Istanbul in April 1909. The city is on edge. A year earlier, the Young Turks had forced the sultan to restore the constitution, and hope was in the air.…
The Karamanlides: Turkey’s Turkish-Speaking Greek Exiles of 1923
Imagine a family that speaks Turkish at home, prays in Greek Orthodox churches, and writes both languages using the Greek alphabet. Then one day, the government decides you are Greek…
Margaret of Beverley: The Crusader Woman Sold by Saladin
The Woman Who Fought with a Sword I have to be honest with you – when I first stumbled across the name Margaret of Beverley in a dusty footnote of…
Siege of Kut: The Ottoman Victory Britain Forgot
Imagine a siege so brutal that starving soldiers ate their own horses, rats, and even the leather from their boots. This wasn’t the legendary siege of Leningrad. It was April…









