Roughly midway between Antalya and Nevsehir, Konya is a place of pilgrimage for the Muslim world - the home of Celalledin Rumi or the Mevlana ("Our Master"), the mystic who founded the Mevlevi or Whirling Dervish sect, and the centre of Sufic mystical practice and teaching. It was also a capital during the Selcuk era, many of the buildings from which are still standing, along with examples of their highly distinctive crafts and applied arts, now on display in Konya’s museums. The Mevlana Museum (Mon 10am-5pm, Tues-Sun 9am-5pm; $2.50) is housed in the first lodge (tekke) of the Mevlevi dervish sect, at the eastern end of Mevlana Bulvari, easily recognizable by its distinctive fluted turquoise dome. Archaeology shows that the Konya region is one of the most ancient settlements of Anatolia. The results of excavations in Catalhoyuk, Karahoyuk, Cukurkent and Kucukoy show the region was inhabited as far back as the Neolithic Period (Late Stone Age) of BC 7000. Other settlers of the city before Islam were; the Calcolitic Period (Copper Age) civilizations, Bronze Age civilizations, Hittites, Frigians, Lidians, Persians, Romans and finally Byzantines.
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