Kantara, like St. Hilarion, located on Cyprus. Its foundations stretch back before the crusader period, but it played an important role in crusader times. It is also shrouded in mystery and legends in addition to being located in a spectacular landscape.
The view up to the castle.
Kantara
is located on the tip of a long, narrow ridge as the Kyrenia mountain
range comes to an abrupt end overlooking the plain of Karpas. It sits
630 meters (2,067 feet) above the Mediterranean.
And the View Down to the Sea
Although
the fundamental structure was constructed under the Byzantine Emperor
Alexius I Comnenus after the Greek Empire re-established firm control
over the island of Cyprus, the name is thought to derive from Arab the
words "kandara" (high building) or "kandak" (castle). This suggests
there may have been an earlier structure, an outpost or watch tower,
that occupied this strategic location before the Comnenus Emperor
constructed a full-fledged castle.
During
Richard the Lionheart's invasion of Cyprus in 1191, Kantara served as a
temporary refuge for the Greek tyrant Isaac Comnenus, and not even the
great Lionheart made any attempt to take it. Then again, he didn't need
too. He captured the seaside fortress of Kyrenia instead and with it
Isaac's beloved daughter. The tyrant submitted without any further
resistance after his daughter's capture.
During
the bitter wars between Emperor Friedrich II and the barons, on the
other hand, the castle of Kantara was subjected to a long and brutal
siege. Defended by men loyal to the German emperor, the barons of
Cyprus besieged the castle. Their forces were commanded by Anseau de
Brie. Brie built a trebuchet that, according to the contemporary
chronicler and witness Philip de Novare (a fighting man in the service
of the Ibelins), "battered down nearly all the walls." While this was
doubtless an exaggeration, Novare also reports that the bedrock on and
into which the castle was built defied destruction. Multiple attempts
to assault the castle were successfully repulsed.
The
castle only surrendered after ten months of siege due primarily to
dwindling supplies and the demoralization of the garrison after the
death of their commander, Gauvain de Cheneche. The latter was one of the
five baillies appointed by Frederick II. (See: The Emperor's Men)
During
the Genoese occupation of Cyprus in late 15th century, the castle was
held for the crown and was twice attacked by Genoese forces. It resisted
both assaults successfully, and became the base for counter-attacks, preventing Genoese control of the Karpas peninsula.
After
the collapse of Lusignan rule on Cyprus and the establishment of
Venetian control in the 16th Century, the castle was abandoned and began
to decay.
Left
behind were the impressive structures that gradually became ruins and
the legends. The locals started to call it "the castle of a hundred
chambers" -- although according to legend the 101st chamber contained a
treasure that no one had ever found. Or, alternatively, the 101st
chamber was enchanted and if one fell asleep in it, one woke up years
later in a lovely garden. Another local name for the castle was "the
house/residence of the queen" -- although no specific queen appears to
be associated with the castle historically.
The 19th century traveler D. Hogarth combines these themes suggesting: "...the traveler might imagine it the stronghold of a Sleeping Beauty, untouched by change or time for a thousand years."
The 19th century traveler D. Hogarth combines these themes suggesting: "...the traveler might imagine it the stronghold of a Sleeping Beauty, untouched by change or time for a thousand years."
Kantara
certainly captured my imagination and my heart. It is the setting of
many episodes of the (unpublished) "Lion of Karpas" and has a modest
role in "The Last Crusader Kingdom" and is an important venue of key events in "Rebels against Tyranny."
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