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Traditional Caique and Dghajsa Boats

Traditional Caique and Dghajsa Boats

Along the Cypriot coast, the sea was never a distant backdrop. It was a working space, a source of food, and a route that connected villages to the wider Mediterranean. For generations, this relationship depended on small wooden boats shaped by experience rather than theory. Among them, the caïque and the varka (or local skiff) represent traditions of craftsmanship and seamanship. This article explores how these boats were built, how they were used, and why they still matter, not as romantic symbols, but as practical responses to life by the sea. Boats Designed by Water, Not by Paper Traditional Mediterranean boats were not designed on drafting tables. They were shaped directly by water conditions, weather patterns, and daily use. Boatbuilders worked from memory, observation, and repetition, adjusting proportions until a vessel behaved correctly at sea. The caïque and the dghajsa belong to this tradition. Both are wooden craft, built by hand, and adapted to short journeys, frequent use, and close interaction with coastlines. Their forms reflect accumulated knowledge rather than innovation for its own sake. Understanding these boats means understanding the environments they served. The Caïque: A Working Boat for Cypriot Waters The caïque is the vessel most closely associated with Cyprus and nearby regions of the Eastern Mediterranean. It was primarily a working boat, built for fishing and small-scale…

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Cyprus Three Continents Landscape

Cyprus Three Continents Landscape

Cyprus isn't just sitting on the Mediterranean - it's rising from deep inside the Earth itself. The island's mountains, plains, and dramatic coastlines tell a story millions of years in the making, a story written by colliding continents, ancient oceans, and forces powerful enough to lift the ocean floor into the sky. Understanding Cyprus's geography means understanding why civilizations flourished here, why copper made the island famous, and why the landscape itself feels almost mythical. An Island Shaped by Deep Forces Cyprus stands where Europe, Asia, and Africa nearly touch, and this position at the crossroads of three continents isn't just cultural - it's geological. The island's dramatic landscape reflects its location along active tectonic boundaries where massive plates of Earth's crust push, pull, and collide. This created an island unlike almost anywhere else on Earth, with features that have fascinated geologists, attracted ancient miners, and shaped human history for thousands of years. The island is defined by contrasts: dark volcanic mountains in the south, pale limestone ridges in the north, and a flat plain stretched between them. Rocky headlands meet sandy beaches, mountain forests give way to sun-baked lowlands, and seasonal rivers carve valleys that run dry under the summer sun. This geographic diversity packed into one relatively small island created the conditions for civilization to take root and…

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Ancient Enkomi Cyprus Bronze Age City

Ancient Enkomi Cyprus Bronze Age City

On the eastern coast of Cyprus near today’s Famagusta, Enkomi was one of the most important Bronze Age cities in the Mediterranean. For over 600 years, this walled city controlled much of the region’s copper trade and acted as a key link between the Near East, Egypt, and the Aegean world. Enkomi was a major Late Bronze Age settlement, occupied from around 1650 BCE to 1050 BCE. The city grew near a Mediterranean inlet, which has since filled with silt, leaving the ruins several kilometers from the sea. At its height, between 1340 and 1200 BCE, Enkomi was one of Cyprus’s main centers for copper production and export. Historical Background Enkomi was first settled in the Middle Bronze Age, around 2000 BCE, when Cyprus traded with Egypt’s Middle Kingdom. Activity at the site slowed during the 17th and 16th centuries BCE, possibly because Hyksos control in Egypt disrupted trade. The city became important again after 1550 BCE, when Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty reunited the country and started importing copper again. This period marked the start of Enkomi’s rise as a major urban center. During the Late Bronze Age, Cyprus was part of a wider trade network across the eastern Mediterranean. Cities like Ugarit, Byblos, Sidon, and Tyre became regular trading partners, and by 1400 BCE, Mycenaean Greeks also developed strong commercial…

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