Van (pronounced vahn in Turkish, wahn in Kurdish) is a city in Eastern Anatolia, Turkey.
Van stands near the eastern shore of Lake Van (Van Gölü), a soda-salt lake also known locally as Van Denizi ("the sea of Van"). This lake, the largest in Turkey, lies 1640 metres above sea level and is ringed by high mountains, so the area has a harsh continental climate. An active tectonic boundary runs beneath, so earthquakes are not uncommon, and the nearby volcano Mount Nemrut is considered dormant, not extinct.
The region is historically important as the centre of the Urartu — established in the area between the 9th and 6th centuries BC by an Iron Age people, naming their country Biainili, the origin of the modern name of Van — and Armenian kingdoms. It later came under the rule of Byzantines, Seljuks and then the Ottomans. At its dramatic lakeside setting just beneath the striking rock of the castle, multicultural Van of the olden times was known as one of the most beautiful cities of "the East", and was especially famous for its jewellers' bazaar on the Silk Road and fine silverwork. During World War I, it changed hands several times between the Ottoman Empire, mostly supported by the local Kurds and other Muslims, and the Russian Empire, mostly supported by the local Armenians and other Christians. At the end of the conflict, the old city was devastated and many of its residents were claimed by massacres. The remaining inhabitants relocated to the city's present location, 5 km further east inland. What's left of the old walled city was destroyed by strong earthquakes, including a 7.1-magnitude quake in 2011. Except for a couple of reconstructed mosques, it has been reduced to mounds of rubble.
Local people mainly speak Turkish and Kurdish. The national language is Turkish, while the native language, Kurdish, is also very common. People, especially the young generation, understand some basic English.
On a trivial note, if you need to practice your rusty Urartian, a language that was unrelated to any other, except for the also extinct Hurrian that was spoken in the surrounding area and written in the cuneiform that they imported from their Mesopotamian neighbours to the south, one great opportunity to do so is to meet Mehmet Kuşman, the retired security guard of the Urartu-era Sarduruhinili Castle (in the village of Çavuştepe 25 km southeast of Van), and one of the 30 or so people in the world proficient in the near extinct language. He is self-taught in the language, and has no academic degree in history or linguistics.
Buses run several times a day to Ankara (19 hours), Istanbul (25 hours) and all major cities in Turkey, some involving a change to a connecting bus: see Kamil Koc website for times and prices. Buses run from the Otogar, 3 km NW of town centre. Free shuttle buses run from the main ticket offices in the town centre, but allow at least 30 minutes before the scheduled departure time.
Frequent dolmuşes run from town centre to Tatvan (100 km, 2 hrs) via the south lake shore, Highway D300. There are no direct services around the north shore. Dolmuses also run north to Doğubeyazıt (185 km, 2½ hrs). Buses leave at 7:30, 9:00, 12:00, 14:00 and 16:00. 100TL (February 2023).
The border crossing to Iran, 100 km away at Kapikoy/Razi, is open for light vehicles, but (as of 2016) no buses or dolmuşes cross by this route: instead go to Dogubeyazit to travel into Iran via Bazargan.
Van is the western terminus of the railway from Iran. A train departs on Monday at 21:00 with a lengthy stop at the border to reach Tabriz by 05:15 Tuesday and Tehran at 18:20 that evening. The westbound train leaves Tehran at 09:30 Sunday and Tabriz at 22:30 to reach Van around 08:00 Monday. Other trains link Tabriz and Tehran but this is the only cross-border service, with modern sleeping cars. A ferry plies across the lake between Van and Tatvan, which has a twice-weekly train to Ankara. There is no railway around the lake but lots of buses and dolmuşes run along the south shore highway.
Van has daily flights to Istanbul, Ankara and other major Turkish cities from Ferit Melen (Van Airport) located 5-10 km SW of the city.
Outside the airport there are taxis to the city costing 20 TL, but you can also walk for the main road where dolmuses stop and take you to the city only for 1 TL. A new bus run by the municipality now serves the security entrance to the airport (past the taxis and towards the main road).
To get to the airport from the city centre, dolmuşes marked Hava Alani leave nearby Hotel Akdamar (Kazim Karabekir Caddesi), and take about 15 minutes.
The ferry across the lake to Tatvan takes 4 hours and costs 5 TL. There are three sailings a day, at irregular times.
Lake Van Monster
There have been claims of witnessing a sea serpent inhabiting the Lake Van almost constantly since the days of the Urartians, and associated myths throughout the history. There is even a video allegedly captured the monster taken by a professor from the local university in 1997, which led to highly sensationalized news broadcasts on national TV channels. But no-one is quite sure whether the Lake Van Monster (Van Gölü Canavarı) exists or not. Some claim the alleged sightings are just those of local buffalos taking a dip in the lake mistaken for something less familiar, while others say it is all a hoax to boost tourism in the relatively underdeveloped and remote area. The municipality of the lakeside town of Gevaş decided to honour the legendary serpent by putting up a 4-metre statue of a dinosaur-like creature in the middle of a roundabout.
Van Shopping Center is in the city centre: it offers shops, restaurants, cafes, and cinemas.
The city is famous for its breakfast halls (kahvaltı salonu), in which for about 10 TL, you are served a really filling breakfast including locally produced cheese (different types) and honey among many other stuff. The price usually includes an unlimited amount of tea. Look around.
Plenty of hotels around the northern end of the bazaar.
The countryside to the southeast is dotted by a series of historic and natural attractions, on and off the highway to Hakkari. Çavuştepe 📍 is the site of an Urartu-era castle with extraordinarily long and well-preserved Urartian cuneiform inscriptions. Further away, Hoşap 📍 (in the village of Güzelsu) is an impressive medieval castle on an outcrop. East from there, Albayrak is worth heading off the highway to visit the ruins of the Armenian monastery of St. Bartholomew 📍, believed to be built on the site of the martyrdom of Bartholomew the Apostle. The glyphs over its intact portal are especially attractive. Long off-limits as part of a military base, the site is open for visits since 2013. Further east, towards the Iranian border is the village of Yavuzlar, overlooked by a group of "fairy chimneys" similar to those found in Cappadocia far to the west, earning the area the monicker of Vanadokya 📍, "Van's Cappadocia".
Çavuştepe and Hoşap are both on the highway to Hakkari (D975), so they are easy to visit by self-driving or taking the buses to Başkale or Hakkari. Albayrak and Yavuzlar are both off the highway, so you need to self-drive or arrange a taxi from Başkale to visit them.
As of Dec 2020, Van has 4G from all Turkish carriers, but only Turkcell has a signal on the highways around. 5G has not yet reached this area.
Primary administrative division