Antiquity It is not certain when Marmaris was founded but in the 6th century BC the site was known as
Physkos ( or ) in
Greek, also Latinised as
Physcus. It was in a part of
Caria that belonged to
Rhodes and contained a magnificent harbour and a grove sacred to
Leto. According to the historian
Herodotus, there had been a castle on the site since 3000 BC. The area eventually came under the control of the
Persian Empire. In 334 BC,
Caria was invaded by
Alexander the Great and Physkos Castle was besieged. The town's 600 inhabitants realised that they had no chance against the invading army and burned their valuables in the castle before escaping to the hills. Aware of the strategic value of the castle, the invaders repaired the destroyed sections to house a few hundred soldiers before the main army returned home.
Ottoman period In the later Middle Ages, Marmaris formed part of the
Beylik of Menteşe. Then In the mid-fifteenth century, Sultan
Mehmed the Conqueror conquered and united the various tribes and kingdoms of
Anatolia and the
Balkans, and acquired
Constantinople. The
Knights of St. John, based in
Rhodes, had fought the
Ottoman Empire for many years and managed to withstand the
onslaughts of Mehmed II too. When
Suleiman the Magnificent set out to conquer
Rhodes, Marmaris served as a base for the
Ottoman navy;
Marmaris Castle was rebuilt from scratch in 1522 to accommodate an
Ottoman army garrison. In 1798,
Admiral Nelson assembled his fleet in the harbour at Marmaris before setting sail for
Egypt and the
Battle of the Nile which put an end to
Napoleon's ambitions in the Mediterranean. In 1801, a British force of 120 ships under
Admiral Keith and 14,000 troops under
General Abercromby anchored in the bay for eight weeks, using the time to train and resupply ready their mission to end the
French campaign in Egypt and Syria.
Modern times Throughout Ottoman rule, Marmaris retained its
Greek population up until the end of
World War I. In the aftermath of the 1919–1922
Greco-Turkish War and the subsequent
population exchange, the Greek population of Marmaris left for
Greece and the town was settled by Turkish migrants from the
Balkans. The two
Fethiye earthquakes of 1957 almost completely destroyed the city. Only the
castle and the historic buildings surrounding it were left undamaged. Renovation work on the castle started in 1979. Under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture, it was converted into a museum with seven galleries, the largest of them used as an exhibition hall. The courtyard is full of seasonal flowers. Built at the same time as the castle, there is also a small
Ottoman caravanserai built by Süleyman's mother
Ayşe Hafsa Sultan in the bazaar. There were many forest fires in the early 2020s. == Tourism ==