Vize

Vize (pronounced vee-ZAY) is a town in Eastern Thrace in Turkey. It's in the foothills of the Istranca Mountains, 40 km from the Black Sea coast. In 2012 the town had a population of 12,543, with 28,228 in the whole district.

Understand
Vize of old was Bizye (in Greek Βιζύη) and stood on the northern route between Byzantium / Constantinople and Europe: the Roman historian Livy stated that it was the capital of the Thracian tribe of Asti. Every passing army smashed the place up, and around 550 AD Vize was fortified with a citadel. Its Hagia Sophia church was also built around then, later becoming Gazi Süleyman Paşa mosque. The smashings-up continued until 1453, when the Ottomans gained Constantinople and Thrace, so thereafter the town could quietly get on with making cheese and honey. Like other towns in Thrace, Vize had large populations of Greeks and Bulgars, but these were expelled after the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne.

The main road to Europe now passes much further south, and Vize is too far west (for the time being) to be part of Istanbul's commuter belt. Visitors coming here from the metropolis are just passing through on their way to the Black Sea beaches. So the town hasn't grown much, and its industries remain textiles and small-scale agriculture. The hilly terrain and small plots of land make for subsistence or market-gardening rather than mechanised extensive agriculture - you might even encounter buffalo - and most produce is consumed or processed locally. For instance, the forests are managed for firewood and charcoal, with only a small amount hewn into furniture.

Read
19th-century Vize forms the setting of Thracian Tales, a collection of three novellas by Georgios Vizyenos (1849–1896), a native of the town as suggested by his adopted surname, "from Vizye/Vize", and a highly influential writer of modern Greek literature.

Get in
Kale Seyahat (which means "Castle Travel") buses run hourly from Istanbul Bayrampaşa, taking about 3 hr via Çerkezköy and Saray for a fare of 80TL. Pamukkale Turizm and Istanbul Seyahat bus lines also serve this route. Most buses continue to Kırklareli, while those across the hills to Demirköy and İğneada on the Black Sea coast are suspended in 2021. Frequent dolmuses run from Çorlu, which has buses from Tekirdağ and Istanbul city and airport.

Vize (otogar) is east side of town centre.

Çerkezköy is the nearest railway station, with services from the stations on the Thracian mainline between Istanbul and Edirne.

Driving from Istanbul city, head west on O-3 / E80 (toll); from Istanbul airport follow O-7 to join it. Leave it on D567 to Çerkezköy and Saray onto D020; reckon two hours.

Get around
Vize is a small town, with its downtown a single main street. The old town, where all the sights are clustered, is on a hillside north of main street. Reach them from the roundabout in town centre, though the signage is poor.

See

 * "Here were watchtowers built under the administration of Firmus, the son of Aulus Pores, along with Aulus Kenthes, the son of Rytes the son of Kenthes, and Rabdus, the son of Hyakinthus."
 * - inscription on the citadel


 * Town centre is ticky-tacky modern low-rise, but Yeni Cami ("new mosque") in town centre has attractive tilework.
 * The Citadel or acropolis is just north of Little Hagia Sophia, up the hill on Hisar Cd (meaning Castle St). It was built by the Romans circa 72-76 BC and rebuilt under Justinian I. There are scrappy remains of citadel walls and a tower, but antiquities found here have been taken to the museum in Kırklareli. Nice views from the pine-covered hilltop.
 * Hasanbey Mosque 100 m downhill from Little Hagia Sophia was a 14th century synagogue, later converted to a mosque. It was restored in 2007.
 * lower down the hill was only discovered in 1998. It's from 2nd century AD, late Roman, and the only amphitheatre yet found in Thrace. Free if you find it open, but excavation and stabilisation work continues.
 * Tumuli are ancient burial mounds for the rulers of Thrace. They're found all over the region, but especially near Vize, dotting the plain to the south. Excavation of Çömlektepe tumulus in town revealed the amphitheatre.
 * Tumuli are ancient burial mounds for the rulers of Thrace. They're found all over the region, but especially near Vize, dotting the plain to the south. Excavation of Çömlektepe tumulus in town revealed the amphitheatre.

Do

 * Sultan's Trail is a 2500 km long-distance cycling and hiking route, retracing the steps of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent during his march upon Vienna in 1529. Across Eastern Thrace there's choice of routes, and Vize is on the northern branch, with Saray the next major town west.

Buy
Migros next to the bus station is open daily 08:30-22:00.

Eat

 * Town centre places are strung along Devlet, the street one block south of main street.
 * Nehir Konya Etliekmek and Mostar Boşnak Böreği are east of the bus station and Trak Otel.
 * Leeks: the 17th century explorer Derviş Mehmed Zillî, better known by his alias Evliya Çelebi, came through Vize, and about the best thing he could say of town was that it grew nice leeks.

Drink
The town doesn't have free-standing bars, but many cafes serve beer.

Connect
As of Nov 2021, Vize has 4G from all Turkish carriers, with Turkcell extending to the countryside around. 5G has not reached this area.

Go next

 * Kıyıköy is a beach resort on the Black Sea coast, with the monastery of St Nicholas carved out its bedrock. You pass a Genoese castle on the way to Kıyıköy.
 * Demirköy has a medieval foundry, the Dupnisa Cave and the beach resort of İğneada.
 * Pınarhisar west has a few Ottoman buildings in its centre and a remaining tower of its Byzantine castle northwest of the centre.
 * Kaynarca further west has some old houses lining a stream springing up below a rock (the local myth describes it as a distributary of the far-away Danube), and fish restaurants.