Enez - Enez

Enez (pronounced ay-nayz) is a small town in southwestern corner of Eastern Thrace, European part of Turkey. It is located on the northern shores of the Aegean Sea, near where the river Maritsa (Meriç in Turkish, Evros in Greek) empties into the sea. Its ancient name was Ainos.

Understand

The river known in English as Maritsa, in Turkish as Meriç and in Greek as Έβρος (Evros) breaks up into a swampy delta as it flows into the Gulf of Saros. By its outlet is the tip of a ridge, providing firm ground where a port developed and a trade route wound inland. That port became known as Ainos (Greek Αίνος, Latin Aenus) and it exported the corn, timber and fruit of Thrace, plus its own fish and sea-salt. Ainos is first mentioned in around 500 BC and, given its name, the poet Virgil couldn't resist weaving it into the Iliad legend as a place founded by Aeneas in his flight from Troy. Certainly it was inhabited by Hellenistic people, one of the many proto-Greek settlements along the coast.

Over the next 1500 years Ainos was raided and occupied by rival powers on multiple occasions, with its longest spell of rule by the Byzantine Empire into the medieval period. From the 1360s the Ottomans came to rule Thrace and beyond, though Ainos fell under Genoa until 1456. From then on it was part of the Ottoman Empire. It had a large Greek population throughout, as did many other coastal towns in Thrace, and from the 19th century ethnic conflicts and nationalistic aspirations fractured Ottoman control of the Balkans. One of those conflicts, far to the northwest in Bosnia, escalated into the First World War. Afterwards, the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne drew the borders of Turkey in their present position, and required Greek communities to leave Turkey while Turkish communities left Greece and Bulgaria.

Overnight Enez became a provincial backwater, a dead-end, hard up against an unfriendly border. It was a garrison town and military zone, off-limits to foreigners, right into the 21st century. Foreigners are now permitted but few visit, and Enez makes a living from local tourism, as Edirne-by-the-sea. Better highways and rising property prices closer to Istanbul are also bringing weekenders here from the big city - it's too far to day trip. The original town therefore has a steady population (it was 3826 in 2010) while the beach strip oscillates from perhaps 6000 June-Aug, to near zero in winter. The border remains sensitive: Greek-Turkish relations have waxed and waned but the crucial factor is that it's the border of the European Union, which is in a moral panic over refugees and jihadists from the Middle East. This is a bonus for the delta wildlife, as it's curbed development.

Get in

There is no border crossing to Greece though it's just the other side of the river. Lots of smugglers and migrants try to cross illegally, and the border guards will assume that anyone larking about in the river or just offshore is trying to do so. The nearest border crossing is at Ipsala, so Enez is something of a dead end.

By bus

There are one or two direct bus connections daily with Istanbul in summer. The seats are sold out in a very short time, so buy your ticket in advance. If you don’t have a ticket bought beforehand and simply can’t just secure a seat on your departure day, you can buy a ticket for Keşan instead, which has a lot more connections with Istanbul which don’t generally need to be booked. In Keşan’s otogar (bus station), take a public minibus or courtesy minibuses which your bus company provides, and ask to be dropped at eski garaj (pronounced ays-kee ga-rrazh, zh like j in French), which is the former and much smaller bus station of the town. At eski garaj, you will be able to find a (likely non-air conditioned) minibus heading for Enez, departing within half an hour at most. Keşan-Enez ride takes about an hour while Istanbul-Keşan takes about three and a half hour.

There are also direct buses from Edirne.

By car

Go to Keşan first, which can be reached by taking D110/E90 from Greco-Turkish border/Ipsala (west), D110/E84 from Istanbul/Tekirdağ (east), D550/E87 from Edirne (north), D550/E87/E90 from Gelibolu/Çanakkale (south). In Keşan crossroad, take the southerly road (D550/E87/E90, follow 'Çanakkale' signs) if arriving from west/east/north and after you left the crossroad with traffic lights about 2 km behind, take the road to west (follow 'Enez' signs, for which you should watch out as those signs are not very big). From Keşan, Enez is a 60 km drive away and the road is somewhat narrow in some parts.

Get around

40°42′0″N 26°6′0″E
Map of Enez

The town is in three parts, straggling over 5 km:

  • Old town centre is the most northerly, backing on to the river on the border.
  • Harbour and Pırlanta Beach, 3 km southwest across the lagoon.
  • Altınkum Sahili Beach, another 2 km south and shown on the map as Gaziömerbey, is the main resort strip.

Dolmuşes link them every couple of hours. Hitchhiking will also work.

See

  • 1 Enez Castle was first built for the 6th century Byzantine Empire, and reinforced by the Ottomans from the 13th. Ayasofya Kilisesi is an old church here but there's not much to see in the castle, you come for the view across the river into Greece. In 2020 the area was poorly maintained, with dumped trash.
  • Has Yunus Bey Türbesi is a historic mosque and graveyard 300 m south of the castle.
  • 2 Kral Kızı Bazilikası is the crumbling remnants of a church basilica overlooking the inner bay.
  • 3 Lake Gala National Park (Gala Gölü Milli Parkı) is a wetland and forest wildlife reserve. Since 2018 thousands of flamingos have over-wintered here. A short way west between two distributaries of the Maritsa delta is the similar Parko Delta Evrou; the birds fly back and forth but it's in Greece, a long way round by road to reach it.
  • 4 Sultaniçe and Gülçavuş: see Keşan for these and other beach resorts further east along the Gulf of Saros.

Do

  • Take a stroll in the pine woods near the beach.
  • Swim in the crystal blue sea. Keep an eye on children, as the beach shelves away steeply to deeper water, and beware sea urchins.
  • Birdwatching in the delta wetlands.
  • Watch the sun set behind the Greek island of Samothrace, that big black mountain rising starkly from the sea.

Buy

  • Migros is the big supermarket in town centre, but it only opens in summer for the holiday trade.
  • Bim nearby is open daily.

Eat

Enez Castle
  • Özkan in town centre is a safe bet.
  • Yakamoz by the harbour does good seafood.
  • Ayışığı by Altinkum beach is a friendly cafe.
  • Ali Karatepe is a cheerful relaxed place south end of the beach strip.

Drink

You can have a cup of tea or coffee in the garden of ruins of an inn, known as İngiliz Kışlası, which is serving as an outdoor café now (near the beach). The name of the inn (“barracks of the Englishmen” in Turkish) comes from the fact that the building was once used by the British traders who were buying oak trunks to produce charcoal in Britain. Infrequently located oak trees you may see near the beach are the remnants of a lush oak forest which covered the whole area before the trade.

Sleep

  • 1 Ege Otel, Gaziömerbey Kale Cd 7, 90 284 811 6086. Probably the best of an indifferent choice in town centre.
  • 2 Enez Altun Motel, Gaziömerbey Mahallesi Kışlaaltı Mevkii, 90 532 255 9379. Beachfront motel, some rooms tired but generally clean and comfy.
  • 3 Enez Balci Motel, Gaziömerbey Mahallesi Altınkum Sahili, 90 284 821 4425. Friendly clean place a block back from beach.

Stay safe

  • Keep out of the river, the line of its main outflow, and anywhere marked as a restricted border area. The border guards will assume that anyone messing around there, including at sea, is trying to smuggle or cross illegally, or at least making a recce. Enez is not a port of entry into Turkey so small craft approaching from Greek waters must radio the Turkish coastguard and await instructions. They'll probably direct you to Çanakkale to clear immigration and customs.
  • Unless there's a breeze, the mosquitoes will greet you in great swarms: they're a scourge around the delta swamps. No risk of malaria here, but the bites are unpleasant, so bring a repellent, screen, and anything else that might keep them away.
  • Sea urchins are always a hazard in the Med. They prefer rocks - Enez is sandy - but whenever swimming in to shore, take a good look down before planting your feet or hands.

Connect

As of Jan 2021, Enez has 4G from Turkcell and a mobile signal from Türk Telekom, but no signal from Vodafone, and it's dead along the highway from Keşan. 5G has not yet reached this area.

Go next

  • Keşan is the transport hub. You have to go that way to reach the Gulf of Saros resorts of Erikli, Mecidiye, Sazlıdere and Adilhan, though you can reach Sultaniçe direct.
  • Head north from Keşan to Edirne, a fascinating historic city but overlooked by tourists as it's so far west.
  • Samothrace is the mountainous island seen to the southwest. To get there you have to go north to cross into Greece from Ipsala, then down to Alexandroupoli on the coast, then take the ferry.
  • Or from Keşan head south down the Gallipoli peninsula: the 1915 battle sites and memorials are around Eceabat.
This city travel guide to Enez is an outline and needs more content. It has a template , but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow !