Jump to content

Devil's Gate (Crimea)

Coordinates: 44°54′51″N 35°14′5″E / 44.91417°N 35.23472°E / 44.91417; 35.23472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Golden Gate (Crimea))

44°54′51″N 35°14′5″E / 44.91417°N 35.23472°E / 44.91417; 35.23472

View from the Kara Dag

The Devil's Gate (Crimean Tatar: şeytan qapu) or Golden Gate (Altın Qapı) is an arch-like cliff near the Kara Dag Mountain in the Crimea. The cliff was supposed to have marked a gateway to hell.[1] It is popular with tourists and carnelian hunters. Alexander Pushkin is thought to have been the first to depict the cliff, on the margins of his verse novel Eugene Onegin.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Antique". travel.kyiv.org.
  2. ^ "ФЭБ: Протоклитов. Рисунок Пушкина "Золотые ворота Карадага". — 1975 (текст)". feb-web.ru.
[edit]

Media related to Golden Gate (Kara-Dag) at Wikimedia Commons