Selime Katedrali ve Peribacaları
Selime Monastery is the big rock-cut complex above Selime village, near the end of Ihlara Valley. It feels rougher and more physical than many Cappadocia stops. Come for the carved cathedral, smoky rooms, and high views, but wear shoes that can cope with steep stone, dust, and awkward steps.
Photos by irem !, From Salih, Mehmet Turgut Kirkgoz on Pexels
Selime Monastery is one of the strongest stops on the southern Cappadocia loop. Go if you want scale, rough rock-cut rooms, and a better sense of how these places worked beyond pretty frescoes.
Worth it for
- Travelers doing Ihlara Valley or the Green Tour
- People who like cave churches, carved architecture, and climbable ruins
You can skip if
- You need flat, easy walking with lots of handrails
- You only want pristine frescoes or a quick photo stop with no climbing
Tickets & tours for Selime Katedrali ve Peribacaları
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What You See
The site is usually called Selime Monastery or Selime Cathedral in English. Turkish sources list it as Selime Katedrali ve Peribacaları. It is cut into volcanic tuff above Selime, with a large cathedral space, chapels, kitchen and storage areas, passages, courtyards, and viewpoints in the rock.
The cathedral is the reason to go. Turkey’s Culture Portal dates it broadly from the 8th to the 11th century and names depictions such as the Ascension of Jesus and Mary. Many paintings are worn, smoky, or damaged, so do not expect clean museum walls. The appeal is the size of the place and the way the rooms still feel worked into the cliff.
Why It Feels Different
Selime is less polished than Göreme Open Air Museum. I like that. The rock, stairs, soot, and erosion still do a lot of the talking. It is also less gentle on visitors: some paths are steep, exposed, and slippery when the dust is loose.
The monastery makes most sense after Ihlara Valley. You spend time down in the canyon with churches along the Melendiz River, then climb into Selime and see the same rock-cut world from a tougher, more exposed angle.
How To Visit
Most travelers visit on a Cappadocia Green Tour from Göreme, Ürgüp, Uçhisar, or Avanos, usually with Ihlara Valley and an underground city on the same day. That is the easiest plan if you do not have a car, but it also means group timing and a fixed stop.
With a rental car, Selime is easy to pair with Ihlara, Belisırma, Yaprakhisar, and Güzelyurt. Allow about 45 to 60 minutes at the monastery, more if you climb slowly, stop often, or want to understand the layout instead of taking one fast photo at the top.
My Take
Selime is worth the detour if you are already doing southern Cappadocia. It is not the prettiest church stop in the region, and the frescoes are not the best preserved, but the place has weight. You can read it as church, shelter, lookout, and work space without needing much imagination.
The tradeoff is comfort. Summer heat hits the exposed rock hard, handrails are not always where nervous visitors want them, and tour schedules can make the visit feel rushed. I would still choose it over another viewpoint stop, but I would not push a tired child or anyone with bad knees through every passage.
Selime Katedrali ve Peribacaları: FAQs
In normal travel use, yes. Selime Monastery, Selime Cathedral, Selime Katedrali, and Selime Katedrali ve Peribacaları usually mean the same rock-cut complex above Selime village.
It is in Selime, in the Güzelyurt district of Aksaray Province, near the Selime end of Ihlara Valley in the wider Cappadocia region.
Plan on 45 to 60 minutes for a normal visit. Add time if you climb slowly, stop for photos, or also want to see Selime Sultan Tomb across the road.
It is not a technical hike, but it has steep rock steps, uneven surfaces, dust, and exposed sections. Wear proper shoes and skip the highest parts if balance or knees are an issue.
Yes. A car is the simplest way. Official local tourism information also notes public transport from Aksaray during the day, but it is not as convenient for a tight Cappadocia day based around Göreme, Ihlara, and Selime.
Some paintings survive, but many are faded, smoky, or damaged. Go for the carved architecture and cliff setting first, then treat the frescoes as a bonus.
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