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All Turkey Selçuk Yedi Uyurlar Mağarası (Cave of the Seven Sleepers)

Yedi Uyurlar Mağarası (Cave of the Seven Sleepers)

Seven early Christians were sealed into a cave where legend has it they slept unharmed for centuries.

Selçuk, Turkey

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Molly McBride Jacobson
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Ephesus’ Cave of the Seven Sleepers.   Klaus-Peter Simon/CC BY 3.0
A Russian icon portraying the Seven Sleepers.   Anonimous/Public Domain
Inside the Church on the Cave of the Seven Sleepers.   Klaus-Peter Simon/CC BY 3.0
The Cave of the Seven Sleepers.   Sailko/CC BY-SA 3.0
  Collector of Experiences / Atlas Obscura User
The Seven Sleepers being walled in, from a medieval manuscript.   Polylerus/Public Domain
  Collector of Experiences / Atlas Obscura User
Cave of the Seven Sleepers.   Sailko/CC BY-SA 3.0
The Cave of the Seven Sleepers   Sailko/CC BY-SA 3.0
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What started as a political protest against Roman paganism became the stuff of religious legend.

In January of 250, the Roman Emperor Decius issued an edict that everyone under his reign must perform a sacrifice dedicating themselves to the empire and to the Roman gods. Understandably, this caused an uproar among young Christian communities, who, though persecuted, had previously been free to worship. Refusal to submit came at the price of death. All the same, many Christians refused to deny their faiths. 

Seven young men in Ephesus refused to make the sacrifice and hid in a cave on the outskirts of the city. Tired from fleeing, they fell asleep. The Roman sentries came upon the Seven slumbering peacefully in the cave. Rather than killing them outright, they sealed them in, perhaps in a mockery of Christians' reverence for Jesus' entombment. That was the last their families and friends ever heard of them.

Sometime much later, the myth continues, the farmer who owned the land thought to open the cave, perhaps to use as an animal pen. He was shocked to find seven young men inside, still asleep. When the light hit their faces, they awoke. Feeling hungry, they pooled their money and sent one of them to the village to buy food. They warned him to watch out for Romans, but, believing they had slept for a full day, they thought the coast was clear. When the young man reached the market and tried to buy bread, vendors were dismayed to see that he carried Decian coins—which were at least 150 years old by then. The bishop was called in (in the century they slept Christianity had resurfaced full force) to interview the Seven Sleepers, and they all died peacefully just a few hours after.

The cave outside Ephesus was excavated in the 1920s, revealing a number of 5th and 6th century Christian graves. An ancient Church sits atop the cave as well. Religious pilgrims still pay visits to the holy Cave of the Seven Sleepers.

The details of the myth are hotly disputed among the various cultures that tell it. Christians believe that the Seven slept for between 128 and 200 years, but the Qur'an states that they slept for around 300 years. Even the location is unclear. Though this cave in Ephesus is the most commonly visited by religious pilgrims, caves in Jordan, China, Tunisia, and Algeria lay claim to the myth of the Seven Sleepers.

Whatever the truth of story is, its lore has seeped into common culture. For example, in Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish, a sysover ("seven-sleeper") is someone who slumbers long and hard. Seven Sleepers Day is June 27th, and is the German equivalent of American Groundhog Day.

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Caves Religion Christianity Islam Biblical History Ancient Ecosystems Sacred Spaces

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Added By

Molly McBride Jacobson

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Collector of Experiences

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Published

October 7, 2016

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Sources
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decius
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Sleepers
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Sleepers%27_Day
  • http://www.sacred-destinations.com/turkey/ephesus-cave-of-the-seven-sleepers
Yedi Uyurlar Mağarası (Cave of the Seven Sleepers)
Yedi Uyurlar Mağarası
Acarlar Köyü
Selçuk
Turkey
37.943728, 27.353924
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