
We are at the moment when the extending finger of an ancient city touches the Aegean. We are in the valley where the honey, fish, red and geranium of the ancient age meet the day. We are on the slope where prophecies meet the sea from the water streams; where the famous prophet Sybil pointed out the gates of Asia to Alexander the Great. Each of our windows looks out on a different color as the day chases another. Each tone of those colors tells mystical tales about what has been experienced. Endemic lilies bloom on our beach where tale and example blend. Modern bread coming out of the oven washes itself with the olive oil dripping from its fruit and becomes evergreen in our dried tomato soil.
We are fed, fed and reborn every day. We are a little bell hung on the doors of the world. You are the one knocking on our door, we are the ones opening your door. From yesterday to tomorrow, without noticing; we are always where you want to be.
A New Accommodation Experience in Ildırı, the Ancient Paradise of the Aegean
Embracing the clean air and deep blue sea of the Aegean, Sibyl Hotel Erythrai offers a perfect atmosphere to its guests who want to have a holiday experience in touch with nature. The hotel, which has been meticulously designed in every detail, aims to offer its guests not only accommodation but also a cultural experience.
Combining the peaceful atmosphere of nature with carefully designed details, Sibyl Hotel Erythrai offers its guests an unforgettable holiday with its suite, deluxe and superior room options and personalized service approach.
A Story Extending from Ionia to the Ottoman Empire
Located northeast of Çeşme, Ildırı was known as Erythrai in ancient times and was an important Ionian city dating back to the Early Bronze Age. The city, which is thought to have taken its name from the red color of its soil or from its founder Erythro, came under the rule of Athenian kings, Lydians, Persians and Alexander the Great over time. Erythrai, which was famous for its goats and oracles during the Pergamon Kingdom and Roman Empire periods, lost its importance during the Byzantine period and was renamed Ildırı after it came under Ottoman rule. Today, it invites visitors to discover traces of the past with its historical texture.
Ildırı, a coastal village with approximately 27 households, located 81 kilometers from Çeşme and 200 kilometers from İzmir, offers its visitors a unique historical and natural beauty.