| Most of the modern nation of Turkey occupies the broad peninsula of Anatolia (Asia Minor) between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The northwestern corner of the country is the region of eastern Thrace, a part of Europe adjoining Greece and Bulgaria. Between Anatolia and Thrace is the small Sea of Marmara, connected to the Black Sea by the Bosporus and to the Aegean Sea by the Dardanelles. These narrow passages form a famous international waterway, lit by several historic lighthouses, connecting the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. This page describes the lighthouses of Turkey's Black Sea coast east of the Bosporus entrance. Lighthouses of the Bosporus, Thrace, the Sea of Marmora, and the Dardanelles are on the Northwestern Turkey page. The Turkish phrase for a lighthouse is deniz feneri ("sea lantern"). Burnu is a cape or headland, ada or adasi is an island, and limani is a harbor. Lighthouses in Turkey are operated by the Directorate General of Coastal Safety (Kiyi Emniyeti Genel Müdürlügü). ARLHS numbers are from the ARLHS World List of Lights. Admiralty numbers are from volume E of the Admiralty List of Lights & Fog Signals. U.S. NGA List numbers are from Publication 113. What's Hot:
| ![]() Sile Feneri; Coastal Safety Directorate photo |
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![]() Hopa Feneri; Coastal Safety Directorate photo |
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![]() Çam Burnu Feneri; Coastal Safety Directorate photo |
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![]() Sinop Feneri; Coastal Safety Directorate photo |
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![]() Kerempe Feneri; Coastal Safety Directorate photo |
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Information available on lost lighthouses:
Notable faux lighthouses:
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Posted April 16, 2007. Checked and revised May 8, 2008. Lighthouses: 34. Site copyright 2008 Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.