Cyprus has the only divided capital city in the world, the only place home to the seat of government of two separate states on either side of an internationally patrolled buffer zone.
Known as Nicosia in Greek and Lefkoşa in Turkish, its historic centre is enclosed by walls dating back to Venetian rule in the 16th century. They are separated by what citizens call the Green Line, a division marked by concrete, barbed wire and barricades.
The Greeks have nicknamed it “Atilla Line”, a reference to Attila the Hun, who once ravaged Europe.
The zone separating the Greek and Turkish communities is just a few metres wide in some places. It is monitored by United Nations observers and patrolled by peacekeeping troops.
Read more: A Turkish ‘ghost state’ haunts the world’s disparate response to a divided Cyprus
Two capitals, two states, one island
The division creates eccentricities, as all such boundaries have in the past, in other once-split cities, such as Berlin.
Near where Lefkoşa becomes Nicosia, there is a street in the bazaar. An apartment block has its entrance on the Turkish side, while the rear of the building is on Greek territory. A two-metre-high wall at the end of the street serves as the border between the two communities.
There is a café in a park in Lefkoşa, on the Roccas Bastion, where you can see straight into Nicosia, getting a clear view of all the normality of daily life on display, across either side of this extraordinary division.
This is the story of how it occurred – and what has happened since in Lefkoşa.
Two communities, divided before military intervention
When the Republic of Cyprus was established in 1960, just over 25,500 Greek Cypriots and just under 15,000 Turkish Cypriots lived within the central zones of the capital. Including the suburbs, the numbers rose to over 64,000 Greeks and 22,000 Turks.
Since then, the numbers on both sides have grown. There are around 100,000 Turks in Lefkoşa and approximately 280,000 Greeks in Nicosia.