User:Aysegultatilde/Sandbox

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Aysegultatilde 11:40, 27 July 2007 (UTC)== Headline text ==

Born in Istanbul, Turkey, in 1964, [[Category:Emine Caykara]] is a graduate of Istanbul University’s Classical Archeology Faculty. During her studies at I.U. she worked at the Ephesus Museum cataloguing ancient sculptures followed by a two-year participation with an Austrian Archeological Team during the [[Category:[[Artemis Temple]]]] excavation. Due to her background in French she spent the next few years after graduation as a professional tour guide. During that period she translated many works to Turkish such as, [[Category:[[Slavery]]]], [[Category:[[Ancient Egypt]]]] and [[Category:Me Jane Looking for Tarzan]]. 

Between 1993 and 1994 she worked as a journalist with the weekly magazine Panorama and as an editor with Turkuaz, a monthly cultural and environmental periodical.

In 1994, she joined the periodical Tempo penning a weekly political column “The 8th Day” and as a science, religion and culture & arts editor. She also wrote numerable freelance articles about the history of [[Category:[[Istanbul]]]], it’s environs and culture.

After leaving Tempo in 2000, [[Category:[[Caykara]]]] translated [[Category:The Best History of Human Being,]] a book outlining seven million years of human history and development. In 2001 she released her first work [[Category:[[My Angel Mom and I]],]] a book she had been working on since 1997, followed by [[Category:The Turkish Einstein, Oktay Sinanoglu]] in October 2001. The following year Caykara released her third book,[[Category:The Lad(y) of Archeology, Muhibbe Darga]]. Her translation of [[Category:Picasso’s Table]] was released in December 2002.

Between 2001 and 2004 she worked as editor-in-chief with the monthly magazine SeaLife, published by IDO (Istanbul Marine Coach Enterprises) and Istanbullu (The Istanbulite), a magazine for the Istanbul Municipality. Starting in June 2005 Caykara served on the Executive Board of [[Category:[[Istanbul 2010, European Capital of Culture]],]] and spent the next year and a half participating in its development.

In September 2005 she edited the book [[The Turkish]]and released her fourth work [[Category:[[The North Star of Historians, Halil Inalcik]],]] an in-depth biography of world-renowned [[Category:Ottoman]] historian [[Category:[[Halil Inalcik]]]] in October 2005.

In April 2007 [[Category:Caykara]] released her fifth work, a book about an unknown [[Anzac]] soldier whose camera and photographs were rediscovered 90 years after his death in [[Category:[[Gallipoli]].]]