Some guides recite history from books; others learn it with a trowel in hand. Ümit Işın has spent four decades doing both. As an Ankara University–trained archaeologist who spent years excavating Anatolia’s ancient landscapes, he doesn’t just lead tours—he interprets the past with scholarly precision and deep, poetic insight.
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The Scholar in the Field
Born in Ankara in 1963, Ümit Işın built his career on a rock-solid academic foundation at Ankara University’s prestigious Department of Archaeology (1982–1987). He immediately took to the field during these formative years, participating in critical excavations and survey projects across Lycia, Caria, Pamphylia, and Pisidia.
This hands-on work gave him a rare dual expertise: the scientific ability to analyze complex excavation data combined with an intuitive understanding of how ancient civilizations shaped the rugged Turkish landscape.
When he officially began his professional guiding career in 1987, Ümit shifted his focus toward guiding without ever leaving the science behind. Instead, he helped pioneer a new industry model: research-based cultural guiding.
By treating his work as an intellectual discipline rather than a mere commercial service, he brought an unmatched level of scholarly authority to the field, permanently elevating the standards of cultural tourism in Turkey.
Umit's Path to Archaeology
Ümit Işın’s path to archaeology began almost by accident — and then became destiny.
He was still in high school in Ankara when his father moved to Antalya. On weekends, young Ümit would travel south to visit him. During those visits, one of his father’s close friends, Professor Korkut Yaltkaya, began taking him around the archaeological sites of Antalya. These were not formal lessons, but they became something far more powerful: Ümit’s first real encounter with the ancient world.
One day, they were in Termessos. The weather was dramatic — light rain, clouds, wind, and that mysterious mountain silence that belongs only to places like Termessos. Ümit was standing beside an ordinary-looking rock when, within seconds, the clouds suddenly opened. Mount Solymos appeared before him. Then, almost immediately, the great theatre emerged as well, facing the mountain with astonishing power.
That was the moment.
Right there, in front of Solymos and the theatre of Termessos, Ümit decided he would become an archaeologist.
Later, when he filled out his university preferences, he had eight slots to choose from. He wrote the same thing in all eight: archaeology.
And he never regretted it — not for a single second.

Similar free-standing statues continue to be discovered in the Taştepeler excavations. 🙂
That early spark soon turned into a serious professional life in the field. Ümit Işın worked at Arykanda, Kaunos, Habibuşağı, and other archaeological sites, gaining the kind of hands-on experience that cannot be learned from books alone. His knowledge came from the soil, the stones, the trenches, and the long conversations that happen only in the field.
The Founding of Equinox Travel
In 1994, Ümit Işın took his vision for research-based guiding a step further by founding Equinox Travel. This wasn’t designed to be a typical tourism agency; it was established with a specific, dedicated purpose: to create highly specialized cultural, archaeological, and nature-focused expeditions across Turkey.
By launching Equinox Travel, Ümit transitioned from an individual scholar-guide to an industry pioneer, establishing a platform where complex history and remote landscapes could be made accessible to travelers who craved deep context over superficial sightseeing.
Under his leadership, the agency became a benchmark for intellectual travel, meticulously designing itineraries that allowed visitors to explore Turkey’s heritage through the lens of genuine scientific inquiry and field-tested discovery.
The Cinematic Legacy of Anadolu Arkeolojisi
For years, Ümit Işın has brought ancient ruins directly into the public eye. As the creator and host of TRT 2’s widely celebrated documentary series, Anadolu Arkeolojisi (Anatolian Archaeology)—which launched on September 30, 2019, and spans over 140 meticulously filmed episodes—he has made Turkey’s layered heritage accessible to millions.
The documentary series stands out as an elite educational production, earning widespread critical acclaim for its cinematic production quality and narrative depth. Through these digital broadcasts, which have found a massive, enduring audience on YouTube, Ümit guides viewers through forgotten ancient cities, explaining complex archaeological data in a way that is visually stunning, factually rigorous, and deeply engaging.
For countless subscribers and history enthusiasts, watching Anadolu Arkeolojisi online is a digital masterclass. He proves that ruins aren’t just dead stones, but vibrant landscapes that still have stories to tell.
What Makes Ümit Işın Unique?
Ümit Işın is more than an archaeologist. He is also, in the best sense of the phrase, a guide’s guide. He has helped countless professional guides expand their expertise, especially by supporting them in acquiring additional regional licenses on top of their main guiding license. Yet his contribution goes far beyond official training. On an individual level, he is known for being incredibly approachable, available, compassionate, and generous with his knowledge.
For many guides, Ümit Işın is not just a teacher or colleague. He is the person they call when they need clarity, encouragement, historical depth, or simply a patient human being who will take the time to help. That is what makes his story so special: a boy who found his calling in the mist of Termessos became an archaeologist — and then spent his life helping others see Anatolia with deeper eyes.
Reading Landscapes Like Text
Where an untrained eye sees a chaotic pile of rubble, a broken stone, or a generic Mediterranean hillside, Ümit reads a highly detailed, layered historical record. Because of his extensive field excavation experience, he understands exactly how ancient cities were deliberately integrated into their natural environments—how geography dictated defense, water management, and urban expansion.
He can look at a single, isolated column capital and determine the exact era of an empire; trace a faint chisel mark on an ancient quarry wall to explain the labor economy of the period; or analyze the specific terracing of a hillside to reveal how a city fed its citizens.
Standing in a ruined agora with Ümit means watching him reconstruct the entire economic, political, and architectural reality of a civilization that vanished millennia ago, turning bare topography into a vibrant, living map.
Separation of Myth from Excavation Data
In a country as saturated with lore and epic poetry as Turkey, it is incredibly easy for genuine history to become muddled by local folklore, romanticized modern legends, or oversimplified tour scripts. Ümit provides a vital layer of intellectual clarity that only a seasoned archaeologist can offer. He meticulously distinguishes between classical mythology, contemporary academic theories, and hard excavation data.
When you stand with him in a ruined temple or an ancient theater, he doesn’t just tell you the popular story; he breaks down exactly what the trowel revealed in the dirt, what the epigraphic inscriptions confirm, and where the historical consensus ends and mystery begins. This scientific rigor ensures you understand the past as it truly was, rather than as a sanitized fable.
Sensory and Immersive Storytelling
Archaeology can easily feel dry and disconnected when confined to a list of kings, dates, and textbook architectural terms, but Ümit possesses a rare talent for translating complex scientific data into a lived human experience.
He combines rigorous theory with rich sensory detail, balancing deep analysis with a masterful use of narrative rhythm and silence. Walking through an ancient city with him allows you to completely visualize the bustling daily life of antiquity.
Under his guidance, you can almost feel the dust of the crowded marketplace, hear the echo of iron tools against monumental stone, and imagine the smell of olive oil wafting through a domestic kitchen from two thousand years ago. He bridges the gap between the material remains and human emotion, turning history into something you don’t just learn, but actively feel.
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Experience Anatolia with Ümit Işın
An ancient city is only as vibrant as the mind interpreting it. Exploring Turkey’s monumental heritage alongside a master archaeologist-guide changes how you see history forever, turning stone ruins into living stories.
Whether you want to trace the rock-cut tombs of Lycia, decode the grand architecture of Aphrodisias, or design a custom, research-driven expedition across the historic landscapes of Anatolia, we can help make it happen.
Get in touch with us today to check Ümit Işın’s availability and begin crafting your private cultural journey.






