From around the 14th to early 20th centuries, Kayaköy (“Rock Village”) was a peaceful town made up of Greek-speaking Christians and Anatolian Muslims during Ottoman rule. Both communities celebrated religious festivals together, congregated at local cafés to shoot the breeze, studied and played together. However, following the events of the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922, which Türkiye won, and the massacres of Greeks and other Christian minorities in the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the town was quickly depopulated of its 6,500 Greek Orthodox residents. The former inhabitants were deprived of their properties and became refugees in Greece. The Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, signed after the Greco-Turkish war, mandated a population exchange between Greece and Türkiye, which barred the return of any prior Greek Orthodox refugees to their homes in Türkiye permanently and expelled Greece's Muslim citizens permanently to Türkiye.