Every day, tourists visit Seddulbahir, the site of the battle, in their hundreds. It is almost like a pilgrimage to gain an understanding about what happened one hundred years ago.<br /><br /> A tourist industry built around the 1915 war.<br /><br /> The street names reflect the battle actors and places.<br /><br /> Souvenirs of mini ships and cannons keep the battle memories alive.<br /><br /> “Those who visit here buy small things to remember the spirit of this place,” said a market seller.<br /><br /> Tourists bring home little mementos from their visit to one of Turkey’s most sacred sites, where there are many monuments honouring Turkish soldiers who died here.<br /><br /> “Our guide talked about these things. That’s why I am interested in it, a tourist told euronews. “This is about our soldiers who carried the wounded enemy soldier.” <br /><br /> The site is significant, not only for Turks, but for Australian and New Zealanders too.<br /><br /> The western coast of the Gallipoli peninsula was a major landing for ANZAC forces in 1915.<br /><br /> Euronews correspondent