Mount Ararat, the tallest peak of Turkey, and of the entire Armenian Highland. In Armenian antiquity known as Masis, it became associated with the Biblical "Mountains of Ararat" (Genesis 8: 4) at some point during the Middle Ages
a mountain in eastern Turkey which, according to the Old Testament of the Bible, is where Noah's Ark first reached land after the great flood. Ararat, Mount. Turkish A r Da Extinct volcanic massif, eastern Turkey. Located in A r province, near the Iranian border, Ararat has two peaks, Great Ararat, at 16,853 ft (5,137 m) the highest point of elevation in Turkey, and Little Ararat, almost 13,000 ft (4,000 m). Ararat is traditionally associated with the mountain where Noah's ark came to rest at the end of the biblical Deluge. A village on its slopes at the site where Noah is said to have built an altar was destroyed in an earthquake in 1840