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Izmir
İzmir
is located in the Aegean province, which, of all the seven geographical regions
of Turkey, enjoys the finest climate. In population it is the third city in Turkey.
It is located in an area whose magnificent history has made it a tourist centre.
It lies at the centre of the most important land, air and sea communication network
in the ancient Aegean region.
THE LEGENDARY ORIGIN OF ITS NAME
The wife of Cinyras, King of Cyprus, foolishly claimed that her daughter, Smyrna,
was more beautiful than Aphrodite herself. This so enraged the goddess that she
made Smyrna fall in love with her own father and one night Smyrna's nurse having
made the king drunk, she climbed into his bed. When he finally awoke from his
drunken slumber, the king drew his sword and drove his daughter from the palace,
pursuing her into the countryside.Just as he was about to overtake her and kill
her with his sword, Aphrodite took pity on the girl and turned her into a myrrh
tree. As it descended, the king's sword split the myrrh-tree and ADONIS tumbled
out. And thus Adonis was born.
According
to famous ancient travelers such as Aristides, Strabo, Pliny and Pausanias, Izmir
was founded around 1450 B.C. by TANTALUS, King of Manisa (Spilos) to the north-east
of the present-day city. There is also a legend to the effect that it was founded
by the Amazons. The one certain thing is that Izmir is not a Greek word and would
appear to be derived from an autochthonous language. HISTORY The excavations carried
out in 1948 by the British Archaeological Institute of Athens and, after 1960,
by the Turkish Historical Association under Prof. Ekrem Akurgal have shown that
the first settlement, known as Bayrakli, can be dated as far back as the Bronze
Age (3500-1000 B.C.) The remains of the earliest layer are contemporary with the
Troy II civilization. This settlement was known as Smurna, written as Smyrna in
ancient Greek.In the 11th century B.C. the coastal city of Smyrna was inhabited
by Ionians and Aeolians. The mudbrick defense walls, which have been dated to
the 8th century B.C.,indicate that Izmir was already a city state at that time.
The Temple of Athena, thought to have been built between the years 725-700 B.C.,
is the most ancient example of Greek architecture in the East. Also to be found
here is the oldest specimen of a Greek house, with courtyard in front, and five
rooms on two storeys. Smyrna also boasts the oldest example of a cobbled street
in Greek civilisation.
The
tomb of TANTALUS (Tholos) on Mt Yamanlar is one of the oldest examples of a circular
tomb. In the 8th and 7th centuries B.C. the region came under the rule of the
Phrygians and Lydians. The city, which had been destroyed during that period,
was captured by the Persians in the 6th century and once again destroyed. In 333
B.C. it fell into the hands of Alexander the Great. The city could no longer be
contained within its old defense walls and was refounded on Mt Pagos, now known
as Kadifekale. By the 1st century B.C. only a small part of the city remained
on Mt Pagos, the greater part lying in the vicinity of the harbour.In 288 B.C.
the city became subject to the Kingdom of Pergamon and, on the death of King Attalos
III in 133 B.C. it became part of the Roman Empire in accordance with the terms
of Attalos' will.In the 7th century A.D. it was exposed to raids by the Arabs.
By the 9th century the city had become a Byzantine naval base with a dockyard.
Under the Nicaean Empire (1204-1260) it was an important international port.
The
first Turkish conquest of the city took place towards the end of the 11 th century
during the reign of Kutalmy?o?lu Süleyman Shah, and in 1426 it was incorporated
into Ottoman territory. The fort on the shore was rebuilt by Mehmed the Conqueror
after an attack by the Venetians in 1472 . The first textile factory was opened
in the 18th century and the first paper factory in the 19th. On 15 May 1919 the
occupation of the city by the Greeks sparked off the Turkish national struggle
for Independence. On its liberation in 1922 three-quarters of the city was destroyed
by fire. The industrialisation and urbanisation that characterised the years following
the proclamation of the Republic destroyed the lovely landscape that the city
had formerly possessed.
Today, the old city slumbers in oblivion in a growing and rapidly changing Izmir,
but those really interested can still find old houses with bay windows hidden
away in narrow streets, old Ottoman hans and magnificent Levantine mansions, as
well as old mosques, synagogues and churches. At the beginning of the 20th century
Izmir was a centre of commerce and entertainment rivaling Istanbul and Salonica
in the hierarchy of Ottoman cities and famous for its raisins and seedless grapes,
its almonds, its horsedrawn phaetons, its spring festival, its "gold drop'' Eau
de Cologne and nargiles or water-pipes. The population of 200,000 at the turn
of the century has now grown to 3 million. All types of cottons and textiles,
together with agricultural produce such as tobacco, grapes, figs, olives and olive
oil are exported from Izmir to all four corners of the world. Today the city
retains its importance as the largest export harbour in Turkey.
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