Kızıl River

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This article is about the Turkish river. For the German singer, see Bahar Kızıl.
Flag of Turkey
Kızıl River, Turkey
Kızılırmak
Kızılırmak
Origin Eastern Anatolia Region, Turkey
Mouth Black Sea
Basin countries Turkey
Length 1,150 km
Source elevation 2,000 m
Mouth elevation 0
Avg. discharge N/A
Basin area N/A

The Kızıl River (Turkish: Kızılırmak, "Red River"; ancient Greek and many English references: Άλυς Halys River) is the longest river in Turkey. It is not used for navigation, but a source of hydroelectric power.

The Kızıl flows for a total of about 1,150 kilometers, rising in the eastern Anatolian highlands around 39.8° N 38.3° E, flowing first to the west and south-west until 38.7° N 34.8° E, then forming a wide arch, flowing first to the west, then to the north-west, passing to the north-east of Lake Tuz, then to the north and northeast where it is joined by its major tributary, the Delice River (also known by its Greek name Cappadox) at 40.47° N 34.14° E, and after zig-zagging to the north-west to the confluence with the Devrez River at 41.10° N 34.42° E, and back to the north-east finally empties into the Black Sea at 41.72° N 35.95° E.

The Hittites called it the Marassantiya River. It formed the boundary of the land Hatti, the core land of the Hittite Empire. In the Classical Antiquity it was the boundary between Asia Minor and the rest of Asia. As the site of the Battle of the Eclipse on May 28th, 585 BC[1], it was the border between Lydia and Persia until Croesus of Lydia crossed it to attack Cyrus the Great in 547 BC; he was defeated (see Battle of Halys) and Persia expanded to the Aegean Sea.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ — Historically, from classical historians until recently, known as the Battle of Halys; since renamed by some as 'Battle of the Eclipse', as the very first pre-modern battle which can be dated with certainty due to the eclipse which brought about it's sudden end and the peace negotiations which followed.