Diyarbakır

Diyarbakır
Diyarbakır Ulu Cami (Great Mosque)
Diyarbakır Ulu Cami (Great Mosque)
Diyarbakır (Turkey)
Diyarbakır
Diyarbakır
Location of Diyarbakır within Turkey.
Coordinates:
Country Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey
Region South East Anatolia
Province Diyarbakır
Elevation 675 m (2,215 ft)
Population (2007)
 - Total 1,860,714
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) EEST ([[UTC+3 ,[1]]])
Postal code 21x xx
Area code(s) (0090)+ 412
Licence plate 21
Website: [1]

Diyarbakır (Ottoman Turkish دیاربکر, Diyâr-ı Bekr; Kurdish Amed; Zazaki language Dêrbekir; Syriac ܐܡܝܕ Āmîḏ; Greek Ἄμιδα Amida; Armenian Ամիդ Amid) is the largest city in southeastern Turkey. Situated on the banks of the River Tigris, it is the seat of Diyarbakır Province, and has a population of 2.5 million.[2] It is the second largest city in Turkey's South-eastern Anatolia region, after Gaziantep. Within Turkey, Diyarbakır is famed for its culture, folklore, and watermelons. Diyarbakır has a large Kurdish population. ,[1] and is sometimes referred to as the "unofficial capital" of Kurdistan.[3]

Contents

Etymology

The most accepted etymology is literal Arabic that translates as the landholdings of the Bekr tribe".[4][5].

History

Antiquity

Amid(a) was the capital of the Aramean kingdom Bet-Zamani from the 13th century B.C. onwards. Amid is the name used in the Syriac sources, which also testifies to the fact that it once was the seat of the Church of the East Patriarch and thus an Assyrian or Syriac stronghold that produced many famous Syriac theologians and Patriarchs; some of them found their final resting place in the St. Mary Church. There are many relics in the Church, such as the bones of the apostle Thomas and St. Jacob of Sarug (d. 521).

The city was called Amida when the region was under the rule of the Roman (from 66 BC) and the succeeding Byzantine Empires.[6]

From 189 BC to 384, the area to the east and south of present-day Diyarbakır, was ruled by a kingdom known as Corduene.[7]

Coffee shop in Diyarbakır, 1909

In 359, Shapur II of Persia captured Amida after a siege of seventy-three days. The Roman soldiers and a large part of the population of the town were massacred by the Persians. The heroic siege is vividly described by Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus who was an eyewitness of the event and survived the massacre by escaping from the town.

Armenian historians at one time hypothesized that Diyarbakır was the site of the ancient Armenian city of Tigranakert, (pronounced Dikranagerd in the Western Armenian dialect) and by the 19th century the Armenian inhabitants were referring to the city as Dikranagerd. Scholarly research has shown that while the ancient Armenian city was in the close vicinity, it in fact is not the same place. The real location of Dikranagerd remains debated, but Armenians who trace their ancestry to Diyarbakır continue to refer to themselves as "Dikranagerdtsi" (native of Dikranagerd.) The "Dikranagerdtsi's" or Armenians of Diyarbakır were noted for having one of the most unusual dialects of Armenian, hard to understand for a speaker of standard Armenian.

The Middle Ages

In 639 the city was captured by the Arab armies of Islam and it remained in Arab hands until the Kurdish dynasty of Marwanid ruled the area during the 10th and 11th centuries. After the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, the city came under the rule of the Mardin branch of Oghuz Turks and then the Anatolian Turkish Beylik of Artuklu (circa 1100–1250 in effective terms, although almost a century longer nominally). The whole area was then disputed between the Ilkhanate Turks and Ayyubid Kurdish dynasties for a century after which it was taken over by the rising Turkmen states of Kara Koyunlu (the Black Sheep) first and Ak Koyunlu (the White Sheep).

The Ottoman Empire

The city became part of the Ottoman Empire during Sultan Süleyman I's campaign of Irakeyn (the two Iraqs, e.g. Arabian and Persian) in 1534.. The Ottoman eyalet of Diyarbakır corresponded to Turkey's southeastern provinces today, a rectangular area between the Lake Urmia to Palu and from the southern shores of Lake Van to Cizre and the beginnings of the Syrian desert, although its borders saw some changes over time. The city was an important military base for controlling this area and at the same time a thriving city noted for its craftsmen, producing glass and metalwork. For example the doors of Mevlana's tomb in Konya were made in Diyarbakır, as were the gold and silver decorated doors of the tomb of Imam-i Azam in Baghdad.

In the 19th century, Diyarbakır prison gained infamy throughout the Ottoman Empire as a site where political prisoners from the enslaved Balkan ethnicities were sent to serve harsh sentences for speaking or fighting for national freedom.[8]

The 20th century

The 20th century was a turbulent one for Diyarbakır. During World War I most of the city's Syriac and Armenian population was murdered by the Young Turk regime and Diyarbakır's governor Dr. Mehmed Reshid (1873-1919) in what is now known as the Armenian Genocide.

After the surrender of the Ottoman Empire, French troops attempted to occupy the city.

In the three decades following the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923, Diyarbakır became the object of Turkish-nationalist policies against Kurds, as a result of which Kurdish elites were destroyed and many Kurds deported to western Turkey.

The 41-year-old American-Turkish Pirinçlik Air Force Base near Diyarbakır, known as NATO's frontier post for monitoring the former Soviet Union and the Middle East, completely closed on 30 September 1997. This closure was the result of the general drawdown of US bases in Europe and improvement in space surveillance technology. The base, near the southeastern city of Diyarbakır, housed sensitive electronic intelligence-gathering systems that kept an ear on the Middle East, the Caucasus and Russia.

Diyarbakır today

During the recent conflict, the population of the city grew dramatically as villagers from remote areas where fighting was serious left or were forced to leave for the relative security of the city. Rural to urban movement has often been the first step in a migratory pattern that has taken large numbers of Kurds from the east to the west. Diyarbakır, grew from 30,000 in the 1930s to 65,000 by 1956, to 140,000 by 1970, to 400,000 by 1990,[9] and eventually swelled to about 1.5 million by 1997.[10] Today the intricate warren of alleyways and old-fashioned tenement blocks which makes up the old city within and around the walls contrasts dramatically with the sprawling suburbs of modern apartment blocks and cheaply-built gecekondu slums to the west.

After the cessation of hostilities between PKK and the Turkish army, a large degree of normality returned to the city, with the Turkish government declaring a 15 year period of emergency rule over on 30 November, 2002. The local economy is slowly improving. There is however a lot more that needs to be done, and in August 2005 Kurdish mayor Osman Baydemir presented the Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan with the following complaints:

According to a November 2006 survey by the Sur Municipality, one of Diyarbakır's metropolitan municipalities, 72% of the inhabitants of the municipality use Kurdish the most in their daily speech, followed by Turkish, and 69% are illiterate in their most widely used vernacular.[12]

Arts and culture

Some jewelry making and other craftwork continues today although the high fame of the Diyarbakır's craftsmen has long gone. Folk dancing to the drum and zurna (pipe) are a part of weddings and celebrations in the area.

Cuisine

Diyarbakır is known for rich dishes of lamb (and lamb's liver, kidneys etc.); spices such as black pepper, sumac and coriander; rice, bulgur and butter.

Places of interest

Old City walls.
Diyarbakır's city walls, built by Constantius II and extended by Valentinian I between 367-375, stretch unbroken for almost 6 kilometres.

Notable residents

  • Ahmed Arif: Poet
  • Aziz Yıldırım: President of Fenerbahçe S.K. sports club
  • Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı: Poet
  • Cihan Haspolatlı: Galatasaray SK footballer
  • Gazi Yaşargil: medical scientist and neurosurgeon
  • Hesenê Metê: writer
  • Hikmet Çetin: Former Turkish foreign minister, former NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan
  • Leyla Zana: politician
  • Lokman Polat: writer
  • Mehmed Emin Bozarslan: writer
  • Mehmet Polat: actor
  • Rojen Barnas: writer
  • Songül Öden: actress
  • Ozkan ADIGUZEL: Assist.Prof.Dr., Dentist, Academician
  • Süleyman Nazif: Prominent Young Turk
  • Ziya Gökalp: Prominent ideologue of Pan-Turkism and Turanism
  • Mıgırdiç Margosyan: writer, some of his books: Gavur Mahallesi, Söyle Margos Nerelisen?, Biletimiz İstanbul'a Kesildi
  • Coşkun Sabah: musician
  • Emre Baris: Youngest local major of Amnesty International since 2006

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Distribution of Kurdish People, GlobalSecurity.org
  2. Year 2000 census
  3. Kurdistan, Encyclopædia Britannica
  4. [http://www.lalishduhok.org/lalish/27/L%2027%20E/L%2027%20E.3.pdf Fadhil H. Khudeda / College of Arts/ Dohuk University]
  5. Turkey - Southeastern Anatolia P 621
  6. Theodor Mommsen History of Rome, The Establishment of the Military Monarchy
  7. The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 7
  8. http://www.archives.government.bg/tda/?cat=183
  9. McDowall, David (2004). 3E. ed.. A Modern History of the Kurds. IB Tauris. p. 403. ISBN 9781850434160. http://books.google.com/books?id=dgDi9qFT41oC&pg=PA403&vq=30,000&source=gbs_search_s&sig=ACfU3U17mxLc-lSe8hHiW_AUeV99Fkn8_g. 
  10. Kirişci, Kemal (June 1998). "Turkey". in Janie Hampton. Internally Displaced People: A Global Survey. London: Earthscan Publications Ltd. pp. 198,199. 
  11. Mavioglu, Ertugrul (2007-09-05). "Baydemir'in raporu: Sekiz büyük proje engellendi" (in Turkish), Radikal. Retrieved on 2008-08-06. 
  12. "Belediye Diyarbakırlıyı tanıdı: Kürtçe konuşuyor" (in Turkish), Dogan News Agency, Radikal (2006-11-24). Retrieved on 2008-08-06. 

External links