Gökçeada Imbros / Ίμβρος |
|
---|---|
— Town — | |
Mountains of Imbros | |
Gökçeada
|
|
Coordinates: | |
Country | Turkey |
Province | Çanakkale |
De jure | Semi-autonomous district of Imbros and Tenedos[1] |
Government | |
• Mayor | Yücel Atalay (AKP) |
Population (2000) | |
• Total | 8,894 |
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) |
• Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
Website | www.gokceada.gov.tr |
Imbros or Imroz, officially referred to as Gökçeada since July 29, 1970[2][3] (older name in Turkish: İmroz; Greek: Ίμβρος – Imvros), is an island in the Aegean Sea and the largest island of Turkey, part of Çanakkale Province. It is located at the entrance of Saros Bay and is also the westernmost point of Turkey (Cape İncirburnu). Imbros has an area of 279 km2 (108 sq mi) and contains some wooded areas.[4]
According to the 2000 census, the island of Imbros had a total population of 8,875.[5] The same census also reported 7,254 people in Cinarli, and 1,621 in the remaining villages.[5] The main industries of Imbros are fishing and tourism. The population is predominantly Turkish but there are still about 250 Greeks on Imbros, most of them elderly. The island was primarily inhabited by ethnic Greeks[2] from ancient times through to approximately the middle of the twentieth century, when many emigrated to Greece, western Europe, the United States and Australia, due to a campaign of state-sponsored discrimination.[2][6][7] The island is noted for its vineyards and wine production.
Contents |
It is located at the southeast of the island. It is an agricultural area that produces fruit and vegetables.
According to Greek mythology, the palace of Thetis, mother of Achilles, king of Phthia, was situated between Imbros and Samothrace. The stables of the winged horses of Poseidon were said to lie between Imbros and Tenedos.
Homer wrote:
In classical antiquity, Imbros, like Lemnos, was an Athenian cleruchy, a colony whose settlers retained Athenian citizenship; although since the Imbrians appear on the Athenian tribute lists, there may have been a division with the native population. The original inhabitants of Imbros were Pelasgians. Miltiades conquered the island from Persia after the battle of Salamis; the colony was established about 450 BC, during the first Athenian empire, and was retained by Athens (with brief exceptions) for the next six centuries. It may have become independent under Septimius Severus.[8]
Between November 1912 and September 1923, Imbros, together with Tenedos, were under Greek administration. Both islands were overwhelmingly Greek, and in the case of Imbros the population was entirely Greek.[2]
Because of their strategic position near the Dardanelles, the western powers, particularly Britain, insisted at the end of the Balkan Wars in 1913 that the island should be retained by the Ottoman Empire when the other Aegean islands were ceded to Greece. However, the islands remained under Greek administration.
In 1920, the Treaty of Sèvres with the defeated Ottoman Empire granted the island to Greece. The Ottoman government, which signed but did not ratify the treaty, was overthrown by the new Turkish nationalist Government of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, based in Ankara. After the Greco-Turkish War ended in Greek defeat in Anatolia, and the fall of Lloyd George and his Middle Eastern policies, the western powers agreed to the Treaty of Lausanne with the new Turkish Republic, in 1923. This treaty made the island part of Turkey; but it guaranteed a special autonomous administrative status for Imbros and Tenedos to accommodate the Greeks, and excluded them from the population exchange that took place between Greece and Turkey, due to their presence there as a majority.[9]
However shortly after the legislation of "Civil Law" on 17 February 1926 (Medeni Kanun), the rights accorded to minorities in Turkey were revoked, in violation of the Lausanne Treaty. The first concrete sign of Turkification policy was undertaken in 1946, where the Turkish authorities installed the first wave of Turkish settlers from the Black Sea region.[10] Massive scale persecution against the local Greek element started at 1961, as part of the Eritme Programmi operation that aimed at the elimination of Greek education and the enforcement of economic, psychological pressure and violence. Under these conditions the Turkish government approved the appropriation of the 90% of the cultivated areas of the island and the settlement of additional 6,000 ethnic Turks from mainland Turkey.[11] Additional population settlements from Anatolia occurred in 1973, 1984 and 2000. The state provided special credit opportunities and agricultural aid in kind to those who would decide to settle in in the island.[12] On the other hand the indigenous Greek population being deprived of its means of production and facing hostile behaviour from the government and the newly arrived settlers, left its native land. The peak of this exodus was in 1974.[13]
The island was primarily inhabited by ethnic Greeks from ancient times through to approximately the middle of the twentieth century. Data dating from 1922 taken under Greek rule and 1927 data taken under Turkish rule showed a strong majority of Greek inhabitants on Imbros, and the Greek Orthodox Church had a strong presence on the island.
Article 14 of the Treaty of Lausanne (1923) exempted Imbros and Tenedos from the large-scale population exchange that took place between Greece and Turkey, and required Turkey to accommodate the local Greek majority and their rights:
The islands of Imbros and Tenedos, remaining under Turkish sovereignty, shall enjoy a special administrative organisation composed of local elements and furnishing every guarantee for the native non-Moslem population insofar as concerns local administration and the protection of persons and property. The maintenance of order will be assured therein by a police force recruited from amongst the local population by the local administration above provided for and placed under its orders.
Thus, under the Turkish Republic, the islands were to be largely autonomous and self-governing, with their own police force. This provision was not guaranteed by anything more than the faith of the Treaty.
The Greek émigrés from Turkey assert numerous violations of the religious, linguistic, and economic rights guaranteed as matters of international concern by the Treaty, including freedom of the Orthodox religion and the right to practice the professions. Leaders of the Greek community in Turkey "voluntarily waived" these rights in 1926; but the Treaty provides (Article 44) that these rights can only be modified by the consent of the majority of the Council of League of Nations. The émigrés assert that the signatures to the waivers were obtained by orders of the police, and that Avrilios Spatharis and Savvas Apostologlou, who refused to sign, were imprisoned. The Greek government appealed this action to the Council and was upheld, but Turkey has not complied.
In addition, the following grievances apply particularly to Imbros:
All of these events have led to the Greeks emigrating from both islands. Before 1964, the population of Imbros was 7000 Greeks, and 200 mainland Turkish officials; by 1970 the Greeks were a minority at 40% of the population, and there remains only a very small Greek community on Imbros today, comprising several hundred mostly elderly people. Most of the former Greeks of Imbros and Tenedos are in diaspora in Greece, the United States, and Australia.[15]
Town & Villages | 1927 | 1970 | 1975 | 1980 | 1985 | 1990 | 1997 | 2000 | ||||||||
Çınarlı (Panaghia Balomeni) | - | - | 3578 | 615 | 3806 | 342 | 4251 | 216 | 767 | 70 | 721 | 40 | 553 | 26 | 503 | 29 |
Bademli (Gliky) | - | - | 66 | 144 | 1 | 57 | 40 | 1 | 13 | 34 | 29 | 22 | 15 | 15 | 15 | 13 |
Dereköy (Shinudy) | - | - | 73 | 672 | 391 | 378 | 319 | 214 | 380 | 106 | 99 | 68 | 82 | 40 | 68 | 42 |
Eşelek | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 152 | - |
Fatih | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 3962 | 45 | 4284 | 32 | 4135 | 21 | 4180 | 25 |
Kaleköy (Kastro) | - | - | 38 | 36 | 24 | - | - | 128 | 94 | - | 105 | - | 90 | - | 89 | - |
Şahinkaya | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 168 | - | 107 | - | 86 | - |
Şirinköy | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 189 | - |
Tepeköy (Agridia) | - | - | 3 | 504 | 4 | 273 | 2 | 193 | 1 | 110 | 75 | 2 | 2 | 39 | 2 | 42 |
Uğurlu | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 460 | - | 490 | - | 466 | - | 401 | - |
Yenibademli | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 416 | - | 660 | - | 628 | - | 581 | - |
Yenimahalle (Evlampio) | - | - | 182 | 143 | 162 | 121 | 231 | 81 | 359 | 59 | 970 | 27 | 2240 | 25 | 2362 | 27 |
Zeytinli (Aghios Theodoros) | - | - | 30 | 507 | 15 | 369 | 36 | 235 | 72 | 162 | 25 | 130 | 12 | 82 | 12 | 76 |
TOTAL | 157 | 6555 | 3970 | 2621 | 4403 | 1540 | 4879 | 1068 | 6524 | 586 | 7626 | 321 | 8330 | 248 | 8640 | 254 |
Ref: Gökçeada Municipality official page
Ref: Alanur Çavlin Bozbeyoğlu, Işıl Onan, "Changes in the demographic characteristics of Gökçeada"
|
|