Diyarbakır Articles about
Diyarbakır
 

Information About

Diyarbakır




Diyarbakır ( ''''; Greek ''Amida''; Armenian Ամիդ ''Amid'') is a major City in southeastern Turkey situated on the banks of the River Tigris , and the seat of Diyarbakır Province . Diyarbakir has a large Kurdish population, and both some Kurds and outside observers often refer to it as the unofficial 'capital' of a Turkish Kurdistan {Link without Title}
Encyclopaedia of Islam
{Link without Title} .

The city has a population of 546,000; the metropolitan area, 721,000 (2000 census; 1,039,000 est. in 2005 {Link without Title} ). This makes it the second-largest city in Turkey's Southeastern Anatolia region, after Gaziantep . The mayor of Diyarbakır is the former human rights defender and deputy-chairman of the Turkish Human Rights Association, Osman Baydemir , member of the Democratic Society Party .

“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 testify to the fact that it once was the seat of the Syriac-Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and thus being a Syriac or Aramean stronghold that produced many famous Syriac theologians and Patriarchs; some of them found their final resting place in the St. Mary Church. Besides, there are many relics in this 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 influence of the Roman and then the Byzantine Empire s. From 189 BCE to 384 CE, the area to the east and south of present-day Diyarbakir , was ruled by a Kurdish kingdom known as Corduene , which became a province of the Roman Empire in 66 BCE. {Link without Title}

In 638 , the leader of the Arab Bekr tribe, Bekr Bin Vail, named the city "Diyar Bakr", meaning "country of the Bekr".

The city is surrounded by a dramatic and fully intact set of black basalt walls, first constructed in 297 , extending in a 5.5 km circle around the old city. The dramatic warren of alleyways and old-fashioned tenement blocks which makes up the old city contrast dramatically with the sprawling suburbs of modern apartment blocks and '' Gecekondu '' slums to the west. Diyarbakır boasts numerous medieval Mosques and Madrassahs , crowned by the 11th Century Ulu Cami ("Great Mosque") constructed by alternating bands of black basalt and limestone. The same patterning was used in the 16th Century Deliler Han Madrassah, which is now a hotel, and the 12th Century Castle Mosque (''Kale Camii'').

The Syriac Orthodox Church of Our Lady (Meryemana), was first constructed as a pagan temple in the 1st Century BC , and is still in use as a place of worship today.

Diyarbakır also boasts one of the region's most lively and dramatic street markets.

The 20th Century was a turbulent one for Diyarbakır. During World War I most of the city's Syriac and Armenian population was driven from the city. After the surrender of the Ottoman Empire , French troops attempted to occupy the city.

Always a centre of Kurdish Nationalism , Diyarbakır became a stronghold of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) after the beginning of the guerilla war in southeastern Turkey in 1984 . During this 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. Diyarbakır was also one of the areas where the Kurdish Hezbullah was most active in the early to mid 1990s , with this group often targeting PKK activists and the city's tiny Christian community of Armenians and Syriacs .

After the PKK's cessation of hostilities, 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 and as of July 2004, Diyarbakır is safe to visit.


FAMOUS NAMES FROM DIYARBAKıR




SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS