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Antiquity
The history of
Gaziantep goes back to the Hittites.[citation needed] Gaziantep was ruled by
Akkadians, Mitannis, Hittites, Neo-Hittites,
Assyrians, Urartians, Babylonians, Persians,
Macedonians,
Parthians, Commagene,
Romans, Byzantines,
Sassanids, and
Arabs.
Hellenistic,
Roman, and
Byzantine[edit]
Gaziantep is the probable site of the Hellenistic city of
Antiochia ad Taurum ("Antiochia in the
Taurus Mountains").
The ruins of the ancient city of
Doliche (modern
Turkish:
Dülük) lie a few kilometers to the north of the city center
.
In the center of the city stands the Gaziantep
Fortress and the Ravanda citadel, which were restored by the Byzantines in the
6th century.
Muslim conquest[edit]
In the first half of the
7th century,
Arab armies of the
Muslim Caliphate captured this region. It was passed to the
Umayyads in 661 and the
Abbasids in 750. During the period of Arab rule, it was ravaged several times by the Byzantines. After the disintegration of the
Abbasid dynasty, the city was ruled successively by the Tulunids, the
Ikhshidids and the
Hamdanids.
In 962, it was recaptured by the Byzantines (
Eastern Romans).
Seljuk conquest[edit]
The Anatolian Seljukss took
Aintab in 1067. They gave way to the
Syrian Seljuks in 1086.
Tutush I appointed
Thoros of Edessa as governor of the region.
It was captured by the
Crusaders and united to the Maras Seigneurship in the
County of Edessa in 1098.
It reverted to the
Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in 1150, controlled by the
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia between 1155--1157 and 1204--1206 and captured by the
Zengids in 1172 and the
Ayyubids in 1181. It was retaken by Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in
1218. It was ruled by the Ilkhanate between 1260--1261, 1271--1272, 1280--1281 and 1299--1317 and by the
Mamluks between 1261--1271, 1272--1280, 1281--1299, 1317--1341, 1353--1378, 1381--1389 and 1395-1516. It was also governed by the
Dulkadirids, which was a Turkish vassal state of the Mamluks.
Ottoman
Period[edit]
The Ottoman Empire captured Gaziantep after the
Battle of Marj Dabiq in 1516, under the reign of
Sultan Selim I
. In the Ottoman period, Aintab was a sanjak centered initially in the
Dulkadir Eyalet (1516-1818), and later in the
Aleppo vilayet (1908--1918). It was also a kaza in the Aleppo vilayet (1818--1908). The city established itself as a centre for commerce due to its location straddling trade routes.
The
17th century Turkish traveler
Evliya Celebi noted that there were
3900 shops and 2 bedesten.
By the end of the
19th century, Aintab had a population of about 45,
000, 2/3 of which was Muslim, largely
Yörük ("Turkmen") of the Çapanoğlu clan, but also Arabs and
Kurds. Of the Christians, there was a large
Armenian community. In the 19th century, there was considerable
American Protestant Christian missionary activity in Aintab.[5][6] In particular,
Central Turkey College was founded in 1874 by the
American Mission Board and largely served the Armenian community. The
Gregorian Armenians suffered from the massacres of
1895, but the Armenian Protestants thrived, drawn by Central Turkey College.[7] Central Turkey College was transferred to
Aleppo in
1916.
Republic of Turkey[edit]
The
Martyrs' monument commemorates the defense of the city and its hero
Şahin Bey. Gaziantep was only a small city at the start of the republican period. However, it quickly became a regional hub and industry grew rapidly in the second half of the
20th century. This quick growth lead it to be designed as an "Anatolian tiger".
#Gaziantep #travel #holiday #turkey #culture #kale #tourism #photo
- published: 31 Dec 2013
- views: 1995