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It is not definitely known when
Bolu was first founded. There are some archaeological findings dating back about
100,
000[citation needed] years that suggest the region was inhabited then.
The area now in
Bolu Province was in eastern
Bithynia and southwestern
Paphlagonia.
The town of Bithynium from which the area takes its name is the modern Bolu. By about 375
BCE, Bithynia had gained its independence from
Persia, and
King Bas subsequently defeated
Alexander's attempt to take it.[3] The
Bithynian region with parts of Paphlagonia remained its own kingdom until 88 BCE when it briefly came under
Mithridates VI and the
Kingdom of Pontus. With
Roman help the last Bithynian king,
Nicomedes IV regained his throne, but on his death bequeathed the kingdom to
Rome. This led to the
Third Mithridatic War and the fall of
Pontus, the area was incorporated into the
Roman Empire as a single province joining Paphlagonia with Bithynia. Under the folling
Byzantine Empire the Bolu area was divided from western Bithynia at the
Sakarya River, with western Bithynia keeping the name. The
Sakarya is still the southern and western boundary of the province.
The Byzantine Empire briefly lost the Bolu area to the
Seljuk Turks after the 1071
Battle of Manzikert, but recovered it under the
Komnenian restoration. After the end of the
Komnenos dynasty, the
Turks gradually took the Bolu area back.
About 1240 the Seljuk Turks took the eastern part of the Bolu area (i.e. the
Paphlagonian part) from the Byzantine Empire and incorporated it into the
Sultanate of Rum. Due to their assistance in taking it and
Sinop, the Chobanids were given that territory and adjacent areas to the north and east to rule. The Chobanids were relatively independent of the
Sultan. That eastern area fell under the Isfendiyarids between 1292 and 1461. In 1461 it was incorporated into the rest of the
Ottoman Empire.
By 1265, the western part of the Bolu area was again acquired by the Seljuk Turks, but it fell to the arms of
Orhan I and the Ottoman Empire in the early to mid-1300s. The two areas were reunited in 1461, under
Mehmed II. In the 1864 Ottoman Empire administrative reorganization, Bolu was created as an independent sanjak,[4] although it was geographically part of the
Vilayet of Kastamonu.
#bolu #turkey #travel #holiday #tourist
- published: 31 Dec 2013
- views: 6769