Diyarbakir Turkey (Beautiful) 2013 Part 1
Diyarbakır City Wall
"This city had formerly been a very small one, till
Constantius while
Caesar, at the same time that he built another town called
Antinopolis, surrounded
Amida also with strong towers and stout walls, that the people in the neighbourhood might have a safe place of refuge. And he placed there a store of mural engines, making it formidable to the enemy, as he wished it to be called by his own name."
The Constantius mentioned by
Ammianus Marcellinus was a son of
Emperor Constantine who was appointed Caesar by his father. Because
Constantine died in 337
AD the walls of Amida (today's
Diyarbakir) were built before that year. Constantius, after a long struggle with his brothers managed to become the sole ruler of the
Roman Empire: he is usually referred to as
Emperor Constantius II.
The walls of Amida and the town itself were designed in line with
Roman practices: they had four gates broadly aligned with the cardinal points. The northern one was called the
Armenian Gate because it faced the mountains which separate
Upper Mesopotamia from
Armenia; after the events which led to the expulsion of the
Armenians from
Turkey, the name of the gate was changed into the current one. A second historical name for this gate was "
Harput Gate" because the road leading to that town started from this gate.
Dag Kapisi was open to cars until the
1980s.
The western gate is named after Urfa because the road leading to that town starts from this gate. The gate has three entrances; the central one has been modified to allow the passage of large vehicles; that on the left side was decorated in 1183 with an inscription and a relief showing an eagle standing on the horns of the skull of an ox: this relief has become the
symbol of today's Diyarbakir.
Mardin Kapisi is the southern gate from which the road leading to Mardin started; it had three entrances of which only one remains because the other two were walled up many centuries ago. The existence of three entrances supports the idea that ancient Amida was crossed by two large roads from Dag Kapisi to Mardin Kapisi and from Urfa Kapisi to Yeni Kapi (the eastern gate). Considering the number of columns and pieces of columns which have been employed in
Ulu Cami and in strengthening the walls most likely these roads were colonnaded: the central track was reserved to chariots and pack animals and the lateral ones were used by pedestrians.
The fourth gate of ancient Amida was most likely a posterula, a small opening in the walls through which the peasants living along the river could enter the town.
The Arabs changed the name of the town in the VIIth century; it was then called
Diarbekr (the
Seat of Bekr) after the name of the tribesmen who conquered it
. In the 1920s the name was slightly modified to make it sound more
Turkish.
"Amida is watered by the
Tigris, which passes close to it, making a kind of elbow: (
..) but in the very centre of Amida, under the citadel, there rises a rich spring of water, drinkable indeed, but often tainted with hot vapours."
Probably not everybody was happy drinking from the spring mentioned by Ammianus Marcellinus; Yeni Kapi was also known as "Su Kapi" the "
Water Gate" because it was used to reach the river and bring back jars of water; today there is a modern bridge which crosses the Tigris, but the historical
point where bridges were built is located two miles south of Mardin Kapisi.
The north-eastern section of Diyarbakir is separated by the rest of the town by walls; this citadel is located on slightly higher ground and its walls had the double purpose of providing a last defence against the enemy and of protecting the rulers of the town from rebellions and riots.
The main gate is named after the saray (palace) of the Artukid rulers; a smaller gate is named after
Dicle, the
Turkish name for the
River Tigris. Alıntı:
http://romeartlover.tripod.com/Turmag23
.html