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Ayvalık

Ayvalık (Turkish: [ˈajvaɫɯk]) is a seaside town on the northwestern Aegean coast of Turkey. It is a district of Balıkesir province. The town centre is connected to Cunda Island by a causeway and is surrounded by the archipelago of Ayvalık Islands, which face the nearby Greek island of Lesbos

Ayvalık
Town
View of Ayvalık town centre
Nicknames: 
Kydonies – The Place of Quinces[1]
Ayvalık
Location of Ayvalık within Turkey.
Ayvalık
Ayvalık (Europe)
Coordinates: 39°19′00″N 26°41′40″E / 39.31667°N 26.69444°E / 39.31667; 26.69444Coordinates: 39°19′00″N 26°41′40″E / 39.31667°N 26.69444°E / 39.31667; 26.69444
Country Turkey
RegionAegean Region
ProvinceBalıkesir
Government
 • MayorMesut Ergin (Ind.)
Area
 • District265.37 km2 (102.46 sq mi)
Population
 (2012)[3]
 • Urban
37,197
 • District
64,153
 • District density240/km2 (630/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
10400
Area code+90 (266)
Licence plate10
Websitewww.ayvalik.bel.tr

Ayvalık ('Quince Orchard') was an ancient Aeolian Greek port-town, called Kydonies (Greek: Κυδωνίες). Its name was changed to Ayvalık in the Ottoman era. Before 1923 the town was predominantly Greek, and although the Turks used its Turkish name, the Greeks used both the old name Kydonies and the new one Hellenised to Aivali (Αϊβαλί). The Greeks knew Cunda Island as Moschonisia (literally "The Perfumed Islands") while the Turks called it Alibey Island (Alibey Adası).

Under the Ottomans Ayvalık had a flourishing olive-oil-production industry and the chimneys of the old factories can still be seen about town. In modern times production has revived in a smaller-scale boutique format.

Daily ferries operate between Ayvalık and Mytilene on nearby Lesbos Island, Greece, during the summer with a reduced service in winter.

The nearest airport to Ayvalık is Balıkesir Koca Seyit Airport (EDO) near Edremit.

Geography

Ayvalık is the southernmost district of Balıkesir province and lies between Edremit Gulf and Dikili Gulf of the Aegean Sea. Its centre is situated on a narrow coastal plain surrounded by low hills to the east which are covered with pine and olive trees. Ayvalık is surrounded by the archipelago of the Ayvalık Islands (the largest of which is Cunda Island) in the west, and by a narrow peninsula in the south named the Hakkıbey Peninsula.

South of Ayvalık are Altınova and Küçükköy/Sarımsaklı which have long pristine beaches. To the north are Gömeç, Burhaniye and Edremit. Dikili district of İzmir Province is to the south of Ayvalık. To the east of Ayvalık lies Bergama, with the remains of ancient Pergamon.

The Greek island of Lesbos is west of Ayvalık and connected to it by ferry.

Climate

The region has a typical Mediterranean climate with mild and rainy winters and hot, dry summers.

History

Prehistory and classical antiquity

Archeological studies in the region have shown that Ayvalık and its environs were inhabited in the prehistoric era. Joseph Thacher Clarke believed that he had identified Ayvalık as the site of Kisthene, which was mentioned by Strabo as a ruinous place beside a harbour beyond Cape Pyrrha.[4] However, Engin Beksaç of Trakya University preferred to site Kisthene at Kız Çiftlik, near the centre of Gömeç.

 
Panoramic view of Ayvalık's town centre.

In his survey of the prehistoric and protohistoric settlements on the southern side of the Gulf of Adramytteion (Edremit) carried out in the 1990s and early 2000s, Beksaç studied the Ayvalık region. The survey identified several different settlements near the centre of Ayvalık which appear to relate to the Early Classical period.[citation needed] However, some settlements near the centre of Altınova were related to the prehistoric period, especially the Bronze and Iron Ages.[dubious ] Kortukaya was identified in the survey as one of the most important settlements in the area and one that aids in the understanding of the interaction between the peoples of the interior and of the coast. The same is true of Yeni Yeldeğirmeni, another settlement near the centre of Altınova.

Beksaç identified traces of a hill fort on Çıplak Island (Chalkys). Some Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age pottery fragments related to the Aeolians were also found here. Two tiny settlements, near the centre of Ayvalık, formed part of the peraia of Mytilene.

 
Historic map of Ayvalık by Piri Reis.
 
Seafront with old Greek houses in Ayvalık harbour.
 
Houses on Cunda Island, the largest of the Ayvalık Islands.
 
View from fish restaurant in harbour of Cunda Island.

Pordoselene, on the eastern side of Cunda Island, near the sea, was another important settlement in Antiquity. All the archaeological data was related to the Classical and Medieval Ages.

During the Byzantine period, the constant threat posed by Arab and Turkish piracy prevented the islet settlements from growing larger. Only Cunda Island could maintain a higher level of habitation as it is the largest and the closest islet to the mainland.

Early Turkish periods

After the Byzantine period, the region came under the rule of the Anatolian beylik of Karasi in the 13th century . Later it was annexed to the territory of the Ottoman beylik (principality), which would become the Ottoman Empire.

1770 Battle of Çeşme and aftermath

In 1770 the Ottoman navy suffered a major defeat against the Russians at Çeşme. The Ottoman admiral Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha and the men who survived the disaster were lodged on their way back to the capital Constantinople by an Ayvalık priest. Hasan Pasha did not forget the kindness shown to his sailors in their hour of need, and when he became Grand Vizier, he granted virtual autonomy to the Greeks of Ayvalık in 1773, paving the way for it to become an important centre of cultures for that community during the late 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. Until 1922 Ayvalık remained an almost entirely Greek settlement.

1821 Greek struggle for independence

Following riots in 1821, the Greek Christian male population was massacred by the Turks, and the women and children were sent into slavery. The then British Ambassador Lord Strangford reported that Osman Pasha accepted the submission of the Aivaliotes, until he could get fresh instructions from Constantinople. However a squadron of Greek insurgents appeared, persuading the inhabitants to hope that it had come to their rescue, and that another revolt might meet with greater success. They accordingly rose en masse, and about fifteen hundred Turks were killed. But the appearance of the squadron turned out to have been merely accidental and it soon sailed away. The Turks then recovered their courage, and an indiscriminate massacre of the Greeks followed.

World War I and its aftermath

As of 1920, Ayvalık's population was estimated at 60,000.[5] Its small port was used to export soap, olive oil, animal hides and flour.[5] The British described Aivali (Ayvalık) and nearby Edremid (Edremit) as having the finest olive oil in Asia Minor[5] and reported large exports of it to France and Italy.[5] This industry suffered during the First World War due to the deportation of the local Christian population (some of whom fled to the nearby Greek islands), who were the main producers of olive oil.[5] Alarmed at the decline of the industry, the Turkish government brought back 4,500 Greek families in order to resume olive oil production.[5] But although these repatriated Greeks were paid wages, they were not allowed to live in their own homes and were kept under official surveillance[5]

 
Ottoman era Greek houses in Ayvalık.

On 29 May 1919 the town was occupied by the Greek Army, only to be reoccupied by the Turkish forces under the command of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on 15 September 1922. Some of the population managed to escape to Greece. However, many of the local men were seized by the Turkish Army and died on death marches into the interior of Anatolia. Among the victims were the Christian clergy and the local metropolitan bishop, Gregory Orologas.[6][7]

Following the Turkish War of Independence, the Greek population and their properties in the town were exchanged for a Muslim population from Greece, and other formerly held Ottoman Turkish lands, under the 1923 agreement for the Exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey. Most of the new population consisted of Greek Muslims from Mytilene (Lesbos), Crete and Macedonia. Until recently Greek could still be heard being spoken in the streets. Many of the town's older mosques are Greek Orthodox churches that have been given a new use.

History of Altınova

 
Paterica Cove

Until the early 1920s Altınova was a village called "Ayazmend". However, during Atatürk's visit to the village, he was so impressed by its golden colour and the fertility of the Madra River's delta, that he called it the "Golden Delta," hence, Altınova.

Altınova had its own separate municipality within Ayvalık district until Balıkesir turned into a metropolitan city in 2014. With the local elections of 2014, Altınova Municipality ceased to exist and merged with Ayvalik Municipality.

Modern Ayvalık

 
Ayvalık Islands from Şeytan Sofrası ('Satan's Dinner Table') hill.

Today, the population of Ayvalık is close to 80,000, which significantly increases during the summer due to tourism. Ayvalık and its environs are famous for high quality olive oil production, which provides an important source of income for the local population.[8] Ayvalık and the numerous islets encircling the bay area are popular holiday resorts. The largest and most important of these islets is Cunda Island (Alibey Island) which is connected to Lale Island, and thence to the mainland, by a bridge and causeway built in the late 1960s. This was the first bridge in Turkey to connect lands separated by a strait. Both Ayvalık and Cunda Island are famous for their seafood restaurants which line the seashore.

 
Two former churches (now mosques) in historic centre of Ayvalık.

Ayvalık also has two of the longest sandy beachesSarımsaklı and Altınova beaches – in Turkey which extend as far as the Dikili district of İzmir nearly 30 km (19 mi) to the south. In recent years, Ayvalık has also become increasingly attractive to scuba divers.

Ayvalık International Music Academy (AIMA) was established in September 1998.[9] Students receive master-instructed classes for violin, viola and cello.[9]

USA-based Harvard University and Turkey's Koç University run a Harvard-Koç University Intensive Ottoman & Turkish Summer School on Cunda Island every summer.[10][11]

Ayvalık is also a member of the Norwich-based European Association of Historic Towns and Regions (EAHTR).[12]

Attractions

In Ayvalık and Cunda

Both Ayvalık and Cunda have a rich heritage of lovely old stone houses built by the lost Greek population and still often called collectively Rum Evleri (Greek Houses). There are also a number of large and imposing Greek Orthodox churches, some of which have been converted into mosques. In the centre of town the Ayios Yannis Kilise became the Saatlı Cami (Clock Mosque) while Ayios Yorgis became the Çınarlı Cami (Plant Tree Mosque). The Taksiyarhis Kilise (Church of the Archangels) is now a museum. The Faneromanı (Ayazma) Kilise is derelict.[13]

On Cunda there is another fine Taksiyarhis Kilise (Church of the Archangels) which was very obviously once at the very heart of the local community.

Cunda Island has a number of meyhanes with a very Greek feel to them as well as the Taş Kahve (Stone Teahouse) overlooking the harbour. In the back streets of Ayvalık the Şeytanın Kahvesi (Devil's Teahouse) is similarly Greek in atmosphere. It featured in a Turkish TV series called İki Yaka Bir İsmail (Two Continents, One İsmail).[13]

Both Ayvalık itself and Cunda Island have attractive fishing harbours full of colourful boats. A few restaurants sell the papalina (whitebait) which is a local speciality.[14]

Around Ayvalık

The ruins of three important ancient cities lie within a short drive of Ayvalık: Assos and Troy are to the north, while Pergamon (modern Bergama) is to the east. Mount Ida (Turkish: Kaz Dağı), which played an important role in ancient Greek mythology and folk tales, is also near Ayvalık (to the north) and can be seen from many points in and around the town centre.

The Gulf of Edremit and the coastal resort towns of Dikili (near ancient Atarneus) and Foça (ancient Phocaea) are also within driving distance for daily excursions.

Olive cultivation

Ayvalık is said to have had millennia of experience[15] in olive cultivation and now has over 2.5 million trees covering 13,200 hectares (33,000 acres) or 41.3% of the region. Hundreds of these trees are over 500 years old. Commercial production began in the 1950s and became prominent in the 1960s.[16] The area is now the second largest producer of olives in Turkey.

The Ayvalık olive (24% and a good pollinator) is among the ten main cultivars in Turkey. 80% of the fruit is processed for oil, 20% for table olives,. The others are Çekiste (26% yield with 1,300,000 trees), Çelebi (400, 000 trees and a 20% yield ), Domat, Erkence (25% yield and good pollinator with 3,000,000 trees), Gemlik (29% yield and a good pollinator), Izmir Sofralik (20% yield), Memecik, Memeli (20% yield and a good pollinator), and Uslu (900 000 trees).[17]

 
Panoramic view of Ayvalık's bay area and the Ayvalık Islands archipelago, as seen from Şeytan Sofrası hill.

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Scott, Alev (2019). Ottoman Odyssey. New York, New York: Pegasus Books. p. 96.
  2. ^ "Area of regions (including lakes), km²". Regional Statistics Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. 2002. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Population of province/district centers and towns/villages by districts - 2012". Address Based Population Registration System (ABPRS) Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  4. ^ Joseph Thacher Clarke, "Gargara, Lamponia and Pionia: Towns of the Troad" The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts 4.3 (September 1888, pp. 291-319) p. 295 note 13.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Prothero, G.W. (1920). Anatolia. London: H.M. Stationery Office.
  6. ^ Clark, Bruce (2006). Twice a stranger : the mass expulsion that forged modern Greece and Turkey. Cambridge (Massachusetts): Harvard University Press. pp. 25. ISBN 9780674023680. bishop ayvalik turkish 1922.
  7. ^ Kiminas, Demetrius (2009). The Ecumenical Patriarchate. Wildside Press LLC. p. 76. ISBN 9781434458766.
  8. ^ Prothero, G.W. (1920). Anatolia. London: H.M. Stationery Office.
  9. ^ a b Ayvalık International Music Academy (AIMA)
  10. ^ . Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations. Harvard Summer School 2008. Archived from the original on 5 April 2008. Retrieved 26 April 2008.
  11. ^ . Koç University. 16 July 2007. Archived from the original on 7 October 2008. Retrieved 26 April 2008.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 September 2008. Retrieved 11 May 2006.
  13. ^ a b "AYVALIK". turkeyfromtheinside.com. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  14. ^ "CUNDA (ALİBEY ADASI)". turkeyfromtheinside.com. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  15. ^ Olive Oil Times- Retrieved 2018-07-09
  16. ^ Unesco- Retrieved 2018-07-09
  17. ^ International Olive Council 10 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine: Policies- Turkey (2012, pp. 5-8)- Retrieved 2018-07-09

External links

  • (Turkish)
  • Pictures of Ayvalık
  • Pictures of Ayvalık and Alibey Island (Turkish)
  • Cunda Island
  • Panoramic pictures of Cunda Island (Turkish)

ayvalık, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, turkish, ˈajvaɫɯk, seaside, town, northwestern, aegean, coast, turkey, district, balıkesir, province, town, centre, connected, cunda, island, causeway, surrounded, archipelago, islands, which, face, nea. For other places with the same name see Ayvalik disambiguation Ayvalik Turkish ˈajvaɫɯk is a seaside town on the northwestern Aegean coast of Turkey It is a district of Balikesir province The town centre is connected to Cunda Island by a causeway and is surrounded by the archipelago of Ayvalik Islands which face the nearby Greek island of LesbosAyvalikTownView of Ayvalik town centreEmblem of Ayvalik MunicipalityNicknames Kydonies The Place of Quinces 1 AyvalikLocation of Ayvalik within Turkey Show map of TurkeyAyvalikAyvalik Europe Show map of EuropeCoordinates 39 19 00 N 26 41 40 E 39 31667 N 26 69444 E 39 31667 26 69444 Coordinates 39 19 00 N 26 41 40 E 39 31667 N 26 69444 E 39 31667 26 69444Country TurkeyRegionAegean RegionProvinceBalikesirGovernment MayorMesut Ergin Ind Area 2 District265 37 km2 102 46 sq mi Population 2012 3 Urban37 197 District64 153 District density240 km2 630 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code10400Area code 90 266 Licence plate10Websitewww wbr ayvalik wbr bel wbr trAyvalik Quince Orchard was an ancient Aeolian Greek port town called Kydonies Greek Kydwnies Its name was changed to Ayvalik in the Ottoman era Before 1923 the town was predominantly Greek and although the Turks used its Turkish name the Greeks used both the old name Kydonies and the new one Hellenised to Aivali Aibali The Greeks knew Cunda Island as Moschonisia literally The Perfumed Islands while the Turks called it Alibey Island Alibey Adasi Under the Ottomans Ayvalik had a flourishing olive oil production industry and the chimneys of the old factories can still be seen about town In modern times production has revived in a smaller scale boutique format Daily ferries operate between Ayvalik and Mytilene on nearby Lesbos Island Greece during the summer with a reduced service in winter The nearest airport to Ayvalik is Balikesir Koca Seyit Airport EDO near Edremit Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 2 History 2 1 Prehistory and classical antiquity 2 2 Early Turkish periods 2 3 1770 Battle of Cesme and aftermath 2 4 1821 Greek struggle for independence 2 5 World War I and its aftermath 2 6 History of Altinova 3 Modern Ayvalik 4 Attractions 4 1 In Ayvalik and Cunda 4 2 Around Ayvalik 5 Olive cultivation 6 Notable people 7 See also 8 Notes 9 External linksGeography EditAyvalik is the southernmost district of Balikesir province and lies between Edremit Gulf and Dikili Gulf of the Aegean Sea Its centre is situated on a narrow coastal plain surrounded by low hills to the east which are covered with pine and olive trees Ayvalik is surrounded by the archipelago of the Ayvalik Islands the largest of which is Cunda Island in the west and by a narrow peninsula in the south named the Hakkibey Peninsula South of Ayvalik are Altinova and Kucukkoy Sarimsakli which have long pristine beaches To the north are Gomec Burhaniye and Edremit Dikili district of Izmir Province is to the south of Ayvalik To the east of Ayvalik lies Bergama with the remains of ancient Pergamon The Greek island of Lesbos is west of Ayvalik and connected to it by ferry Climate Edit The region has a typical Mediterranean climate with mild and rainy winters and hot dry summers History EditPrehistory and classical antiquity Edit Archeological studies in the region have shown that Ayvalik and its environs were inhabited in the prehistoric era Joseph Thacher Clarke believed that he had identified Ayvalik as the site of Kisthene which was mentioned by Strabo as a ruinous place beside a harbour beyond Cape Pyrrha 4 However Engin Beksac of Trakya University preferred to site Kisthene at Kiz Ciftlik near the centre of Gomec Panoramic view of Ayvalik s town centre In his survey of the prehistoric and protohistoric settlements on the southern side of the Gulf of Adramytteion Edremit carried out in the 1990s and early 2000s Beksac studied the Ayvalik region The survey identified several different settlements near the centre of Ayvalik which appear to relate to the Early Classical period citation needed However some settlements near the centre of Altinova were related to the prehistoric period especially the Bronze and Iron Ages dubious discuss Kortukaya was identified in the survey as one of the most important settlements in the area and one that aids in the understanding of the interaction between the peoples of the interior and of the coast The same is true of Yeni Yeldegirmeni another settlement near the centre of Altinova Beksac identified traces of a hill fort on Ciplak Island Chalkys Some Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age pottery fragments related to the Aeolians were also found here Two tiny settlements near the centre of Ayvalik formed part of the peraia of Mytilene Historic map of Ayvalik by Piri Reis Seafront with old Greek houses in Ayvalik harbour Houses on Cunda Island the largest of the Ayvalik Islands View from fish restaurant in harbour of Cunda Island Pordoselene on the eastern side of Cunda Island near the sea was another important settlement in Antiquity All the archaeological data was related to the Classical and Medieval Ages During the Byzantine period the constant threat posed by Arab and Turkish piracy prevented the islet settlements from growing larger Only Cunda Island could maintain a higher level of habitation as it is the largest and the closest islet to the mainland Early Turkish periods Edit After the Byzantine period the region came under the rule of the Anatolian beylik of Karasi in the 13th century Later it was annexed to the territory of the Ottoman beylik principality which would become the Ottoman Empire 1770 Battle of Cesme and aftermath Edit In 1770 the Ottoman navy suffered a major defeat against the Russians at Cesme The Ottoman admiral Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha and the men who survived the disaster were lodged on their way back to the capital Constantinople by an Ayvalik priest Hasan Pasha did not forget the kindness shown to his sailors in their hour of need and when he became Grand Vizier he granted virtual autonomy to the Greeks of Ayvalik in 1773 paving the way for it to become an important centre of cultures for that community during the late 18th 19th and early 20th centuries Until 1922 Ayvalik remained an almost entirely Greek settlement 1821 Greek struggle for independence Edit Following riots in 1821 the Greek Christian male population was massacred by the Turks and the women and children were sent into slavery The then British Ambassador Lord Strangford reported that Osman Pasha accepted the submission of the Aivaliotes until he could get fresh instructions from Constantinople However a squadron of Greek insurgents appeared persuading the inhabitants to hope that it had come to their rescue and that another revolt might meet with greater success They accordingly rose en masse and about fifteen hundred Turks were killed But the appearance of the squadron turned out to have been merely accidental and it soon sailed away The Turks then recovered their courage and an indiscriminate massacre of the Greeks followed World War I and its aftermath Edit As of 1920 Ayvalik s population was estimated at 60 000 5 Its small port was used to export soap olive oil animal hides and flour 5 The British described Aivali Ayvalik and nearby Edremid Edremit as having the finest olive oil in Asia Minor 5 and reported large exports of it to France and Italy 5 This industry suffered during the First World War due to the deportation of the local Christian population some of whom fled to the nearby Greek islands who were the main producers of olive oil 5 Alarmed at the decline of the industry the Turkish government brought back 4 500 Greek families in order to resume olive oil production 5 But although these repatriated Greeks were paid wages they were not allowed to live in their own homes and were kept under official surveillance 5 Ottoman era Greek houses in Ayvalik On 29 May 1919 the town was occupied by the Greek Army only to be reoccupied by the Turkish forces under the command of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk on 15 September 1922 Some of the population managed to escape to Greece However many of the local men were seized by the Turkish Army and died on death marches into the interior of Anatolia Among the victims were the Christian clergy and the local metropolitan bishop Gregory Orologas 6 7 Following the Turkish War of Independence the Greek population and their properties in the town were exchanged for a Muslim population from Greece and other formerly held Ottoman Turkish lands under the 1923 agreement for the Exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey Most of the new population consisted of Greek Muslims from Mytilene Lesbos Crete and Macedonia Until recently Greek could still be heard being spoken in the streets Many of the town s older mosques are Greek Orthodox churches that have been given a new use History of Altinova Edit Paterica Cove Until the early 1920s Altinova was a village called Ayazmend However during Ataturk s visit to the village he was so impressed by its golden colour and the fertility of the Madra River s delta that he called it the Golden Delta hence Altinova Altinova had its own separate municipality within Ayvalik district until Balikesir turned into a metropolitan city in 2014 With the local elections of 2014 Altinova Municipality ceased to exist and merged with Ayvalik Municipality Modern Ayvalik Edit Ayvalik Islands from Seytan Sofrasi Satan s Dinner Table hill Today the population of Ayvalik is close to 80 000 which significantly increases during the summer due to tourism Ayvalik and its environs are famous for high quality olive oil production which provides an important source of income for the local population 8 Ayvalik and the numerous islets encircling the bay area are popular holiday resorts The largest and most important of these islets is Cunda Island Alibey Island which is connected to Lale Island and thence to the mainland by a bridge and causeway built in the late 1960s This was the first bridge in Turkey to connect lands separated by a strait Both Ayvalik and Cunda Island are famous for their seafood restaurants which line the seashore Two former churches now mosques in historic centre of Ayvalik Ayvalik also has two of the longest sandy beaches Sarimsakli and Altinova beaches in Turkey which extend as far as the Dikili district of Izmir nearly 30 km 19 mi to the south In recent years Ayvalik has also become increasingly attractive to scuba divers Ayvalik International Music Academy AIMA was established in September 1998 9 Students receive master instructed classes for violin viola and cello 9 USA based Harvard University and Turkey s Koc University run a Harvard Koc University Intensive Ottoman amp Turkish Summer School on Cunda Island every summer 10 11 Ayvalik is also a member of the Norwich based European Association of Historic Towns and Regions EAHTR 12 Attractions EditIn Ayvalik and Cunda Edit Both Ayvalik and Cunda have a rich heritage of lovely old stone houses built by the lost Greek population and still often called collectively Rum Evleri Greek Houses There are also a number of large and imposing Greek Orthodox churches some of which have been converted into mosques In the centre of town the Ayios Yannis Kilise became the Saatli Cami Clock Mosque while Ayios Yorgis became the Cinarli Cami Plant Tree Mosque The Taksiyarhis Kilise Church of the Archangels is now a museum The Faneromani Ayazma Kilise is derelict 13 On Cunda there is another fine Taksiyarhis Kilise Church of the Archangels which was very obviously once at the very heart of the local community Cunda Island has a number of meyhanes with a very Greek feel to them as well as the Tas Kahve Stone Teahouse overlooking the harbour In the back streets of Ayvalik the Seytanin Kahvesi Devil s Teahouse is similarly Greek in atmosphere It featured in a Turkish TV series called Iki Yaka Bir Ismail Two Continents One Ismail 13 Both Ayvalik itself and Cunda Island have attractive fishing harbours full of colourful boats A few restaurants sell the papalina whitebait which is a local speciality 14 Around Ayvalik Edit The ruins of three important ancient cities lie within a short drive of Ayvalik Assos and Troy are to the north while Pergamon modern Bergama is to the east Mount Ida Turkish Kaz Dagi which played an important role in ancient Greek mythology and folk tales is also near Ayvalik to the north and can be seen from many points in and around the town centre The Gulf of Edremit and the coastal resort towns of Dikili near ancient Atarneus and Foca ancient Phocaea are also within driving distance for daily excursions Olive cultivation EditAyvalik is said to have had millennia of experience 15 in olive cultivation and now has over 2 5 million trees covering 13 200 hectares 33 000 acres or 41 3 of the region Hundreds of these trees are over 500 years old Commercial production began in the 1950s and became prominent in the 1960s 16 The area is now the second largest producer of olives in Turkey The Ayvalik olive 24 and a good pollinator is among the ten main cultivars in Turkey 80 of the fruit is processed for oil 20 for table olives The others are Cekiste 26 yield with 1 300 000 trees Celebi 400 000 trees and a 20 yield Domat Erkence 25 yield and good pollinator with 3 000 000 trees Gemlik 29 yield and a good pollinator Izmir Sofralik 20 yield Memecik Memeli 20 yield and a good pollinator and Uslu 900 000 trees 17 Panoramic view of Ayvalik s bay area and the Ayvalik Islands archipelago as seen from Seytan Sofrasi hill Notable people EditPhotis Kontoglou Greek writer painter and iconographer Elias Venezis Greek author Gregory Orologas of Kydonies Metropolitan of Kydonies ethnomartyr who arranged for majority of Greek population to leave for Greece via the International Red Cross but was himself executed by Turkish authorities Stratos Pagioumtzis Greek rebetiko singer Konstantinos Tombras operator of first printing press in the town and first press in Greece Georgios Tombras Greek soldier of Macedonian Struggle and First Balkan War Marco Misciagna Italian virtuoso violist was the first and only person to have received honorary citizenship of town of Ayvalik Efstratios Pissas Greek revolutionary of Greek War of Independence and later lieutenant general See also EditAyvalik Islands Cunda Island Marinas in Turkey Ayvalik Strait Bridge SarimsakliNotes Edit Scott Alev 2019 Ottoman Odyssey New York New York Pegasus Books p 96 Area of regions including lakes km Regional Statistics Database Turkish Statistical Institute 2002 Retrieved 5 March 2013 Population of province district centers and towns villages by districts 2012 Address Based Population Registration System ABPRS Database Turkish Statistical Institute Retrieved 27 February 2013 Joseph Thacher Clarke Gargara Lamponia and Pionia Towns of the Troad The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts 4 3 September 1888 pp 291 319 p 295 note 13 a b c d e f g Prothero G W 1920 Anatolia London H M Stationery Office Clark Bruce 2006 Twice a stranger the mass expulsion that forged modern Greece and Turkey Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 25 ISBN 9780674023680 bishop ayvalik turkish 1922 Kiminas Demetrius 2009 The Ecumenical Patriarchate Wildside Press LLC p 76 ISBN 9781434458766 Prothero G W 1920 Anatolia London H M Stationery Office a b Ayvalik International Music Academy AIMA Intensive Ottoman Summer School in Turkey Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Harvard Summer School 2008 Archived from the original on 5 April 2008 Retrieved 26 April 2008 Department of History Koc University 16 July 2007 Archived from the original on 7 October 2008 Retrieved 26 April 2008 European Association of Historic Towns and Regions EAHTR Archived from the original on 10 September 2008 Retrieved 11 May 2006 a b AYVALIK turkeyfromtheinside com Retrieved 1 October 2022 CUNDA ALIBEY ADASI turkeyfromtheinside com Retrieved 1 October 2022 Olive Oil Times Retrieved 2018 07 09 Unesco Retrieved 2018 07 09 International Olive Council Archived 10 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Policies Turkey 2012 pp 5 8 Retrieved 2018 07 09External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ayvalik Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ayvalik AYKUSAD Ayvalik Association of Culture and Arts Turkish Pictures of Ayvalik Pictures of Ayvalik and Alibey Island Turkish Cunda Island Panoramic pictures of Cunda Island Turkish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ayvalik amp oldid 1153213523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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