fbpx
Wikipedia

Datça

Datça is a municipality and district of Muğla Province, Turkey.[2] Its area is 436 km2,[3] and its population is 25,029 (2022).[1] The town center is situated midway through the peninsula which carries the same name as the district and the town (Datça Peninsula). It was a nahiya of Marmaris District until 1928. Datça's first center in village of Reşadiye till 1947, when it was moved to present borough of İskele.

Datça
A street view in Old Datça
Map showing Datça District in Muğla Province
Datça
Location in Turkey
Datça
Datça (Turkey Aegean)
Coordinates: 36°43′42″N 27°41′13″E / 36.7283°N 27.6869°E / 36.7283; 27.6869
CountryTurkey
ProvinceMuğla
Government
 • MayorAbdullah Gürsel Uçar (CHP)
Area
436 km2 (168 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)[1]
25,029
 • Density57/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zoneTRT (UTC+3)
Postal code
48900
Area code0252
Websitewww.datca.bel.tr

Name edit

The name Datça comes from Stadia, an ancient town near Cnidus. Stadia developed into Tadya, Dadya, Dadça, and then Datça.[4]

Both the town and the peninsula of Datça were called Reşadiye[5] for a brief period in the beginning of the 20th century, honoring the penultimate Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V Reşad, and some maps may still refer to the peninsula under this name; today Reşadiye is the name of one of the quarters of the town.

Geography edit

The long and narrow Datça Peninsula, whose outline follows the undulations of small bays and coves facing south or north all along its length which reaches near 100 km (62 mi), corresponds almost exactly to the Datça district, with the addition beyond its isthmus of a small panhandle in the direction of the south-east. The isthmus itself is only several hundred meters wide.

The extreme end of the western tip of the district and the peninsula, the locality called Tekir, is the location of the ancient city of Knidos. There is an ongoing debate on whether or not this location was the original site of the ancient city, a number of sources claiming that until the mid-4th century BCE, Knidos was halfway along the peninsula, near the present-day district center.[6]

The peninsula's eastern end is marked by the fjord-like indentation of Bencik Cove, 1.5 km in length, at the end of which the narrow isthmus where it joins the mainland is found. This point is a natural curiosity which offers a wide view of the Gulf of Gökova in the north and the Gulf of Hisarönü in the south and is called Balıkaşıran (literally, the place where fish may leap across) and is also often used for the portage of small boats. According to Herodotus, during the Persian invasions in 540 BC, the Knidians had sought to dig a canal at this spot as a defensive measure and in order to transform their territory into an island. But an oracle was consulted who reportedly said "If the gods had so willed, they would have made your land an island. Do not pierce the isthmus." Whereupon they surrendered to the Persians.

Climate edit

Datça has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen: Csa),[7] with very hot, dry summers, and mild, wet winters.

Climate data for Datça (1991–2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 15.2
(59.4)
15.6
(60.1)
17.7
(63.9)
20.8
(69.4)
25.6
(78.1)
30.6
(87.1)
33.0
(91.4)
33.3
(91.9)
29.9
(85.8)
25.5
(77.9)
20.7
(69.3)
16.7
(62.1)
23.8
(74.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 12.3
(54.1)
12.5
(54.5)
14.2
(57.6)
17.0
(62.6)
21.3
(70.3)
25.9
(78.6)
28.4
(83.1)
28.8
(83.8)
25.8
(78.4)
21.8
(71.2)
17.4
(63.3)
13.9
(57.0)
20.0
(68.0)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 9.6
(49.3)
9.6
(49.3)
11.0
(51.8)
13.3
(55.9)
17.2
(63.0)
21.7
(71.1)
24.3
(75.7)
24.8
(76.6)
22.0
(71.6)
18.4
(65.1)
14.4
(57.9)
11.3
(52.3)
16.5
(61.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 148.26
(5.84)
102.56
(4.04)
63.53
(2.50)
38.24
(1.51)
17.99
(0.71)
0.7
(0.03)
0.22
(0.01)
0.09
(0.00)
8.09
(0.32)
53.77
(2.12)
103.46
(4.07)
150.03
(5.91)
686.94
(27.04)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 10.9 9.1 6.6 4.4 2.8 1.2 1 1 1.8 3.5 5.8 9.7 57.8
Average relative humidity (%) 65.8 65.6 64.4 63.7 61.5 55.3 53.7 55.3 54.6 61.1 65.6 67.3 61.1
Source: NOAA[8]

Settlement edit

The quarters of the city of Datça are Reşadiye, Eski Datça 'Old Datça' and İskele 'quay', separated by about a mile from each other. Reşadiye was the original administrative core when the town was renamed Datça and turned into a district center in 1928, before it was moved to İskele quarter. The center town is crossed by the short course of the Datça Stream (Datça Çayı in Turkish).

 
Datça Peninsula is traced by many small bays and coves

The Datça district has nine villages scattered along the peninsula. These are; Cumalı, Emecik, Hızırşah, Karaköy, Kızlan, Mesudiye, Sındı, Yakaköy, Yazıköy. Historically, apart from small coastal patches, Datça Peninsula has two fertile areas along its length. The whole of the eastern half is bare, mountainous and scarcely inhabited. The western part is also mountainous, rising in places over 1,000 meters, but has towards its western end on the south side a considerable extent of well-watered land reaching to the coast at Palamutbükü locality and supporting a group of villages known collectively as Betçe (the five villages). These are; Mesudiye, Sındı, Yakaköy, Yazıköy, Cumalı. The village of Mesudiye, very near the sea shore has a jetty owned by the community of villagers. The village's bay is called Hayıtbükü. Palamutbükü locality, more to the west, also has a little pier which allows boats to moore. Palamutbükü today is a holiday village with a long beach.[9]

The second and larger area of good land is in the middle of the peninsula southwest of the median isthmus dividing the two halves and centered on the town of Datça. The region's promising potential was noted already in the 1880s by the hydrographer Thomas Abel B. Spratt in the following terms:

The plain and valley of Datça is very fertile, having fine groves of olive and valonia, and of almonds and other fruit trees, with abundance of water, if properly utilized.[10]

A point of note on the general settlement pattern of these villages is that the locations chosen were never in the immediate coastline, but always at a mile's distance or more from the sea and at a relatively safe altitude on the slopes of a hill. The reason was from times immemorial was the fear of pirates, advantaged as they were by the intricate geology of shores of southwestern Turkey and of the many islands and islets that are its natural extensions, in an environment not unlike that of the Caribbean Sea. Piracy remained a serious security problem well until the beginning of the 20th century and especially during the weakening of the Ottoman Empire and the issue often necessitated foreign intervention.

Composition edit

There are 12 neighbourhoods in Datça District:[11]

  • Cumalı
  • Datça
  • Emecik
  • Hızırşah
  • İskele
  • Karaköy
  • Kızlan
  • Mesudiye
  • Reşadiye
  • Sındı
  • Yakaköy
  • Yazıköy

Tourism edit

 
Windmills of Datça

Datça Peninsula is popular among tourists, especially by mariners, because of its many coves and larger bays, which are promoted as part of the Blue Cruise along Turkey's southwest coast. Boats (usually gulets) depart from Bodrum, Marmaris, or Datça.

The road from Marmaris to Datça is rough in parts.[citation needed]

 
A small cove in Datça

Apart from the traditional settlements, there are also a dozen recently constructed vacation villages on the peninsula.

Datça has become a major rock climbing destination since about 2013, most popular from fall to spring.[12]

Forest Fires edit

On 29 August 2012, a fire in the town of Emecik, Datca burned 75 hectares of forest.

Notable natives edit

In Turkish literature, Datça is associated with the poet and the accomplished translator (notably of Shakespeare) Can Yücel who spent the last decades of his life in Datça and is also buried here.

Twin Towns edit

   Houma, Louisiana, United States

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b "Address-based population registration system (ADNKS) results dated 31 December 2022, Favorite Reports" (XLS). TÜİK. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  2. ^ Büyükşehir İlçe Belediyesi, Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  3. ^ "İl ve İlçe Yüz ölçümleri". General Directorate of Mapping. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  4. ^ Tülay Artan, "Journeys and Landscapes in the Datça Peninsula: Ali Agaki of Crete and the Tuhfezade Dynasty", in Antonis Anastasopoulos, ed., Halcyon Days in Crete 6, Rethymno: Crete University Press 2009, p. 339 full text
  5. ^ Not to be confused with the town of Reşadiye in central-northern Anatolia.
  6. ^ George Ewart Bean (1989). Turkey beyond the Meander. John Murray Publishers Ltd, London. ISBN 978-0-7195-4663-1.
  7. ^ "Table 1 Overview of the Köppen-Geiger climate classes including the defining criteria". Nature: Scientific Data.
  8. ^ "World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991-2020 — Datça". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved January 14, 2024.
  9. ^ With the very high number of the bays and coves ornamenting Turkey's southwestern coastal straits, it is not uncommon for one of these to be spontaneously named after a certain person who could have had a connection to the locality of a temporary or a permanent sort. These names often evolve without the direct involvement of the person concerned. For example, the former "Bencik cove" before arriving in Datça is now widely known as "Emel Sayın cove" (Emel Sayın koyu) simply because she had found the place beautiful and had stopped there to give a short concert to those present. Similarly, "Bardakçı cove" in Bodrum is also called "Zeki Müren cove" (Zeki Müren koyu).
  10. ^ Thomas Abel Brimage Spratt (1886). Remarks on the Dorian Peninsula and Gulf, with Notes on a Temple of Latona there. Archaeologia, 49:345-365, London.
  11. ^ Mahalle, Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  12. ^ Rock climbing in Datça

External links edit

  • Short movie about Eski Datca
  • Rock Climbing in Datça

datça, municipality, district, muğla, province, turkey, area, population, 2022, town, center, situated, midway, through, peninsula, which, carries, same, name, district, town, peninsula, nahiya, marmaris, district, until, 1928, first, center, village, reşadiye. Datca is a municipality and district of Mugla Province Turkey 2 Its area is 436 km2 3 and its population is 25 029 2022 1 The town center is situated midway through the peninsula which carries the same name as the district and the town Datca Peninsula It was a nahiya of Marmaris District until 1928 Datca s first center in village of Resadiye till 1947 when it was moved to present borough of Iskele DatcaDistrict and municipalityA street view in Old DatcaMap showing Datca District in Mugla ProvinceDatcaLocation in TurkeyShow map of TurkeyDatcaDatca Turkey Aegean Show map of Turkey AegeanCoordinates 36 43 42 N 27 41 13 E 36 7283 N 27 6869 E 36 7283 27 6869CountryTurkeyProvinceMuglaGovernment MayorAbdullah Gursel Ucar CHP Area436 km2 168 sq mi Population 2022 1 25 029 Density57 km2 150 sq mi Time zoneTRT UTC 3 Postal code48900Area code0252Websitewww wbr datca wbr bel wbr tr Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Settlement 4 Composition 5 Tourism 6 Forest Fires 7 Notable natives 8 Twin Towns 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 External linksName editThe name Datca comes from Stadia an ancient town near Cnidus Stadia developed into Tadya Dadya Dadca and then Datca 4 Both the town and the peninsula of Datca were called Resadiye 5 for a brief period in the beginning of the 20th century honoring the penultimate Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V Resad and some maps may still refer to the peninsula under this name today Resadiye is the name of one of the quarters of the town Geography editThe long and narrow Datca Peninsula whose outline follows the undulations of small bays and coves facing south or north all along its length which reaches near 100 km 62 mi corresponds almost exactly to the Datca district with the addition beyond its isthmus of a small panhandle in the direction of the south east The isthmus itself is only several hundred meters wide The extreme end of the western tip of the district and the peninsula the locality called Tekir is the location of the ancient city of Knidos There is an ongoing debate on whether or not this location was the original site of the ancient city a number of sources claiming that until the mid 4th century BCE Knidos was halfway along the peninsula near the present day district center 6 The peninsula s eastern end is marked by the fjord like indentation of Bencik Cove 1 5 km in length at the end of which the narrow isthmus where it joins the mainland is found This point is a natural curiosity which offers a wide view of the Gulf of Gokova in the north and the Gulf of Hisaronu in the south and is called Balikasiran literally the place where fish may leap across and is also often used for the portage of small boats According to Herodotus during the Persian invasions in 540 BC the Knidians had sought to dig a canal at this spot as a defensive measure and in order to transform their territory into an island But an oracle was consulted who reportedly said If the gods had so willed they would have made your land an island Do not pierce the isthmus Whereupon they surrendered to the Persians Climate edit Datca has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Koppen Csa 7 with very hot dry summers and mild wet winters Climate data for Datca 1991 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 15 2 59 4 15 6 60 1 17 7 63 9 20 8 69 4 25 6 78 1 30 6 87 1 33 0 91 4 33 3 91 9 29 9 85 8 25 5 77 9 20 7 69 3 16 7 62 1 23 8 74 8 Daily mean C F 12 3 54 1 12 5 54 5 14 2 57 6 17 0 62 6 21 3 70 3 25 9 78 6 28 4 83 1 28 8 83 8 25 8 78 4 21 8 71 2 17 4 63 3 13 9 57 0 20 0 68 0 Mean daily minimum C F 9 6 49 3 9 6 49 3 11 0 51 8 13 3 55 9 17 2 63 0 21 7 71 1 24 3 75 7 24 8 76 6 22 0 71 6 18 4 65 1 14 4 57 9 11 3 52 3 16 5 61 7 Average precipitation mm inches 148 26 5 84 102 56 4 04 63 53 2 50 38 24 1 51 17 99 0 71 0 7 0 03 0 22 0 01 0 09 0 00 8 09 0 32 53 77 2 12 103 46 4 07 150 03 5 91 686 94 27 04 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 10 9 9 1 6 6 4 4 2 8 1 2 1 1 1 8 3 5 5 8 9 7 57 8Average relative humidity 65 8 65 6 64 4 63 7 61 5 55 3 53 7 55 3 54 6 61 1 65 6 67 3 61 1Source NOAA 8 Settlement editThe quarters of the city of Datca are Resadiye Eski Datca Old Datca and Iskele quay separated by about a mile from each other Resadiye was the original administrative core when the town was renamed Datca and turned into a district center in 1928 before it was moved to Iskele quarter The center town is crossed by the short course of the Datca Stream Datca Cayi in Turkish nbsp Datca Peninsula is traced by many small bays and covesThe Datca district has nine villages scattered along the peninsula These are Cumali Emecik Hizirsah Karakoy Kizlan Mesudiye Sindi Yakakoy Yazikoy Historically apart from small coastal patches Datca Peninsula has two fertile areas along its length The whole of the eastern half is bare mountainous and scarcely inhabited The western part is also mountainous rising in places over 1 000 meters but has towards its western end on the south side a considerable extent of well watered land reaching to the coast at Palamutbuku locality and supporting a group of villages known collectively as Betce the five villages These are Mesudiye Sindi Yakakoy Yazikoy Cumali The village of Mesudiye very near the sea shore has a jetty owned by the community of villagers The village s bay is called Hayitbuku Palamutbuku locality more to the west also has a little pier which allows boats to moore Palamutbuku today is a holiday village with a long beach 9 The second and larger area of good land is in the middle of the peninsula southwest of the median isthmus dividing the two halves and centered on the town of Datca The region s promising potential was noted already in the 1880s by the hydrographer Thomas Abel B Spratt in the following terms The plain and valley of Datca is very fertile having fine groves of olive and valonia and of almonds and other fruit trees with abundance of water if properly utilized 10 A point of note on the general settlement pattern of these villages is that the locations chosen were never in the immediate coastline but always at a mile s distance or more from the sea and at a relatively safe altitude on the slopes of a hill The reason was from times immemorial was the fear of pirates advantaged as they were by the intricate geology of shores of southwestern Turkey and of the many islands and islets that are its natural extensions in an environment not unlike that of the Caribbean Sea Piracy remained a serious security problem well until the beginning of the 20th century and especially during the weakening of the Ottoman Empire and the issue often necessitated foreign intervention Composition editThere are 12 neighbourhoods in Datca District 11 Cumali Datca Emecik Hizirsah Iskele Karakoy Kizlan Mesudiye Resadiye Sindi Yakakoy YazikoyTourism edit nbsp Windmills of DatcaDatca Peninsula is popular among tourists especially by mariners because of its many coves and larger bays which are promoted as part of the Blue Cruise along Turkey s southwest coast Boats usually gulets depart from Bodrum Marmaris or Datca The road from Marmaris to Datca is rough in parts citation needed nbsp A small cove in DatcaApart from the traditional settlements there are also a dozen recently constructed vacation villages on the peninsula Datca has become a major rock climbing destination since about 2013 most popular from fall to spring 12 Forest Fires editOn 29 August 2012 a fire in the town of Emecik Datca burned 75 hectares of forest Notable natives editIn Turkish literature Datca is associated with the poet and the accomplished translator notably of Shakespeare Can Yucel who spent the last decades of his life in Datca and is also buried here Twin Towns edit nbsp nbsp Houma Louisiana United StatesSee also editFethiye Bodrum Datca Peninsula Gulf of Gokova Marinas in Turkey Foreign purchases of real estate in TurkeyFootnotes edit a b Address based population registration system ADNKS results dated 31 December 2022 Favorite Reports XLS TUIK Retrieved 19 September 2023 Buyuksehir Ilce Belediyesi Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory Retrieved 19 September 2023 Il ve Ilce Yuz olcumleri General Directorate of Mapping Retrieved 19 September 2023 Tulay Artan Journeys and Landscapes in the Datca Peninsula Ali Agaki of Crete and the Tuhfezade Dynasty in Antonis Anastasopoulos ed Halcyon Days in Crete 6 Rethymno Crete University Press 2009 p 339 full text Not to be confused with the town of Resadiye in central northern Anatolia George Ewart Bean 1989 Turkey beyond the Meander John Murray Publishers Ltd London ISBN 978 0 7195 4663 1 Table 1 Overview of the Koppen Geiger climate classes including the defining criteria Nature Scientific Data World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991 2020 Datca National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved January 14 2024 With the very high number of the bays and coves ornamenting Turkey s southwestern coastal straits it is not uncommon for one of these to be spontaneously named after a certain person who could have had a connection to the locality of a temporary or a permanent sort These names often evolve without the direct involvement of the person concerned For example the former Bencik cove before arriving in Datca is now widely known as Emel Sayin cove Emel Sayin koyu simply because she had found the place beautiful and had stopped there to give a short concert to those present Similarly Bardakci cove in Bodrum is also called Zeki Muren cove Zeki Muren koyu Thomas Abel Brimage Spratt 1886 Remarks on the Dorian Peninsula and Gulf with Notes on a Temple of Latona there Archaeologia 49 345 365 London Mahalle Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory Retrieved 19 September 2023 Rock climbing in DatcaExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Datca nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Datca Official Datca History Short movie about Eski Datca Rock Climbing in Datca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Datca amp oldid 1195738232, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.