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Diyarbakır

Diyarbakır (Turkish pronunciation: [diˈjaɾ.bakɯɾ]; Armenian: Տիգրանակերտ, romanizedTigranakert, local pronunciation: Dikranagerd; Kurdish: Amed; Syriac: ܐܡܝܕ, romanizedĀmīd), formerly Diyarbekir, is the largest Kurdish-majority city in Turkey.[3] It is the administrative center of Diyarbakır Province.

Diyarbakır
Clockwise from top: A pond park in Diyarbakir, Hasan Pasha Han, historic city walls, Gazi Pavillion, A park in Diyarbakir, Ongözlü Bridge (The Dicle Bridge), Great Mosque of Diyarbakır.
Diyarbakır
Location of Diyarbakır within Turkey
Diyarbakır
Diyarbakır (Asia)
Diyarbakır
Diyarbakır (Europe)
Diyarbakır
Diyarbakır (Earth)
Coordinates: 37°55′N 40°14′E / 37.91°N 40.24°E / 37.91; 40.24
CountryTurkey
RegionSoutheastern Anatolia
ProvinceDiyarbakır
Government
 • MayorAyşe Serra Bucak Küçük (DEM Party)
Area
 • Metropolitan municipality15,058 km2 (5,814 sq mi)
 • Urban
2,410 km2 (930 sq mi)
 • Metro
2,410 km2 (930 sq mi)
Elevation
675 m (2,215 ft)
Population
 (2021 estimation)[1]
 • Metropolitan municipality1,791,373
 • Density120/km2 (310/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,129,218
 • Urban density470/km2 (1,200/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,129,218
 • Metro density470/km2 (1,200/sq mi)
GDP
 • Metropolitan municipalityTRY 62.494 billion
US$ 6.959 billion (2021)
 • Per capitaTRY 34,964
US$ 3,893 (2021)
Time zoneUTC+3 (TRT)
Postal code
21x xx
Area code412
Licence plate21
Websitewww.diyarbakir.gov.tr

Situated around a high plateau by the banks of the Tigris river on which stands the historic Diyarbakır Fortress, it is the administrative capital of the Diyarbakır Province of southeastern Turkey. It is the second-largest city in the Southeastern Anatolia Region. As of December 2021, the Metropolitan Province population was 1,791,373 of whom 1,129,218 lived in the built-up (or metro) area made of the 4 urban districts (Bağlar, Kayapınar, Sur and Yenişehir).

Diyarbakır has been a main focal point of the conflict between the Turkish state and various Kurdish separatist groups, and is seen by many Kurds as the de facto capital of Kurdistan.[4][5] The city was intended to become the capital of an independent Kurdistan following the Treaty of Sèvres, but this was disregarded following subsequent political developments.[6][7][8]

On 6 February 2023 Diyarbakır was affected by the twin Turkey-Syria earthquakes, which inflicted some damage on its city walls.[9]

Names and etymology edit

In ancient times the city was known as Amida, a name which could derive from an older Assyrian toponym Amedi.[10] The name Āmid was also used in Arabic.[11][12] The name Amit is found in official documents of the Empire of Trebizond from 1358.[13]

After the Muslim conquests of the 7th century, the city became known as Diyar Bakr (Arabic: ديار بكر, romanized: Diyār Bakr, lit.'the abode of [the tribe of] Bakr'), in reference to the territory of the Banu Bakr tribe, the Diyar Bakr.[12][14][15] That tribe had already settled in northern Mesopotomia during the pre-Islamic period. In the 7th century, during the caliphate of Uthman and under the regional governorship of Mu'awiya, a portion of the tribe was ordered to settle further north in the lands near the city.[12] The city was later also known in Turkish as Kara-Amid ("Black Amid"), on account of its black basalt walls.[16]

In November 1937, Turkish President Atatürk visited the city and after expressing uncertainty on the exact etymology of the city's name, "Diyarbekir", in December of the same year ordered that it be renamed "Diyarbakır", which means "land of copper" in Turkish after the abundant resources of copper around the city.[17] This was one of the early examples of the Turkification process of non-Turkish place names, in which non-Turkish (Kurdish, Armenian, Arabic and other) geographical names were changed to Turkish alternatives.[18][19]

The modern Armenian name of the city is Tigranakert (Տիգրանակերտ).[20] It is known as Amed in Kurdish[21] and in Syriac as ܐܡܝܕ (Āmīd).[22]

History edit

Antiquity edit

 
Kurkh stele of Shalmaneser III in the British Museum, 9th century BC

People have inhabited the area around Diyarbakır since the Stone Age. The first major civilization to establish itself in the region of Diyarbakır was the Hurrian kingdom of the Mitanni. It was then ruled by a succession of nearly every polity that controlled Upper Mesopotamia, including the Arameans, Assyrians, Urartu, Armenians, Achaemenid Persians, Medes, Seleucids, and Parthians.[23] The Roman Republic gained control of the city in 66 BC, by which stage it was named "Amida".[24] In 359, Shapur II of Persia captured Amida after a siege of 73 days.[25][26]

According to the Synecdemus of Hierocles, as Amida, Diyarbakır was the major city of the Roman province of Mesopotamia.[27] It was the episcopal see of the Christian diocese of Mesopotamia.[27] Ancient texts record that ancient Amida had an amphitheatre, thermae (public baths), warehouses, a tetrapylon monument, and Roman aqueducts supplying and distributing water.[28] The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus was serving in the late Roman army during the Siege of Amida by the Sasanian Empire under Shapur II (r. 309–379), and described the successful siege in detail.[28] Amida was then enlarged by refugees from ancient Nisibis (Nusaybin), which the emperor Jovian (r. 363–364) was forced to evacuate and cede to Shapur's Persians after the defeat of his predecessor Julian's Persian War, becoming the main Roman stronghold in the region.[28] The chronicle attributed to Joshua the Stylite describes the capture of Amida by the Persians under Kavad I (r. 488–531) in the second Siege of Amida in 502–503, part of the Anastasian War.[28]

Either the emperor Anastasius Dicorus (r. 491–518) or the emperor Justinian the Great (r. 527–565) rebuilt the walls of Amida, a feat of defensive architecture praised by the Greek historian Procopius.[28] As recorded by the works of John of Ephesus, Zacharias Rhetor, and Procopius, the Romans and Persians continued to contest the area, and in the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 Amida was captured and held by the Persians for twenty-six years, being recovered in 628 for the Romans by the emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641), who also founded a church in the city on his return to Constantinople (Istanbul) from Persia the following year.[27][28]

Ecclesiastical history edit

 
Page from abridged Bible created in Diyarbakır in 1601 by the Serapion of Edessa for the future Co-Catholicos of All Armenians, now at the Chester Beatty Library

Syriac Christianity took hold in the region between the 1st and 4th centuries AD, particularly amongst the Assyrians of the city. The Byzantine Emperor Theodosius II (408–450) divided the Roman province of Mesopotamia into two, and made Amida the capital of Mesopotamia Prima, and thereby also the metropolitan see for all the province's bishoprics.[29]

At some stage, Amida became a see of the Armenian Church. The bishops who held the see in 1650 and 1681 were in full communion with the Holy See, and in 1727 Peter Derboghossian sent his profession of faith to Rome. He was succeeded by two more bishops of the Armenian Catholic Church, Eugenius and Ioannes of Smyrna, the latter of whom died in Constantinople in 1785. After a long vacancy, three more bishops followed.[30][31][32][33][34] The diocese had some 5,000 Armenian Catholics in 1903,[35] but it lost most of its population in the 1915 Armenian genocide. The last diocesan bishop of the see, Andreas Elias Celebian, was killed with some 600 of his flock in the summer of 1915.[30][31][32][33]

An eparchy for the local members of the Syriac Catholic Church was established in 1862. Persecution of Christians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War brought an end to the existence of both these Syrian residential sees.[30][31][36][37]

Middle Ages edit

 
Fragment of an unglazed jar from Diyarbakir, 13th century AD

In 639, as part of the Muslim conquest of the Levant during the early Arab–Byzantine wars, Amida fell to the armies of the Rashidun Caliphate led by Iyad ibn Ghanm, and the Great Mosque of Amida was constructed afterwards in the city's centre, possibly on the site of the Heraclian Church of Saint Thomas.[27][28][26] There were as many as five Christian monasteries in the city, including the Zuqnin Monastery and several ancient churches mentioned by John of Ephesus.[28] One of these, the Church of the Virgin Mary, remains the city's cathedral and the see of the bishop of Diyarbakır in the Syriac Orthodox Church.[28] Another ancient church, the Church of Mar Cosmas, was seen by the British explorer Gertrude Bell in 1911 but was destroyed in 1930, while the former Church of Saint George, in the walled citadel, may originally have been built for Muslim use or for the Church of the East.[28]

The city was part of the Umayyad Caliphate and then the Abbasid Caliphate, but then came under more local rule until its recovery in 899 by forces loyal to the caliph al-Mu'tadid (r. 892–902) before falling under the sway of first the Hamdanid dynasty and then the Buyid dynasty, followed by a period of control by the Marwanids. The city was taken by the Seljuks in 1085 and by the Ayyubids in 1183. Ayyubid control lasted until the Mongol invasions of Anatolia, with its last Ayyubid ruler Al-Kamil Muhammad. The Mongols of Hulagu captured of the city in 1260 (Siege of Mayyāfāriqīn), following a long siege with a small Mongol force and a much larger Georgian and Armenian force under the Georgian leader Hasan Brosh.[38] Between the Mongol occupation and conquest by the Safavid dynasty of Iran, the Kara Koyunlu and Aq Qoyunlu – two Turkoman confederations – were in control of the city in succession. Diyarbakır was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1514 by Bıyıklı Mehmed Pasha, in the reign of the sultan Selim I (r. 1512–1520). Mohammad Khan Ustajlu, the Safavid governor of Diyarbakir, was evicted from the city and killed in the following Battle of Chaldiran in 1514.[39][40]

Safavids and Ottomans edit

 
16th-century plan of Diyarbakır by Matrakci Nasuh

The Classical Age of the Ottoman Empire saw it expand into Western Armenia and all but the eastern regions of Kurdistan at the expense of the Safavids. From the early 16th century, the city and the wider region was the source of intrigue between the Safavids and the Ottoman Empire, both of whom sought the support of the Kurdish chieftains around Idris Bitlisi.[39] It was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1514 in the campaigns of Bıyıklı Mehmed Pasha, under the rule of Sultan Selim I. Mohammad Khan Ustajlu, the Safavid Governor of Diyarbakir, was evicted from the city and killed in the following Battle of Chaldiran in 1514.[39]

Following their victory, the Ottomans established the Diyarbekir Eyalet with its administrative centre in Diyarbakır. The Eyalet of Diyarbakır corresponded to today's Turkish Kurdistan, a rectangular area between the Lake Urmia to Palu and from the southern shores of Lake Van to Cizre and the beginnings of the Syrian desert, although its borders saw some changes over time. The city was an important military base for controlling the region and at the same time a thriving city noted for its craftsmen, producing glass and metalwork. For example, the doors of Rumi's tomb in Konya were made in Diyarbakır, as were the gold and silver decorated doors of the tomb of Ebu Hanife in Baghdad. Ottoman rule was confirmed by the 1555 Peace of Amasya which followed the Ottoman–Safavid War (1532–1555).

 
Depiction of Diyarbakır in a 17th-century Ottoman map, possibly created by Evliya Çelebi

Concerned with independent-mindedness of the Kurdish principalities, the Ottomans sought to curb their influence and bring them under the control of the central government in Constantinople. However, removal from power of these hereditary principalities led to more instability in the region from the 1840s onwards. In their place, sufi sheiks and religious orders rose to prominence and spread their influence throughout the region. One of the prominent Sufi leaders was Shaikh Ubaidalla Nahri, who began a revolt in the region between Lakes Van and Urmia. The area under his control covered both Ottoman and Qajar territories. Shaikh Ubaidalla is regarded as one of the earliest proponents of Kurdish nationalism. In a letter to a British Vice-Consul, he declared: "The Kurdish nation is a people apart... we want our affairs to be in our hands."

 
Diyarbakır, c. 1900

In 1895 an estimated 25,000 Armenians and Assyrians were massacred in Diyarbekir Vilayet, including in the city.[41] At the turn of the 19th century, the Christian population of the city was mainly made up of Armenians and Syriac Orthodox Christians.[42] The city was also a site of ethnic cleansing during the 1915 Armenian and Assyrian genocide; nearly 150,000 were expelled from the city to the death marches in the Syrian Desert.[43]

Republic of Turkey edit

In January 1928, Diyarbakır became the center of the First Inspectorate-General, a regional subdivision for an area containing the provinces of Hakkari, Van, Şırnak, Mardin, Siirt, Bitlis and Şanlıurfa. In a reorganization of the provinces in 1952, Diyarbakır city was made the administrative capital of the Diyarbakır Province. In 1993, Diyarbakir was established as a Metropolitan Municipality.[44] Its districts are Bağlar, Bismil, Ergani, Hazro, Kayapinar, Çermik, Çinar, Eğil, Dicle, Kulp, Kocaköy, Lice, Silvan, Sur, Yenişehir, Hani and Çüngüş.[45]

The American-Turkish Pirinçlik Air Force Base near Diyarbakır was operational from 1956 to 1997.

Diyarbakır has seen much violence in recent years, involving Turkish security forces, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).[46][47][48] Between 8 November 2015 and 15 May 2016 large parts of Sur were destroyed in fighting between the Turkish military and the PKK.[49] In early November 2015, Kurdish lawyer and human rights activist Tahir Elçi was killed in the Sur district during a press statement in which he had been calling for a de-escalation in violence between the PKK and the Turkish state.[50]

 
Diyarbakır's city walls in the Sur district (2010 photo)

A 2018 report by Arkeologlar Derneği İstanbul found that, since 2015, 72% of the city's historic Sur district had been destroyed through demolition and redevelopment, and that laws designed to protect historic monuments had been ignored. They found that the city's "urban regeneration" policy was one of demolition and redevelopment rather than one of repairing cultural assets damaged during the recent civil conflict, and because of that many registered historic buildings had been completely destroyed. The extent of the loss of non-registered historic structures is unknown because any historic building fragments revealed during the demolition of modern structures were also demolished.[51] As of 2021, large parts of the city and district were restored and government officials were looking towards tourism again.[52][53][54][26]

Many residences and buildings collapsed or suffered substantial damage in the 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquakes around 200 miles (300 km) from the epicentre.[55][56][57] A Turkish professor and former journalist from the country commented, "It is like having an epicenter of an earthquake in Harrisburg and buildings in New York City are collapsing."[58]

Sports edit

The most notable football clubs of the city are Diyarbakırspor (established 1968) and Amed S.F.K. (established 1990),[59] with Deniz Naki being one of the most notable footballers from the city. The women's football team Amed S.K. were promoted at the end of the 2016–17 Turkish Women's Second Football League season to the Women's First League.[60]

Politics edit

In the 2014 local elections, Gültan Kışanak and Fırat Anlı of the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) were elected co-mayors of Diyarbakır. However, on 25 October 2016, both were detained by Turkish authorities "on thinly supported charges of being a member of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)".[61] The Turkish government ordered a general internet blackout after the arrest.[62] Nevertheless, on 26 October, several thousand demonstrators at Diyarbakir city hall demanded the mayors' release.[61] Some days later, the Turkish government appointed an unelected state trustee as the mayor.[63] In November, public prosecutors demanded a 230-year prison sentence for Kışanak.[64]

In January 2017, the un-elected state trustee appointed by the Turkish government ordered the removal of the Assyrian sculpture of a mythological winged bull from the town hall, which had been erected by the BDP mayors to commemorate the Assyrian history of the town and its still resident Assyrian minority. All Kurdish language street signs were also removed, alongside the shutting down of organisations concerned with Kurdish language and culture, removal of Kurdish names from public parks, and removal of Kurdish cultural monuments and linguistic symbols.[65][66]

In the 2019 municipal elections, Adnan Selçuk Mızraklı of the HDP party was elected mayor of Diyarbakir.[67] In August 2019 he was dismissed and subsequently sentenced to 9 years and 4 months imprisonment accused of supporting terrorism as part of a government crackdown against politicians of the Kurdish HDP party; the Turkish state appointed Münir Karaloğlu in his place.[68] Other Kurdish mayors in Kurdish cities across the region also suffered a similar fate, with Turkish President Erdoğan vowing to remove any future Kurdish mayors too.[69][70] Protests against the decision arose which were suppressed by the Turkish police with the use of water cannons; some protestors were killed.[71][72][73] Diyarbakır's prison has become home to many political prisoners, mainly Kurdish activists and politicians accused of terrorism charges by the Turkish state. Inmates have been subject to torture, rape, humiliation, beating, murder and other abuses.[74]

Economy edit

Historically, Diyarbakır produced wheat and sesame.[75][76] They would preserve the wheat in warehouses, with coverings of straw and twigs from licorice trees. This system would allow the wheat to be preserved for up to ten years.[75][26] In the late 19th and early 20th century, Diyarbakır exported raisins, almonds, and apricots to Europe.[76] Angora goats were raised, and wool and mohair was exported from Diyarbakır. Merchants would also come from Egypt, Istanbul, and Syria, to purchase goats and sheep.[77] Honey was also produced, but not so much exported, but used by locals. Sericulture was observed in the area, too.[78]

Prior to World War I, Diyarbakır had an active copper industry, with six mines. Three were active, with two being owned by locals and the third being owned by the Turkish government. Tenorite was the primary type of copper mined. It was mined by hand by Kurds. A large portion of the ore was exported to England. The region also produced iron, gypsum, coal, chalk, lime, jet, and quartz, but primarily for local use.[79]

The city is served by Diyarbakır Airport and Diyarbakır railway station. In 1935 the railway between Elazığ and Diyarbakır was inaugurated.[80]

Demographics edit

At the turn of the 19th century, the Christian population of the city was mainly made up of Armenians and Assyrians.[42] The Assyrian and Armenian presence dates to antiquity.[81] There was also a small Jewish community in the city.[82] All Christians spoke Armenian and Kurdish. Notables spoke Turkish. In the streets, the language was Kurdish.[83] According to the Encyclopædia Britannica from 1911, the population numbered 38 thousand, almost half being Christian and consisting of Turks, Kurds, Arabs, Turkomans, Armenians, Chaldeans, Jacobites, and a few Greeks.[84] During the Governorship of Mehmed Reshid in the Vilayet of Diyarbakır, the Armenian population of Diyarbakir was resettled and exterminated.[85]

After World War II, as the Kurdish population moved from the villages and mountains to urban centres, Diyarbakir's Kurdish population continued to grow.[86] Diyarbakır grew from a population of 30,000 in the 1930s to 65,000 by 1956, to 140,000 by 1970, to 400,000 by 1990,[87] and eventually swelled to about 1.5 million by 1997.[88] During the 1990s, the city grew dramatically due to the immigrant population from thousands of Kurdish villages depopulated by Turkey during the Kurdish–Turkish conflict.[89]

According to a November 2006 survey by the Sûr Municipality, 72% of the inhabitants of the municipality use Kurdish most often in their daily speech due to the overwhelming Kurdish majority in the city, followed by minorities of Assyrian, Armenian and Turkish.[90]

There are some Alevi Turkmen villages around Diyarbakır's old city, but there are no official reports about their population numbers.[82][91]

There have been attempts by Turkish lawmakers to deny Diyarbakır's Kurdish majority identity,[92] with Turkey's Education Ministry releasing a school book named "Our City, Diyarbakir" ("Şehrimiz Diyarbakır" in Turkish) on Diyarbakir Province in which it claims that a Turkish similar to that spoken in Baku is spoken in the city along with regional languages like Arabic, Persian, Kurdish, Turkmen and Caucasian languages.[93][90][94][95] Critics link this to a general trend towards anti-Kurdish sentiment in Turkey.[92]

Culture edit

There is local jewelry making and other craftwork in the area. Folk dancing to the drum and zurna (pipe) are a part of weddings and celebrations in the area. The Diyarbakir Municipality Theatre was founded in 1990, and had to close its doors in 1995.[96] It was re-opened in 1999,[96] under Mayor Osman Baydemir. It was closed down in 2016 after the dismissal of the mayor in 2016.[97][98] The Municipality City Theatre also performed plays in the Kurdish language.[97][99]

One of the other common celebrations in Turkey is Nowruz. This celebration is done on the pretext of the beginning of spring and the beginning of the new year. The establishment of Nowruz has a long history, so much so that it has been celebrated in different parts of Asia for the past three thousand years, especially in the Middle East. In different parts of Turkey, especially the Kurdish regions of this country, Nowruz is considered one of the most important cultural and historical traditions of these regions. Lighting a fire, wearing new clothes, holding a dance ceremony, and giving gifts to each other are some of the activities that are done in this celebration.[26][100][101][102][103]

Cuisine edit

Diyarbakır's cuisine includes lamb dishes which use spices such as black pepper, sumac and coriander; rice, bulgur and butter. Local dishes include Meftune, lamb meat and vegetables with garlic and sumac, and Kaburga Dolması, baked lamb's ribs stuffed with rice, almonds and spices.[104] Watermelons are grown locally and there is an annual Watermelon Festival.[105]

Main sights edit

 
The Evli Beden or Ulu Beden Tower in the southern city walls, built in 1208 during the Artuqid period by Nasir al-Din Artuq Arslan.[106][107]

The core of Diyarbakır is surrounded by an almost intact set of high walls of black basalt forming a 5.5 km (3.4 mi) circle around the old city. There are four gates into the old city and 82 watch-towers on the walls, which were built in antiquity and restored and extended by the Roman emperor Constantius II in 349. The area inside the walls is known as the Sur district; before its recent demolition and redevelopment this district had 599 registered historical buildings.[51] Nearby is Karaca Dağ.[citation needed]

Medieval mosques and medreses edit

 
Sheikh Matar Mosque with its four-legged minaret
  • Great Mosque of Diyarbakır built by the Seljuk Turkish Sultan Malik Shah in the 11th century. The mosque, one of the oldest in Turkey, is constructed in alternating bands of black basalt and white limestone (The same patterning is used in the 16th century Deliler Han Madrassah, which is now a hotel). The adjoining Mesudiye Medresesi/Medreseya Mesûdiyeyê was built at the same time, as was another prayer-school in the city, Zinciriye Medresesi/Medreseya Zincîriyeyê.
  • Behram Pasha Mosque (Beharampaşa Camii/Mizgefta Behram Paşa) – an Ottoman mosque built in 1572 by the governor of Diyarbakır, Behram Pasha, noted for the well-constructed arches at the entrance.
  • Sheikh Matar Mosque with Dört Ayaklı Minare/Mizgefta Çarling (the Four-legged Minaret) – built by Kasim Khan of the Aq Qoyunlu.
  • Fatihpaşa Camii/Mizgefta Fetih Paşa – built in 1520 by Diyarbakır's first Ottoman governor, Bıyıklı Mehmet Paşa ("the moustachioed Mehmet pasha"). The city's earliest Ottoman building, it is decorated with fine tilework.
  • Hazreti Süleyman Mosque/Mizgefta Hezretî Silêman (1155–1169) Süleyman son of Halid Bin Velid, who died capturing the city from the Arabs, is buried here along with his companions.
  • Hüsrevpaşa Camii/Mizgefta Husrev Paşa – the mosque of the second Ottoman governor, 1512–1528. Originally the building was intended to be a school (medrese)
  • İskender Paşa Camii/Mizgefta Îskender Paşa – a mosque of an Ottoman governor, in black and white stone, built in 1551.
  • Melek Ahmet Camii/Melek Ahmed Paşa a 16th-century mosque with tiled prayer-niche and for the double stairway up the minaret.
  • Nebii Camii/Mizgefta Pêxember – an Aq Qoyunlu mosque, a single-domed stone construction from the 16th century. Nebi Camii means "the mosque of the prophet" and is named for the inscriptions in honour of the prophet on its minaret.
  • Safa Camii/Mizgefta Palo – built in the middle of the 15th century under Uzun Hasan, ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu (White Sheep Turkomans) tribe[108] and restored in Ottoman time in 1532.

Churches edit

 
The Syriac Orthodox St. Mary Church, Diyarbakır
 
St. Giragos Armenian Church

Museums edit

 
Interior of the Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı Museum, an example of Diyarbakır's historic domestic architecture, built in local dark basalt

Other historical buildings edit

  • The Diyarbakır Fortress and Hevsel Gardens Cultural Landscape, named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2015.[113][114]
  • Hasan Pasha Han, a large 16th-century Ottoman caravanserai, now hosting shops and cafés.[115][116]
  • Delliler Han, a caravanserai built in 1527, now used as a five-star hotel.[115][116]
  • Sülüklü Han, built circa 1680, now a popular café and meeting spot.[116]
  • The Dicle Bridge, an 11th-century bridge with ten arches.
  • Urfa Kapi, Urfa Kapi (Urfa Gate) is one of the four main gates built in the 4th century Byzantine era city walls of Diyarbakir that leads the road from the west to the town of Urfa.[117]

Climate edit

Diyarbakır has a Mediterranean (Köppen climate classification: Csa) or an anomalously warm, hot-summer oceanic climate (Trewartha climate classification: Doa). Summers are very hot and very dry, due to its location on the Mesopotamian plain which is subject to hot air masses from the deserts of Syria and Iraq to the south. The highest recorded temperature was 46.2 °C (112.64 °F) on 21 July 1937. Winters are chilly with moderate precipitation and frosty nights. Snowfall is quite common between the months of December and March, snowing for a week or two. [citation needed] The lowest recorded temperature was −24.2 °C (−10.12 °F) on 11 January 1933. Highest recorded snow depth was 65 cm (25.6 inches) on 16 January 1971.

Climate data for Diyarbakır (1991–2020, extremes 1929–2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 16.9
(62.4)
21.8
(71.2)
28.3
(82.9)
35.3
(95.5)
39.8
(103.6)
42.0
(107.6)
46.2
(115.2)
45.9
(114.6)
42.0
(107.6)
35.7
(96.3)
28.4
(83.1)
22.5
(72.5)
46.2
(115.2)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.3
(45.1)
9.6
(49.3)
15.0
(59.0)
20.5
(68.9)
26.8
(80.2)
34.4
(93.9)
38.9
(102.0)
38.7
(101.7)
33.4
(92.1)
25.7
(78.3)
16.3
(61.3)
9.2
(48.6)
23.0
(73.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 2.1
(35.8)
3.8
(38.8)
8.7
(47.7)
13.5
(56.3)
18.9
(66.0)
26.3
(79.3)
31.0
(87.8)
30.5
(86.9)
25.0
(77.0)
17.8
(64.0)
9.3
(48.7)
3.8
(38.8)
15.9
(60.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −2.0
(28.4)
−1.1
(30.0)
2.6
(36.7)
6.6
(43.9)
10.9
(51.6)
16.8
(62.2)
21.7
(71.1)
21.2
(70.2)
15.9
(60.6)
10.4
(50.7)
3.8
(38.8)
−0.5
(31.1)
8.9
(48.0)
Record low °C (°F) −24.2
(−11.6)
−21.0
(−5.8)
−14.0
(6.8)
−6.1
(21.0)
0.8
(33.4)
1.8
(35.2)
9.9
(49.8)
11.4
(52.5)
0.0
(32.0)
−1.8
(28.8)
−12.9
(8.8)
−23.4
(−10.1)
−24.2
(−11.6)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 63.6
(2.50)
66.8
(2.63)
67.5
(2.66)
63.1
(2.48)
50.0
(1.97)
10.8
(0.43)
1.0
(0.04)
0.4
(0.02)
8.4
(0.33)
37.3
(1.47)
54.3
(2.14)
75.2
(2.96)
498.4
(19.62)
Average precipitation days 11.77 11.10 12.80 12.43 11.40 3.80 0.83 0.60 2.13 7.00 8.20 11.83 93.9
Average relative humidity (%) 76.4 71.8 66.4 65.1 57.3 34.4 25.2 24.7 30.6 47.7 64.7 76.5 53.3
Mean monthly sunshine hours 124.0 135.6 173.6 210.0 282.1 348.0 362.7 341.0 279.0 220.1 165.0 114.7 2,755.8
Mean daily sunshine hours 4.0 4.8 5.6 7.0 9.1 11.6 11.7 11.0 9.3 7.1 5.5 3.7 7.5
Source 1: Turkish State Meteorological Service[118]
Source 2: NOAA (humidity, 1991–2020)[119]

Notable people born in the city edit

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

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37°55′N 40°14′E / 37.91°N 40.24°E / 37.91; 40.24

diyarbakır, amid, redirects, here, other, uses, amid, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, turkish, pronunciation, diˈjaɾ, bakɯɾ, armenian, Տիգրանակերտ, romanized, tigranakert, local, pronunciation, dikranagerd, kurdish, amed, syriac, ܐܡܝܕ, romanized, . Amid redirects here For other uses see Amid disambiguation For other uses see Diyarbakir disambiguation Diyarbakir Turkish pronunciation diˈjaɾ bakɯɾ Armenian Տիգրանակերտ romanized Tigranakert local pronunciation Dikranagerd Kurdish Amed Syriac ܐܡܝܕ romanized Amid formerly Diyarbekir is the largest Kurdish majority city in Turkey 3 It is the administrative center of Diyarbakir Province DiyarbakirMetropolitan municipalityClockwise from top A pond park in Diyarbakir Hasan Pasha Han historic city walls Gazi Pavillion A park in Diyarbakir Ongozlu Bridge The Dicle Bridge Great Mosque of Diyarbakir Emblem of Diyarbakir Metropolitan MunicipalityDiyarbakirLocation of Diyarbakir within TurkeyShow map of TurkeyDiyarbakirDiyarbakir Asia Show map of AsiaDiyarbakirDiyarbakir Europe Show map of EuropeDiyarbakirDiyarbakir Earth Show map of EarthCoordinates 37 55 N 40 14 E 37 91 N 40 24 E 37 91 40 24CountryTurkeyRegionSoutheastern AnatoliaProvinceDiyarbakirGovernment MayorAyse Serra Bucak Kucuk DEM Party Area Metropolitan municipality15 058 km2 5 814 sq mi Urban2 410 km2 930 sq mi Metro2 410 km2 930 sq mi Elevation675 m 2 215 ft Population 2021 estimation 1 Metropolitan municipality1 791 373 Density120 km2 310 sq mi Urban1 129 218 Urban density470 km2 1 200 sq mi Metro1 129 218 Metro density470 km2 1 200 sq mi GDP 2 Metropolitan municipalityTRY 62 494 billionUS 6 959 billion 2021 Per capitaTRY 34 964US 3 893 2021 Time zoneUTC 3 TRT Postal code21x xxArea code412Licence plate21Websitewww diyarbakir gov tr Situated around a high plateau by the banks of the Tigris river on which stands the historic Diyarbakir Fortress it is the administrative capital of the Diyarbakir Province of southeastern Turkey It is the second largest city in the Southeastern Anatolia Region As of December 2021 the Metropolitan Province population was 1 791 373 of whom 1 129 218 lived in the built up or metro area made of the 4 urban districts Baglar Kayapinar Sur and Yenisehir Diyarbakir has been a main focal point of the conflict between the Turkish state and various Kurdish separatist groups and is seen by many Kurds as the de facto capital of Kurdistan 4 5 The city was intended to become the capital of an independent Kurdistan following the Treaty of Sevres but this was disregarded following subsequent political developments 6 7 8 On 6 February 2023 Diyarbakir was affected by the twin Turkey Syria earthquakes which inflicted some damage on its city walls 9 Contents 1 Names and etymology 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Ecclesiastical history 2 3 Middle Ages 2 4 Safavids and Ottomans 2 5 Republic of Turkey 3 Sports 4 Politics 5 Economy 6 Demographics 7 Culture 7 1 Cuisine 8 Main sights 8 1 Medieval mosques and medreses 8 2 Churches 8 3 Museums 8 4 Other historical buildings 9 Climate 10 Notable people born in the city 11 See also 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksNames and etymology editIn ancient times the city was known as Amida a name which could derive from an older Assyrian toponym Amedi 10 The name Amid was also used in Arabic 11 12 The name Amit is found in official documents of the Empire of Trebizond from 1358 13 After the Muslim conquests of the 7th century the city became known as Diyar Bakr Arabic ديار بكر romanized Diyar Bakr lit the abode of the tribe of Bakr in reference to the territory of the Banu Bakr tribe the Diyar Bakr 12 14 15 That tribe had already settled in northern Mesopotomia during the pre Islamic period In the 7th century during the caliphate of Uthman and under the regional governorship of Mu awiya a portion of the tribe was ordered to settle further north in the lands near the city 12 The city was later also known in Turkish as Kara Amid Black Amid on account of its black basalt walls 16 In November 1937 Turkish President Ataturk visited the city and after expressing uncertainty on the exact etymology of the city s name Diyarbekir in December of the same year ordered that it be renamed Diyarbakir which means land of copper in Turkish after the abundant resources of copper around the city 17 This was one of the early examples of the Turkification process of non Turkish place names in which non Turkish Kurdish Armenian Arabic and other geographical names were changed to Turkish alternatives 18 19 The modern Armenian name of the city is Tigranakert Տիգրանակերտ 20 It is known as Amed in Kurdish 21 and in Syriac as ܐܡܝܕ Amid 22 History editMain article History of Diyarbakir Antiquity edit nbsp Kurkh stele of Shalmaneser III in the British Museum 9th century BC People have inhabited the area around Diyarbakir since the Stone Age The first major civilization to establish itself in the region of Diyarbakir was the Hurrian kingdom of the Mitanni It was then ruled by a succession of nearly every polity that controlled Upper Mesopotamia including the Arameans Assyrians Urartu Armenians Achaemenid Persians Medes Seleucids and Parthians 23 The Roman Republic gained control of the city in 66 BC by which stage it was named Amida 24 In 359 Shapur II of Persia captured Amida after a siege of 73 days 25 26 According to the Synecdemus of Hierocles as Amida Diyarbakir was the major city of the Roman province of Mesopotamia 27 It was the episcopal see of the Christian diocese of Mesopotamia 27 Ancient texts record that ancient Amida had an amphitheatre thermae public baths warehouses a tetrapylon monument and Roman aqueducts supplying and distributing water 28 The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus was serving in the late Roman army during the Siege of Amida by the Sasanian Empire under Shapur II r 309 379 and described the successful siege in detail 28 Amida was then enlarged by refugees from ancient Nisibis Nusaybin which the emperor Jovian r 363 364 was forced to evacuate and cede to Shapur s Persians after the defeat of his predecessor Julian s Persian War becoming the main Roman stronghold in the region 28 The chronicle attributed to Joshua the Stylite describes the capture of Amida by the Persians under Kavad I r 488 531 in the second Siege of Amida in 502 503 part of the Anastasian War 28 Either the emperor Anastasius Dicorus r 491 518 or the emperor Justinian the Great r 527 565 rebuilt the walls of Amida a feat of defensive architecture praised by the Greek historian Procopius 28 As recorded by the works of John of Ephesus Zacharias Rhetor and Procopius the Romans and Persians continued to contest the area and in the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 Amida was captured and held by the Persians for twenty six years being recovered in 628 for the Romans by the emperor Heraclius r 610 641 who also founded a church in the city on his return to Constantinople Istanbul from Persia the following year 27 28 Ecclesiastical history edit nbsp Page from abridged Bible created in Diyarbakir in 1601 by the Serapion of Edessa for the future Co Catholicos of All Armenians now at the Chester Beatty Library Syriac Christianity took hold in the region between the 1st and 4th centuries AD particularly amongst the Assyrians of the city The Byzantine Emperor Theodosius II 408 450 divided the Roman province of Mesopotamia into two and made Amida the capital of Mesopotamia Prima and thereby also the metropolitan see for all the province s bishoprics 29 At some stage Amida became a see of the Armenian Church The bishops who held the see in 1650 and 1681 were in full communion with the Holy See and in 1727 Peter Derboghossian sent his profession of faith to Rome He was succeeded by two more bishops of the Armenian Catholic Church Eugenius and Ioannes of Smyrna the latter of whom died in Constantinople in 1785 After a long vacancy three more bishops followed 30 31 32 33 34 The diocese had some 5 000 Armenian Catholics in 1903 35 but it lost most of its population in the 1915 Armenian genocide The last diocesan bishop of the see Andreas Elias Celebian was killed with some 600 of his flock in the summer of 1915 30 31 32 33 An eparchy for the local members of the Syriac Catholic Church was established in 1862 Persecution of Christians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War brought an end to the existence of both these Syrian residential sees 30 31 36 37 Middle Ages edit See also Diyar Bakr nbsp Fragment of an unglazed jar from Diyarbakir 13th century AD In 639 as part of the Muslim conquest of the Levant during the early Arab Byzantine wars Amida fell to the armies of the Rashidun Caliphate led by Iyad ibn Ghanm and the Great Mosque of Amida was constructed afterwards in the city s centre possibly on the site of the Heraclian Church of Saint Thomas 27 28 26 There were as many as five Christian monasteries in the city including the Zuqnin Monastery and several ancient churches mentioned by John of Ephesus 28 One of these the Church of the Virgin Mary remains the city s cathedral and the see of the bishop of Diyarbakir in the Syriac Orthodox Church 28 Another ancient church the Church of Mar Cosmas was seen by the British explorer Gertrude Bell in 1911 but was destroyed in 1930 while the former Church of Saint George in the walled citadel may originally have been built for Muslim use or for the Church of the East 28 The city was part of the Umayyad Caliphate and then the Abbasid Caliphate but then came under more local rule until its recovery in 899 by forces loyal to the caliph al Mu tadid r 892 902 before falling under the sway of first the Hamdanid dynasty and then the Buyid dynasty followed by a period of control by the Marwanids The city was taken by the Seljuks in 1085 and by the Ayyubids in 1183 Ayyubid control lasted until the Mongol invasions of Anatolia with its last Ayyubid ruler Al Kamil Muhammad The Mongols of Hulagu captured of the city in 1260 Siege of Mayyafariqin following a long siege with a small Mongol force and a much larger Georgian and Armenian force under the Georgian leader Hasan Brosh 38 Between the Mongol occupation and conquest by the Safavid dynasty of Iran the Kara Koyunlu and Aq Qoyunlu two Turkoman confederations were in control of the city in succession Diyarbakir was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1514 by Biyikli Mehmed Pasha in the reign of the sultan Selim I r 1512 1520 Mohammad Khan Ustajlu the Safavid governor of Diyarbakir was evicted from the city and killed in the following Battle of Chaldiran in 1514 39 40 Safavids and Ottomans edit See also Diyarbekir Eyalet and Diyarbekir Vilayet nbsp 16th century plan of Diyarbakir by Matrakci Nasuh The Classical Age of the Ottoman Empire saw it expand into Western Armenia and all but the eastern regions of Kurdistan at the expense of the Safavids From the early 16th century the city and the wider region was the source of intrigue between the Safavids and the Ottoman Empire both of whom sought the support of the Kurdish chieftains around Idris Bitlisi 39 It was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1514 in the campaigns of Biyikli Mehmed Pasha under the rule of Sultan Selim I Mohammad Khan Ustajlu the Safavid Governor of Diyarbakir was evicted from the city and killed in the following Battle of Chaldiran in 1514 39 Following their victory the Ottomans established the Diyarbekir Eyalet with its administrative centre in Diyarbakir The Eyalet of Diyarbakir corresponded to today s Turkish Kurdistan a rectangular area between the Lake Urmia to Palu and from the southern shores of Lake Van to Cizre and the beginnings of the Syrian desert although its borders saw some changes over time The city was an important military base for controlling the region and at the same time a thriving city noted for its craftsmen producing glass and metalwork For example the doors of Rumi s tomb in Konya were made in Diyarbakir as were the gold and silver decorated doors of the tomb of Ebu Hanife in Baghdad Ottoman rule was confirmed by the 1555 Peace of Amasya which followed the Ottoman Safavid War 1532 1555 nbsp Depiction of Diyarbakir in a 17th century Ottoman map possibly created by Evliya Celebi Concerned with independent mindedness of the Kurdish principalities the Ottomans sought to curb their influence and bring them under the control of the central government in Constantinople However removal from power of these hereditary principalities led to more instability in the region from the 1840s onwards In their place sufi sheiks and religious orders rose to prominence and spread their influence throughout the region One of the prominent Sufi leaders was Shaikh Ubaidalla Nahri who began a revolt in the region between Lakes Van and Urmia The area under his control covered both Ottoman and Qajar territories Shaikh Ubaidalla is regarded as one of the earliest proponents of Kurdish nationalism In a letter to a British Vice Consul he declared The Kurdish nation is a people apart we want our affairs to be in our hands nbsp Diyarbakir c 1900 In 1895 an estimated 25 000 Armenians and Assyrians were massacred in Diyarbekir Vilayet including in the city 41 At the turn of the 19th century the Christian population of the city was mainly made up of Armenians and Syriac Orthodox Christians 42 The city was also a site of ethnic cleansing during the 1915 Armenian and Assyrian genocide nearly 150 000 were expelled from the city to the death marches in the Syrian Desert 43 Republic of Turkey edit In January 1928 Diyarbakir became the center of the First Inspectorate General a regional subdivision for an area containing the provinces of Hakkari Van Sirnak Mardin Siirt Bitlis and Sanliurfa In a reorganization of the provinces in 1952 Diyarbakir city was made the administrative capital of the Diyarbakir Province In 1993 Diyarbakir was established as a Metropolitan Municipality 44 Its districts are Baglar Bismil Ergani Hazro Kayapinar Cermik Cinar Egil Dicle Kulp Kocakoy Lice Silvan Sur Yenisehir Hani and Cungus 45 The American Turkish Pirinclik Air Force Base near Diyarbakir was operational from 1956 to 1997 Diyarbakir has seen much violence in recent years involving Turkish security forces the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL 46 47 48 Between 8 November 2015 and 15 May 2016 large parts of Sur were destroyed in fighting between the Turkish military and the PKK 49 In early November 2015 Kurdish lawyer and human rights activist Tahir Elci was killed in the Sur district during a press statement in which he had been calling for a de escalation in violence between the PKK and the Turkish state 50 nbsp Diyarbakir s city walls in the Sur district 2010 photo A 2018 report by Arkeologlar Dernegi Istanbul found that since 2015 72 of the city s historic Sur district had been destroyed through demolition and redevelopment and that laws designed to protect historic monuments had been ignored They found that the city s urban regeneration policy was one of demolition and redevelopment rather than one of repairing cultural assets damaged during the recent civil conflict and because of that many registered historic buildings had been completely destroyed The extent of the loss of non registered historic structures is unknown because any historic building fragments revealed during the demolition of modern structures were also demolished 51 As of 2021 large parts of the city and district were restored and government officials were looking towards tourism again 52 53 54 26 Many residences and buildings collapsed or suffered substantial damage in the 2023 Turkey Syria earthquakes around 200 miles 300 km from the epicentre 55 56 57 A Turkish professor and former journalist from the country commented It is like having an epicenter of an earthquake in Harrisburg and buildings in New York City are collapsing 58 Sports editThe most notable football clubs of the city are Diyarbakirspor established 1968 and Amed S F K established 1990 59 with Deniz Naki being one of the most notable footballers from the city The women s football team Amed S K were promoted at the end of the 2016 17 Turkish Women s Second Football League season to the Women s First League 60 Politics editIn the 2014 local elections Gultan Kisanak and Firat Anli of the Peace and Democracy Party BDP were elected co mayors of Diyarbakir However on 25 October 2016 both were detained by Turkish authorities on thinly supported charges of being a member of the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK 61 The Turkish government ordered a general internet blackout after the arrest 62 Nevertheless on 26 October several thousand demonstrators at Diyarbakir city hall demanded the mayors release 61 Some days later the Turkish government appointed an unelected state trustee as the mayor 63 In November public prosecutors demanded a 230 year prison sentence for Kisanak 64 In January 2017 the un elected state trustee appointed by the Turkish government ordered the removal of the Assyrian sculpture of a mythological winged bull from the town hall which had been erected by the BDP mayors to commemorate the Assyrian history of the town and its still resident Assyrian minority All Kurdish language street signs were also removed alongside the shutting down of organisations concerned with Kurdish language and culture removal of Kurdish names from public parks and removal of Kurdish cultural monuments and linguistic symbols 65 66 In the 2019 municipal elections Adnan Selcuk Mizrakli of the HDP party was elected mayor of Diyarbakir 67 In August 2019 he was dismissed and subsequently sentenced to 9 years and 4 months imprisonment accused of supporting terrorism as part of a government crackdown against politicians of the Kurdish HDP party the Turkish state appointed Munir Karaloglu in his place 68 Other Kurdish mayors in Kurdish cities across the region also suffered a similar fate with Turkish President Erdogan vowing to remove any future Kurdish mayors too 69 70 Protests against the decision arose which were suppressed by the Turkish police with the use of water cannons some protestors were killed 71 72 73 Diyarbakir s prison has become home to many political prisoners mainly Kurdish activists and politicians accused of terrorism charges by the Turkish state Inmates have been subject to torture rape humiliation beating murder and other abuses 74 Economy editHistorically Diyarbakir produced wheat and sesame 75 76 They would preserve the wheat in warehouses with coverings of straw and twigs from licorice trees This system would allow the wheat to be preserved for up to ten years 75 26 In the late 19th and early 20th century Diyarbakir exported raisins almonds and apricots to Europe 76 Angora goats were raised and wool and mohair was exported from Diyarbakir Merchants would also come from Egypt Istanbul and Syria to purchase goats and sheep 77 Honey was also produced but not so much exported but used by locals Sericulture was observed in the area too 78 Prior to World War I Diyarbakir had an active copper industry with six mines Three were active with two being owned by locals and the third being owned by the Turkish government Tenorite was the primary type of copper mined It was mined by hand by Kurds A large portion of the ore was exported to England The region also produced iron gypsum coal chalk lime jet and quartz but primarily for local use 79 The city is served by Diyarbakir Airport and Diyarbakir railway station In 1935 the railway between Elazig and Diyarbakir was inaugurated 80 Demographics editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2021 At the turn of the 19th century the Christian population of the city was mainly made up of Armenians and Assyrians 42 The Assyrian and Armenian presence dates to antiquity 81 There was also a small Jewish community in the city 82 All Christians spoke Armenian and Kurdish Notables spoke Turkish In the streets the language was Kurdish 83 According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica from 1911 the population numbered 38 thousand almost half being Christian and consisting of Turks Kurds Arabs Turkomans Armenians Chaldeans Jacobites and a few Greeks 84 During the Governorship of Mehmed Reshid in the Vilayet of Diyarbakir the Armenian population of Diyarbakir was resettled and exterminated 85 After World War II as the Kurdish population moved from the villages and mountains to urban centres Diyarbakir s Kurdish population continued to grow 86 Diyarbakir grew from a population of 30 000 in the 1930s to 65 000 by 1956 to 140 000 by 1970 to 400 000 by 1990 87 and eventually swelled to about 1 5 million by 1997 88 During the 1990s the city grew dramatically due to the immigrant population from thousands of Kurdish villages depopulated by Turkey during the Kurdish Turkish conflict 89 According to a November 2006 survey by the Sur Municipality 72 of the inhabitants of the municipality use Kurdish most often in their daily speech due to the overwhelming Kurdish majority in the city followed by minorities of Assyrian Armenian and Turkish 90 There are some Alevi Turkmen villages around Diyarbakir s old city but there are no official reports about their population numbers 82 91 There have been attempts by Turkish lawmakers to deny Diyarbakir s Kurdish majority identity 92 with Turkey s Education Ministry releasing a school book named Our City Diyarbakir Sehrimiz Diyarbakir in Turkish on Diyarbakir Province in which it claims that a Turkish similar to that spoken in Baku is spoken in the city along with regional languages like Arabic Persian Kurdish Turkmen and Caucasian languages 93 90 94 95 Critics link this to a general trend towards anti Kurdish sentiment in Turkey 92 Culture editThere is local jewelry making and other craftwork in the area Folk dancing to the drum and zurna pipe are a part of weddings and celebrations in the area The Diyarbakir Municipality Theatre was founded in 1990 and had to close its doors in 1995 96 It was re opened in 1999 96 under Mayor Osman Baydemir It was closed down in 2016 after the dismissal of the mayor in 2016 97 98 The Municipality City Theatre also performed plays in the Kurdish language 97 99 One of the other common celebrations in Turkey is Nowruz This celebration is done on the pretext of the beginning of spring and the beginning of the new year The establishment of Nowruz has a long history so much so that it has been celebrated in different parts of Asia for the past three thousand years especially in the Middle East In different parts of Turkey especially the Kurdish regions of this country Nowruz is considered one of the most important cultural and historical traditions of these regions Lighting a fire wearing new clothes holding a dance ceremony and giving gifts to each other are some of the activities that are done in this celebration 26 100 101 102 103 Cuisine edit Diyarbakir s cuisine includes lamb dishes which use spices such as black pepper sumac and coriander rice bulgur and butter Local dishes include Meftune lamb meat and vegetables with garlic and sumac and Kaburga Dolmasi baked lamb s ribs stuffed with rice almonds and spices 104 Watermelons are grown locally and there is an annual Watermelon Festival 105 Main sights edit nbsp The Evli Beden or Ulu Beden Tower in the southern city walls built in 1208 during the Artuqid period by Nasir al Din Artuq Arslan 106 107 The core of Diyarbakir is surrounded by an almost intact set of high walls of black basalt forming a 5 5 km 3 4 mi circle around the old city There are four gates into the old city and 82 watch towers on the walls which were built in antiquity and restored and extended by the Roman emperor Constantius II in 349 The area inside the walls is known as the Sur district before its recent demolition and redevelopment this district had 599 registered historical buildings 51 Nearby is Karaca Dag citation needed Medieval mosques and medreses edit nbsp Sheikh Matar Mosque with its four legged minaret Great Mosque of Diyarbakir built by the Seljuk Turkish Sultan Malik Shah in the 11th century The mosque one of the oldest in Turkey is constructed in alternating bands of black basalt and white limestone The same patterning is used in the 16th century Deliler Han Madrassah which is now a hotel The adjoining Mesudiye Medresesi Medreseya Mesudiyeye was built at the same time as was another prayer school in the city Zinciriye Medresesi Medreseya Zinciriyeye Behram Pasha Mosque Beharampasa Camii Mizgefta Behram Pasa an Ottoman mosque built in 1572 by the governor of Diyarbakir Behram Pasha noted for the well constructed arches at the entrance Sheikh Matar Mosque with Dort Ayakli Minare Mizgefta Carling the Four legged Minaret built by Kasim Khan of the Aq Qoyunlu Fatihpasa Camii Mizgefta Fetih Pasa built in 1520 by Diyarbakir s first Ottoman governor Biyikli Mehmet Pasa the moustachioed Mehmet pasha The city s earliest Ottoman building it is decorated with fine tilework Hazreti Suleyman Mosque Mizgefta Hezreti Sileman 1155 1169 Suleyman son of Halid Bin Velid who died capturing the city from the Arabs is buried here along with his companions Husrevpasa Camii Mizgefta Husrev Pasa the mosque of the second Ottoman governor 1512 1528 Originally the building was intended to be a school medrese Iskender Pasa Camii Mizgefta Iskender Pasa a mosque of an Ottoman governor in black and white stone built in 1551 Melek Ahmet Camii Melek Ahmed Pasa a 16th century mosque with tiled prayer niche and for the double stairway up the minaret Nebii Camii Mizgefta Pexember an Aq Qoyunlu mosque a single domed stone construction from the 16th century Nebi Camii means the mosque of the prophet and is named for the inscriptions in honour of the prophet on its minaret Safa Camii Mizgefta Palo built in the middle of the 15th century under Uzun Hasan ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu White Sheep Turkomans tribe 108 and restored in Ottoman time in 1532 Churches edit nbsp The Syriac Orthodox St Mary Church Diyarbakir nbsp St Giragos Armenian Church St Giragos Armenian Church first built in 1519 the current structure is from 1883 and was recently restored after a long period of disuse 109 The Syriac Orthodox Church of Our Lady Syriac ܐ ܕܝܠܕܬ ܐܠܗܐ Idto d Yoldat Aloho Turkish Meryemana kilisesi was first constructed as a pagan temple in the 1st century BC The current construction dates back to the 3rd century has been restored many times and is still in use as a place of worship today 110 Mar Petyun St Anthony Chaldean Catholic Church built in 1681 109 Surp Sarkis Chaldean Church 111 St Marys Cathedral St George s Church Museums edit nbsp Interior of the Cahit Sitki Taranci Museum an example of Diyarbakir s historic domestic architecture built in local dark basalt The Archaeological Museum contains artifacts from the neolithic period through the Early Bronze Age Assyrian Urartu Roman Byzantine Artuqids Seljuk Turk Aq Qoyunlu and Ottoman Empire periods 26 112 Cahit Sitki Taranci Museum the home of the late poet and a classic example of a traditional Diyarbakir home Ziya Gokalp Museum the birthplace of poet Ziya Gokalp preserved as a museum to his life and works Ahmet Arif Literature Museum Library Other historical buildings edit The Diyarbakir Fortress and Hevsel Gardens Cultural Landscape named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2015 113 114 Hasan Pasha Han a large 16th century Ottoman caravanserai now hosting shops and cafes 115 116 Delliler Han a caravanserai built in 1527 now used as a five star hotel 115 116 Suluklu Han built circa 1680 now a popular cafe and meeting spot 116 The Dicle Bridge an 11th century bridge with ten arches Urfa Kapi Urfa Kapi Urfa Gate is one of the four main gates built in the 4th century Byzantine era city walls of Diyarbakir that leads the road from the west to the town of Urfa 117 Climate editDiyarbakir has a Mediterranean Koppen climate classification Csa or an anomalously warm hot summer oceanic climate Trewartha climate classification Doa Summers are very hot and very dry due to its location on the Mesopotamian plain which is subject to hot air masses from the deserts of Syria and Iraq to the south The highest recorded temperature was 46 2 C 112 64 F on 21 July 1937 Winters are chilly with moderate precipitation and frosty nights Snowfall is quite common between the months of December and March snowing for a week or two citation needed The lowest recorded temperature was 24 2 C 10 12 F on 11 January 1933 Highest recorded snow depth was 65 cm 25 6 inches on 16 January 1971 Climate data for Diyarbakir 1991 2020 extremes 1929 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 16 9 62 4 21 8 71 2 28 3 82 9 35 3 95 5 39 8 103 6 42 0 107 6 46 2 115 2 45 9 114 6 42 0 107 6 35 7 96 3 28 4 83 1 22 5 72 5 46 2 115 2 Mean daily maximum C F 7 3 45 1 9 6 49 3 15 0 59 0 20 5 68 9 26 8 80 2 34 4 93 9 38 9 102 0 38 7 101 7 33 4 92 1 25 7 78 3 16 3 61 3 9 2 48 6 23 0 73 4 Daily mean C F 2 1 35 8 3 8 38 8 8 7 47 7 13 5 56 3 18 9 66 0 26 3 79 3 31 0 87 8 30 5 86 9 25 0 77 0 17 8 64 0 9 3 48 7 3 8 38 8 15 9 60 6 Mean daily minimum C F 2 0 28 4 1 1 30 0 2 6 36 7 6 6 43 9 10 9 51 6 16 8 62 2 21 7 71 1 21 2 70 2 15 9 60 6 10 4 50 7 3 8 38 8 0 5 31 1 8 9 48 0 Record low C F 24 2 11 6 21 0 5 8 14 0 6 8 6 1 21 0 0 8 33 4 1 8 35 2 9 9 49 8 11 4 52 5 0 0 32 0 1 8 28 8 12 9 8 8 23 4 10 1 24 2 11 6 Average precipitation mm inches 63 6 2 50 66 8 2 63 67 5 2 66 63 1 2 48 50 0 1 97 10 8 0 43 1 0 0 04 0 4 0 02 8 4 0 33 37 3 1 47 54 3 2 14 75 2 2 96 498 4 19 62 Average precipitation days 11 77 11 10 12 80 12 43 11 40 3 80 0 83 0 60 2 13 7 00 8 20 11 83 93 9 Average relative humidity 76 4 71 8 66 4 65 1 57 3 34 4 25 2 24 7 30 6 47 7 64 7 76 5 53 3 Mean monthly sunshine hours 124 0 135 6 173 6 210 0 282 1 348 0 362 7 341 0 279 0 220 1 165 0 114 7 2 755 8 Mean daily sunshine hours 4 0 4 8 5 6 7 0 9 1 11 6 11 7 11 0 9 3 7 1 5 5 3 7 7 5 Source 1 Turkish State Meteorological Service 118 Source 2 NOAA humidity 1991 2020 119 Notable people born in the city editSee Category People from Diyarbakir Aetius of Amida 5th century to mid 6th century a Greek medical writer and court physician at Constantinople 120 121 122 Ayse San one of the most legendary voices in contemporary Kurdish music 123 124 125 Abdulkadir Aksu former interior minister Ahmed Arif poet Pinar Ayhan singer Turkish representative at the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 Aziz Yildirim President of Fenerbahce S K sports club Cahit Sitki Taranci poet Cihan Haspolatli footballer for Galatasaray S K Ephraim of Amida Chalcedonian Christian theologian comes orientis 523 524 526 and patriarch of Antioch 527 545 126 Gazi Yasargil medical scientist and neurosurgeon Hesene Mete writer Hovsep Pushman Armenian American painter Hikmet Cetin former foreign minister and former NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan Azad Zal poet writer journalist translator and linguist of Kurdish origin Leyla Zana politician Yekta Uzunoglu 127 writer physician human rights fighter translator and entrepreneur Lokman Polat writer Agop Handanyan physician and writer Mehmed Emin Bozarslan writer Kevork Malikyan actor Naum Faiq Assyrian writer and founding father of modern Assyrian nationalism Osman Baydemir Kurdish politician Rupen Zartarian Armenian writer Rojen Barnas writer Songul Oden actress Suleyman Nazif poet Ziya Gokalp sociologist and writer the Ziyagokalp neighborhood of the city is named after him as well as many streets and schools Migirdic Margosyan writer Coskun Sabah musician Sayf al Din al Amidi Islamic theologian and legal scholar of the Shafi i school Zabelle C Boyajian Armenian painter and writer Cigdem Toker Turkish investigative journalistSee also editDiyarbakir electoral district Kitab i Diyarbakriyya Bozulus Another Look at East and Southeast Turkey Nowruz Turkish Kurdistan nbsp Geography portal nbsp Kurdistan portal nbsp Turkey portalReferences edit Turkey Administrative Division Provinces and Districts Population Statistics Charts and Map www citypopulation de Statistics by Theme gt National Accounts gt Regional Accounts www turkstat gov tr Retrieved 11 May 2023 Bois Th Minorsky V MacKenzie D N 24 April 2012 Kurds Kurdistan Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Tensions increase as already fragile Kurdish peace process faulters in Turkey Middle East Eye Nordland Rod 24 December 2016 An Aleppo like Landscape in a Kurdish Redoubt of Turkey The New York Times Kubilay Arin 26 March 2015 Turkey and the Kurds From War to Reconciliation Koksal Yonca 2005 Hakan Ozoglu Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State Evolving Identities Competing Loyalties and Shifting Boundaries New Perspectives on Turkey 32 227 230 doi 10 1017 s0896634600004180 ISSN 0896 6346 S2CID 148060175 Serif Pasa Memorandum on the claims of the Kurd people OCLC 42520854 Earthquakes batter Turkey Syria s historical monuments www aljazeera com Retrieved 14 February 2023 Comfort Anthony Marciak Michal 2018 How did the Persian King of Kings Get His Wine The upper Tigris in antiquity c 700 BCE to 636 CE Archaeopress Publishing Ltd pp 123 124 ISBN 978 1 78491 957 3 Sinclair T A 1989 Eastern Turkey An Architectural amp Archaeological Survey Volume III Pindar Press p 161 ISBN 978 0 907132 34 9 a b c Canard M Cahen Cl Yinanc Mukrimin H amp Sourdel Thomine J 1965 Diyar Bakr In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill pp 343 347 OCLC 495469475 Zehiroglu Ahmet M Trabzon Imparatorlugu 2016 ISBN 978 605 4567 52 2 p 223 Suwaed Muhammad 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Bedouins Rowman amp Littlefield p 45 ISBN 978 1 4422 5451 0 M Bloom Jonathan S Blair Sheila eds 2009 Diyarbakir The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Vol 2 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530991 1 Lipinski Edward 2000 The Aramaeans Their Ancient History Culture Religion Peeters Publishers p 136 ISBN 978 90 429 0859 8 See Ungor Ugur 2011 The Making of Modern Turkey Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia 1913 1950 Oxford Oxford University Press p 244 ISBN 0 19 960360 X Nisanyan Sevan 2010 Adini unutan ulke Turkiye de adi degistirilen yerler sozlugu 1 basim ed Istanbul Everest Yayinlari ISBN 978 975 289 730 4 OCLC 670108399 Joost Jongerden Jelle Verheij eds 2012 Social relations in Ottoman Diyarbekir 1870 1915 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 23227 3 OCLC 808419956 Western Armenian pronunciation Dikranagerd Hovannisian Richard G 2006 Armenian Tigranakert Diarbekir and Edessa Urfa Costa Mesa California Mazda Publishers p 2 ISBN 978 1 56859 153 7 The city that later generations of Armenians would call Dikranagerd was actually ancient Amid or Amida now Diyarbekir or Diyarbakir a great walled city with seventy two towers Adem Avcikiran 2009 Kurtce Anamnez Anamneza bi Kurmanci in Turkish and Kurdish p 55 Smith J Payne ܐܡܝܕ Oxford The Clarendon Press 1903 Trevor Bryce The Kingdom of the Hittites 1999 p 137 Theodor Mommsen History of Rome The Establishment of the Military Monarchy Italian classic literature co uk Retrieved 2012 05 13 The Eye of Command Kimberly Kagan p 23 a b c d e f Ahmady Kameel 2009 Another Look at East and Southeast Turkey GABB Publication Diyarbakir p 200 a b c d Nicholson Oliver 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Mesopotamia Roman The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Retrieved 28 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Keser Kayaalp Elif 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Amida The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Edwards Robert W 2016 Diyarbakir In Paul Corby Finney ed The Eerdmans Encyclopedia of Early Christian Art and Archaeology Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans p 115 ISBN 978 0 8028 9016 0 a b c Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Leipzig 1931 p 456 a b c Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Complementi Leipzig 1931 p 93 a b F Tournebize v Amid ou Amida in Dictionnaire d Histoire et de Geographie ecclesiastiques vol XII Paris 1953 coll 1246 1247 a b Hovhannes J Tcholakian L eglise armenienne catholique en Turquie 1998 Arango Tim 23 April 2015 Hidden Armenians of Turkey Seek to Reclaim Their Erased Identities The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Annuaire Pontifical Catholique 1903 p 173 S Vailhe Antioche Patriarcat syrien catholique in Dictionnaire de Theologie Catholique Vol I Paris 1903 coll 1433 O Werner Orbis terrarum catholicus Freiburg 1890 p 164 Sicker Martin 30 June 2000 The Islamic World in Ascendancy From the Arab Conquests to the Siege of Vienna Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 111 ISBN 978 0 313 00111 6 a b c Ozoglu Hakan 12 February 2004 Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State Evolving Identities Competing Loyalties and Shifting Boundaries SUNY Press pp 47 49 ISBN 978 0 7914 5993 5 Battle of Chaldiran Summary Britannica www britannica com 16 August 2023 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Gunter Michael 1999 The Kurdish Predicament in Iraq A Political Analysis St Martin s Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 312 21896 6 a b Joost Jongerden Jelle Verheij 2012 Social Relations in Ottoman Diyarbekir 1870 1915 Brill p 20 ISBN 978 90 04 22518 3 Dumper Michael 2007 Cities of The Middle East and North Africa A Historical Encyclopedia Bloomsbury Academic p 130 ISBN 978 1 57607 919 5 504 Sayili Kanun Hukmunde Kararname Kanunlar 3 February 2014 Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 10 November 2019 Diyarbakir Secim Sonuclari 31 Mart 2019 Yerel Secimleri sabah com tr Retrieved 10 November 2019 Death toll in HDP Diyarbakir rally rises to three Turkey News Hurriyet Daily News 10 June 2015 Retrieved 10 November 2019 ISIL claims Diyarbakir bombing days after al Baghdadi urged attacks on Turkey euronews 4 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2019 Roadside bomb blast kills police in Turkey s Diyarbakir www aljazeera com Retrieved 23 January 2020 Turkije Lucas Waagmeestercorrespondent in 27 May 2016 Vernietiging Turkse steden veel groter dan gedacht nos nl Report Investigation of the audio visual material included in the case file of the killing of Tahir Elci PDF Forensic Architecture 13 December 2018 Retrieved 24 September 2023 a b Aciklama www arkeologlardernegist org Hedef 5 milyon turist getirmek 19 March 2021 Tarihi diriltecek dev projenin 2 Etabi basladi unesco dunya kultur mirasi listesinde bulunan diyarbakir surlarinin 2 Etap projesi basladi yaklasik 14 milyon liraya mal olacak olan restorasyon calismalarinin 500 gun surecegi ogrenildi Diyarbakir Haberleri 17 March 2021 Teroristlerin yiktigi Sur u devlet ayaga kaldirdi 18 March 2021 Robles Pablo Chang Agnes Holder Josh Leatherby Lauren Reinhard Scott Wu Ashley 6 February 2023 Mapping the Damage From the Earthquake in Turkey and Syria The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 14 February 2023 The earthquake s widespread destruction in photos maps and videos Washington Post 6 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Ozdal Umit 6 February 2023 After huge Turkey quake Diyarbakir residents pray for missing families Reuters Retrieved 14 February 2023 Lebanon County professor reacts to deadly earthquakes in Turkey and Syria fox43 com 7 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Turkish court acquits German footballer Naki in Kurdish case BBC 8 November 2016 are your ancesters from dikrranagerr westarmgen 4 September 2018 Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Retrieved 4 September 2018 a b Fury erupts after mayors detained in Turkey s Kurdish southeast Al Monitor 26 October 2016 Slowdown in access to social media in Turkey a security measure says PM Hurriyet Daily News 4 November 2016 Turkey appoints trustee as Diyarbakir mayor after arrests France24 1 November 2016 Archived from the original on 30 November 2016 Prosecutors demand 230 years prison sentences for ousted Diyarbakir Co Mayor Kisanak Hurriyet Daily News 29 November 2016 Turkey remove Assyrian sculpture from front of local city hall Almasdar News 17 January 2017 Kurdish language signs removed from Diyarbakir streets Ahval Retrieved 20 February 2021 Diyarbakir Secim Sonuclari 31 Mart Diyarbakir Yerel Secim Sonuclari secim haberler com in Turkish Retrieved 20 May 2019 Three pro Kurdish mayors replaced in southeastern Turkey Middle East Eye Retrieved 19 August 2019 Turkey Kurdish Mayors Removal Violates Voters Rights Human Rights Watch 7 February 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Erdogan vows re seizure of Kurdish municipalities should HDP win local elections www kurdistan24 net Retrieved 2 April 2021 Turkey Police and militias killing of Kurdish protesters must be investigated and prosecuted Brill Human Rights Documents online doi 10 1163 2210 7975 hrd 0035 2014132 Gunes Cengiz 1 January 2014 Kurdish Political Activism in Turkey An Overview Singapore Middle East Papers doi 10 23976 smep 2014008 Three pro Kurdish mayors replaced in southeastern Turkey Middle East Eye Retrieved 2 April 2021 Hakyemez Serra 2017 Margins of the Archive Torture Heroism and the Ordinary in Prison No 5 Turkey Anthropological Quarterly 90 1 107 138 doi 10 1353 anq 2017 0004 ISSN 1534 1518 S2CID 152237485 a b Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 60 a b Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 62 Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 63 Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 64 Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 70 Kezer Zeynep 2014 Spatializing Difference The Making of an Internal Border in Early Republican Elazig Turkey Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 73 4 516 doi 10 1525 jsah 2014 73 4 507 ISSN 0037 9808 JSTOR 10 1525 jsah 2014 73 4 507 Goodspeed George 1902 A History of the Babylonians and Assyrians Volume 6 a b 1 Konu Diyarbakir Tarihi ve Demografik Yapisi Kaza Diyarbekir Diyarbakir Amid Omid ܐܡܝܕ Virtual Genocide Memorial Retrieved 18 September 2023 Maunsell Francis Richard 1911 Diarbekr In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 167 Ungor Ugur Umit 2012 Rethinking the Violence of Pacification State Formation and Bandits in Turkey 1914 1937 Comparative Studies in Society and History 54 4 754 doi 10 1017 S0010417512000400 ISSN 0010 4175 JSTOR 23274550 S2CID 147038615 via JSTOR Metin Heper Sabri Sayari 7 May 2013 The Routledge Handbook of Modern Turkey Routledge p 247 ISBN 978 1 136 30964 9 It was thus only in recent times that Diyarbakir the unofficial capital of Turkey s Kurdish area became a predominantly Kurdish town McDowall David 2004 A Modern History of the Kurds IB Tauris p 403 ISBN 978 1 85043 416 0 Kirisci Kemal June 1998 Turkey In Janie Hampton ed Internally Displaced People A Global Survey London Earthscan Publications Ltd pp 198 199 Houston Christopher 2005 Creating a Diaspora within a Country Kurds in Turkey in Ember Melvin Ember Carol R Skoggard Ian eds Encyclopedia of Diasporas Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World Boston MA Springer US pp 403 414 doi 10 1007 978 0 387 29904 4 40 ISBN 978 0 387 29904 4 a b Belediye Diyarbakirliyi tanidi Kurtce konusuyor Radikal in Turkish Dogan News Agency 24 November 2006 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 6 August 2008 2 Archived 21 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Diyarbakir Alevi Turkmen koyleri a b Yegen Mesut April 1996 The Turkish state discourse and the exclusion of Kurdish identity Middle Eastern Studies 32 2 216 229 doi 10 1080 00263209608701112 ISSN 0026 3206 Gazetesi Evrensel MEB e gore Diyarbakir da Kurtce degil Azericeye benzeyen bir Turkce konusuluyor Evrensel net in Turkish Retrieved 23 March 2021 Baku Turkish spoken in Kurdish majority Diyarbakir according to Ministry Bianet Bagimsiz Iletisim Agi Retrieved 19 March 2021 Sehrimiz Diyarbakir PDF Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2021 a b Celik Duygu 2020 The Impact of the Dengbeji Tradition on Kurdish Theater in Turkey Kurdish Art and Identity De Gruyter pp 106 107 doi 10 1515 9783110599626 005 ISBN 978 3 11 059962 6 S2CID 241540342 a b Tzabiras Marianna 5 January 2017 Turkey s state of emergency puts Kurdish theatre in a chokehold IFEX Retrieved 16 August 2022 Celik Duygu C 7 September 2020 The Impact of the Dengbeji Tradition on Kurdish Theater in Turkey Kurdish Art and Identity De Gruyter pp 96 118 doi 10 1515 9783110599626 005 ISBN 978 3 11 059962 6 S2CID 241540342 Verstraete Peter Acting under Turkey s State of Emergency PDF University of Groningen p 64 Wilks Andrew 29 March 2022 Possible closure of political party dampens Nowruz for Turkey s Kurds Al Monitor Retrieved 6 October 2023 english alarabiya net perspective Nowruz celebrations in Turkey Nations United International Nowruz Day United Nations Retrieved 6 October 2023 Kurdish Activists Arrested in Turkey Ahead of Nowruz Celebrations VOA 20 March 2017 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Selim Amca nin Sofra Salonu Lonely Planet Diyarbakir Culture and Watermelon Festival arastirma tarimorman gov tr Retrieved 9 September 2019 Sinclair Thomas Alan 1989 Eastern Turkey An Architectural and Archaeological Survey Volume III The Pindar Press p 172 ISBN 978 1 904597 76 6 Eastmond Antony 20 April 2017 Tamta s World Cambridge University Press p 141 ISBN 978 1 107 16756 8 Tile Revetments from the 15th Century in Eastern Anatolia A Problem of Attribution Khalida Mahi Ancient Cities 2011 3 a b Diyarbakir Other monuments romeartlover tripod com To the caravanserai The Oldie Retrieved 22 June 2021 Churches of Diyarbakir also expropriated Agos 28 March 2016 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Historical Places in Diyarbakir Diyarbakir Valiligi Kultur Turizm Proje Birimi www diyarbakirkulturturizm org Retrieved 6 October 2023 Diyarbakir Fortress and Hevsel Gardens Cultural Landscape UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 9 September 2019 Historical Places to See in Diyarbakir flyista com Retrieved 6 October 2023 a b Bloom Jonathan Blair Sheila 2009 Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art amp Architecture Three Volume Set Vol 2 Oxford University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 19 530991 1 a b c The stop for tourist caravans Hasan Pasa Hani Diyarbakir s Memory 19 March 2020 Retrieved 8 May 2023 Parla Canan 17 October 2019 Diyarbakir Artuklu Donemi Urfa Kapisi nin Figurlu Kabartmalarina Ikonografik Yaklasim Journal of Turkish Studies in Turkish 10 6 763 788 doi 10 7827 TurkishStudies 8365 Resmi Istatistikler Illerimize Ait Mevism Normalleri 1991 2020 in Turkish Turkish State Meteorological Service Retrieved 28 June 2021 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1991 2020 World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 17 July 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Plant Ian Michael 2004 Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome An Anthology University of Oklahoma Press p 229 ISBN 978 0 8061 3621 9 Aetius A Greek from Amida in Mesopotamia who wrote on philosophy in the mid sixth century AD in Alexandria Meade Richard Hardaway 1968 An introduction to the history of general surgery Saunders p 108 OCLC 438114 Aetius of Amida who lived in the sixth century A D and was the first Greek physician who was a Christian had a chapter on aneurysms in his book on surgery Pormann Peter E 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Aetius of Amida The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Akyol Hilmi 2008 Car gulen Amede in Kurdish Turkey Wesanen Do p 184 ISBN 978 994 41 0842 3 Gazetesi Evrensel 18 December 2016 Tacsiz kralice Ayse San Evrensel net in Turkish Retrieved 1 September 2021 Diken Seyhmus 2007 Amidalilar surgundeki Diyarbekirliler in Turkish Istanbul Iletisim p 165 ISBN 978 975 05 0493 8 Mellon Saint Laurent Jeanne Nicole 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Ephrem of Amida The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Retrieved 15 December 2020 home Yekta Uzunoglu Retrieved 10 August 2018 Sources editFaroqhi Suraiya 2009 Frisch Shelley ed The Ottoman Empire A Short History Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 978 1 55876 449 1 Ahmady Kameel 2009 Lim Richard ed Another Look at East and Southeast Turkey in Turkish and English Diyarbakir GABB Publication ISBN 978 605 60513 0 2 Further reading editCanard M Cahen Cl Yinanc Mukrimin H amp Sourdel Thomine J 1965 Diyar Bakr In Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Schacht J eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume II C G Leiden E J Brill OCLC 495469475 Vali Vahab 2018 Diyar Bakr In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica Online Brill Online ISSN 1875 9831 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diyarbakir nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Diyarbakir in Turkish Governorship of Diyarbakir in Turkish Diyarbakirspor funs news informarmation in Turkish Information on Diyarbakir Over 1000 well organized pictures of major sights 37 55 N 40 14 E 37 91 N 40 24 E 37 91 40 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diyarbakir amp oldid 1222862997, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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