Boyabat

Boyabat
Boyabat
Coordinates: 41°27′55″N 34°46′15″E / 41.46528°N 34.77083°E / 41.46528; 34.77083Coordinates: 41°27′55″N 34°46′15″E / 41.46528°N 34.77083°E / 41.46528; 34.77083
Country  Turkey
Province Sinop
Government
  Mayor Mehmet Ermiş (AKP)
  Kaymakam Bilal BOZDEMİR
Area[1]
  District 1,475.38 km2 (569.65 sq mi)
Elevation 330 m (1,080 ft)
Population (2012)[2]
  Urban 26,586
  District 43,139
  District density 29/km2 (76/sq mi)
Post code 57200
Area code(s) (+90) 368
Vehicle registration 57
Climate Cfb
Website www.boyabat.gov.tr
www.boyabat.bel.tr
Market of Boyabat
Basalt columns in Boyabat

Boyabat is a town and district of Sinop Province in the Black Sea region of Turkey. The mayor is Mehmet Ermiş (AKP).

Boyabat has a population of 50,000 in the town itself. The town is in the Gökırmak ("blue river") valley, a river valley parallel to the Black Sea coast, located 100 km south of Sinop over the coastal mountain range, Isfendiyar Mountains.

The town is the trade hub for over a hundred villages around it. Of larger centers nearby, up the Gökırmak valley to the west are Taşköprü, and Kastamonu; down the Gökırmak and later Kızılırmak ("red river") valley to the east you find Durağan, Havza, Vezirköprü, and Samsun.

Name

The name Boyabat is said to consist of "boy" which means border and the Persian suffix "abad" (آباد) which means built/cultivated town/agricultural landscape. It bears witness to the fact that the border between the Byzantine empire and the empire of the Seljuq Turks was once here.

History

Boyabat town was built below a castle which probably has not been in serious use since around 1300 A.D. but may be as old as 2800 years. The castle overlooks the Gökırmak valley. This valley is long and lies parallel with the Black Sea coast. Together with a similarly placed valley in eastern Anatolia it forms a natural east-west pathway used both in antiquity and later as part of the silk road. The older history of Boyabat may have started from Bronze Age, and it may have been ruled by Kaskians, Hittites, Paphlagonians, Persians, Lydians, Pontus kingdom, and Romans.

The area has since been under the rule of several Turkish states (Danişmendli, Seljuq Turks, Pervaneoğulları, Jandarids), Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic and has been spared from major military conflicts and battles on its territory for at least 500 years.

Kazdere/Gazidere, a tributary of Gökirmak, passes through the town. It cuts the rock that the castle is perched on with a dramatic pair of vertical walls. The wall on the castle side has a window on the rock face illuminating descending tunnels for a newly discovered large underground city from Roman times. The tunnels may also have served for water supply and safe passage during siege.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, Boyabat was part of the Kastamonu Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire.

Today

The main income source of the area is agriculture, animal husbandry, and some forest related activities. Of agricultural produce Boyabat is renowned for its rice. Rice fields cover the bottom of Gökirmak and Kizilirmak valleys.

The town boasts some local industry, notably brick, tiles, and ceramic production, unhusking and polishing of rice, and tanning.

Mondays a weekly bazaar is held in Boyabat center and the town overflows with farmers and merchants of the area. A larger several days long yearly event "Panayır" (fair) is held in autumn (starting the second Wednesday of October) just outside town center.[3] It lasts several days and attracts participants from a much larger area.

The local character of Boyabat is reflected in the characteristic old houses below the castle, handwoven traditional scarves popular among the farmer ladies and woodprint scarves among town ladies. Davul and zurna music is the hallmark of weddings. They lead processions through the town carrying gifts to the wedding house. On arrival, the drummer in full traditional drummer outfit performs a drumplaying dance[4] to the music of zurna. Another Boyabat tradition kept alive is the whole grilled lamb kebab [5] served in special restaurants. Village weddings and the panayır /fair also include a wrestling championship performed to the tune of davul and zurna, playing non-stop epic "köroğlu" melodies (typically in five eight rhythm) in the background.[6]

Like every other similar town in Turkey, a large number of people originating from Boyabat now live in large metropolitan centers, mainly Istanbul some 650 km or a 10 hours bus ride away.

During the latest decades Boyabat town itself has also expanded greatly by the building of apartment blocks. The plan of the city is altered by a wide thoroughfare which also attracted arenas of business out from the old shopping district.[7]

The countryside around has also seen dramatic changes. A belt of planted pine forests, a dry canal diverting flash floods away from town center, factories on the plains west of the town etc..

The construction of the Boyabat Dam on the Kızıl River near Duragan (operational since 2012), a tunnel to avoid the highest peak of the mountain pass towards Sinop (operational since 2009) were major infrastructure projects in the area.

Notable natives

References

  1. "Area of regions (including lakes), km²". Regional Statistics Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. 2002. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  2. "Population of province/district centers and towns/villages by districts - 2012". Address Based Population Registration System (ABPRS) Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1afk8fnlQY "Panayır" (fair) video from the local newspaper
  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-3smWjw-GQ Double drummers in full traditional outfit performing a drumplaying dance to the tune of a zurna playing "Sepetçioğlu" melody of Boyabat-Kastamonu
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jc_JC4KGYTA whole grilled lamb kebab
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qy6a20JCcE Epic Köroğlu melody with davul and zurna in the background
  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMNhiLDOWSc Boyabat town drone overflight video 1080p

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.