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Marmara Island

Coordinates: 40°37′N 27°37′E / 40.617°N 27.617°E / 40.617; 27.617
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(Redirected from Proconnesian)
Marmara Island
View of Marmara from a plane
View of Marmara from a plane
Marmara Island is located in Marmara
Marmara Island
Marmara Island
Marmara Island is located in Turkey
Marmara Island
Marmara Island
Marmara Island is located in Europe
Marmara Island
Marmara Island
Coordinates: 40°37′N 27°37′E / 40.617°N 27.617°E / 40.617; 27.617
Country Turkey
RegionMarmara
ProvinceBalıkesir
Area126.1 km2 (48.7 sq mi)
Marmara Island is located in The Aegean Sea area
Marmara Island
Marmara Island
Location of Marmara Island.
Aerial view of the island

Marmara Island (Turkish: Marmara Adası) is a Turkish island in the Sea of Marmara. With an area of 126.1 km2 (48.7 sq mi) it is the largest island in the Sea of Marmara and is the second largest island of Turkey after Gökçeada (older name in Turkish: İmroz; Greek: Ίμβρος Imvros).[1] It is the center of Marmara district in Balıkesir Province. Transportation is possible from Istanbul by ship and ferry, and by motorboat from Tekirdağ and Erdek. Marmara island has a lot of historical artifacts. The town of "Mermer Plaj"/Marble Beach takes its name from the marble for which the town is famous and which gives the island and the sea their name.

Etymology

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Great Ludovisi sarcophagus from the Palazzo Altemps in the National Museum of Rome – carved in Proconnesian marble
Detail from the Ludovisi sarcophagus

In ancient times the island was called Proikonesos (Προικόνησος) or Prokonnesos (Προκόννησος), Latinized as Proconnesus.[2] The modern name "Marmara" is derived from the Greek μάρμαρον (marmaron)[3] and that from μάρμαρος (mármaros), "crystalline rock", "shining stone",[4][5] perhaps from the verb μαρμαίρω (marmaírō), "to flash, sparkle, gleam",[6] because it was famous for the white marble quarried there. Under the name Proconnesus it is a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church[2] (the see has been vacant since the death in 1963 of the most recent occupant),[7] and of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.

Proconnesian marble was used extensively in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, and exclusively in the Herculean Sarcophagus of Genzano now in the British Museum. Additionally, it was used in the Basilica of Maxentius and the arch of Septimius Severus in the Roman Forum. (Marble is still the island's primary export.)

History

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Stories and legends identify the island of Marmara (ancient Prokonnessos) as a visiting place of Jason and the Argonauts and with the expedition against Troy, the Trojan War, which Herodotus dates around 1250 BC. Historical evidence of the first Hellenic presence on Marmara came with the early colonization of Ionian Greeks in the 8th century BC. In 493 BC it was burned by a Phoenician fleet fighting for Darius the Great.[2] The island was ruled for the Achaemenid Empire under a Greek tyrant named Metrodorus.[8]

In 410 BC, Alcibiades conquered it for Athens.[2]

During the Diocletianic Persecution, the Emperor Diocletian ordered low-status Manichaeans to be executed while high-status Manichaeans were to be sent to work in the quarries of Proconnesus or the mines of Khirbat Faynan.[9]

During the reign of Constantine the Great in the 4th century, notable aristocracy from Constantinople first settled on the island. By 569, many Byzantine aristocrats had built palaces on the island that they had accepted as their home. The greatest palace of this period was built by the Emperor Justinian I. With the Emperor came a large entourage of nobility, palace guards, tradesmen, and servants. Justinian also built a large convent on Marmara that is one of the earliest in recorded history. The Byzantine royal presence on the island was strongly felt through strong ties to the Patriarchate of Constantinople. During most of its history, the island was called "Proikonnesos" (island of the royal dowry), and "Prinkipo", (island of the aristocracy).

From the fall of the Byzantine Empire through the beginning of the Ottoman period, the island was almost exclusively populated by Greek Orthodox Christians.[10] The island was a refuge for the runaways of the Devshirme System. For example in 1567, a group of runaways was protected and hidden by the locals of Marmara Island while the batches of children were being transported from the port of Dutlimanı in Bandırma.[11] Beginning in the 17th century some Turks and a relatively large number of Jewish people lived on the island; most of these were Sephardi who had left Spain after the Inquisition. During World War I much of the population was forced off the island onto the mainland. And, following the war, as a result of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne and the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, all remaining Greeks native to the island of Marmara emigrated to Greece and other locations around the globe.

The island's Greek Orthodox diaspora settled primarily in Neos Marmaras in Chalkidiki, the island of Euboea and in the city of Thessaloniki in northern Greece. In addition, Canada, Australia and South America were popular destinations for Greek immigration of that time. Many of the former Jewish residents settled in the North American cities of New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland (Oregon) and the Seattle/Tacoma area.

Many of the current residents of Marmara Adasi are descendants of Turks who fled Greek islands during the population transfers of the 1920s and Circassians (Çerkesler) originally from the Russian Caucasus.

1935 earthquake

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On 4 January 1935 at 16:41:29 local time, an earthquake hit the Marmara Island and its neighboring islands Avşa and Paşalimanı, causing five deaths, 30 people injured and several villages destroyed.[12]

Administration center and the villages

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Marmara Island has five villages and one central town. The center is called Marmara and is the administration center of two more islands (Avşa and Ekinlik Islands) nearby. The population was mainly Greek along with some Turkish and Jewish population in Marmara settlement until the population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1923. Today the local people are originally from different regions of Turkey and Balkans, mainly from Middle and East of Black Sea Region and Western Thrace of Greece. The permanent population, distances from the center, the current names and the previous names of the villages are:[13]

  • Marmara (Greek; Marmara and Proconnesus); 2183
  • Çınarlı (Greek; Galemi); 503, 7 Km
  • Gündoğdu (Greek; Prastos); 278, 4 Km
  • Topağaç (Greek; Kilazaki); 518, 12 Km
  • Asmalı (Greek; Aftoni); 237, 18 Km
  • Saraylar (Greek; Palatia); 2687, 24 Km

Transportation

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There is no airport on Marmara Island. Transportation is provided by ferries departing from 5 different ports on the mainland;:[14]

Notable residents

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  • Aristeas of Proconnesos (7th century BC), a semi-legendary Greek poet and miracle-worker, a native of Proconnesus.
  • Justinian I (482-565), Roman Emperor.
  • Themistocles (5th century BC), Athenian Politician. After being ostracized from Athens, he sought refuge on Prokennesos.
  • Eubulides (4th century BC), Greek philosopher and mathematician. He was exiled to Prokennesos.
  • Yaşar Kemal (1923-2015), Turkish write and human rights activist.
  • Oktay Rıfat (1914-1988), Turkish writer and playwright. Oktay Rıfat registered in the island during the census of 1970 in order to reach. 2000-inhabitant limit required for Marmara.

Panoramic view

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A panorama of Marmara

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Turkey's Statistical Yearbook 2013" (PDF) (in Turkish and English). Turkish Statistical Institute. 2014. p. 7.
  2. ^ a b c d Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Proconnesus" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  3. ^ Marmaron, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus
  4. ^ Marmaros, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus
  5. ^ Marble, Compact Oxford English Dictionary[dead link]
  6. ^ Marmairō, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus
  7. ^ Proconnesus catholic-hierarchy.org
  8. ^ Tuplin, Christopher (2007). Persian Responses: Political and Cultural Interaction with(in) the Achaemenid Empire. ISD LLC. p. 126. ISBN 9781910589465.
  9. ^ Iain Gardner and Samuel N. C. Lieu, eds., Manichaean Texts from the Roman Empire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 117–18.
  10. ^ [1]
  11. ^ Yılmaz, Gülay (2015-12-01). "The Devshirme System and the Levied Children of Bursa in 1603-4". Belleten (in Turkish). 79 (286): 901–930. doi:10.37879/belleten.2015.901. ISSN 0041-4255.
  12. ^ "Erdek-Marmara Adaları Depremi 04 Ocak 1935" (in Turkish). İBB AKOM. Retrieved 2010-11-08.
  13. ^ "Marmara Island". travelingturks.
  14. ^ "Marmara Island Transportation". officialguides.

Further reading

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  • Papers presented to the II. National Symposium on the Aegean Islands, 2–3 July 2004, Gökçeada, Çanakkale