Mersin
MERSİN
/ KIZ KALESİ
Mersin today
Mersin is a large city and a busy port on the Mediterranean coast of southern Turkey and is the capital of the Mersin Province.
Mersin Seaside
Today Mersin is a large city spreading out along the coast, with Turkey's second tallest skyscraper, huge hotels, an opera house, expensive real estate near the sea or up in the hills, and many other modern urban amenities, although still nothing like the long-established nightlife and culture of Istanbul or Izmir.
The municipality is now trying to
rescue the sea front with walkways, parks and statuary, and there are
still palm trees on the roadsides especially where the young generation
likes to hang out in the cafes and patisseries of smart neighborhoods
such as Pozcu or Çamlıbel. These are established neighborhoods where
there are many well-known shops and restaurants with years of
experience and reputations to protect. The city centre is
a maze of narrow streets and arcades of little shops and cafes, with
young people buzzing around on scooters. The old quarter near the fish
market is where you will find the stalls selling tantuni and grilled
liver sandwiches.One of the most distinctive features of the city as a
whole is the solar heating panels; they are everywhere, on top of every
building. Turkey now plans to construct its first nuclear power plant in
the port city of Mersin. In March 2008, Turkey opened bidding for the
construction of the plant. Environmental groups, such as Green peace,
oppose this plan.
Cuisine
The local cuisine includes: kebab of course but
especially the hot sandwich of grilled meats wrapped in flat bread
called tantuni; the home-made sausage bumbar; carrot helva (cezerye);
karsambaç (a kind of ice slush); künefe a baked cheese pastry (known
throughout south-east Turkey including Mersin); and kerebiç, a semolina
pudding, especially made in the month of Ramadan, and many other local
soups and stews. The traditional drink of this corner of Turkey,
including Mersin, is şalgam suyu (the water used to pickle turnips
in).
Economy
The port is the mainstay of Mersin's economy. There are 45 piers, a total port area of 785 km² (205 acres), with a capacity of 6,000 ships per year.
Adjacent to the port is Mersin Free Zone established in 1986, the first free zone in Turkey, with warehouses, shops, assembly-disassembly, maintenance and engineering workshops, banking and insurance, packing-repacking, labelling and exhibition facilities. The zone is a publicly owned center for foreign investors, close to major markets in the (Middle East, North Africa, East and West Europe,
Russian Federation and Central Asia. The trading volume of the free zone was USD 51, 8 billion in 2002.Mersin has highway connections to the north and east, and is also connected to the southern railroad. Adana airport is 69 km (43 miles).70% of the male population and 46% of the female population is employed. Unemployment is about 6.7%Mersin port is an international hub for many vessels routing to European countries. Its now operated by PSA.
Mersin University
Mersin University was founded in 1992 and started teaching in 1993-1994, with 11 faculties, 6 schools and 9 vocational schools. The university has had about 10 thousand graduates, has broadened its current academic staff to more than 2100 academicians, and enrolls 38,000 students.
Culture
Because the city has been a crossroads for centuries the local culture is a medley of civilizations. Mersin has a State Opera and Ballet, the fourth in Turkey after Istanbul, İzmir and Ankara. Mersin International Music Festival was established in 2001, and takes place every October. The photography association Mersin Photograph (MFD), is one of the most popular and active cultural organizations in the city. There is a great museum in the city center. The municipal cemetery is interesting as people of all faiths and denominations can be buried here.In order to swim in clean water you need to get out of town, perhaps an hour along the coast. The beach at (109km beaches) Kızkalesi, Ayaş,Soloi,Susanoğlu is popular with families while young people prefer Akyar,Yapraklı koy,Narlıkuyu or quieter bays along the coast, some of which are very attractive indeed
History
This coast has been inhabited since the 9th millennium
BC. Excavations by John Garstang of the hill of Yümüktepe have revealed
23 levels of occupation, the earliest dating from ca. 6300 BC. A
fortification was put up around 4500 BC, but the site appears to have
been abandoned between 3200 BC and 1200
BC.Afterward the city was part of many states and civilizations including the Hittites, Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, the Macedonians of Alexander the Great, Seleucids, Lagids. During the Ancient Greek period, the city bore the name Zephyrion (Greek: Ζεφύριον[1]) and was mentioned by numerous ancient authors. Apart from its natural harbor and its strategic position along the trade routes of southern Anatolia, the city profited from trade in molybdenum (white lead) from the neighboring mines of Coreyra. Ancient sources attributed the best molybdenum to the city, which also minted its own coins.Then the area became the Roman, province of Cilice, which had its capital at Tarsus while nearby Mersin was the major port. The city, whose name was Latin zed to Zephyrium, was renamed Hadrianopolis for Emperor Hadrian.
The Roman Empire split
and this area fell into the half ruled from Byzantium (later
Constantinople), which became the center of trade in this part of the
world, drawing investments and trade, and causing Mersin to lose its
shine.
The city was Christianized early; and was the see of a
bishop. Le Queen (Oriens christianus, II, 883) names four bishops of
Zephyrium: Aerius, present at the Council of Constantinople in 381;
Zenobius, a Nestorian, at the Second Council of Constantinople in
432-434; Hypatius, present at the Council of Chalcedon in 451; and
Peter, at the Council in Trullo in 692. The city remains a titular see
of the Roman Catholic Church, Zephyriensis; the see has been vacant
since 1966. Then came Arabs, Egyptian Tulunids, Seljuk Turks, Mongols,
Crusaders, Armenians, Mamluks, Anatolian beyliks, and finally the city
was conquered by the Ottomans in 1473.
During the American Civil War, the region
became a major supplier of cotton to make up for the high demand due to
shortage. Railroads were extended to Mersin in 1866 from where cotton
was exported by sea, and the city developed into a major trade center.
By 1900, the Catholic Encyclopedia reports the city having about 18,000
inhabitants, of whom 8,000 were by ethnicity Greeks, 1,000 Armenians,
and 2,000 Roman Catholics; the remaining approximately 9,000 inhabitants
were presumably Muslim. The Roman Catholic parish of Mersin was
administered by Capuchins; there were also Sisters of St. Joseph of the
Apparition; schools for boys and girls, and hospitals.In 1918 Mersin was
occupied by French and British troops in accord with the Treaty of
Sevrès. It was liberated by the Turkish army in 1920. In 1924, Mersin
was made a province, and in 1933, Mersin and İçel provinces were joined
to form the (greater Mersin) İçel province.
Up until the 1970s Mersin had a population of 580,000 and a classy feel to it, with carriages parading under palm trees. The seafront was all orchards of oranges and lemons, perfect for a quiet stroll, and you could play on the beach. The heart of this tree-lined bourgois establishment was the patisseries along Flamingo road, a name that evokes nostalgia among those who lived here through the 60s and 70s.
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