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'''Ayvalık''' ([[Greek language|Greek]]: ''Αϊβαλί'') is a seaside town in the northwest [[Turkey]]. It is a [[district]] of [[Balıkesir]] [[province]]. It was alternatively called (''Κυδωνίες'' - ''Kidonies'') by the town's formerly important [[Greek people|Greek]] population although use of the name Ayvalık was widespread for centuries by both [[Turkish people|Turks]] and Greeks (pronounced as ''Ayvali'' by the latter).
'''Ayvalık''' ([[Ancient Greek]]: ''Κυδωνίαι'', [[Greek language|Greek]]: ''Αϊβαλί'' or ''Κυδωνίες'') is a seaside town in the northwest [[Turkey]]. It is a [[district]] of [[Balıkesir]] [[province]]. It was alternatively called (''Κυδωνίες'' - ''Kidonies'') by the town's formerly important [[Greek people|Greek]] population although use of the name Ayvalık was widespread for centuries by both [[Turkish people|Turks]] and Greeks (pronounced as ''Ayvali'' by the latter).


==Geography==
==Geography==

Revision as of 21:58, 19 February 2007

Template:Infobox town TR

Ayvalık (Ancient Greek: Κυδωνίαι, Greek: Αϊβαλί or Κυδωνίες) is a seaside town in the northwest Turkey. It is a district of Balıkesir province. It was alternatively called (Κυδωνίες - Kidonies) by the town's formerly important Greek population although use of the name Ayvalık was widespread for centuries by both Turks and Greeks (pronounced as Ayvali by the latter).

Geography

Ayvalık is a district in Turkey's Balıkesir Province on the Aegean Sea coast, facing the Greek island of Lesbos. It is situated on a narrow coastal plain surrounded by low hills to the east which are covered with pine and olive trees. Ayvalık is also surrounded by Ayvalık Islands group on the sea and by a narrow peninsula in the south named Hakkıbey Peninsula. Ayvalık is the southernmost district of Balıkesir. Gömeç, Burhaniye and Edremit are other districts of Balıkesir Province which are situated on the Aegean shores and they are lined up respectively to the north. The region is under the influence of a typical Mediterranean climate with mild and rainy winters and hot, dry summers.

History

Various archeological finds and excavations in the region prove that Ayvalık and its environs were inhabited as early as the prehistoric ages. The islets in the Ayvalık Bay (Ayvalık Körfezi) were also used for settlement purposes, together with Ayvalık, during the late Roman and early Byzantine periods. The constant threat posed by piracy in the region during the previous ages did not allow the islet settlements to grow larger and only Cunda (formerly Nesos) could maintain a higher level of habitation as it is the largest and the closest islet to the mainland.

After the Byzantine period, the region came under the rule of Anatolian Turkish Beylik of Karesi in the 13th century and was later annexed to the territory of the Ottoman beylik (principality), which was to become the Ottoman Empire later.

Until 1922, Ayvalık had a large Greek population. Anecdotal evidence indicates that, immediately after the defeat in the naval Battle of Chesma (Çeşme), the Ottoman admiral (later grand vizier) Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha and men from the ships he could extirpate from the disaster, were lodged, on their frantic return to the capital, by a local priest in Ayvalık who did not know who they were. Hasan Pasha did not forget the kindness shown at that hour of crisis and when he became grand vizier, accorded virtual autonomy to the Greeks of Ayvalık, paving the way for its becoming an important cultural center for that community in the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century.

The town was invaded by the Greek Army on 29 May 1919, and taken back three years later by Turkish Armies on 15 September 1922. After the Turkish Independence War, the Greek population in the town was replaced by a Muslim population from Greece under the 1923 agreement for the Exchange of Greek and Turkish Populations. Most of the new population that replaced the former Greek community were Muslim Turks from Mytilene, Crete and Greek Macedonia. One could still hear Greek spoken in the streets till recently. Many of the town's mosques are Greek Orthodox churches that have been converted.

Modern Ayvalık

Today, Ayvalık and the numerous islets encircling the bay area are popular holiday resorts. The most important and the biggest of these islets is Cunda Island (Alibey Island) which was connected to the mainland by a bridge in the late 1960s.

Since September 1998, Ayvalık has had an international music academy (AIMA) which gives master classes for violin, viola and cello. It brings together students from all over the world and gives them a precious opportunity to work with distinguished masters of their branch.

Ayvalık also has two of the longest sandy beaches of the whole country which extend as far as the Dikili district of İzmir nearly 30 km in the south. These are Sarımsaklı and Altınova beaches.

In recent years Ayvalık has also become an important point of attraction for scuba divers with its underwater fauna.

Ayvalık and its environs is famous for the highly appreciated quality of olive oil production.

Today, the population of Ayvalık is nearly 30,000 and much more during the summer due to its touristic importance. Ayvalık is also close to Bergama (former Pergamon) which is another important attraction for tourists with its ruins dating back to antiquity.

With its rich architectural heritage, Ayvalık is a member of the Norwich-based European Association of Historic Towns and Regions (EAHTR)

File:Ayvalik1.jpg
Ayvalık panorama

See also