KUTAHYA

THE ANCIENT CITY OF ROME ...

ANATOLIAN MANAGEMENT CENTER OF THE OTTOMAN STATE ...



TURKEY'S FOUNDATION CITY STATE ...

Kütahya (Turkish pronunciation: [cyˈtahja]) is a city in western Turkey with 237,804 inhabitants (2011 estimate), lying on the Porsuk river, at 969 metres above sea level. It is the capital of Kütahya Province, inhabited by some 564,294 people (2011 estimate). The region of Kütahya has large areas of gentle slopes with agricultural land culminating in high mountain ridges to the north and west. The city's Greek name was Kotyaion, Latinized in Roman times as Cotyaeum.



It is an open-air museum with historical richness as the city of organization and liberation with its 7000-year history. (Seyitömer mound, Phrygian, Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk, Germiyan, Ottoman - Establishment, Turkey - Liberation) Mountains are covered with forests, Gediz and Porsuk river, where the underground, surface waters, springs and famous plateaus are famous for its natural attractions. Having 9 to 65 thermal zones in Turkey, in every district or near the different temperature, thermal springs THERMAL cities have different characteristics.


KÃœTAHYA HISTORY FROM THE WORLD TO PRESENT

Since the Late Miocene period in the city's land Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Old Bronze, Hittite, Phrygian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk, Germiyan has a rich cultural heritage to Turkey which will live Ottoman and forever Republic.

The province has a historical background dating back seven thousand years. Ancient sources show Kütahya as the place where the famous storyteller Aesop was born. It is known from coins that Kütahya was named KOTIAEION in those ages. The Phrygians are the oldest inhabitants of Kütahya.

The Phrygians who migrated to Anatolia at the end of the 12th century BC dominated the region by eliminating the Hittites. In 6,6 BC, the Cimmerians defeated the king of Phrygia III.

In the period when Alyattes was the king of Lydia, the Lydian rulers who were dominated by Kimmer dominated the administration. B.C. Persians who invaded Anatolia in 546 defeated the Lydian army. The Great Macedonian Macedonian Great. When Alexander the Great died in 354 BC, he passed to Antigonas, one of the commanders of Kütahya and its environs. In 1433 BC, it came under the rule of Rome. In the Byzantine period, Kütahya continued its importance as the episcopal center and later on it was dominated by the Anatolian Seljuks.

Kutludikoglu Suleiman Shah, who founded the Anatolian Seljuk State in 1078, seized Kütahya. Kütahya was attacked by the Crusaders in 1097 and re-entered Turkey in 1233 after a short period of occupation. Among the works of the Seljuk period, the Hıdırlık Masjid, Yoncalı Bath and Mosque, the Balıklı Mosque and Madrasa, known as tekkesi, are located in the center of Kütahya.

With the dissolution of the Anatolian Seljuk State in 1277, these lands fell to the share of GermiyanoÄŸlu beys. The most famous among the works of Germiyanogullari II.Yakup Bey Imaret Complex, Umur bin Savci Madrasa and Ishak Fakih Mosque and Madrasah.

Son of the Germiyan II. After the marriage of Yakup, the sister of State Hatun to his marriage with the Ottoman Sultan Yildirim Beyazit, a relationship of kinship was established.



HISTORICAL PLACES

WHAT EAT IN KUTAHYA? 


We have brought together some of the main regional culinary products that you should not return until you come and eat. Here are the most famous dishes of Kütahya:

Sini Mantısı


Cimcik


Ispanak Sibit


Dolamber Boregi


Hashasli Gözleme


Ilibada Dolması


Tirit


Tosunum Boregi


Sikicik Corbasi


Kizilcik Tarhanasi


Kup Kebabi


Dovmec


Govec


Sutlu Incir Tatlisi


Yufka Tatlisi


Gelincik ve Gül Surubu

Yorum Gönder

0 Yorumlar