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Kastamonu Province

Coordinates: 41°31′10″N 33°41′23″E / 41.51944°N 33.68972°E / 41.51944; 33.68972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kastamonu Province
Kastamonu ili
Horma Canyon
Location of the province within Turkey
Location of the province within Turkey
CountryTurkey
SeatKastamonu
Government
 • GovernorMeftun Dallı
Area
13,064 km2 (5,044 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)[1]
378,115
 • Density29/km2 (75/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (TRT)
Area code0366
Websitewww.kastamonu.gov.tr

Kastamonu Province (Turkish: Kastamonu ili) is a province of Turkey, in the Black Sea region in the north of the country. It is surrounded by Sinop to the east, Bartın, Karabük to the west, Çankırı to the south, Çorum to the southeast and the Black Sea to the north. Its area is 13,064 km2,[2] and its population is 378,115 (2022).[1] The population density is 29 inhabitants per km2. The provincial capital Kastamonu has a population of 128,707 (2022).[1]

Districts

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Kastamonu province is divided into 20 districts (capital district in bold):

History

[edit]
Kastamonu Republic Monument

It is not definitively known when Kastamonu was first founded. However, some sources[which?] dating back to the Early Middle Ages refer to the province. There are also some archeological findings that date to about 100,000[citation needed] years that suggest the region was inhabited at that time.

There are many ideas about the derivation of the name Kastamonu:

According to the first view, it should be considered that the name Kastamonu is Turkishized from the name Paphlagonía[Greek "land of Paphlagon (people)"]. The region covering the West Black Sea and Central Black Sea regions was called Paphlagonia before the Turks. Today, Kastamonu, Sinop, Bartın, Çankırı and Karabük are located in this region, while parts of Çorum, Bolu, Zonguldak and Samsun provinces remain within the region. The Paphlagonians, who dominated this region in 1000 BC, gave their name to this geography.[3]

According to a second opinion, the city of Kastamonu took its name from the name Kastama, which was used for the same region in the Hittite period. The name Kastama turned into Kastamonu over time.[4]

According to another view, the city of Kastamonu took its name from the combination of the words Gas and Tumanna. Gas, or better known as Kashkas, are among the first settlers of Kastamonu. Tumanna is the name of a city/region located on Kastamonu at that time. The combination of these two words took the form of Kastamonu over time.[5]

According to a third opinion, the city of Kastamonu took its name from the combination of the words Kastra and Komnen. The word Kastra means "castle" in Latin. The Komnens are a Byzantine Dynasty and the settlers of this region during the Byzantine period. These two words took the form of Kastamonu over time.[6]

With the weakening of the Macedon kings, the Paphlagonia and Bithynia regions were engulfed by the newly formed Pontus kingdom. After the fall of the Pontus kingdom in first century BC, the area was incorporated by the Roman Empire by joining Paphlagonia with Bithynia. The capital center of this new city-state was Pompeiopolis, of which the remains still stand near Tasköprü District in Kastamonu.

Kastamonu Castle

The region then fell under the hegemony of the Seljuq dynasty (11th century AD), followed by the Danishmends, the Byzantines during the crusades, Çobanoğlu and Jandarid beyliks. The Ottoman sultan Beyazid I conquered the province in 1392; however, following his capture and death in Battle of Ankara, the area was granted back to the Çandaroğlu by the Mongol warlord Timur Lenk. Ottoman sultan Mehmed II incorporated the region back into the empire in 1461.

During the Ottoman reign, the province boundaries were expanded up to reach Constantinople. The sultan's heirs were often sent to rule the province as governors to gain experience.

After the First World War, during the battles of the Turkish War of Independence, Kastamonu played an important role in the supply of ammunition and troops to the İneboluAnkara front, transporting the war machines that would arrive to İnebolu by sea from Istanbul (Constantinople) and the Soviets. When the Greeks noticed this activity, the İnebolu port was bombarded from the sea on 9 June 1921.

Geography

[edit]
Ilısu Waterfall, at Küre national Park, near Pınarbaşı, Kastamonu, Turkey

The province is mostly covered with forests, thanks to the mild Black Sea climate. Ilgaz National Park, where a micro-climate dominates due to the mountainous terrain and numerous streams, is 63 km south of the province center of Kastamonu.

Ilgaz Mountain (highest peak 2587 m) dominates the south of the province where hiking and whitewater rafting is possible at the Ilgaz Stream.

Economy

[edit]

According to the 2000 census, 77.5% of the labor force is occupied in agriculture. This ratio is higher than the country average. The second largest sector is public and private services (8.9%).

Almost all of the arable land has permanent crops. The agricultural products make up about of 0.01% of the total in Turkey. A large portion of the agricultural produce consists of cereals. Thanks to its widespread forest areas (a total of 57% of the surface area), forestry is also an important industry. Industries largely consist of manufacturing of forestry, agriculture and mining products.

Underground resources include copper, mercury, iron ore, chromium, manganese, asbestos, bauxite, graphite, phosphate, kaolinite, clay, limestone, quartz, marble, magnesite, fire clay, coal and nickel. There are also some natural thermal and mineral water springs, of which a few are suitable for economic investments.

Kastamonu shares about 0.4% of the GDP, the composition of the GDP is as follows (1998 est.):

  • Agriculture: 32.8%
  • Communication and transport: 20%
  • Services: 16.8%
  • Industry: 9.5%

Transportation is possible only through paved and unpaved highways; a railroad that will connect Çankırı, Kastamonu and İnebolu is under construction.[when?] Although the province has a 135 km long coastline to Black Sea, only İnebolu has a small port and transportation by the sea is almost non-existent.

There are around 112,000 telephone main lines in use, about 200,000 cellphone subscribers and 15,000 Internet users in the province.[citation needed]

Miscellaneous

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  • Handcrafts are abundant in Kastamonu, especially in rural areas. Most available are hand-woven textiles.
  • Several national and local annual festivities also take place in the province.
  • In a research conducted in the province, 812 different food are identified that are specific to the region.
  • The provincial soccer team Kastamonuspor competes in the Bank Asya 1st League (1st National Soccer League).
  • The founder of the Turkish republic, Atatürk, declared the "dress code reform", which abolished the fez, in Kastamonu in 1925.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Address-based population registration system (ADNKS) results dated 31 December 2022, Favorite Reports" (XLS). TÜİK. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  2. ^ "İl ve İlçe Yüz ölçümleri". General Directorate of Mapping. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  3. ^ Nijman, Jan (2020). Geography: Realms, Regions, and Concepts (20. ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-1119607410.
  4. ^ Ahmet Ünal, Hititler Devrinde Anadolu Cilt 2, syf. 54
  5. ^ Talat Mümtaz Yaman, Kastamonu Tarihi, syf. 175
  6. ^ "Archived Copy". Archived from the original on 30 September 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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41°31′10″N 33°41′23″E / 41.51944°N 33.68972°E / 41.51944; 33.68972