Online Encyclopedia

BITLIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 13 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BITLIS  , or BETrLrs (

Arm . Paghesh), the chief
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town of a vilayet of the same name in
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Asiatic
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Turkey, situated at an altitude of 4700 ft., in the deep, narrow valley of the Bitlis Chai, a tributary of the Tigris . The main
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part of the town and the bazaars are crowded alongside the stream, while suburbs with scattered houses among orchards and gardens extend up two tributary streams . The houses are massive and well built of a soft volcanic tufa, and with their courtyards and gardens climbing up the hillsides afford a striking picture . At the junction of two streams in the centre of the town is a
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fine old castle, partly ruined, which, according to
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local tradition, occupies the site of a fortress built by Alexander the
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Great . It is apparently an Arab
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building, as Arabic inscriptions appear on the walls, but as the town stands on the
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principal
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highway between the
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Van plateau and the Mesopotamian plain it must always have been of strategic importance . The bazaars are crowded, covered across with branches in summer, and typical of a Kurdish town . The population numbers 35,000, of whom about 12,000 are Armenians and the remainder are Kurds or of Kurdish descent . Kurdish beys and sheiks have much influence in the town and wild mountain districts adjoining, while the Sasun mountains, the scene of successive Armenian revolutions of
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late years, are not far off to the west . The town was ruled by a semi-
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independent Kurdish bey as late as 1836 . There are some fine old mosques and medresses (colleges), and the Armenians have a large monastery and churches . There are
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British, French and
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Russian consuls in the town, and a branch of the
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American
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Mission with
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schools is established also .

The

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climate is healthy and the thermometer rarely falls below o° Fahr., but there is a heavy snowfall and the narrow streets are blocked for some five months in the
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year . A good road runs southward down the pass, passing after a few miles some large chalybeate and
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sulphur springs . Roads also lead north to
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Mush and Erzerum and along the lake to Van . Postal communication is through Erzerum with Trebizond .
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Tobacco of an inferior quality is largely grown, and the chief industry is the
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weaving of a coarse. red
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cloth .
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Manna and gum tragacanth are also collected . Fruit is also plentiful, and there are many vineyards close by . The Bitlis vilayet comprises a very varied section of Asiatic Turkey, as it includes the Mush plain and the plateau country west of Lake Van, as well as a large extent of wild mountaindistrict's inhabited by turbulent Kurds and Armenians on either side of the central town of Bitlis, also some of the
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lower country about Sairt along the
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left
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bank of the main stream of the Tigris . The mountains have been little explored, but are believed to be rich in minerals, iron, lead, copper, traces of gold and many
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mineral springs are known to exist . (F . R .

End of Article: BITLIS
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