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GALLIPOLI (Turk. Gelibolu, anc. KaAAi...

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 420 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GALLIPOLI (Turk. Gelibolu, anc. KaAAiiroXrs)  , a seaport and city of
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European
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Turkey, in the vilayet of Adrianople; at the north-western extremity of the Dardanelles, on a narrow peninsula 132 M . W.S.W. of Constantinople, and 90 M . S. of Adrianople, in 40° 24' N. and 26° 40' 30° E . Pop . (1905) about 25,000 . Nearly opposite is Lapsaki on the
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Asiatic side of the channel, which is here about 2 M. wide . Gallipoli has an unattractive appearance; its streets are narrow and dirty, and many of its houses are built of wood, although there are a few better structures, occupied by the
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foreign residents and the richer class of
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Turkish citizens . The only noteworthy buildings are the large, crowded and well-furnished bazaars with leaden domes . There are several mosques, none of them remarkable, and many interesting
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Roman and
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Byzantine remains, especially a
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magazine of the emperor Justinian (483-565), a square castle and tower attributed to Bayezid I . (1389-1403), and some tumuli on the south, popularly called the tombs of the Thracian kings . The lighthouse, built on a cliff, has a
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fine appearance as seen from the Dardanelles . Gallipoli is the seat of a Greek bishop .

It hastwo

good harbours, and is the
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principal station for the Turkish
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fleet . From its position as the key of the Dardanelles, it was occupied by the allied French and
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British armies in 1854 . Then the isthmus a few miles north of the
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town, between it and Bulair; was fortified with strong earthworks by
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English and French engineers, mainly on the lines of the old
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works constructed in 1357 . These fortifications were renewed and enlarged in
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January 1878, on the Russians threatening to take possession of Constantinople . The peninsula thus isolated by the fortified positions has the Gulf of
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Saros on the N.W., and extends some 5o m . S.W . The guns of Gallipoli command the Dardanelles just before the strait joins the Sea of Marmora . The town itself is not very strongly fortified, the principal fortifications being farther down the Dardanelles, where the passage is narrower . The
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district (sanjak) of Gallipoli is exceedingly fertile and well adapted for agriculture . It has about 1oo,000 inhabitants, and comprises four kazas (cantons), namely, (1) Maitos, noted for its excellent cotton; (2) Keshan, lying inland north of Gallipoli, noted for its cattle-market, and producing grain,
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linseed and canary seed; (3) Myriofyto; and (4) Sharkeui or Shar-Koi (Peristeri) on the coast of the Sea of Marmora . Copper ore and petroleum are worked at Sharkeui, and the neighbourhood formerly produced wine that was highly esteemed and largely exported to France for blending . Heavy taxation, however, amounting to 55% of the value of the wine, broke the spirit of the viticulturists, most of whom uprooted their vines and replanted their lands with mulberry trees, making sericulture their occupation .

There are no important

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industrial establishments in Gallipoli itself, except steam
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flour-mills and a sardine factory . The
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line of railway between Adrianople and the
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Aegean Sea has been prejudicial to the transit trade of Gallipoli, and several attempts have been made to obtain concessions for the construction of a railway that would connect this
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port with the Turkish railway
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system . Steamers to and from Constantinople call regularly . In 1904 the
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total value of the exports was £8o,000 . Wheat and maize are exported to the Aegean islands and to Turkish ports on the mainland; barley, oats and linseed to
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Great Britain; canary seed chiefly to
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Australia; beans to France and Spain . Semolinaand
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bran are manufactured in the district . Live stock, principally sheep, pass through Gallipoli in transit to Constantinople and Smyrna . Cheese, sardines, goats' skins and sheepskins are also exported . The imports include woollen and cotton fabrics from Italy, Germany, France and Great Britain, and hardware from Germany and Austria . These goods are imported through Constantinople . Cordage is chiefly obtained from
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Servia . Other imports are fuel, iron and groceries .

The Macedonian city of Callipolis was founded in the 5th

century B.C . At an early date it became a Christian bishopric, and in the
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middle ages
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developed into a great commercial city, with a population estimated at 1oo,000 . It was fortified by the East Roman emperors owing to its commanding strategic position and its valuable trade with
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Greece and Italy . In 1190 the armies of the Third Crusade, under the emperor Frederick I . (Barbarossa), embarked here for
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Asia Minor . After the capture of Constantinople by the Latins in 1204, Gallipoli passed into the power of Venice . In 1294 the Genoese defeated a Venetian force in the neighbourhood . A
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body of Catalans, under Roger Florus, established themselves here in 1306, and after the
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death of their leader massacred almost all the citizens; they were vainly besieged by the allied troops of Venice and the
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Empire, and with-drew in 1307, after :dismantling the fortifications . About the middle of the 14th century the
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Turks invaded
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Europe, and Gallipoli was the first city to fall into their power . The Venetians under Pietro Loredano defeated the Turks here in 1416 .

End of Article: GALLIPOLI (Turk. Gelibolu, anc. KaAAiiroXrs)
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