Online Encyclopedia

KONIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 893 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KONIA  . (r) A vilayet in

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Asia Minor which includes the whole, or parts of,
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Pamphylia,
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Pisidia,
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Phrygia,
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Lycaonia,
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Cilicia and
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Cappadocia . It was formed in 1864 by adding to the old eyalet of
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Karamania the western
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half of
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Adana, and
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part of south-eastern Anadoli . It is divided into five sanjaks: Adalia, Buldur, Hamid-abad, Konia and Nigdeh . The population (990,000 Moslems and 8o,000 Christians) is for the most part agricultural and pastoral . The only
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industries are
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carpet-
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weaving and the manufacture of cotton and
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silk stuffs . There are mines of chrome, mercury, cinnabar, argentiferous lead and rock salt . The
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principal exports are salt, minerals, opium, cotton, cereals, wool and live stock; and the imports
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cloth-goods, coffee, rice and petroleum . The vilayet is now traversed by the Anatolian railway, and contains the railhead of the
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Ottoman
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line from Smyrna . (2) The chief
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town [anc . Iconium (q.v.)], altitude 3320 ft., situated at the S.W. edge of the vast central plain of Asia Minor, amidst luxuriant orchards famous in the
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middle ages for their yellow plums and apricots and watered by streams from the hills . Pop .

45,000, including 5000 Christians . There are interesting remains of Seljuk buildings, all showing strong traces of

Persian influence in their decorative details . The principal ruin is that of the palace of Kilij Arslan II., which contained a famous hall . The most important mosques are the
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great Tekke, which contains the tomb of the poet Mevlana Jelal ed-din Rumi, a mystic (sufi) poet, founder of the order of Mevlevi (whirling) dervishes, and those of his successors, the "
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Golden " mosque and those of
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Ala ed-Din and Sultan
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Selim . The walls, largely the
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work of Ala ed-Din I., are preserved in great part and notable for the number of ancient inscriptions built into them . They once had twelve gates and were 30 ells in height . The
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climate is good—hot in summer and cold, with snow, in winter . Konia is connected by railway with Constantinople and is the starting-point of the extension towards Bagdad . After the capture of Nicaea by the Crusaders (1097), Konia became the capital of the Seljuk Sultans of Rum (see SELJuxs and
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TURKS) . It was temporarily occupied by Godfrey, and again by Frederick Barbarossa, but this scarcely affected its prosperity . During the reign of Ala ed-Din I . (1219-1236) the city was thronged with artists, poets, historians, jurists and dervishes, driven westwards from
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Persia and Bokhara by the advance of the
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Mongols, and there was a brief period of great splendour .

After the break up of the

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empire of Rum, Konia became a secondary city of the amirate of Karamania and in part fell to ruin . In 1472 it was annexed to the Osmanli empire by Mahommed II . In 1832 it was occupied by
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Ibrahim
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Pasha who defeated and captured the
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Turkish general, Reshid Pasha, not far from the walls . It had come to fill only part of its ancient circuit, but of
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recent years it has revived considerably, and, since the railway reached it, has acquired a semi-
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European quarter, with a German hotel, cafes and Greek shops, &c . See W . M . Ramsay,
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Historical Geography of Asia Minor (189o); St Paul the Traveller (1895) ; G . Le Strange, Lands of the E .
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Caliphate (1905) . (D . G .

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