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MARDIN

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 697 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARDIN  , the

chief
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town of a sanjak of the Diarbekr vilayet of
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Asiatic
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Turkey . It is a military station on the Diarbekr-
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Mosul road . It occupies a remarkable site on the south side of a conical hill of soft
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limestone, and the houses rise tier above tier. character—he can claim the
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protection of this government, and it may
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respond to that claim without being obliged to explain its conduct to any
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foreign power; for it is its duty to make its
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nationality respected by other nations and respectable in every quarter of the globe." Eventually Koszta was released and returned to the
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United States . The Hiilsemann letter was published and greatly increased Marcy's popularity . ' See Henry L . James, " The Black
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Warrior Affair " in the
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American
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Historical Review, vol. xii . (1907) . MARDUK 697 The streets are narrow and paved in steps, while often the road-way runs along the roof of the house in the tier below . The hill is almost surrounded by old walls, while on the
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summit are the remains of the famous castle of the Kaleh Shubha (
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Lat . Maride or Marde,) which from
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Roman times has played an important
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part in
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history . The Arab geographers considered it impregnable, and from its steep approaches and well-arranged defences it was able to offer a protracted resistance to the Mongolian conqueror Hulagu and to the armies of Timur . It was also for several centuries the residence of more or less
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independent princes of the Ortokid
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Turkoman dynasty .

The

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climate is healthy and dry, and fruit grows well, but
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water is sometimes scanty in the summer . Mardin is the centre of a good corn-growing
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district, and is important chiefly as a border town for the Kurds on the north and the Arab tribes to the south . It is the chief centre of the Jacobite Christians, who have many villages in the Tor Abdin hills to the north-east, and whose patriarch lives at
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Deir Zaferan, a Syrian monastery of the 9th century not far off in the same direction . The population is estimated at 27,000, of whom about one-
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half are Christians of the Armenian, Chaldean, Jacobite,
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Protestant and Roman Catholic communities . Besides many mosques and churches there are three monasteries (Syrian, Franciscan and Capuchin), and an important American
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Mission station, with church,
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schools and a medical officer .

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