Online Encyclopedia

SAMSUN (anc. Antisus)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 120 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAMSUN (anc. Antisus)  , the chief
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town of the Janik sanjak of the Trebizond vilayet of
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Asiatic
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Turkey, situated on the S. coast of the Black Sea between the deltas of the Kizil and Yeshil Irmaks . Pop. about 15,000, two-thirds Christian . It is connected by metalled roads with Sivas and Kaisarieh, and by sea with Constantinople.' It is a thriving town, and the outlet for the trade of the Sivas vilayet . Steamers lie about x m. from the
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shore in an open roadstead, and in winter landing is some-times impossible . Its
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district is one of the
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principal
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sources of
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Turkish
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tobacco, a whole variety of which is known as" Samsun." Samsun exports cereals, tobacco and wool . Both exports and imports are about stationary, the Angora.railway having neutralized any tendency to rise . Amisus, which stood on a promontory about 1 z m . N.W. of Samsun, was, next to
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Sinope, the most flourishing of the Greek settlements on the Euxine, and under the kings of
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Pontus it was a rich trading town . By the 1st century A.D. it had displaced Sinope as the N .
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Port of the
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great trade route from Central
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Asia, and later it was one of the chief towns of the Comneni of Trebizond . There are still a few remains of the Greek settlement . (D .

G .

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