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Iğdır

Iğdır
Municipality
Iğdır at night
Iğdır at night
Iğdır is located in Turkey
Iğdır
Iğdır
Coordinates: 39°55′15″N 44°02′40″E / 39.92083°N 44.04444°E / 39.92083; 44.04444Coordinates: 39°55′15″N 44°02′40″E / 39.92083°N 44.04444°E / 39.92083; 44.04444
Country Turkey
Province Iğdır
Government
 • Mayor Murat Yikit (BDP)
Area
 • District 1,431.17 km2 (552.58 sq mi)
Elevation 850 m (2,790 ft)
Population (2012)
 • Urban 82,656
 • District 128,976
 • District density 90/km2 (230/sq mi)
Post code 76000
Website www.igdir.bel.tr

Iğdır (Turkish [ˈɯːβdɯɾ]; Armenian: Իգդիր Igdir, also Ցոլակերտ, Tsolakert, after the ancient city nearby), is the capital of Iğdır Province in the Eastern Anatolia Region of Turkey. The highest mountain in Turkey, Ağrı Dağı or Mount Ararat, is partly in Iğdır province.

Turkish sources maintain that the area is named after a western Turkish clan Iğdıroğlu that belonged to a branch of the Oghuz Turks. They spread throughout Anatolia and there are towns and villages named Iğdır in Malatya and other parts of Turkey today. The city called in Kurdish: Îdir, and in Armenian: Իգդիր Igdir, also Ցոլակերտ, Tsolakert, after the ancient site nearby).

Igdir went by the Armenian name of Tsolakert during the Middle Ages. When the Spanish traveler Ruy González de Clavijo passed through this region in the early 15th century, he stayed a night in a castle he called Egida, located at the foot of Mount Ararat. Clavijo describes it as being built upon a rock and ruled by a woman, the widow of a brigand Timurlane had put to death. Because modern Igdir has no such rock, and is a considerable distance from the Ararat foothills, it is believed that medieval Igdir was located at a different site, at a place also known as Tsolakert, now called Taşburun. Russian excavations there at the end of the 19th century discovered the ruins of houses and what was identified as a church, as well as traces of fortifications. The settlement may have been abandoned after an earthquake in 1664. In 1555 the town became a part of the Safavid Empire, remaining under Persian rule (with brief military occupations by the Ottomans in 1514, between 1534-1535, 1548-1549, 1554-1555, 1578–1605, 1635–36 and 1722–46) until it fell into the hands of the Russian Empire after the Russo-Persian War of 1826-1828.


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Wikipedia

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