| Location of Ardahan Province in Turkey | |
|---|---|
| Overview | |
| Region: | Eastern Anatolia Region, Turkey |
| Area: | 5,661 (km²) |
| Total Population | 119,172 TUIK 2007 (est) |
| Licence plate code: | 75 |
| Area code: | 0478 |
| Governor Website | http://www.ardahan.gov.tr |
Ardahan Province is a province in the far north-east of Turkey, at the very end of the country, where Turkey borders with Georgia .
The provincial capital is the city of Ardahan.
Contents |
Etymology
Its historical names include Ардаган (Ardagan) in Russian, არტაანი, artaani in Georgian.
Geography
This is attractive open countryside which however spends many months of the year under snow. At this altitude temperatures on average reach -20 and can drop below freezing all year round, including summer months.
The local economy depends on farming and raising livestock. Until 1993 Ardahan was a district of the province of Kars, becoming a province in its own right has meant more investment in infrastructure, but still this is an impoverished area that since the 1950s has seen a large number of its people migrate to other parts of Turkey or abroad. The population declined from 170,000 people in 1990 to 119,000 in 2000. Ethnic groups in the region include,Turkish people, Georgians, Kipchak[citation needed], Turkman[citation needed], Karapapaks[citation needed] and Azeris[citation needed].
There are two crossing points into the Samtskhe-Javakheti district of Georgia, one at Posof and the other (currently closed) at Çıldır. The Turkish military have a strong presence in this border district, another boost to the local economy.
History
In 680 BC Scythians came across the Caucasus from the north and captured this area from the Urartu Kings that ruled from their capital on the shores of Lake Van to the south. The Scythians were replaced by Persians and then in 330(?) BC Alexander the Great came through with his armies. Ethnic Georgians populated the area, and in between conquests, it was a province of a Georgian Kingdom after whose paritition in the 1490s the area passed to the atabegs of Samtskhe based in Akhaltsikhe until it was taken over by the Ottoman Empire in 1578.
In 1878, after the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), the region was included into the Russian Empire, and until 1918 was known as Kars Oblast. Part of the Democratic Republic of Georgia from 1918 to 1921, Ardahan was reclaimed by Turkey under the Treaty of Kars in 1921.
The construction of the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline gave the local economy a brief boost from 2000 onwards.
Places of interest
- There are a number of medieval castles in the district including Ardahan Castle itself. Although the name Ardahan is Armenian, there never existed any Armenians in this area. As shown in the historical discription of this area.
- At a certain time of the year Damal mountain throws a shadow that is a very lifelike silhouette of Atatürk. See.[1]
Districts
Ardahan province is divided into 6 districts (capital district in bold):
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Coordinates: 41°06′47″N 42°49′15″E / 41.11306°N 42.82083°E
References
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