|
Visit our new topic page about
Edirne
|
Edirne
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Edirne , formerly Adrianople , city (1990 pop. 102,325), capital of Edirne prov., NW Turkey, in Thrace. It is the commercial center for a farm region where grains, fruits, and tobacco are grown and cattle and sheep are raised. The city was founded (c.AD 125) by Hadrian, the Roman emperor, on the site of Uscudama. Of great strategic importance and strongly fortified, the city has had a turbulent history. The defeat (378) of Emperor Valens by the Visigoths at Adrianople left Greece open to invasion by barbarian tribes. Later conquered by the Avars, the Bulgarians, and the Crusaders, the city passed to the Ottoman Turks in 1361 and was the residence of the Ottoman sultans until the conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Russia captured the city twice (1829 and 1878) during the Russo-Turkish Wars. It fell (1913) to Bulgaria in the First Balkan War but was restored to Turkey after the Second Balkan War. It passed to Greece by the Treaty of Sèvres (1920), but was again restored to Turkey by the Treaty of Lausanne (1923). The city's many mosques include the great mosque of Selim II (completed 1574). The city was also called Orestia by Byzantine writers.
Author not available, EDIRNE.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Ham radio operators serve as vital communications link in Balkan war. (Originated from Boston Globe)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 4/13/1994; Neuffer, Elizabeth; 684 words
; ... such as Sarajevo, Tuzla and Zenica. Often, they have the first news of fresh offensives in the war, as phone lines have long ago ... destroyed by fighting. It was ham operators from Gorazde who reported news of the major Serb offensive on the city of 65,000 last Saturday ...
Read more
|
|
A Balkan War Journal No 2.(Comment)
The Independent (London, England); 5/22/2001; 65 words
; A Balkan War Journal No 2: Two Kosovar Albanians, forced to leave their homes at gunpoint by Serb forces, are reunited at the border of Kosovo and Montenegro in the winter of 1999. Ron Haviv's picture can be seen in the exhibition Blood and Honey: A Balkan War Journal, which runs until Friday at
Read more
|
|
A Balkan War Journal No 2
The Independent - London; 5/22/2001; 65 words
; A Balkan War Journal No 2: Two Kosovar Albanians, forced to leave their homes at gunpoint by Serb forces, are reunited at the border of Kosovo and Montenegro in the winter of 1999. Ron Haviv's picture can be seen in the exhibition Blood and Honey: A Balkan War Journal, which runs until Friday at
Read more
|
|
Balkan War photographic exhibition.(Comment)
The Independent (London, England); 5/25/2001; 40 words
; A Balkan War Journal No 5: A Serbian father and son in newly liberated territory, in the autumn of 1991. Ron Haviv's picture can be seen in the exhibition Blood and Honey: A Balkan War Journal, which runs until today at the Freedom Forum in central London
Read more
|
|
Balkan War photographic exhibition
The Independent - London; 5/25/2001; 40 words
; A Balkan War Journal No 5: A Serbian father and son in newly liberated territory, in the autumn of 1991. Ron Haviv's picture can be seen in the exhibition Blood and Honey: A Balkan War Journal, which runs until today at the Freedom Forum in central London
Read more
|