Silivri, formerly Selymbria (Greek: Σηλυμβρία), is a municipality anddistrict ofIstanbul Province, Turkey.[2] Its population is 217,163 (2022).[1] It lies along theSea of Marmara, outside the urban core ofIstanbul, containing many holiday and weekend homes for residents of the city. The largest settlement in the district is also named Silivri.
Silivri is located borderingBüyükçekmece to the east,Çatalca to the north,Çorlu andMarmara Ereğlisi (both districts ofTekirdağ Province) to the west,Çerkezköy to the north-west (one ofTekirdağ Province) and with the Sea of Marmara to the south. It is, with an area of 858 km2 (331 sq mi), the second largest district of Istanbul Province afterÇatalca.[3] The seat of the district is the city of Silivri.
Established in 2008, Turkey's most modern (and Europe's largest)prison complex is located 9 km (5.6 mi) west of Silivri.
The fort and town of Silivria, the ancient Selymbria, on the Sea of Marmara – Drawn from nature byF. Hervé, Esq. (about 1832). Courtesy of Gürhan Altan, IstanbulGate of the Silivri Castle on the top of a hill at the seaside, today an urban park.Traditional Ottoman house in Silivri
Silivri, the ancientGreekSelymbria orSelybria (Greek:Σηλυ(μ)βρία), owed its historical importance to the natural harbor and its position on the major commercial roads. It was a colony ofMegara founded on a steep 56 m high hill east of the bay, but excavations show that it was a Thracian settlement before it was a Greek colony.
According toStrabo, the city's name is a combination of the name of the mythological founder of the city, Selus, and the Thracian word that Strabo thought was used for polis, "bria". This, however, did not mean polis,[4] and had another meaning.
Selymbria is the birthplace of the physicianHerodicus, and was an ally of theAthenians in 351 BC. Until the second half of the 2nd century BC, the city could preserve its autonomy, but after its neighboursByzantium andPerinthos became more powerful, the city fell under their control during the next centuries. The settlement shrank into a village under the governance of the Roman Empire. In the early 5th century, the town was officially renamedEudoxiopolis (Greek: Εὐδοξιόπολις), during the reign of the Byzantine emperorArcadius (377–408), after his wifeAelia Eudoxia, though this name did not survive.
In 805 AD, the Bulgarian KhanKroum pillaged the town. In the late 9th century, EmperorMichael III constructed a fortress on the top of the hill, the ruins of which still remain, during an era in which theByzantine Empire suffered attacks bySaracencorsairs andRus raiders. With theFourth Crusade, and the fall of Constantinople to theLatin Empire in 1204, the fortress fell in quick succession to theLatin Empire, Bulgarian, back to the Latins and finally was recaptured by the Byzantine successor state of theEmpire of Nicaea in 1247, who were finally able to recapture Constantinople and restore the empire in 1261.
In 1346, theOttomans became an ally of the pretender for the EmperorJohn VI Cantacuzenus (1292–1383), and helped him against his rivalJohn V Palaeologus (1332–1391). The same year, SultanOrhan I married Theodora, the daughter of John VI in Selymbria.
In 1399, Selymbria fell to the Ottomans, marking their complete encirclement of Constantinople by land in Europe. Many contemporary observers believed from then on it was a mere matter of time before the Ottomans took the Byzantine capital. However, after their disastrous defeat at the hands ofTimur the Ottomans returned Selymbria and several other possessions to the Byzantines in 1403. It was sometimes attacked by the Ottomans in later years, but was not captured.
During theFall of Constantinople in 1453, Selymbria, along withEpibatos, stood up against theOttoman armies, and surrendered only after the city had fallen. The town remained a summer resort during the Ottoman time, as it was during the Byzantine era.
On the order ofSuleiman the Magnificent, architectMimar Sinan built 1562 a stone bridge with 33 arches just west of Silivri. The historical bridge, called "Uzunköprü" (The "Long Bridge"), is still in use today, however one arch is not visible due to sedimentation.
Prior to World War I, some Silivrian Jews immigrated to the town ofCamagüey,Cuba.[5]Russians occupied Silivri on February 5, 1878 for 1 month until 3 March 1878.Bulgarians occupied it on November 16, 1912 for 9 months until May 30, 1913.
During the war, many moreSephardim in the city left as conditions worsened due to the war. Many of these Turkish Jews emigrated to the United States settling primarily in New York and Seattle. Others went to Palestine, France and South America.
According to theTreaty of Sèvres, Silivri became a part of Greece on July 20, 1920. However,Italians took it over from the withdrawing Greek troops on October 22, 1922, according to theArmistice of Mudanya. Finally, Turkish forces entered Silivri on November 1, 1922. It was part ofÇatalca province between 1923–1926 and was bounded toIstanbul Province in 1926. It was enlarged with joining of Gümüşyaka (formerly Eski Ereğli) village fromÇorlu district.
Silivri coast and the hillMarina and Promenade of Silivri in the background
During the summer months, the population increases 4–5 times. Silivri is 67 km (42 mi) far from the city center of Istanbul, and is a popular summer resort for many Istanbul residents with its 45-kilometre-long (28 mi) coast. It is on the highwayD.100 and the motorway E80, which connect Turkey to Europe viaEdirne. It takes about an hour and a half to get here from the city so is feasible for use in the summer months as a weekend and holiday retreat, although the road out here is heaving with traffic in summer.
Being accessible from Istanbul, the Marmara coast has long been used for holidaying by Istanbul's people. As the city has grown, these facilities have moved further and further away. OnceFlorya andYeşilköy were resorts, today it is Tekirdağ and even further. Silivri had its heyday in the 1960s and 1970s as families would come by the busload to complexes of holiday flats that were built on the beach. The Marmara Sea suffered from pollution in the 1980s and 1990s but now efforts have been made to clean it up. All the facilities are located in the holiday housing area, the town centre of Silivri has little to offer in the way of cinema, theatre or any other cultural amenities.
Now the coast has also been blessed with resort hotels and country clubs with sports facilities including golf courses, horse riding centres and tennis courts, health and conference centers. At weekend the area is crowded with day trippers.
With all this development it is hard to find a stretch of open coastline.
The winter months are cold here, as bitter weather blows across Thrace from theBalkans, and holiday homes in Silivri are not much used from mid-September until May or even June.
The district has great agricultural potential thanks to its almost flat landscape, mildThracian climate and yield-effective soil, and in the 1950s and 1960s the pasture was so rich that theyogurt of Silivri was renowned. Now the reputation of the yogurt has declined due to poor quality control and mismanagement of the brand. The Silivri Yoğurt Festivali used to be a major event but nowadays there is less interest and in some years it is not even held.Wheat (246 km2),sunflower (105 km2) andbarley (50 km2) are cultivated here. Vineyards were once important but have declined since the 1970s.Livestock is still important.
Silivri has two sports clubsSilivrispor and Alibeyspor. Established in 1957, Silivrispor has two active branches, football and basketball.[7] Silivrispor's professional football team play in theApor Toto 3rd Şeague.[8][9] The basketball section eas founded in 2014.[10][11] Alibeyspor, named after a neighborhood of Silivri, was established in 1989.[12][13] The club's main activity is in football. Their amateur football team play in theIstanbul Super Amateuar League,[14] and the women's team in theTurkish Women's Third League.[15]
Sport venues in Silivri are the 2,700-seating capacity Müjdat Gürsu Stadium,[16] named afterMüjdat Gürsu (1971–1994) a local footballer, and Alibey Sport Hall.[17]
TheAnastasian Wall, also known as the Long Walls of Thrace, was constructed by Byzantine emperorAnastasius I (491–518) as part of an additional outer defense system forConstantinople during the 5th century and probably was in use until the 7th century. Comparable only withHadrian's Wall in England in its complexity and preservation, thefortification stretches some 56 km fromBlack Sea coast across the Thracian peninsula to the Sea of Marmara at west of Silivri.
The Long Bridge of 32 arches (Uzunköprü) dating from the 1560s
Silivri Kalepark, an urban public park inside the Silivri Castle,
The Byzantine church of Saint Spyridon occupied the highest point in the city before its demolition in the 1920s.[19] It was described in theTurkish Embassy Letters.
^Boardman, John & I. E. S. Edwards, E. Sollberger, N. G. L. Hammond (1992).The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East, from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries BC. Vol. 3. The Cambridge Ancient History. p. 612.ISBN0-521-22717-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)