Söğüt

Söğüt ([ˈsœ.yt]) is a town and district in Bilecik Province, Turkey. It is located in the Marmara region in the north-west of the country, with an area of 599 km2 (231 sq mi), bordering Bilecik to the west, Gölpazarı to the north, İnhisar to the north-east, Tepebaşı (Eskişehir) to the south-east, and Bozüyük to the south-west. Söğüt district has 5 boroughs and 23 villages, with the population last recorded as 21,012 citizens (2000), but according to a 2010 estimate the population was 19,425.

Söğüt
Town
Söğüt
Söğüt
Coordinates: 40°1′7″N 30°10′53″E
Country Turkey
RegionMarmara
ProvinceBilecik
Government
  Mayorİsmet Sever (MHP)
  GovernorMurat Öztürk
Area
  District530.21 km2 (204.72 sq mi)
Population
 (2012)[2]
  Urban
13,891
  District
19,842
  District density37/km2 (97/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (FET)
Postal code
11600
Area code(s)(+90) 0228
Licence plate11
Websitewww.sogut.bel.tr
Museum of Ertuğrul Ghazi in Söğüt.

Söğüt is notable as the founding location and first capital of the Ottoman Empire from 1299 to 1335.

History

Söğüt was a Seljuk Turkish tribe in western Anatolia that later gave birth to the Ottoman Empire. It was a small tribe that extended from the Kayi branch of the Oghuz Turks who settled Anatolia in the 12th and 13th centuries. The village of Söğüt was surrounded by three greater Turkish tribes: Eskenderum in the north, Eskişehir in the east, Konyali in the south; the Eastern Roman Empire in the west. Legend has it that the bey (chief) of the tribe in the late 13th century, Ertuğrul, bravely kept the enemies at bay so that his son, Osman, could conquer them all during his reign from 1299 to 1326. When Osman's son, Orhan, came to power after his father's death, he renamed the tribe Osmanli in honour of his father. The village of Söğüt (formerly Thebasion until 1231) later grew into a town that served the Osmanli tribe as its capital until the capture of the Byzantine city of Bursa in 1326. The capital was moved to Bursa as it was a significant city of the region.

Söğüt was the birthplace of Sultan Osman I. It was conquered by Ertuğrul for the Anatolian Seljuks from the Nicean Empire in 1231.[3] It had a kaza centre in the Ertuğrul Sanjak of Hüdavendigâr Vilayet, the centre of which was Bilecik. The kaza centre included present-day districts of İnhisar, İnönü, Mihalgazi, Sarıcakaya and Yenipazar, central and eastern parts of Bozüyük and some villages of Nallıhan and Tepebaşı prior to World War I. Söğüt was occupied three times by Greek troops during the Turkish War of Independence: 8-11 January 1921, 24 March-21 April 1921 and 12 July 1921-6 September 1922.

Today

Today Söğüt is a small town in the humid river valley of Bilecik Province in Turkey. Turkish history and life-size statues of the Ottoman sultans are exhibited in the Söğüt Ethnographical Museum. It is also the 3rd biggest district center in its province after Bozüyük and Bilecik.

References

  1. "Area of regions (including lakes), km²". Regional Statistics Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. 2002. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  2. "Population of province/district centers and towns/villages by districts - 2012". Address Based Population Registration System (ABPRS) Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
  3. Farrell & Fairey 2018, p. 113.

Sources

  • Farrell, Brian P.; Fairey, Jack, eds. (2018). Empire in Asia: A New Global History From Chinggisid to Qing. 1. Bloomsbury Publishing.
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