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・ Kemal Pasha dessert
・ Kemal Reis
・ Kemal Satır
・ Kemal Sunal
・ Kemal Tahir
・ Kemal Tokak
・ Kemal Türkler
・ Kemal Unakıtan
・ Kemal Yamak
・ Kemal Özdeş
・ Kemal Özçelik
・ Kemal Şahin
・ Kemalettin Sami Gökçen
・ Kemalettin Şentürk
・ Kemalism
Kemaliye
・ Kemalpaşa
・ Kemalpaşa (disambiguation)
・ Kemalpaşa, Artvin
・ Kemaman
・ Kemaman Bypass
・ Kemaman Port
・ Kemaman River
・ Keman
・ Kemanak
・ Kemane
・ Kemani Tatyos Ekserciyan
・ Kemankeş Kara Ali Pasha
・ Kemankeş Mustafa Pasha
・ Kemano


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Kemaliye : ウィキペディア英語版
Kemaliye

Kemaliye (formerly Eğin) ((アルメニア語:Ակն), Romanized Old Armenian: ''Akn'', meaning "spring") is both a town in and one of the nine districts of Erzincan Province in the Eastern Anatolia region of Turkey.
The town is known for its historic architecture, including many Ottoman-era houses. It is also notable for its commanding view of the river Karasu (Euphrates) flowing south through a gorge above the Keban dam.
==History==
In 1813, James Playfair's "A System of Geography" described Eğin as "() little town in the form of an amphitheatre, at the foot of a mountain, in a fruitful tract that reaches to the Euphrates."
The British explorer Francis Rawdon Chesney followed the course of the Euphrates for a survey expedition between 1835 and 1837, and mentions Eğin as "a town of 2700 houses on the right bank". In comparison, he counts about 3000 houses in Erzincan and 2923 families in Malatya. Chesney describes Eğin's situation in a deep valley where the "mountains rise to about 4000 feet on each side of this singular fissure, which is so narrow that it is crossed by a bridge between lofty limestone precipices seeming to overhang the town and as it were to threaten its destruction."
In 1895, the British geographer Charles William Wilson describes Eğin as follows in a travel guide to Asia Minor.
An Ottoman historian Vahakn Dadrian reports that in 1896, the town was evenly divided between Armenians and Muslims (Turks and Kurds). He says that Eğin was notable for its prosperity and had previously escaped the 1895–1896 Hamidian massacres through a ransom payment by the Armenians of 1500 Turkish gold pounds. However, British archaeologist David George Hogarth writing for the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica noted a massacre of Armenians in Eğin on November 8, 1895.
By 1911, Hogarth described Eğin as an important town in the Mamuretülaziz Vilayet "...picturesquely situated in a theatre of lofty, abrupt rocks, on the right bank of the western Euphrates, which is crossed by a wooden bridge. The stone houses stand in terraced gardens and orchards, and the streets are mere rock ladders."〔
On 21 October 1922, following the Turkish War of Independence, a decree was issued renaming Eğin as Kemaliye (and Selinti as Gazipaşa) in honor of Mustafa Kemal Pasha. The former name is still known and used locally and sometimes even beyond. Kemaliye was administered as part of Elazığ Province until 1926, and within Malatya Province between 1926 and 1938. In 1938 it was transferred to Erzincan Province.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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