Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/turkey

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Bolu Province

Province of Turkey

Bolu Province

Province of Turkey

FieldValue
typeprovince
other_nameBolu ili
image_skylineTABİATIN KALBİ BOLU GÖLCÜK TABİAT PARKI.jpg
image_captionLake Gölcük
image_mapBolu in Turkey.svg
map_captionLocation of the province within Turkey
coordinates
seatBolu
leader_nameErkan Kılıç
area_total_km28313
leader_titleGovernor
population_footnotes
population_total320824
population_as_of2022
area_code0374
iso_codeTR-14
website

Bolu Province () is a province in north-western Turkey, between the capital, Ankara, and the largest city in the country, Istanbul. Its area is 8,313 km2, and its population is 320,824 (2022). The capital city of the province is Bolu.

Geography

The province is drained by the Bolu River (Boli Su) and the Koca River.

The forests, lakes, and mountains are home to wildlife, including three deer species. Parts of the province are vulnerable to earthquakes.

Protected areas

Bolu Gölcük Nature Park aerial view
Bolu Gölcük Nature Park side view of the State Guesthouse

The province has the Yedigöller National Park.

There is also another area consisting of a lake and its surroundings that is under protection by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry as a 'nature park' that is called Gölcük. There is a structure on the shore of the lake named the State Guesthouse of the Ministry of Forestry. Near the nature park is an artificial lake; the lake is 13 km to the south of the city of Bolu.

History

It is not known when Bolu was first established. Some archaeological findings that date back about 100,000 years suggest the region was inhabited then.

The area now in Bolu Province was in eastern Bithynia and southwestern Paphlagonia. The town of Bithynium, from which the area takes its name, is the modern Bolu. The area was called Bithynia during the Hellenistic period. The Romans named it Claudiopolis, and it was called Bolu by the Turks. By approximately 375 BCE, Bithynia had gained its independence from Persia under Artaxerxes II, and King Bas subsequently defeated Alexander's attempt to take it. The Bithynian region, with parts of Paphlagonia remained its own kingdom until 88 BCE, when it briefly came under Mithridates VI and the Kingdom of Pontus. With Roman's help, the last Bithynian king, Nicomedes IV, regained his throne, but on his death bequeathed the kingdom to Rome. This led to the Third Mithridatic War and the fall of Pontus, after which the area was incorporated into the Roman Empire as a single province, merging Paphlagonia with Bithynia. Under the falling Byzantine Empire, the Bolu area was divided from western Bithynia at the Sakarya River, with western Bithynia keeping the name. The Sakarya River remains the southern and western boundary of the province.

After the victory of Malazgirt in 1071, the Turkmens spread to the west and settled in Bolu 3 years later. The Turkmens who settled in Bolu in 1074 easily integrated with the Bulgar, Pecheneg, Uz and Cuman Turks that the Byzantine Empire's had brought from the Balkans long before and later. Bolu and its villages were completely Turkified and took the names of the Turkic tribes. The Turks who came from the Balkans became Christians, but they did not forget the Turkic language, customs and traditions. They became Muslims in a short time.

The Byzantine Empire briefly lost the Bolu area to the Seljuk Turks after the 1071 Battle of Manzikert but recovered it under Alexios I Komnenos. After the end of the Komnenos dynasty, the Turks gradually reclaimed the Bolu area back. In approximately 1240, the Seljuk Turks took the eastern part of the Bolu area (i.e., the Paphlagonian part) from the Byzantine Empire and incorporated it into the Sultanate of Rum. Due to their assistance in taking it and Sinop, the Chobanids were given that territory and adjacent areas to the north and east to govern. That eastern area fell to the Isfendiyarids in 1292 and was controlled by them until 1461, after which it was incorporated into the rest of the Ottoman Empire by Mehmed II.

By 1265, the western part of the Bolu area was again acquired by the Seljuk Turks, but it fell to Orhan and the Ottoman Empire in the early to mid-1300s. The two areas were reunited in 1461, under Mehmed II. In the 1864 Ottoman Empire administrative reorganization, Bolu was made into an independent sanjak, although it was geographically part of the Kastamonu Vilayet.

Administrative divisions

Bolu province is divided into nine districts, four sub-districts, thirteen municipalities, and 491 villages.

Districts

Districts of Bolu Province
  • Bolu, the capital district
  • Dörtdivan
  • Gerede
  • Göynük
  • Kıbrıscık
  • Mengen
  • Mudurnu
  • Seben
  • Yeniçağa

Main sites

  • Lake Abant, a mountain lake resort and hot springs
  • Yedigöller National Park. The name means "seven lakes" in Turkish, referring to the number of lakes in this forest park.
  • The Köroğlu Mountains, said to be the scene of the folk Epic of Köroğlu
  • Kartalkaya, ski resort
  • Göynük Akshemseddin Mausoleum
  • Sarıalan, a lake high in the mountains above Kartalkaya
  • The Aladağ mountains, including the trail and picnic area of Gölcük

Towns include:

  • Mengen
  • Mudurnu (the ancient town of Modrenea)
  • Gerede

References

References

  1. "İl ve İlçe Yüz ölçümleri". General Directorate of Mapping.
  2. "Address-based population registration system (ADNKS) results dated 31 December 2022, Favorite Reports". [[TÜİK]].
  3. [https://www.allaboutturkey.com/bolu.html All About Turkey - Bolu]
  4. [[Memnon of Heraclea. Memnon]], ''History of Heracleia'', [http://www.attalus.org/translate/memnon1.html 12]
  5. (2024-10-02). "Turkey {{!}} Location, Geography, People, Economy, Culture, & History {{!}} Britannica".
  6. "Bolu Tarihi". Bolu Valiliği.
  7. Naval staff, Intelligence Department (Royal Navy). (1919). "A Handbook of Asia Minor". H.M.S.O..
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Bolu Province — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report