Adrianople vilayet

(Redirected from Vilayet of Edirne)

The Vilayet of Adrianople or Vilayet of Edirne (Ottoman Turkish: ولايت ادرنه; Vilâyet-i Edirne)[3] was a first-level administrative division (vilayet) of the Ottoman Empire.

Vilayet of Adrianople
ولايت ادرنه
Vilâyet-i Edirne
Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire
1867–1922
Flag of Adrianople vilayet
Flag

The Adrianople Vilayet in 1900
CapitalAdrianople (Edirne)[1]
Area
 • Coordinates41°10′N 26°19′E / 41.16°N 26.32°E / 41.16; 26.32
Population 
• Muslim, 1914[2]
360,411
• Greek, 1914[2]
224,680
• Armenian, 1914[2]
19,773
• Jewish, 1914[2]
22,515
History 
1867
• Disestablished
1922
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Edirne Eyalet
Kingdom of Greece
Turkey
Kingdom of Bulgaria
Today part ofTurkey
Greece
Bulgaria

Prior to 1878, the vilayet had an area of 26,160 square miles (67,800 km2)[4][5] and extended all the way to the Balkan Mountains. However, by virtue of the Treaty of Berlin (1878), the Sanjak of İslimye, most of the Sanjak of Filibe and a small part of the Sanjak of Edirne (the Kızılağaç kaza and Monastır nahiya) were carved out of it to create the autonomous province of Eastern Rumelia, with a total area of 32,978 km2.[6] The province unified peacefully with the Principality of Bulgaria in 1885.

The rest of the vilayet was split between Turkey and Greece in 1923, culminating in the formation of Western and Eastern Thrace after World War I as part of the Treaty of Lausanne. A smaller portion had already gone to Bulgaria by virtue of the Treaty of Bucharest (1913) following the Balkan wars. In the late 19th century, it bordered on the Istanbul Vilayet, the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara in the east, on the Salonica Vilayet in the west, on Eastern Rumelia (Bulgarian since 1885) in the north and on the Aegean Sea in the south. Sometimes the area is also described as Southern Thrace,[7] or Adrianopolitan Thrace.[8]

After the city of Adrianople (Edirne in Turkish; pop. in 1905 about 80,000), the principal towns were Rodosto (now Tekirdağ) (35,000), Gelibolu (25,000), Kırklareli (16,000), İskeçe (14,000), Çorlu (11,500), Dimetoka (10,000), Enez (8000), Gümülcine (8000) and Dedeağaç (3000).[1]

Administrative divisions

Sanjaks of the Vilayet:[9]

  1. Sanjak of Adrianople (now Edirne) (Adrianople, Cisr-i Mustafapaşa, Kırcaali, Dimetoka, Ortaköy, Cisr-i Ergene, Havsa. It had also kazas of Kırkkilise, Baba-yı Atik, Beykar Hisar, Maa Hatunili-Kızılağaç (Its centre was Kızılağaç) and Ferecik. Kızılağaç went to Yanbolu sanjak of Şarki Rumeli Vilayeti, Ferecik went initially to Gelibolu in 1876, later to Dedeağaç and was demoted to nahiya in 1878, Kırkkilise, Baba-yı Atik and Beykar Hisar went to recreated Kırkkilise sanjak in 1878. Beykar Hisar was demoted to nahiya in 1879)
  2. Sanjak of Kirklareli (Since 1878) (Kirkkilise) (Kırkkilise, Tırnovacık, Lüleburgaz, Vize, Ahtabolu, Midye, Baba-yı Atik. Most of Tırnovacık and Ahtabolu were ceded to Bulgaria in 1913. Saray separated from Vize and became kaza in 1916)
  3. Sanjak of Rodosto (now Tekirdağ) (Tekfurdagi) (Tekfurdağı, Çorlu, Malkara, Hayrabolu. It had also kazas Vize, Lüleburgaz and Midye till 1879, it was gone to recreated Kırkkilise sanjak)
  4. Sanjak of Gelibolu (Gelibolu, Maydos, Şarköy, Mürefte, Keşan. It had also Enez and Gümülcine kazas till 1878. Gümülcine promoted to sanjak in 1878. Enez went to Dedeağaç sanjak. Finally İpsala (promoted to kaza) and Enez returned to Gelibolu in 1913)
  5. Sanjak of Dedeağaç (1878-1912) (Dedeağaç, Sofulu, Enez)
  6. Sanjak of Gümülcine (1878-1912) (Gümülcine, İskeçe, Koşukavak, Ahiçelebi, Eğridere, Darıdere). The whole Sanjak was ceded to Bulgaria, with a small part to Greece in 1913.
  7. Sanjak of Filibe (Filibe, Pazarcık, Hasköy, Zağra-i Atik, Kızanlık, Çırpan, Sultanyeri, Ahiçelebi) (until 1878, then it became part of Eastern Rumelia, except for Sultanyeri and Ahiçelebi, which were seded back to the Ottoman Empire and eventually incorporated into the Sanjak of Gümülcine)
  8. Sanjak of Slimia (İslimye, Yanbolu, Misivri, Karinabat, Aydos, Zağra-i Cedid, Ahyolu, Burgaz) (until 1878, then became part of Eastern Rumelia)

Demographics

Ethnoconfessional groups in the Adrianople Vilayet as per the 1875 Vilayet Census[10]

  Bulgarians and Greeks (58.78%)
  Muslims (34.98%)
  Muslim Romani (2.84%)
  Jews (1.03%)
  Armenians (1.02%)
  Roman Catholics (0.76%)
  Christian Romani (0.58%)

Total population of the Adrianople Vilayet by ethnoconfessional groups according to French orientalist Ubicini on the basis of the official Ottoman Census of the Vilayet in 1875:[10]

Ethnoconfessional Groups in the Adrianople Vilayet as per the 1875 Vilayet Census
PopulationNumberPercentage
Muslims603,11037.83%
—Muslims557,69234.98%
—Muslim Romani45,4182.84%
Christians974,64461.14%
Bulgar millet & Rum millet937,05458.78%
Ermeni millet16,1941.02%
—Roman Catholics12,1440.76%
—Christian Romani9,2520.58%
Yahudi millet16,4321.03%
GRAND TOTAL1,594,186100%

Total population of the Adrianople Vilayet (including Eastern Rumelia) in 1878 according to the Turkish author Kemal Karpat:[11]

GroupPOPULATION
Bulgarians40% (526,691)
Other Christians22% (283,603)
Muslims39% (503,058)
TOTAL Adrianople Vilayet100% (1,304,352)

Population of various ethnoconfessonal communities in the Vilayet and its sanjaks according to the 1906/7 Ottoman census, in thousands, adjusted to round numbers.[12]The communities are counted according to the Millet System of the Ottoman Empire rather than by the mother tongue. Thus, some Bulgarian-speakers were included in the Greek Rum millet and counted as Greeks, while the Muslim millet included Turks and Pomaks (Bulgarian speaking Muslims).

Ethnoconfessional groups in the Adrianople Vilayet as per the 1906-07 Ottoman Census

  Muslims (52.64%)
  Greeks (29.00%)
  Bulgarians (13.78%)
  Armenians (2.21%)
  Jews (2.04%)
  Miscellaneous (0.37%)
GroupsEdirneGümülcineKırklareliDedeağacTekirdağGeliboluTotal
Muslims15424078447726619
Greeks1032271285365341
Bulgarians5729302961162
Jews16123224
Armenians5-19126
Others2--1-2
Total31729218189159961,176

A publication from December 21, 1912, in the Belgian magazine Ons Volk Ontwaakt (Our Nation Awakes) estimated 1,006,500 inhabitants:[13]

Sanjak of Filibe

Male population of the Filibe Sanjak of the Adrianople Vilayet in 1876 according to the British R. J. Moore:[14][15]

Ethnoconfessional groups in the Sanjak of Filibe in 1876[14][15]

  Bulgarians (57.57%)
  Turks (36.57%)
  Muslim Romani (3.58%)
  Greeks (1.15%)
  Jews (0.59%)
  Christian Romani (0.40%)
  Armenians (0.14%)
TurksMuslim GypsiesChristian GypsiesBulgariansGreeksArmeniansJewsKAZA TOTAL
Filibe kaza28% (35,400)4% (5,474)0% (495)63% (80,107)3% (3,700)0% (380)1% (691)100% (126,247)
Tatar Pazardzhik kaza23% (10,805)4% (2,120)1% (579)70% (33,395)1% (300)0% (94)1% (344)100% (47,637)
Hasköy kaza55% (33,323)3% (1,548)0% (145)42% (25,503)0% (0)0% (3)0% (65)100% (60,587)
Zagora kaza20% (6,677)3% (989)0% (70)75% (24,857)0% (0)0% (0)2% (740)100% (33,333)
Kazanlak kaza46% (14,365)4% (1,384)0% (24)48% (14,906)0% (0)0% (0)1% (219)100% (30,898)
Chirpan kaza24% (5,157)2% (420)0% (88)74% (15,959)0% (0)0% (0)0% (0)100% (21,624)
Sultan-Jeri kaza97% (13,336)1% (159)0% (0)2% (262)0% (0)0% (0)0% (0)100% (13,757)
Akcselebi kaza59% (8,197)3% (377)0% (0)38% (5,346)0% (0)0% (0)0% (0)100% (13,920)
TOTAL Filibe Sanjak37% (127,260)4% (12,471)0% (1,401)58% (200,335)1% (4,000)0% (477)1% (2,059)100% (348,000)

Sanjak of İslimiye

Male population of İslimiye sanjak of Adrianople Vilayet in 1873 according to Ottoman almanacs:[16]

CommunityPopulation
Muslims37,200 (47%)
Non-Muslims46,961 (53%)
TOTAL Islimiye sanjak100% (84,161)

Male population of İslimiye sanjak of Adrianople Vilayet in 1875 according to British R.J. Moore:[17]

CommunityPopulation
Muslims42% (44,747)
Non-Muslims58% (60,854)
TOTAL Islimiye sanjak100% (105,601)

Sanjak of Gümülcine

Total population of the Sanjak of Gümülcine of the Adrianople Vilayet In the 19th century:[18]

SanjakMuslimsChristian BulgariansChristian Greeks
Gümülcine206.91420.67115.241

References