Karamürsel
Karamürsel
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Karamürsel

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Karamürsel

Karamürsel is a municipality and district of Kocaeli Province, Turkey. Its area is 262 km2, and its population is 59,676 (2022). It is on the south coast of the Gulf of İzmit. Before its conquest by the Ottomans it used to be called by the Greek name of Praenetos (Πραινετός in Greek). The modern name commemorates Kara Mürsel who founded the Ottoman navy and designed distinctive galley ships, called kadırgas, for it.

Karamürsel holds special significance for the Turkish Navy, as it was here in 1323 that the Ottoman Empire first established an outlet to the sea, thus laying the foundations for the Ottoman Navy which would go on to dominate the eastern Mediterranean for several centuries.

The Karamürsel area is not as heavily industrialised as other parts of Kocaeli province.

Ferry services link Karamürsel to İzmit and Hereke on the northern side of the Bay of İzmit.

According to the Ottoman General Census of 1881/82-1893, the kaza of Karamürsel had a total population of 25,322, consisting of 11,023 Greeks, 10,732 Muslims, 3,549 Armenians and 18 foreign citizens. In 1923 the Greeks were obliged to leave Turkey under the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne that concluded the Turkish War of Independence.

Today the people living in Karamürsel and its villages are mainly Muslim Manav Turks and immigrants known as muhacir in Turkish. Some of these immigrants arrived from Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Romania, North Macedonia, Lazistan, Georgia, Circassia and Crimea during and after the fall of Ottoman Empire; a particularly large number of Bosniaks settled in the area after the 1877-78 Russo-Turkish war. Many Muslim refugees from all around the Ottoman Empire settled in the region and this ethnic structure has resulted in a culture influenced by that of the Balkans and Caucasus. More recently Karamürsel has also attracted settlers from other parts of Turkey, especially the Black Sea Region.

Karamürsel was badly damaged on 17 August 1999 during the devastating İzmit earthquake, which rocked the eastern part of the Marmara Region. in Karamürsel alone 164 people lost their lives and many were left homeless. After the earthquake many people left for other parts of Turkey and Karamürsel resembled a ghost-town over the winter of 1999. Since then houses have been repaired and business reopened. During the earthquake, a tsunami struck both sides of the Bay of İzmit in about a single minute. Although the tsunami was not particularly large, substantial portions of the towns of Gölcük, Degirmendere and Karamürsel were inundated by the sea (Altinok et al., 1999). The coast of Karamürsel has now been repaired and reconstructed. There is a monument to those who died on the waterfront in Karamürsel.

Karamürsel has a long history as an important naval base. The first Ottoman shipyard was built in Karamürsel in 1327. The ships built there formed the nucleus of the first Ottoman Naval Forces.

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