Malatya is a busy city situated on a fertile plain at the foot of the Anti-Taurus Mountains. The Archaeology Museum houses new finds from the Lower Firat region that date from the Neolithic and Chalcolithic ages.
IDENTITY CARDSurface Area: 12.313 km2
Population: 853.658 (2000)
Population growth rate: % 19 (2000)
Income Per capita: $1863 (2000)
Number of districts: 13
Literacy Rate: % 97
Urbanization Rate: % 59
When the 17th century Turkish writer Evliya Çelebi, who travelled throughout the Ottoman Empire recording everything he saw, visited Malatya he remarked upon the plentiful water from numerous springs, the good air, and the orchards and vineyards in the green plain, and said that this was a city which aroused the admiration of all those who travelled there.
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Malatya is a city encircled by the Beydağları range of mountains, an extension of the Toros, and its position on the road linking Anatolia to Mesopotamia meant that it was settled at a very early stage in history. It saw many civilisations come and go, including the Hittites, Assyrians, Romans, Persians, Arabs, Seljuk Turks and their successors the Ottomans. Assyrian tablets unearthed at Kültepe and dating from the early 2nd millennium BC give the name as Melita, while the Hittites knew the city as Maldia meaning honey, the Romans as Melite or Melitene, the Persians as Aspozanı, the Arabs as Malatiyye, and the Turks as Malatya.
Next to the city museum, you can shop in at the bazaar where an entire passageway of shops is devoted to copperware.
In Malatya, the apricot growing center of Turkey, it is possible to sample many delicious apricot confections as well as other fresh and dried fruit.
The two small towns which pre-date the establishment of present-day Malatya are easy expeditions. Aslantepe, 7 km away, was the capital of a Hittite state in the first millennium B.C., and Battalgazi, 9 km away, was once the ancient city of Melitene. At the latter, stand the ruins of a Byzantine enclosure, and in the center of town, the 13th-century Ulu Mosque is an excellent example of Seljuk architecture.
Significant Days
Local Days of Celebration:Arrival of Atatürk at Malatya
13 February Festivals:Apricot Festival
22-24 July Festivities:Arapkir Grape Harvest Festivities
Arapkir
First week of SeptemberDarende Zengibahar Traditional Wrestling Matches
Darende
30 August
SITES OF INTEREST: Pınarbaşı forest recreation area, Takaz Spring, Old Malatya (today Battalgazi), Castle, Malatya, Arapkir and Darende Grand Mosques,
Şahabiye-i Kübra old theological school (medrese),Sadrazam mosque complex, Melik Sunullah, Akminare, Abdülselam, Karahan, Cafer Pasha, Mirliva Ahmed Pasha,
Gümrükçü Osman Pasha, Çobanlı and Köprülü Mehmed Pasha mosques, Ispanakçı Mustafa Pasha Library (later Molla Eyüb Mosque), Kanlı (bloody) Vault, Twin Mausoleums,
Şeyh Hamid-i Veli (Somuncu Baba) Dervish' Lodge, Silahtar Mustafa Pasha Inn, Taşhan, Kırkgöz Bridge, Bazaar (Arasta of Haç Hüseyin Pasha), Hasan Pasha and Köprülü Mehmed Pasha baths.
Some Malatya Site You may want to visit:
(My server does not allow to link those; so, you have to copy and paste)http://stu.inonu.edu.tr/~daras/malatya.html
http://www.malatyahaber.com
http://www.malatya-bel.gov.tr
http://www.malatya.gov.tr
http://www.malatyaspor1966.com
http://www.zaferturizm.com.tr/anasayfa.html
http://www.malatyafuar.com/ana.htm
http://www.inonu.edu.tr
http://www.kultur.gov.tr/portal/default_en.asp?belgeno=2173