Gaziler | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 40°25′17″N 42°20′52″E / 40.4215°N 42.3479°E | |
Country | Turkey |
Province | Erzurum |
District | Şenkaya |
Population (2022) | 299 |
Time zone | UTC+3 ( TRT) |
Gaziler is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Şenkaya, Erzurum Province in Turkey. [1] [2] Its population is 299 (2022). [3]
Gaziler was known as Bardus or Barduz ( Russian: Бардус or Бардуз) within the Russian Empire as part of the Olti Okrug of the Kars Oblast. [4]
During the First Republic of Armenia's administration of the Kars Oblast in 1919, Turkish and Azerbaijani agents engaged in arms deliveries and sedition through the environs of Gaziler. [5] The village later became the site of battles between the Armenian army and local Kurdish militia supplemented by the Turkish army in June 1920, [6] finally passing to Turkish republican control by late 1920, as confirmed by the Treaty of Kars. [7]
In 1886, Barduz had 404 inhabitants including 392 Greeks and 12 Ossetians. [8] In 1897, the village had 540 inhabitants including 280 men and 260 women, 519 of whom were Eastern Orthodox. [4] In 1914, there were 728 inhabitants in Barduz, predominantly Greeks. [9]
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
Gaziler | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 40°25′17″N 42°20′52″E / 40.4215°N 42.3479°E | |
Country | Turkey |
Province | Erzurum |
District | Şenkaya |
Population (2022) | 299 |
Time zone | UTC+3 ( TRT) |
Gaziler is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Şenkaya, Erzurum Province in Turkey. [1] [2] Its population is 299 (2022). [3]
Gaziler was known as Bardus or Barduz ( Russian: Бардус or Бардуз) within the Russian Empire as part of the Olti Okrug of the Kars Oblast. [4]
During the First Republic of Armenia's administration of the Kars Oblast in 1919, Turkish and Azerbaijani agents engaged in arms deliveries and sedition through the environs of Gaziler. [5] The village later became the site of battles between the Armenian army and local Kurdish militia supplemented by the Turkish army in June 1920, [6] finally passing to Turkish republican control by late 1920, as confirmed by the Treaty of Kars. [7]
In 1886, Barduz had 404 inhabitants including 392 Greeks and 12 Ossetians. [8] In 1897, the village had 540 inhabitants including 280 men and 260 women, 519 of whom were Eastern Orthodox. [4] In 1914, there were 728 inhabitants in Barduz, predominantly Greeks. [9]
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)