Search: in
Rumelia
Rumelia Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Dictionary     Directory  
Rumelia Email this to a friend      Rumelia

Rumelia

Map of Rumelia as of 1801.
Map of Rumelia as of 1801.

Rumelia or Rumeli (Turkish: Rumeli ("Land of the Romans" from Rum: "Greek" [formerly "Roman"] and El: "Land"[1]); , Roúmeli; , Rumeliya) is a Turkish name, used from the 15th century onwards, for the southern Balkan regions of the Ottoman Empire. "Rumeli" literally translates as "land of the Romans", in reference to the Byzantine Empire, the former dominant power in the area. During the 11th and 12th centuries it was widely used for Anatolia while it was gradually being conquered from the Byzantines.

Rumelia included the ancient provinces of Constantinople, Thessaloniki, Thrace, Macedonia and Moesia, today's central Greece and European Turkey, bounded to the north by Danube, west by Albania and south by the Morea. The name Rumelia was ultimately applied to a province composed of central Albania and north-western Macedonia, with Bitola for its chief town.

Owing to administrative changes effected between 1870 and 1875, the name ceased to correspond to any political division. Eastern Rumelia was constituted as an autonomous province of the Ottoman Empire by the Treaty of Berlin, 1878, but on September 6, 1885, after a bloodless revolution, it was united with Bulgaria.

Today, in Turkey, the word Trakya has mostly replaced Rumelia when referring to the part of Turkey which is in Europe (provinces of Edirne, K?rklareli, Tekirda?, and the western part of Istanbul Province, though Rumelia remains in use in historical contexts. This region in Turkey is also referred to as Eastern Thrace or Turkish Thrace. In Greece, the term ??????? (Rumeli) has been used since Ottoman times to refer to Central Greece, especially when juxtaposed with Morea.

Administration

Rumelian coat of arms from 1741, adopted later as coat of arms of Eastern Rumelia.
Rumelian coat of arms from 1741, adopted later as coat of arms of Eastern Rumelia.

The first Beylerbey of Rumelia was Lala Shahin Pasha, the lala (tutor) of Murad I. He established the seat of his administration in Plovdiv (Filibe, Philippopolis) in 1362.

In 1382 the capital of Rumelia was moved to Sofia.

See also

References

af:Roemelië bg:??????? (??????) ca:Rumèlia de:Rumelien es:Rumelia fr:Roumélie it:Rumelia ka:??????? lv:Rum?lija nl:Roemelië no:Rumelia pt:Rumélia ro:Rumelia ru:??????? sl:Rumelija fi:Rumelia sv:Rumelien tr:Rumeli uk:???????





Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article


Search for Rumelia in Tutorials
Search for Rumelia in Encyclopedia
Search for Rumelia in Dictionary
Search for Rumelia in Open Directory
Search for Rumelia in Store
Search for Rumelia in PriceGig



Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor

Advertisement

Advertisement



Rumelia
Rumelia top Rumelia

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2008-2009 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement