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Konya

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.07 sec.
Konya (kōn`yä), city (1990 pop. 509,208), capital of Konya prov., S central Turkey. It is the trade center of a rich agricultural and livestock-raising region. Manufactures include cement, carpets, and leather, cotton, and silk goods. As the ancient Iconium Iconium (īkō`nēəm), ancient city of Asia Minor, the modern Konya , Turkey.
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, the city was important in Roman times, but it reached its peak after the victory (1071) of Alp Arslan over the Byzantines at Manzikert, which resulted in the establishment (1099) of the sultanate of Iconium or Rum (so called after Rome), a powerful state of the Seljuk Turks. In the late 13th cent. the Seljuks of Iconium were defeated by the Mongols, and their territories subsequently passed to Karamania (see Karaman Karaman (kärämän`), town (1990 pop. 76,682), S central Turkey, at the northern foot of the Taurus Mts.
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). In the 15th cent. the whole region was annexed to the Ottoman Empire by Sultan Muhammad II, the conqueror of Constantinople. Konya lost its political importance but remained a religious center as the chief seat of the Mawlawiyya Sufi order (the dervishes), which was founded there in the 13th cent. by the poet and mystic Jalal ad-Din Rumi Rumi, Jalal ad-Din (jäläl` ĕd-dēn` r
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. His tomb, several medieval mosques, and the old city walls have been preserved, and Rumi is honored in an annual festival. In 1832 an Egyptian army under Ibrahim Pasha routed the Turks at Konya. The town's once-numerous Armenian population was largely deported during World War I. Konya prov., the largest in Turkey, has important mineral resources.

Konya

 ancient Iconium

City (pop., 1997: 623,333), central Turkey. First settled in the 3rd millennium BC, it is one of the oldest urban centres in the world. Influenced by Greek culture from the 3rd century BC, Iconium came under Roman rule by 25 BC. It was taken by the Seljuq dynasty c. 1072. Renamed Konya, it was a major cultural centre in the 13th century and was home to the Sufi brotherhood known as “whirling dervishes.” Later ruled by the Mongols, it was annexed to the Ottoman Empire c. 1467. It declined during Ottoman rule but revived after the Istanbul-Baghdad railway opened in 1896. An important industrial centre, it is also a trade centre for the agricultural area surrounding it.


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He settled in Konya, located in present-day Turkey, and began making a name for himself as a professor and preacher.
Around lunchtime, eyewitnesses claim, a white "Dogan" car, registered in the central Anatolian city of Konya, drew up near the Umit, or "Hope," bookstore.
It was discovered at Catalhuyuk (chah-tahl-hoo-YOOK), an archaeological site near Konya, Turkey.
 
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