Giresun Province

Coordinates: 40°34′47″N 38°35′40″E / 40.57972°N 38.59444°E / 40.57972; 38.59444
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Giresun Province
Giresun ili
Birch forest in Şebinkarahisar, Giresun Province
Birch forest in Şebinkarahisar, Giresun Province
Location of the province within Turkey
Location of the province within Turkey
CountryTurkey
SeatGiresun
Government
 • GovernorEnver Ünlü
Area
6,972 km2 (2,692 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)[1]
450,862
 • Density65/km2 (170/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (TRT)
Area code0454
Websitewww.giresun.gov.tr
Çımaklı village in the Espiye district, Giresun

Giresun Province (Turkish: Giresun ili; Armenian: Գիրեսունի գավառ) is a province of Turkey on the Black Sea coast. Its adjacent provinces are Trabzon to the east, Gümüşhane to the southeast, Erzincan to the south, Sivas to the southwest, and Ordu to the west. Its area is 6,972 km2,[2] and its population is 450,862 (2022).[1] The provincial capital is Giresun. Its license-plate code is 28.

Geography

A sunset view on the coast of Giresun province

Giresun is an agricultural region and its lower areas, near the

hazelnuts[clarification needed] and it is famously home to the best quality hazelnuts in the world; a Giresun folk song tells "I will not eat a single hazelnut, unless you are by my side,"[3] while another tells of a lover shot dead under a hazelnut tree.[4]

Pınarlar village

Forests and pasture cover the high mountainous regions, and in places there is mining of copper, zinc, iron and other metals. The mountain villages are remote, with poor roads and little else in the way of infrastructure. The hillsides are too steep for most forms of agriculture, and as a result, cornbread is the traditional meal, as wheat cannot be grown.

The climate is typical of this stretch of the

bilberries
(Turkish "taflan").

Demographics

The province is traditionally inhabited mostly by

Chepni Turks as well as a minority of Cheveneburi Georgians
in select rural villages and towns.

Due to migration, more Giresunians live outside of Giresun than inside it.

Districts

Giresun province is divided into 16 districts (capital district in bold):

Culture

Giresun province is culturally divided into two regions from north to south. North Giresun having virtually the same culture as the neighbouring Ordu and Trabzon, while south Giresun (aka. the Şebinkarahisar region) being much closer to the neighbouring Sivas province and the Central Anatolia region. Because of the northern part dominating much of the province's economic and demographic sides, south of the province is more often than not ignored.

Handcrafts

Due to the dense forestry in Giresun,

handcrafts in the region. Some small wooden handcrafts peculiar to the city are churns, külek (a storing pot for cheese), and spoons. One of the oldest handcrafts in the city is weaving. Wool, linen threads and similar raw materials are spun in handlooms to produce various local clothes, heybe
(shoulder bags) and bags. Strong threads and knitted threads are also produced in handlooms.

Cuisine

Some of the dishes peculiar to the city are

dible), kaygana, kuymak (made of cheese, cornmeal and butter)[5]

Places of interest

Çakrak church in Çakrak, Alucra.

Notable residents

Aksu stream, Giresun

Politicians

Writers and artists

Musicians

Giresun province shares the folk music of the Black Sea region and is the birthplace of:

Other musicians include:

Sports people

Giresun in popular culture

  • The TV series Uy Başuma Gelenler was filmed in the village of Düzköy. It is the story of a young man from Istanbul who inherits a hazelnut grove in Giresun (a Turkish twist on Monarch of the Glen).
  • The folk song "Giresun üstünde vapur bağrıyor" ("Eşref Bey Ağıtı") has been recorded by a number of artists including Ismail Hakkı Demircioğlu, and tells of a wounded soldier dying in Giresun.
  • "Giresun'un içinde" has been sung by
    Selda Bağcan and Fuat Saka, who also sang "Lazutlar," which means corn in the local dialect and is a kind of Cider with Rosie
    rural idyll in verse.
  • Ahmet Kaya sang "Mican," a ballad about a local bandit in the mountains.

See also

References

  1. ^
    TÜİK
    . Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  2. ^ "İl ve İlçe Yüz ölçümleri". General Directorate of Mapping. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  3. ^ bir fındığın içini yar senden ayrı yemem
  4. ^ Giresun'un içinde yeşil fındık tarlası vurdular feride'mi yere düştü bohçası
  5. ^ "Giresun cuisine - Karadeniz mutfağı". Archived from the original on 2015-09-10. Retrieved 2008-05-10.

External links