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Vize (; ; ) is a town in Kırklareli Province in the Marmara region of . It is the seat of . İlçe Belediyesi, Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory. Retrieved 1 March 2023. Its population is 15,116 (2022). The mayor is Ercan Özalp (CHP). The town's distance to the provincial centre is . Vize is situated on state road D.020, which runs from to via Kırklareli. In 2012 Vize was designated a (Slow City).


History

Antiquity
Under the ancient name of Bizya or Bizye () Vize served as a capital for the ancient tribe of the Asti, and was mentioned by several ancient authors.

From inscriptions it seems that during the late 1st century Bizye was under local rule of the rather than under direct Roman control.

The martyrs Memnon and Severos were killed in Bizye as part of the Diocletianic Persecution beginning in 303. In 353 CE, the exiled Eustathius of Antioch chose to settle in Bizye, where he later died. The city is documented as the seat of an , as a suffragan of Heraclea, as early as the 5th century.


Middle Ages
Beginning in the 6th century, water was piped from Bizye to Constantinople, and some of the pipes are still visible. In 773 or 774, the emperor had a bridge built here.

Bizye is described as a city () in the province of in the of Hierocles, as well as later in the of Constantine Porphyrogenitus.

The city appears to be identical with the "Uzusa" () mentioned by the council in Trullo in 692, which was signed by one Geōrgios elachistos episkopos Uzusēs tēs Thrakōn chōras.

(2025). 9783700139454, Börsedruck Ges.m.b.H.. .
Since there is no signature for a representative of Bizye in the document, it is assumed that they are the same place.

inscriptions indicate that Khan captured and probably destroyed Bizye. During the 9th and 10th centuries the town served as the head of a . In the aftermath of Thomas the Slav's rebellion in 823, his stepson Anastasios attempted to take refuge in Bizye but was handed over by the city's residents to the emperor. The folk saint Mary the Younger lived in Bizye after her marriage in 896 to Nikephoros, who was tourmarches here. After her death in 903, she was venerated as a saint, and her cult became very popular in Bizye and the surrounding regions.

The Bulgarian emperor Simeon I captured Bizye in c. 925 after a five-year-long siege; the city's walls were destroyed, and most of its population fled to nearby Medea. Whether Bizye was later targeted during Peter I's campaign in eastern Thrace in 927 is uncertain.

In the 12th century, the Arab geographer described Bizye as a large and well-fortified city in a fertile valley, with thriving commerce and industry. When invaders came and looted eastern Thrace in 1199, a Byzantine army was dispatched from Bizye to repel them. They were at first successful, but their initial victory was squandered because the Byzantine troops got greedy.

After the sack of Constantinople in April 1204, Bizye became part of the new as per the Partitio terrarum imperii Romaniae. The city did not submit to the Latins at first, and it wasn't until March 1205 that it was brought to heel, along with the similarly rebellious cities of (modern Lüleburgaz) and (modern Çorlu). Just one month later, though, the Latin army was defeated by a combined force of Bulgars and Cumans led by Tsar , who then launched a series of invasions throughout eastern Thrace. Bizye was one of the few cities in the region that remained unaffected by these incursions. Toward the end of 1205, the nobleman Anseau de Cayeux was sent to garrison the city along with 120 knights. Later in June 1206, the emperor Henry of Flanders set up camp at Bizye, which was honored as "mult ere bone et forz".

Sometime after 1225, an Epirote force under Theodore Komnenos Doukas advanced on Bizye, but they were unable to take possession of the city. In 1237, the Cumans again invaded Thrace, and many of Bizye's residents were captured and sold as slaves. In August 1246, the Latin emperor Baldwin II negotiated a deal with the Order of Saint James which would have ceded Bizye and Medea to the order along with possessions in Constantinople. However the treaty was never put into effect. In 1147, Bizye (along with Tzurulon, Medea, and ) came under the control of John III Doukas Vatatzes, who had allied with the Bulgarians.

Either at the end of 1255 or the beginning of 1256, the emperor Theodore II Laskaris defeated a combined Bulgarian and Cuman force somewhere between Bizye and (modern ). He then concluded a peace treaty that fixed a new border in the upper valley.

From 1286 to 1355, Bizye was the centre of one of three known military districts called (the other two were and . This district covered the entire area stretching roughly from in the north to Arcadiopolis in the west and the suburbs of Constantinople in the east.

In 1304, a large Byzantine army was assembled at Bizye, commanded by emperor and Michael Doukas Glabas Tarchaneiotes in an attempt to stop an incursion under Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria. The Byzantines had already been defeated at and at Bizye they were defeated again.

In 1307, over the protests of the megas tzausios Humbertopoulos, the local population attempted to fight a force with auxiliaries under the command of Ferran Ximenes de Arenos. They were defeated, and the Catalans looted the city. The city was again looted in 1313, this time by a Turkish force led by Ḫalil; the Turks were later defeated in battle at .

In the winter of 1322, Syrgiannes Palaiologos captured Bizye along with (modern Tekirdağ) and , but almost immediately lost the city to the forces of Andronikos III Palaiologos. Andronikos himself stayed in Bizye for several days during the summer of 1324 due to an illness. That September, Bizye's annual donation to the Patriarchate of Constantinople was set at 100 . Andronikos returned to Bizye with an army in 1328, in anticipation of an attack by his former ally that never came. In the summer of 1332, the theologian Matthaios of Ephesos stopped in Bizye en route to , where he had been appointed to office; he only stayed briefly, but he wrote that there were numerous or hagiasmata ( ayazma) in the area, which were consecrated to the Blessed Mother. The area around Bizye was described as unsafe due to the presence of robbers

In 1344, Bizye was captured by John VI Kantakouzenos, who installed his general Manuel Komnenos Raul Asen as governor of the city. A few years later, in the late 1340s, a force of 1,200 Turkish horsemen penetrated Byzantine territory as far as Bizye. After Matthew Kantakouzenos was forced to abdicate the imperial throne, Bizye remained under his effective control, and he stayed here several times in 1356.

As part of a synodal act in August 1355, which ratified an alliance between the emperor John V Palaiologos and Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria, the metropolitanate of Bizye was given the archdiocese of Derkos as an for about two years. A similar thing happened with the diocese of Stauropolis in July 1361.

The inhabitants of Bizye were possibly resettled in 1357 or 58, perhaps because of Turkish brigands taking advantage of the fact that the city's garrison had been depleted by the fighting between John V Palaiologos and Matthew Kantakouzenos.

In the autumn of 1358, , Matthew's uncle-turned-enemy, asked John V to make him governor of Bizye.

In 1368, Bizye came under the control of the Gazi Turks along with other areas in the southern Istranca mountains. The metropolitan of Bizye was reassigned to Mesembria and to compensate for the loss of Bizye. During the Ottoman civil war, Bizye was ceded by the Ottoman emir Süleyman Çelebi to Manuel II Palaiologos in 1403 and then reconquered by the Ottomans under Musa Çelebi in 1410 or 1411. After the elimination of Musa, Sultan restored the town to Manuel II Palaiologos in 1413.


Ottoman period
Bizye finally came under definitive Turkish control at the beginning of 1453, possibly under Karaca Paşa.

The Turkish traveler Evliya Çelebi visited Vize in 1661, during his sixth journey. He described it as the seat of a , inhabited by a mixture of Turks, Bulgarians, and Greeks, and famous for its .

According to the Ottoman population statistics of 1914, the of Vize had a total population of 14,109, consisting of 10,020 Muslims and 4,089 . (1985), Ottoman Population, 1830-1914, Demographic and Social Characteristics, The University of Wisconsin Press, p. 170-171


Places of interest
The area on the hill above the town has a commanding position overlooking the surrounding area and still retains some ancient remains; Byzantine Church - Ottoman Mosque - Endangered Architectural Monument: An Architectural and Archaeological Survey of the Hagia Sophia at Vize the remains of the ancient theatre were discovered on the slope of the acropolis in the 1990s. Many burial mounds constructed for the rulers of Thracian Kingdom are scattered cross the plains around the town.

Little Hagia Sophia Church (Gazi Süleyman Pasha Mosque) () is a former era Orthodox church built during the reign of Emperor (reigned 527–565). It converted into a mosque in the era. Designed on a basilican plan, the church was constructed over the foundations of A Temple of with masonry stone and brick. The -shaped church consisted of a with two rows of columns with three columns each, two and an . Its original wooden roof was replaced in the 12th and 13th centuries by a high dome. The building is vaulted around the dome in a style that is not normally seen in Byzantine architecture.

Vize Fortress () is a constructed in the era at the northwest of the town. The fortress is believed to have been built originally in 72-76 B.C., and was revived during the reign of . It is constructed of clear cut stones and on foundations with stone blocks of and . The bluish colour of the stones of the north wall indicates that this section was rebuilt in the Late Byzantine era during the . The fortress consists of two nested walls. The western and southern walls are intact. An inscription in Greek letters found at the fortress, says "Here were watchtowers built under the administration of Firmus, the son of Aulus Pores, along with Aulus Kenthes, the son of Rytes the son of Kenthes, and Rabdus, the son of Hyakinthus." It is exhibited in Kırklareli Museum.

The Theatre () was built in the 2nd century during the Late Roman era and is the only one known in . It was discovered in 1998 during archaeological excavations carried out on the Çömlektepe tumulus. Parts of the (spectators' seats) still exist with aisles between the seats as do parts of the (stage) and orchestra. Reliefs from the , the stage backdrop, are exhibited in Kırklareli Museum.

The town also has some structures, in addition to an ancient .

==Image gallery==


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