Official Name: | Gökdepe |
Other Name: | Geok Tepe |
Pushpin Map: | Turkmenistan |
Pushpin Label Position: | bottom |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 300 |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Turkmenistan |
Coordinates: | 38.1578°N 57.9664°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name: | Turkmenistan |
Subdivision Name1: | Ahal Province |
Subdivision Type2: | District |
Subdivision Name2: | Gökdepe District |
Population As Of: | 2010 |
Population Total: | 21,465 |
Postal Code: | 745190 |
Gökdepe, also Geok Tepe, is a city in and the administrative center of Gökdepe District, Ahal Region, Turkmenistan,[1] 28miles north-west of Ashgabat.[2] The city is built around a former fortress of the Turkmens which bore the same name. The city lies along the M37 highway and the Trans-Caspian Railway.
See main article: Battle of Geok Tepe.
The fortress of Geok Tepe consisted of a walled enclosure NaNorder=flipNaNorder=flip in circuit, the wall being 18order=flipNaNorder=flip high and 20to thick. In December 1880 in the Siege of Geoktepe it was attacked by 6,000 Russians under General Mikhail Skobelev against 25,000 defenders. The siege of Geok Tepe lasted 23 days, after which the fort was taken by storm. The Russian forces encountered heavy resistance and finally broke in by digging a tunnel under the wall, then detonating a mine under the wall on January 12 (24th new style), 1881. Once the fortress was breached, the Russian troops stormed in. Several hundred defenders died in the explosion, and many more died in the fighting that ensued.[3] Eventually, the defenders, and the 40,000 civilians inside the fort, fled across the desert, pursued by General Skobelev's cavalry. Around 8,000 Turkmen soldiers and civilians died while fleeing, adding to 6,500 who had died in the fort. Russian casualties were 398 killed and 669 wounded.
The words gök depe mean "blue hill" in Turkmen. Atanyyazow explains that nearby hills in this district, as well as elsewhere in Turkmenistan, "appear to be blue-black with fog from the wind" and the settlements are named after such hills.[4] [5]
Gökdepe is the site of a cotton ginning mill and of the Gökdepe Textile Factory named for Hero Atamyrat Nyýazow (father of the first president of independent Turkmenistan, Saparmyrat Nyýazow). The city features two hospitals, one a general hospital and the other specializing in obstetrics and pediatrics. The city's central market, Ak Bazar, located across the M37 highway from the central train and bus stations, draws villagers from the surrounding area both to sell their wares and to purchase necessities.
The city's main architectural attraction is the Saparmyrat Hajji Mosque, completed in 1995 by order of President Nyýazow to commemorate the fallen in the Battle of Geok Depe. The local history museum is located on the grounds of the mosque, and one floor of the museum is dedicated to the battle. The entire complex is on the southern end of the former fortress.