Kastamonu Castle Explained

Kastamonu Castle
Native Name:Kastamonu Kalesi
Location:Kastamonu, Turkey
Coordinates:41.3744°N 33.7697°W
Pushpin Map:Turkey
Type:Castle
Materials:stone
Controlledby:Byzantine Empire
Seljuks
Candarids
Ottoman Empire

Kastamonu Castle is a medieval castle in Kastamonu, Turkey.

Geography

The castle lies inside the urban fabric of the modern city. It is situated slightly to the south west of the city center at an elevation of about .

History

During the 10th century, the area around Kastamonu was under the rule of the Byzantine commander Manuel Erotikos Komnenos who built the castle bearing his name: Kastra Komnenon, "Castle of the Komnenoi", a corrupted version of which later became the name of the city in Turkish, i.e. Kastamonu. The city and the castle were captured by the Çobanoğlu on behalf of the Seljuks of Rum.[1] After the Çobanoğlu, the castle fell to the Candaroğulları and finally to the Ottoman Empire. During the Turkish Republic era, in 1943, a part of the castle was destroyed as a result of 1943 Tosya–Ladik earthquake.[2] In 2005 Kastamonu municipality partially restored the castle.[3]

Building

The original castle had fortification walls around the city. But presently only the inner castle which was restored during the Candarid era is partially standing.[4] The north to south dimension of the castle is and the width is (narrowest) and (widest). There are 15 bastions and a secret passage to the outer castle.[3]

References

41.3744°N 33.7697°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.tdvia.org/index.php?klme=kastamonu İslam encyclopaedia
  2. http://seyahat.pw/kastamonu-kalesinin-tarihcesi/ Short history of the castle
  3. http://karged.uzerine.com/ Karged page
  4. http://www.ugurerden.com.tr/2014/01/kastamonu-kaleleri.html Kastamonu Castles