Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş

The neighborhood of Kurtuluş, heritage of the ancient village of Tatavla, was formed and developed till the mid of the 20th century. From 1950, along with the departure of the Rum minorities, which were considered till that time as quasi majorities, and with the arrival of Anatolian migrants, consid...

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Main Author: Cilia Martin
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique 2011-07-01
Series:EchoGéo
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12393
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author Cilia Martin
author_facet Cilia Martin
author_sort Cilia Martin
collection DOAJ
description The neighborhood of Kurtuluş, heritage of the ancient village of Tatavla, was formed and developed till the mid of the 20th century. From 1950, along with the departure of the Rum minorities, which were considered till that time as quasi majorities, and with the arrival of Anatolian migrants, considerable demographical ruptures were provoked. Thoses mobilities create a diversity of territorial modes and give birth to new centralities, seen also throughout the commerce and recently from within the memorial strategies which rebuild the rum past of the neighborhood. Finally, those territorialities participate to the recomposition of the neigborhood and will be analysed through the scale of a headlight avenue, the avenue of Kurtuluş.
format Article
id doaj-art-bd1424d03ede4de9bcd80af61e017e41
institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1197
language fra
publishDate 2011-07-01
publisher Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique
record_format Article
series EchoGéo
spelling doaj-art-bd1424d03ede4de9bcd80af61e017e412025-01-30T12:44:06ZfraPôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information GéographiqueEchoGéo1963-11972011-07-011610.4000/echogeo.12393Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de KurtuluşCilia MartinThe neighborhood of Kurtuluş, heritage of the ancient village of Tatavla, was formed and developed till the mid of the 20th century. From 1950, along with the departure of the Rum minorities, which were considered till that time as quasi majorities, and with the arrival of Anatolian migrants, considerable demographical ruptures were provoked. Thoses mobilities create a diversity of territorial modes and give birth to new centralities, seen also throughout the commerce and recently from within the memorial strategies which rebuild the rum past of the neighborhood. Finally, those territorialities participate to the recomposition of the neigborhood and will be analysed through the scale of a headlight avenue, the avenue of Kurtuluş.https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12393centralitymobilityterritorialitycommercial mutationurban memory
spellingShingle Cilia Martin
Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
EchoGéo
centrality
mobility
territoriality
commercial mutation
urban memory
title Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
title_full Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
title_fullStr Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
title_full_unstemmed Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
title_short Reconversion(s) territoriale(s) sur l’avenue de Kurtuluş
title_sort reconversion s territoriale s sur l avenue de kurtulus
topic centrality
mobility
territoriality
commercial mutation
urban memory
url https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12393
work_keys_str_mv AT ciliamartin reconversionsterritorialessurlavenuedekurtulus