Uluabat Lake - The freshwater Gölü near Bursa
- Written by Portal Editor
Uluabat Lake - Once in the vicinity of Bursa, we of course also wanted to see the large freshwater lake Uluabat (Uluabat Gölü), or as it is often called due to the former Greek city, the Apolyont lake.
With a lake area of between 135 and 160 square kilometres, depending on the season, the Uluabat Lake is one of the smaller Turkish lakes, but it is worth a visit.
Uluabat Lake is fed by the Mustafakemalpasa River, which brings meltwater and rainwater from the mountains and has formed a large, muddy delta at the point where it flows into the lake. Due to the Uluabat River, which forms the outflow of the lake in a westerly direction and then passes through the Susurluk River to the Marmara Sea, the water level in the lake is so low.
Lush flora and fauna at Uluabat Lake
The shores of the lake are appropriately protected and well guarded by local and foreign conservationists. In June 1998 the Association for the Protection of Nature Turkey (DHKD) discovered 823 pairs of pygmy, 105 pairs of the black heron, 109 pairs of the black heron and 48 pairs of the Eurasian shoveler breeding at Lake Uluabat.
Apollonia ad Rhyndacum is now Gölyazi
The Greek settlers were the first to settle here in large numbers and to establish a city that became known as Apollonia (Apollonia ad Rhyndacum). Today called Gölyazi, there are only a few remains of this ancient city history.
Later, during Byzantine times, the city became the castron and seat of a bishop belonging to the metropolitan area of Nicomedia. After being conquered by the Seljuks in the 11th century, Apollonia was once again Byzantine until it was conquered by the Ottomans in the 14th century.
Remnants of the wall on the shores of Lake Uluabat
Until 1922/23, a large part of the population was of Greek origin, who lived on fishing in the lake or were engaged in the extraction of silk by cultivating the silkworm, for which the region was known. It was just with the development of synthetic fabrics that the art of silk production was suppressed and later almost forgotten.
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