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==Untitled==
''Please do not edit archived pages. If you want to react to a statement made in an archived discussion, please make a new header on THIS page.'' [[User:Baristarim|Baristarim]] 04:58, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
<br>

'''Archives:'''
*[[Talk:İzmir/Archive 1|Archive 1 - Archived on August 9, 2006]]
*[[Talk:İzmir/Archive 2|Archive 2 - Archived on November 24, 2006]]
*[[Talk:İzmir/Archive 3|Archive 3 - To be Archived on ... ]]
|}<!--Template:Archivebox-->

'''Important Note''': Please do not change the names of İzmir listed in the intro without first raising the issue in this talk page. For further background information on the debates that led to those names being listed, please see the archives on the right. Thank you.

==Population and Area==
First, the population listed in the infobox and the population listed at the beginning of the page don't match despite both giving 2008 as the year of the estimate. The infobox gives a population of 3,210,465 while the page gives a population of 3,795,978.

As for the districts that make up the city, the beginning paragraph first states that it includes eleven districts, but the sentences after says only nine, and only then at the end does it mention that only nine districts make up the central city. This needs to be made much more clear, and I think I'll do that. --[[User:Criticalthinker|Criticalthinker]] ([[User talk:Criticalthinker|talk]]) 08:15, 1 November 2009 (UTC)

I think I know what the problem is. These numbers are taken from the Turkiye Istatistik Kurumu (the state's statistics org.), which is the most reliable source. However, the numbers imported are incorrect. For example, the infobox number is the "total urban population in all population centers in the province" including far distant towns in the province. So, the infobox number is incorrect. The metropolitan area number was also incorrect, that was actually the province population. I am afraid such numbers might be bad for all/most Turkish cities, but that's a bigger project. --[[User:Enozkan|Enozkan]] ([[User talk:Enozkan|talk]]) 17:14, 6 January 2010 (UTC)

== Comments ==
It doesn't write the the Turkish names of Athens, Yerevan or Thessaloniki in Wikipedia, but why in İzmir page it writes? This makes hard to believe Wikipedia's objectivity. I hope you'll add the Japenese name of the city too! /Qghvz <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/88.227.82.192|88.227.82.192]] ([[User talk:88.227.82.192|talk]]) 01:48, May 1, 2007</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP -->
:The subject has been discussed ''ad nauseum''. Unless you want a headache, don't complain. [[User:Alton|<font color="#808080" size="-1"><b>ALTON</b></font>]] [[User talk:Alton|<font color="#808080">.ıl</font>]] 05:11, 14 May 2007 (UTC)

== Names ==

For that looong list of alternate names in different languages, I suggest a solution like at [[Thessaloniki]] that I also took the liberty of applying to [[Istanbul]]. [[User:Baristarim|Baristarim]] 11:03, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

:That sounds reasonable to me. I'd also suggest that we follow the example of [[Istanbul]] by using the English name Izmir in most cases, rather than the Turkish name İzmir (which should still be mentioned, of course). --[[User:Delirium|Delirium]] 02:27, 17 February 2007 (UTC)

::I have a feeling that proposal would be contested, because Izmir is not as well-known as Istanbul, in my experience. [[User:Alton|<font color="#808080" size="-1"><b>ALTON</b></font>]] [[User talk:Alton|<font color="#808080">.ıl</font>]] 05:12, 14 May 2007 (UTC)

== Why Turkish name? ==

Why is this article under the Turkish name (İzmir) as opposed to the English name, Izmir? Quote from [[WP:NCGN]]:

''When a widely accepted English name, in a modern context, exists for a place, we should use it.''

As far as I can tell the widely accepted English name does not contain a dotted capital I (İ) considering it doesn't exist in English. Explanation anyone? You don't find [[Munich]] under ''München''. - [[User:Estoy Aquí|<font color="#cadbff"><sup>Estoy</sup></font><font color="#cadbff"><sub>Aquí</sub></font>]]<sup>([[User talk:Estoy Aquí|t]] • [[Special:Contributions/Estoy Aquí|c]] • [[Special:Emailuser/Estoy Aquí|e]])</sup> 18:08, 28 August 2007 (UTC)

:Check out similar examples like [[São Paulo]], [[León, Spain|León]], [[Cádiz]], [[Córdoba, Spain|Córdoba]], [[Málaga]], etc. [[User:Res Gestæ Divi Augusti|Res Gestæ Divi Augusti]] ([[User talk:Res Gestæ Divi Augusti|talk]]) 20:38, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
::Of those, at least half should be changed. The English is ''Cordova''. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 15:52, 14 May 2009 (UTC)

As a Turkish citizen and an izmir residence I agree that the name should be either "Izmir" or "izmir" because of the undefined capital "i" in English the ussers who will conduct sources like google also have some difficulties in finding the article through the search engines. So an editor should correct it to one of the above mentioned choices.--[[User:Odevlen|Odevlen]] ([[User talk:Odevlen|talk]]) 20:02, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

I agree that the title should be '''Izmir''', rather than ''İzmir'' which should of course still be mentioned in the lead sentence. Although I would not go so far as to say the İ "does not exist in English", it certainly is not very widespread. In this case, I could only find citations for İzmir coming from publications originating from Turkey. The wider English speaking world uses Izmir almost exclusively. For instance:
*[http://turkey.usembassy.gov/u.s._consular_agent_in_izmir.html US State Department]
*[http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Izmir+site:un.org&start=0&sa=N UN] to include in [http://untreaty.un.org/unts/120001_144071/14/4/00011318.pdf legal treaty texts]
*[http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/about-the-fco/embassies-and-posts/find-an-embassy-overseas/europe/consulate-izmir British Foreign Office]
*[http://original.britannica.com/eb/article-9043106/Izmir#277138.hook Britannica]
*[http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_1861677014/izmir.html Encarta] (''first listing is Izmir, secondary is İzmir'')
*[http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/izmir Webster's]
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7630994.stm BBC] (''notice that BBC [http://www.bbc.co.uk/turkish/europe/story/2008/03/080331_expo.shtml uses İzmir] on their Turkish service, strongly suggesting that using the unadorned I is a professional editorial decision on behalf of English readers, rather than a technical limitation.'')
*[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/european_football/article1085016.ece London ''Times'']
*[http://weather.cnn.com/weather/forecast.jsp?locCode=LTBJ&zipCode=433856037476 CNN]
*[http://www.cbc.ca/arts/film/story/2006/11/07/mahir-borat.html CBC]
*[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6648945 NPR]
*[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/13/AR2007051300219.html Washington Post]
*Survey of [http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Izmir+İzmir&hl=en&lr=lang_en&start=10&sa=N Google Scholar] English language hits indicates overwhelming preference for Izmir. (It should be noted, however, that Google [http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=lang_en&q=Izmir+-İzmir&btnG=Search&lr=lang_en does not differentiate between I and İ in searches]. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Erudy|Erudy]] ([[User talk:Erudy|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Erudy|contribs]]) September 28, 2008</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned -->

== Who had the higher populations of Izmir before 1922? ==

Greeks or Turks? If it is Greeks, don't you think it should be at least mentioned? If it is Turks, how many more were there? If there were more Armenians and Greeks before 1922 living in the city, surely it was therefore mainly a christian city up until 1922? [[User:Reaper7|Reaper7]] 18:52, 25 September 2007 (UTC)

See the article on Greek-Turkish war for more info on that. Basically the Turks said the turks had a majority; Greeks said the greeks did. Historians think the Greeks had a concentrated majority in the city of smyrna itself. Also the complexity of the issue may make it not worth going into in the article itself, especially since there are other pages with that info already (previously mentioned one)[[User:N16pr|Unknown]] ([[User talk:N16pr|talk]]) 04:08, 27 May 2009 (UTC)


It was very nice of Ottomans, way ahead of their time, to let all live in peace. Wish the World at large had adopted these customs.--[[User:Hudavendigar|Murat]] ([[User talk:Hudavendigar|talk]]) 00:34, 31 July 2008 (UTC)

== Defining population ==

It was mentioned, defined by a couple of paragraphs showing how the trade boom along with the large presence of Greeks and Armenians changed the character of the city itself. The whole idea is not to define a population in numerical terms, but to show how Izmir evolved. To quantify the population along those lines would be unnecessary and would just spark controversy for the sake of it. [[User:Monsieurdl|Monsieurdl]] 16:17, 26 September 2007 (UTC)

== There have always been Greeks there ==

So what has that got to do with a sudden trade boom? I am sorry, can someone at least an attempt at my first question? [[User:Reaper7|Reaper7]] 14:17, 27 September 2007 (UTC)

== You are missing the point ==

1. Your question is Greeks or Turks, and the answer is BOTH.
2. Every influence in Izmir has been mentioned in the article.
3. After the 15th century, Izmir was a very multicultural city, and MANY different religions were represented. This is also mentioned in the article.

It is very simple to me- a general, accurate history of Izmir is a lot more important than validating an agenda, plain and simple. [[User:Monsieurdl|Monsieurdl]] 23:12, 27 September 2007 (UTC)

== Use a translator if your English is so bad ==

1. The question is not Greeks or Turks, reread. It is who had the higher population before 1922.
2. It is not a subject to be hidden in cultural garbage section of the article, we are talking facts and figures. If a city in the UK was almost half or over half spanish before 1922 and now there are none, trust me, there would be a section on it, especially if the city is as old and important as Izmir.
3. Again, what are you talking about? Izmir was multi cultural before the 15 century. Please reread and try not to start and answer a new topic to reply. Thankyou. [[User:Reaper7|Reaper7]] 11:12, 28 September 2007 (UTC)

== Redirecting [[Smyrna]] ==

I propose changing the disambiguation solution currently used for [[Smyrna]]. Currently, [[Smyrna]] is an article of its own but deals only with the ancient city, with disambiguation notices only in the article heads. But people keep using links to [[Smyrna]] in articles mentioning the modern city (under a Greek perspective), especially in pre-1923 contexts. These links should all end up here at [[Izmir]], because that's the article that has the information relevant to those contexts. If you look at [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Smyrna]], most of the incoming links are more relevant to modern Izmir than to the ancient city.

Therefore: Move [[Smyrna]] to [[Smyrna (ancient city)]], redirect [[Smyrna]] to [[İzmir]], include dab notices:
*at the head of [[İzmir]]: ''[[Smyrna]] redirects here. For the ancient city, see [[Smyrna (ancient city)]], for other uses see [[Smyrna (disambiguation)]]''
*at the head of [[Smyrna (ancient city)]]: ''For the modern city, see [[İzmir]]''

[[User:Future Perfect at Sunrise|Fut.Perf.]] [[User talk:Future Perfect at Sunrise|☼]] 08:08, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
: I ended up here by accident but can't help but also ask about the redirect of [[Izmir]] to the turkish name with the "İ". Did you mess something up while working out the Smyrna disambiguation? You quoted the English Izmir at first and then the Turkish İzmir. Shouldn't the articles be in the english language and use/quote the local writing '''inside''' the article? And to anyone answering please read carefully what I ask. I am not talking about the modern name of the <s>island</s> city. I am asking why the name of the article is in the Turkish language when this is the English page.[[User:Arheos|Arheos]] ([[User talk:Arheos|talk]]) 00:08, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
::Check out similar examples like [[São Paulo]], [[León, Spain|León]], [[Cádiz]], [[Córdoba, Spain|Córdoba]], [[Málaga]], etc. İzmir is not an island by the way. [[User:Res Gestæ Divi Augusti|Res Gestæ Divi Augusti]] ([[User talk:Res Gestæ Divi Augusti|talk]]) 00:34, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
::: Oops, sorry about the island reference. Don't know how that slipped away, I was on another page about Imbros and Tenedos and I was on auto-mode. Still, even for those, can you brief me on the explanation behind it? I'm sure it's hidden around the talk pages, most probably the archives, but if you can be bothered...Cheers. [[User:Arheos|Arheos]] ([[User talk:Arheos|talk]]) 11:33, 29 April 2008 (UTC)

It sounds great. Now, of course, that should be done with every city that might need it along the whole of Asia Minor. I'll be back to work here tomorrow and will see if any need the same treatment. [[User:Monsieurdl|Monsieurdl]] 15:22, 7 October 2007 (UTC)

Ok lets do it now!
[[User:Eae1983]] <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/88.245.123.154|88.245.123.154]] ([[User talk:88.245.123.154|talk]]) 09:15, 16 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:These anonymous and even logged-in (!) Turkish jokers are sufficiently answered at [[Talk:Smyrna]]. --[[User:Wetman|Wetman]] ([[User talk:Wetman|talk]]) 13:25, 16 February 2008 (UTC)
Sorry Wetman as I am no Wiki-friendly, I posted my comment without logging in then logged in and signed it. I know that is stupid, now could you refrain of calling me a "turkish joker"? Thanks!
--[[User:Eae1983|Eae1983]] ([[User talk:Eae1983|talk]]) 13:40, 21 February 2008 (UTC)


=== Is this a fake? ===

http://www.agiasofia.com/horton/table.jpg

If it is not, can it be added? [[User:Reaper7|Reaper7]] ([[User talk:Reaper7|talk]]) 05:27, 12 February 2008 (UTC)


These figures are ridiculus... Nearly 3 milyon Greeks living in todays Turkey borders... in 1915... you must be kidding... with a projection from 1915 to 2008, there should be at least 10 to 15 million Greek people out there, somewhere... I believe it is more than todays population of Greece... Therefore you have to consider the fact that (if all Greeks forced out of the Turkey by 1915) todays Greece should be empty in 1915 in order welcome this nearly 3 million Greeks... some math wont harm...
Turkey had near 10 million population in 1930's... now is around 80 million.. do the math yourself...--[[User:Odevlen|Odevlen]] ([[User talk:Odevlen|talk]]) 01:54, 6 October 2008 (UTC)

:: ? There are 15 million Greeks all over the world.[[User:Reaper7|Reaper7]] ([[User talk:Reaper7|talk]]) 21:40, 25 January 2009 (UTC)

I would like to make a general comment about the "Smyrna" reference to Izmir, at least to the people that have scientific and historical and not nationalist-driven doubts about it. I think it is wrong to wonder why the name Yerevan (unknown to most, in contrast to Smyrna) is not used for Athens while Smyrna does for Izmir, in wiki. First of all, the etymology of the name Izmir itself is derived from the greek, former name. Also, they name "Smyrna" was indeed kept in use by both Muslims and Christians. In contrast, the turkish name Ayvalik was alwasys used, instead of ancient "Kydonies" term.
But there is another, substantial reason: The civilization and activities developed throughout history in Izmir were almost exlusively achieved by its greek citizens. This is proved by the cultural and aesthetical fall of Izmir for many decades, after the greeks left under the Population Exchange. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, born in Salonica and not in Anatolia, was aware of that fact: He knew that there would be a significant financial and cultural downfall after the departure of the urban population of the area, but the stabilisation inside his country was of course of highsest importance at those critical times.

Dimitris Chrisafinos <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/193.105.85.4|193.105.85.4]] ([[User talk:193.105.85.4|talk]]) 13:00, 7 April 2010 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

==Beauty==

I know this is kinda irrelevant, but that article is plain BEAUTIFUL!!
Congratulations on all editors that worked hard to make it happen!
--[[User:Eae1983|Eae1983]] ([[User talk:Eae1983|talk]]) 13:37, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
:It is not irrelevant:you can nominate this article for "Good articles" or "Featured Articles" [[User:AverageTurkishJoe|AverageTurkishJoe]] ([[User talk:AverageTurkishJoe|talk]]) 15:56, 10 May 2008 (UTC)
::Good but how? I am a really ignorant person when it comes to computer stuff :)) --[[User:Eae1983|Eae1983]] ([[User talk:Eae1983|talk]]) 06:16, 13 May 2008 (UTC)

Same here. Kudos to all who contributed. Such a long and coloful history though! Even I am impressed!--[[User:Hudavendigar|Murat]] ([[User talk:Hudavendigar|talk]]) 00:38, 31 July 2008 (UTC)

Indeed its accurate but beautiful? Maybe if the writing was ten times higher quality [[User:N16pr|Unknown]] ([[User talk:N16pr|talk]]) 04:11, 27 May 2009 (UTC)

== cuisine ==

It is written:"Historically, as a result of the influx of Greek refugees from İzmir (as well as from other parts of Asia Minor and Istanbul) to mainland Greece after 1922, the cuisine of İzmir has had an enormous impact on Greek cuisine, exporting many sophisticated spices and foods."

so the greek cuisine in smyrna is different than greek cuisine??

i think it shoulbe written like this: " ....the cuisine of Greeks of İzmir has had an enormous impact on the rest of Greek cuisine, exporting many sophisticated spices and foods." <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/195.167.52.4|195.167.52.4]] ([[User talk:195.167.52.4|talk]]) 07:35, 7 October 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:That suggests that the Greeks of Smyrna cooked differently from their Turkish, Armenian, Jewish...etc. neighbors. Excluding dietary laws, is there any reason to believe this true? [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 15:54, 14 May 2009 (UTC)

== Requested move ==
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: #efe; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;"><!-- Template:RM top -->
:''The following discussion is an archived discussion of a [[WP:RM|requested move]]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section. ''

The result of the move request was {{Not done}}. No consensus. — [[User:Aitias|<font face="Tahoma" size="3.9" color="#20406F">''A''<small>itias</small></font>]] <span style="color: #999;">//</span>&nbsp;[[User talk:Aitias|<font face="Tahoma" size="3.9" color="#20406F"><small>discussion</small></font>]] 21:45, 23 May 2009 (UTC)

----
[[İzmir]] → [[Izmir]] (see also [[#Why Turkish name?]] above). [[Special:Contributions/199.125.109.99|199.125.109.99]] ([[User talk:199.125.109.99|talk]]) 18:18, 14 May 2009 (UTC)

The [[#Why Turkish name?|above list of evidence]] is pretty convincing. You have to look at article names case by case, as [[WP:NCGN]] tells us. In English we use some diacritics, but not others. So we use [[São Paulo]], but [[Montreal]] (not Montréal). The test is whether there is a widely used name in English, and if there is, use that. If there is a source for the assertion that İzmir is widely used in English, let's have it. If there is not, let's rename the article.[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 16:10, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

*I '''support''' moving the page to [[Izmir]]; Erudy has provided a number of reliable sources showing the use of the common English variant in a variety of sources, including US and UK media, US and UK governmental bodies, the UN, etc. [[User:Parsecboy|Parsecboy]] ([[User talk:Parsecboy|talk]]) 12:29, 13 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''', I don't know when I've ever seen this with a diacritic in my experience with the sources. Distinguishable from São Paulo. [[User:John J. Bulten/Friends|JJB]] 22:13, 13 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' as above. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 15:52, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
* '''Oppose''' for basically the same reasons as to why the article [[Tenedos]] should be under the title [[Bozcaada]]. To my impression, those who are in a position to contribute the most up-to-date information to this article usually use the spelling İzmir. Changing the title to Izmir will alienate further contributors. NB: We should also buy the line of [[Cabinet of Turkey|these blokes]]. It could interest them for a change. :) [[User:Cretanforever|Cretanforever]] ([[User talk:Cretanforever|talk]]) 17:06, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
**Alienating those Turks so nationalist that they will decline to edit over the absence of this [[tittle]] can only improve the article. If we could find some way to alienate Greek nationalists at the same time, the situation would be close to ideal. Now, is there any objection based on evidence, as opposed to [[WP:MYPEOPLELIKEIT]]? [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 18:10, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' move, in line with the evidence deposited earlier. I think this is a clear case of English convention preferring an unadorned spelling, and we should follow it.[[User:Erudy|Erudy]] ([[User talk:Erudy|talk]]) 00:16, 15 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' move to Izmir, as the name commonly used in English, and thus the one the greatest number of English speakers would most easily recognize. - [[User:Ev|Ev]] ([[User talk:Ev|talk]]) 16:00, 20 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Oppose'''. "Izmir" seems to be a failure to dot the "İ" rather than an actual English exonym and Wikipedia usually includes diacritics on placenames (e.g., [[Düsseldorf]], [[Kraków]], [[Cádiz]]) even if many English texts don't. Based on the arguments here, all Turkish cities should be moved to diacriticless titles which would be a mess. İzmir does have an English name, though: Smyrna. Anyone in favor of that move? — <span style="border:1px solid blue;padding:1px;">[[User talk:AjaxSmack|<font style="color:#fef;background:navy;">''' AjaxSmack '''</font>]]</span> 01:00, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Oppose'''. "Izmir" is the common English spelling for the city because most English-language typesetting equipment does not have '''İ''' or '''ı'''. [[User:Anthony Appleyard|Anthony Appleyard]] ([[User talk:Anthony Appleyard|talk]]) 10:35, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''', for the reasons AjaxSmack and Anthony Appleyard give. Many sources with diacriticless spellings simply do not use diacritics or modified latin letters at all, or only use the ones the most familiar to Anglophones or most easy to produce on a keyboard (such as tildes and accents aigu and grave). If a source consistenty uses ''i'' for ''ı'' and ''I'' for ''İ'', that doesn't tell us anything about the individual place-names, just about whether the source bothers with Turkish letters.--[[User:Atemperman|Atemperman]] ([[User talk:Atemperman|talk]]) 16:53, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
:It doesn't really matter ''why'' Izmir is the most conmmon spelling in English texts. It is, and that should be enough. It may well be that the reason is that most English readers are not familiar with the difference between dotted and dotless i, but that does not alter the fact that they do not use İzmir. Recall the example of the BBC cited by [[User:Erudy|Erudy]] above:[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7630994.stm BBC] (''notice that BBC [http://www.bbc.co.uk/turkish/europe/story/2008/03/080331_expo.shtml uses İzmir] on their Turkish service, strongly suggesting that using the unadorned I is a professional editorial decision on behalf of English readers, rather than a technical limitation.'') This does not mean that we should avoid İ in less familiar Turkish names (e.g. [[İzmit]]), where there is no common English usage. [[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 21:56, 21 May 2009 (UTC)
::But the BBC doesn't use the "İ" on İzmit either[http://search.bbc.co.uk/search?scope=all&tab=all&q=Izmit] so why should it be any different? Who decides which names are more familiar and which are less? Is it to be ''ad hoc'' case by case? While many news services have style guidelines calling for no diacritics, Wikipedia does not. — <span style="border:1px solid blue;padding:1px;">[[User talk:AjaxSmack|<font style="color:#fef;background:navy;">''' AjaxSmack '''</font>]]</span> 02:14, 22 May 2009 (UTC)
:::Nor on [[Istanbul]] either; should we dot the I there, although no English-speaker does? What basis is there for any line other than ''what does English do?'' We have no guidance, and no consensus for it, saying ''always use diacritics''. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 04:39, 22 May 2009 (UTC)
::::English ''does'' many things. While news organizations typically don't use diacritics, encyclopedias often do. For example, the folks over at Britannica use [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/298480/Izmir İzmir] with the "İ" (but not so with [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/296962/Istanbul Istanbul]). — <span style="border:1px solid blue;padding:1px;">[[User talk:AjaxSmack|<font style="color:#fef;background:navy;">''' AjaxSmack '''</font>]]</span> 06:48, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
:::::Strange; this version of the Britannica still uses [http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9043106 Izmir], with no dot. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 15:54, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' No need to downgrade accuracy. <strong><font style="color: #082567">[[User:Husond|Hús]]</font>[[User:Husond/Esperanza|<font color="green">ö</font>]]<font style="color: #082567">[[User talk:Husond|nd]]</font></strong> 22:32, 22 May 2009 (UTC)
**But the present title is inaccurate; it misrepresents English usage. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 15:50, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
***English usage is very relative concept. Many English speakers write "İzmir" because they are familiar with the local spelling, and others don't because they are neither familiar, nor bother, nor both. "İzmir" could indeed misrepresent the majority of the English usage, but would definitely not misrepresent the usage per se. <strong><font style="color: #082567">[[User:Husond|Hús]]</font>[[User:Husond/Esperanza|<font color="green">ö</font>]]<font style="color: #082567">[[User talk:Husond|nd]]</font></strong> 16:02, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
****Speculation; there is no "many". The point of Erudy's accumulation of sources is that English-speakers who use ''İzmir'' are extremely rare. There are (of course) pedants; perhaps more frequently, there are Turks who do not know, and have not considered, what English idiom is. [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 16:07, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
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== Bias in Greek-Turkish War and subsequent fire ==

Seems a bit biased to me. The bit about how the turks felt (first bullet fire etc.) needs to be more explicitly stated as ''their'' POV. Also focus seems to be on Greek atrocities with a bit of "the turks did it too" at the end. I think would be a good idea to look at the wiki page dedicated to the Greek-Turkish war, its pretty unbiased.
--[[User:N16pr|Unknown]] ([[User talk:N16pr|talk]]) 04:18, 27 May 2009 (UTC)

:All right, here goes. '''My view''' on this whole section is that sources for both sides during the whole period from 1919-1922 are "spoiled", i.e. there is not really a single impartial one to be found anywhere. Hence, we as modern historians are placed in between two sides that hold up examples of violence as proof of complicity against the other. All we can do is be guarded in our language by using such words as "claimed", "accused", and "X have said that Y", and so on, since we are in a minefield so to speak.

:The problem that we have is that books that have been written long after the events still use these same tainted sources to draw conclusions as to what happened. All you have to do is turn to the footnotes or the bibliography, and you will see the same oft-quoted sources. We can avoid this whole problem by stating events in the form that I mentioned, and therefore all material can be used with appropriate references.[[User:Monsieurdl|<span style="color:#0000C8;font-family: vivaldi"><font size=3>'''Monsieur<font color= "#DC143C">dl'''</font></span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Monsieurdl|mon talk]]</sup> 14:42, 30 October 2009 (UTC)

== The article itself is not the place for continuing an argument related to the move request ==

I removed the argumentative material [[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] added to the ''Names and Etymology'' section, which consisted a statement that Izmir is the primary way of writing the city's name in English and a list of sources that have the city so spelled. This is original research, which, while accepted as necessary and part of the guidelines for deciding how to title a page, is not appropriate for the article itself. If the material I removed were to stay in, then editors who disagree with Mhockey will be just as justified in offering their countervailing points in the article, distracting readers with what should be a "backstage" controversy. --[[User:Atemperman|Atemperman]] ([[User talk:Atemperman|talk]]) 01:38, 2 June 2009 (UTC)
:Sorry, it was not meant to be argumentative, I thought it was stating verified facts which were established in the debate. Maybe I misunderstood the arguments put forward in the debate, but I thought we had established that common usage in English ''is'' Izmir, but some editors thought that we ''should'' use İzmir in English (assuming availability of the appropriate typesetting equipment). I would have no problem if "countervailing points" were included in the article (in fact I included one myself), as long as they can be verified. Plenty of evidence was provided by [[User:Erudy]] (not by me) that authoritative texts in English use Izmir. In what sense is that original research? It is citing references, which is what we should always do in WP articles. [[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 20:32, 3 June 2009 (UTC)
If there are no other comments, I am proposing to restore the citations deleted by Atemperman, which are factual and relevant to an undestanding of usage of the name in English. [[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 07:07, 10 June 2009 (UTC)

This argument is over it seems. It is also becoming clear that there are concerns beyond "accuracy" here. When in any doubt, the "correct" version of a name, as it would appear in formal communications, or a map or a road sign for example, should be preferred, it is common sense. Etno-nationalistic claims and arguments hidden behind a very thin veil do not belong here. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/173.77.156.90|173.77.156.90]] ([[User talk:173.77.156.90|talk]]) 22:47, 16 June 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Agreed. WP should deal with verifiable facts, and we must observe [[WP:NPOV]]. I have restored the deleted citations.[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 10:14, 23 June 2009 (UTC)

==Thumb Picture and Montage==

Ok, can someone fix a decent one, please? If the picture is well sourced like the one in [[Ankara]] -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ankara_kolajı.jpg there should be no problem at all. I really think İzmir needs it. Cheers!
--[[Special:Contributions/88.254.241.230|88.254.241.230]] ([[User talk:88.254.241.230|talk]]) 20:17, 2 October 2009 (UTC)


==Image==
==Image==
Line 227: Line 25:
But there is another, substantial reason: The civilization and activities developed throughout history in Izmir were almost exlusively achieved by its greek citizens. This is proved by the cultural and aesthetical fall of Izmir for many decades, after the greeks left under the Population Exchange. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, born in Salonica and not in Anatolia, was aware of that fact: He knew that there would be a significant financial and cultural downfall after the departure of the urban population of the area, but the stabilisation inside his country was of course of highsest importance at those critical times. Dimitris Chrisafinos
But there is another, substantial reason: The civilization and activities developed throughout history in Izmir were almost exlusively achieved by its greek citizens. This is proved by the cultural and aesthetical fall of Izmir for many decades, after the greeks left under the Population Exchange. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, born in Salonica and not in Anatolia, was aware of that fact: He knew that there would be a significant financial and cultural downfall after the departure of the urban population of the area, but the stabilisation inside his country was of course of highsest importance at those critical times. Dimitris Chrisafinos


== Population according to the cited resources. ==
==Turkish Portal==

Why is this article not labeled under the Turkish Portal? [[User:Hudavendigar|Murat]] ([[User talk:Hudavendigar|talk]]) 12:07, 9 June 2011 (UTC)

==Ionian University==
There has been recent activity by removing the Ionian University (first established in the city, at 1920), from the list of universities, with edit summaries that are either irrelevant [[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=%C4%B0zmir&diff=433691261&oldid=433456292]] or aggresive without giving an argument [[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=%C4%B0zmir&diff=434578130&oldid=434535650]].[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 16:57, 16 June 2011 (UTC)

== Requested Move (revisted) ==
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: #efe; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;"><!-- Template:RM top -->
:''The following discussion is an archived discussion of a [[WP:RM|requested move]]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section. ''

The result of the move request was: '''page moved'''. [[User:Vegaswikian|Vegaswikian]] ([[User talk:Vegaswikian|talk]]) 02:58, 22 October 2011 (UTC)

----


[[İzmir]] → {{no redirect|1=Izmir}} – I'm going to bring this up again because having been in Turkey for awhile, I've noticed that English sources usually distinguish "ü" and "ö" from their un-umlauted counterparts, and sometimes distinguish "ş" and "ç" and rarely write the dotless "i" in the lower case, but I have ''never'' seen "İzmir" or "İstanbul" except in Turkish sources. I find an almost definitive list of reliable sources using "Izmir" [[Talk:İzmir#Why_Turkish_name.3F|here]], and poking around expat forums shows English usage in Turkey is exclusively without the capital "İ." I find examples [http://www.expatfocus.com/expatriate-forums-turkey here] and [http://www.sublimeportal.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=53 here].

If I search for "Izmir" and ""Bakirkoy" on MyMerhaba (the only one of these sites I heard of before googling), I find [http://www.google.com/custom?domains=www.mymerhaba.com&q=izmir&sa=Search&sitesearch=www.mymerhaba.com&client=pub-2138978771906811&forid=1&ie=ISO-8859-1&oe=ISO-8859-1&safe=active&flav=0000&sig=rQoxW3LDbGQVULEo&cof=GALT%3A%23008000%3BGL%3A1%3BDIV%3A%23ffffff%3BVLC%3A663399%3BAH%3Acenter%3BBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BLBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BALC%3A0000FF%3BLC%3A0000FF%3BT%3A000000%3BGFNT%3A0000FF%3BGIMP%3A0000FF%3BLH%3A50%3BLW%3A144%3BL%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mymerhaba.com%2Fen%2Fwebimages%2Fmymerhabalogo.gif%3BS%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mymerhaba.com%3BFORID%3A1&hl=en dotless Izmir] and [http://www.google.com/custom?hl=en&safe=active&client=pub-2138978771906811&cof=FORID%3A1%3BGL%3A1%3BS%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mymerhaba.com%3BL%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mymerhaba.com%2Fen%2Fwebimages%2Fmymerhabalogo.gif%3BLH%3A50%3BLW%3A144%3BLBGC%3AFFFFFF%3BLC%3A%230000ff%3BVLC%3A%23663399%3BGFNT%3A%230000ff%3BGIMP%3A%230000ff%3B&domains=www.mymerhaba.com&flav=0000&sig=rQoxW3LDbGQVULEo&ie=ISO-8859-1&oe=ISO-8859-1&q=bakirkoy&btnG=Search&sitesearch=www.mymerhaba.com umlauted Bakirköy]. I also find direct evidence of the distinction between umlauted vowels or ş/ç and the dotted "i" [http://www.expatsofturkey.com/forumdisplay.php?s=d8a7c339c4d61cf5fe911ca4a45336f1&f=157 here], [http://www.merhabaforums.com/ here]. And [http://merhabaforums.com/moving-izmir-f48/?sid=24be352fa99e4f184070acfd80472ed2 this forum] shows the difference in usage between Turks advertising apartments and foreigners seeking them. Basically, common usage in both reliable sources and in English among people living in Turkey spells it "Izmir." The only people who spell it "İzmir" are Turks, and even then they don't always spell it that way when writing in English. --[[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 21:59, 14 October 2011 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. The diacritic-free form of the name is used by ''[http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Izmir.aspx#2 Columbia Encyclopedia]'', ''[http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Izmir.aspx#4 World Encyclopedia]'', the [http://www.un.org/wcm/content/site/sport/home/newsandevents/news/template/news_item.jsp?cid=19212 UN News Center], [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-14590701 BBC], [http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/26/greece-turkey-cyprus-idUSL5E7KQ40020110926 Reuters], [http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/02/22/turkey.sledgehammer.arrests/index.html?iref=allsearch CNN], the ''[http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703670004575616492763804832.html Wall Street Journal]'', the ''[http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/world/europe/13iht-turkey.5.5691619.html New York Times]'', and ''[http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=238884 TurkishPress.com]''. Although the Turkish ambassador to the UN has a diacritic in his name, his master's degree is from a school in diacritic-free "Izmir", according to [http://www.un.org/esa/dsd/dsd_aofw_wat/wat_pdfs/meetings/wat_gapd1109/APAKAN%20_CV.pdf his CV]. [[User:Kauffner|Kauffner]] ([[User talk:Kauffner|talk]]) 03:08, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
*'''Oppose'''. [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/298480/Izmir Britannica] and [http://books.google.com/books?id=Co_VIPIJerIC&pg=PA931&hl=en&ei=BapZTq3hMY-TswbS2oTLCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CDsQ6AEwAw#v=snippet&q=%C4%B0zmir&f=false Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary] (recommended by ''The Chicago Manual of Style'') use İzmir, which suits our encyclopedic purpose. [[User:Prolog|Prolog]] ([[User talk:Prolog|talk]]) 20:53, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
*'''Support''' Almost all sources in English use the undotted I - including the [http://turkey.usembassy.gov/consular_agent_izmir.html US Embassy], the [http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/travel-and-living-abroad/find-an-embassy/europe/consulate-izmir UK FCO], [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/izmir?show=0&t=1319147008 Merriam-Webster], and the news sources cited in previous discussions. Britannica was found to be inconsistent in previous discussions. Using the dotted I for a well-known place like Izmir (or [[Istanbul]] for that matter) is spurious accuracy, akin to writing Montréal for [[Montreal]]. It's just not the usual form in English.--[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 21:57, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. I find the arguments of Quintucket, Kauffner and Mhockey to be more convincing than Prolog's. [[User:Jenks24|Jenks24]] ([[User talk:Jenks24|talk]]) 01:53, 21 October 2011 (UTC)
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== Population ==

In June, [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Izmir&diff=prev&oldid=435482990 an edit] dated the claim as to Izmir's population to 2010. Which would be plausible if it were only the city or metro area, however it's claimed that the metro area is defined as Izmir province. I doubt that say [[Kınık]] is really part of metro Izmir, but we'll go with that. A noted at [[Izmir Province]], the 2010 population of Izmir Province is about 3.95 million.[http://www.turkstat.gov.tr/PreHaberBultenleri.do?id=8428&tb_id=1] I'm changing it to reflect that, but if someone has a better estimate of Izmir's actual metro area.(I'm not sure how this is defined, but [[:File:İzmir_districts.png|this map]] seems plausible, we should go with that, I think. Regards, [[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 06:28, 24 January 2012 (UTC)

== Pie Chart on [[Great Fire of Smyrna]] and [[Izmir]] Pages ==

{{Pie chart
|value1 = 49
|color1 = #08f
|label1 = Greeks
|value2 = 24
|color2 = green
|label2 = Turks
|value3 = 27
|color3 = yellow
|label3 = others (Armenians, Jews, Levantines)
|caption = Ethnic composition of Smyrna in 1922 according to Katherine Fleming<!--<ref name="Fleming"/>-->
}}
'''This pie chart under International Port City on the Izmir page is being deleted by me because the source (Fleming) does not provide the data for the pie chart.''' Here is the source from Fleming's book Greece- [http://books.google.com/books?id=o3vIneSflMcC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Greece+a+Jewish+History&source=bl&ots=OgUstOwpC_&sig=Ekyt57R_OrQ8Uhv_ccYdI717ZJQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=TQmHUNirDNHD0AHko4GQAw&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Smyrna&f=false A Jewish History] (pg. 81): ''"The Greek army fled in chaos, heading for Smyrna on the coast, where the Greek population outnumbered the Turkish by a ration of two to one. Before the mass arrival of the refugees, there were about 150,000 living in the city, almost half the population."'' She provides 1. no percentages, 2. no discussion of others, 3. doesn't even tell us whether there more others or more Turks 4. Is not giving raw data to create percentages either on page 81 or in footnotes. '''The numbers in the pie chart are an invention.''' The construction of this pie chart from those two sentences in Fleming is a misrepresentation of her statement. I have tried to resolve this on the [[User_talk:Alexikoua|Talk page of one person who has reverted edits]] on this pie chart, but to no avail. Fleming does not provide sufficient data to be a reliable source for the pie chart, and so it gets deleted. [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 21:36, 23 October 2012 (UTC)
:That was the main reason of my [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Great_Fire_of_Smyrna&diff=519026044&oldid=518996908 this] edit. Thanks for the proper explanation.--[[User:Rapsar|Rapsar]] ([[User talk:Rapsar|talk]]) 08:54, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
:I don't know adding these pie charts are useful, but we can add charts that contains "official numbers" ([http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Great_Fire_of_Smyrna&diff=519039018&oldid=519035616 like this]).--[[User:Rapsar|Rapsar]] ([[User talk:Rapsar|talk]]) 08:57, 24 October 2012 (UTC)

::I explained my rationale here [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Alexikoua#Pie_Chart_on_.22Great_Fire_of_Smyrna.22_and_.22Izmir.22_page], and you never bothered to reply. The pie chart is a faithful representation of the figures Fleming cites. I understand that Turkish and consistently pro-Turkish users might not like the chart, but that is not a reason for removal. [[User:Athenean|Athenean]] ([[User talk:Athenean|talk]]) 09:16, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
:::Just tell me this, what number means "Almost Half"? [http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/oct/28/ftse-100-directors-earnings-rose-by-almost-half 49%], [http://econsultancy.com/us/blog/10717-mobile-will-influence-15bn-of-in-store-sales-in-2012 46%], [http://rt.com/usa/news/philadelphia-law-id-vote-152/ 43%], [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/21/food-waste-americans-throw-away-food-study_n_1819340.html 40%], or a [http://books.google.com/books?id=Z5oNcfVeEN4C&pg=PA165&dq=Almost+Half+40%25&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Q9eHUIbpLqXp0QG3oYHADw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=Almost%20Half%2040%25&f=false guide to teaching statistics that also uses it to mean 40%]? Here is a person named Katherine Fleming, no relation, who says almost half [http://www.katiefleming.ca/pdf/crystal_imc.pdf means 45%]. What does Almost Half mean in this context? And here's the kicker, this question can't be answered using Katherine Fleming's book, because she doesn't provide it. (You also might want to think about why you round down the number for one ethnic group but round up the other, even though both are at .5, but I'm sure that was unintentional) You got me, I am hereby pushing my POV that wikipedia should not misrepresent the claims of reputable sources and invent numbers where the sources provide none. [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 12:05, 24 October 2012 (UTC)

::: If I may butt in? I like the idea of having a pie chart, but can I ask why we are using Flemming's numbers? Though I've always been inclined to take the Ottoman censuses with a grain of salt, personally I feel like if we're going to use only one source, there's a strong argument [[George Horton]]'s estimates, given that 1. He was in a good position to know and 2. while his numbers are closer to the Ottoman ones than the Greek ones, nobody could accuse Consul Horton of having a pro-Turkish bias.
::: There's also the advantage of Horton's estimates including specific numbers for the Jewish and Armenian millets, and estimates for foreigners. The lumping of Jews, Armenians, and foreigners into the "other" column is what I took to be one of AbstractIllusions's main objections on the other thread. It'd say it's an important point to consider, since identifying only specific numbers for Greeks and Turks belies the truly cosmopolitan nature of old Smyrna. —[[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 12:25, 24 October 2012 (UTC)

::::With regards to Flemming, I take "almost half" to mean 45-49%. The population of the city at the time was 300,000 as given by various sources, so 48% sounds right. But even if we change the numbers around a bit (e.g 48%, 24%, 28%), the chart will still end up looking approximately the same. Notice I have added "approximately" to the legend. But I suppose we could use Horton's numbers, if people prefer. [[User:Athenean|Athenean]] ([[User talk:Athenean|talk]]) 13:17, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
::::::"I like the idea of having a pie chart, but can I ask why we are using Flemming's numbers? <small>Author note: agree with sentiment but disagree that Fleming has numbers for construction of such a chart</small> Though I've always been inclined to take the Ottoman censuses with a grain of salt, personally I feel like if we're going to use only one source, there's a strong argument [[George Horton]]'s estimates" '''Support''' All I've asked for from the beginning are actual numbers and not invented numbers. I don't care where they come from and don't care if a pie chart exists or not, but don't like numbers which are derived from broad qualitative claims in the source they are ascribed to. A pie chart ascribed to Fleming is inaccurate. A pie chart ascribed to anyone else that actually provides numbers or percentages for the pie chart, cool! [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 13:28, 24 October 2012 (UTC)

{{Pie chart
|value1 = 43
|color1 = green
|label1 = Turks
|value2 = 39
|color2 = #08f
|label2 = Greeks
|value3 = 6.5
|color3 = orange
|label3 = Armenians
|value4 = 6.5
|color4 = yellow
|label4 = Jews
|value5 = 5
|color5 = purple
|label5 = Foreigners
|caption = Approximate ethnic composition of Smyrna before the [[Great Fire of Smyrna]], according to contemporary American consul, [[George Horton]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Horton|first=George|title=The Blight of Asia|year=1926|publisher=The Bobbs-Merrill Company|location=Indianopolis|isbn=978-1-903656-15-0}}</ref> Other sources suggest that Greeks outnumbered Turks by as much as 2:1.
}}
I've created a pie chart above calculating percentages based on Horton's estimate. How does it look? —[[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 14:17, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
:*It looks kinda like a side-ways peace sign. I think "foreigners" should be capitalized. Also, for NPOV reasons, could a line be added after Horton sourcing that says something like: "Other sources contend that Greeks outnumbered Turkish population by 2-1. (Source: Flemming)" I think introducing the debate directly in the chart rather than just in the text of the article is the best NPOV method. [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 14:33, 24 October 2012 (UTC)
:::Nice pie! I also like the idea of presenting Flemings 2:1 in the caption. Just one additional point: Is it possible to fix a year for Horton's numbers. If it is pre-1922, it might explain some of the difference between him and Fleming. Regards! [[Special:Contributions/79.160.40.10|79.160.40.10]] ([[User talk:79.160.40.10|talk]]) 06:59, 25 October 2012 (UTC)
::::Horton's numbers come from ''The Blight of Asia'', and refer to the period he was consul there, either 1911-1917, or 1919-1922. I assume the latter. —[[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 17:55, 26 October 2012 (UTC)
:::I've added the disclaimer and I've capitalized "Foreigners," but I haven't added a cite for the disclaimer, since after seeing AbstractIllusions's earlier protestations, I'm not completely sold on the strength of Flemming as a source. The book in question is about the Jews in Greek territories, of which Smyrna was part only briefly in the modern era, and it seems like she she may have mentioned the Greek:Turkish ratio as an offhand comment (though I can't check this at the moment). I'm fairly certain that she's not the only one who's made similar claims about the Greek population, and if we can find one, I'd prefer a source that's more focused on the whole history of Izmir/Smyrna, the Greek population of Anatolia, or the Greco-Turkish War. —[[User:Quintucket|Quintucket]] ([[User talk:Quintucket|talk]]) 17:55, 26 October 2012 (UTC)
::::I think it is great! Flemming's sources for the claims are a French newspaper from the period (1918), and it isn't easily findable. I can't find additional data that corroborates the 2-1 claim. The closes I come is Milton's Paradise Lost: Smyrna: "A glance at the 1913 census reveals why his job was not easy. Smyrna's Christians outnumbered the Muslims by more than two to one; his was a majority Christian city in a resolutely Muslim world." (pg. 14) But note, he is talking solely religion and not ethnicity (the problem of possibly other coding errors leading to different percentages). FYI: The Inter-allied Commission on Smyrna (1920) used the following numbers for the Smyrna Zone or Aidin Vilayet (they aren't quite clear) (American estimates): Muslims 325,000 (42.9%), Greeks 375,000 (49.5%), Armenians 18,000 (2.3%), Jews 40,000 (5.3%). Percentages added by me (standard rounding rules at .05=up, .04=down), showing a clear Greek largest percentage. Just putting this stuff out there to get the best pie chart possible, don't know if it adds anything. [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 15:27, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
::Although Horton seems ok, at first glance, I have some questions about his estimations: are they pre-wwi or post wwi or just before the events of Sept. 1922? Also where did he base such estimations?[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 19:25, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
:::His numbers are those of the American Consul General (his office) and were considered the most reliable at the time (See Montgomery for this claim) and based sometime in the period around 1919 (according to Congressional record). Hope that helps. [[User:AbstractIllusions|AbstractIllusions]] ([[User talk:AbstractIllusions|talk]]) 13:12, 29 October 2012 (UTC)

::::When İzmir was occupied by the Greek Army on 15 May 1919, many of the city's Turks moved to Aydın or other Turkish-controlled cities in the inner Aegean region of Anatolia for the safety of their children and families, so any "unofficial census" figures from 1919-1922 will not include the Turks who fled the city during the Greek occupation. Therefore, a census figure "prior to the Greek invasion of 15 May 1919" will be a more realistic one. [[Special:Contributions/88.251.102.56|88.251.102.56]] ([[User talk:88.251.102.56|talk]]) 00:08, 30 October 2012 (UTC)

:::::Katherine Fleming and George Horton are much better sources than highly partisan and unreliable Ottoman "statistics". [[User:Athenean|Athenean]] ([[User talk:Athenean|talk]]) 08:23, 30 October 2012 (UTC)

{{reflist-talk}}

== Time gentlemen, please ==

I think it is time now to introduce the (second) pie chart to the articles Izmir and Great fire of Smyrna. There seems to be no controversy about the Horton pie, and it would greatly add to the information in the articles. Regards! [[Special:Contributions/79.160.40.10|79.160.40.10]] ([[User talk:79.160.40.10|talk]]) 08:04, 23 November 2012 (UTC)

== Average Pie Chart ==

Why not get the average from both the neutral Horton and the neutral Flemming? Why is this chart such an issue? It would be one of the most interesting things in the article. I dont see why certain editors fear it so much? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/176.26.229.19|176.26.229.19]] ([[User talk:176.26.229.19|talk]]) 17:34, 3 December 2012 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

# Numbered list item
== Requested move 3 ==
<div class="boilerplate" style="background-color: #efe; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px dotted #aaa;"><!-- Template:RM top -->
:''The following discussion is an archived discussion of a [[WP:requested moves|requested move]]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a [[Wikipedia:move review|move review]]. No further edits should be made to this section. ''

The result of the move request was: '''move'''. On pure numbers, people are quite split. However, I find the arguments of those opposing the move to be fairly weak. There are many articles on Wikipedia, many articles about cities -- Turkish or otherwise -- with diacritics, so the absence of the dotted I in English shouldn't mean case closed. Some of the sources (e.g. the U.S. embassy source) seem to just not use diacritics altogether, even for cities (e.g. [[Uşak]]) that have them on Wikipedia. And then other sources, of course, support the use of the dotted I here. The consistency argument seems quite convincing; one of the counter-examples ([[Iznik]]) was actually just moved [not by me] through an RM discussion. -- '''[[User:Tariqabjotu|<font color="black">tariq</font><font color="gray">abjotu</font>]]''' 02:18, 29 August 2013 (UTC)

----

[[:Izmir]] → {{no redirect|İzmir}} – per [[WP:CRITERIA|WP:CRITERIA "Consistency – The title is consistent with the pattern of similar articles' titles"]] with en.wp Turkish geo articles, e.g. [[İzmit]]. ''Lonely Planet Turkey'' 2010 ''"'''İzmir's synagogues''' - İzmir still has a sizeable Jewish population – although not nearly as large as it was in Ottoman times – and it is possible to take a tour of some of the city's beautiful old synagogues"''. [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 10:31, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Strong support''': Actually the original title was İzmir. But it was moved to Izmir on 17 October 2011 by Vegaswikian w/o any good reason. Since WP permits the capital İ character there is no reason to keep Izmir with undotted I character. [[User:Nedim Ardoğa|Nedim Ardoğa]] ([[User talk:Nedim Ardoğa|talk]]) 11:16, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Strong support''': İzmir is a major city in Turkey. Correct spelling is warranted. [[User:Cavann|Cavann]] ([[User talk:Cavann|talk]]) 17:55, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' The dotted capital "I" is a Turkish diacritic and does not exist in English. This is the English wikipedia. [[User:Athenean|Athenean]] ([[User talk:Athenean|talk]]) 20:20, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
::Athenean, FYI Lonely Planet is written in English. And yes this is the English Wikipedia (not the Greek Wikipedia) and in English Wikipedia we don't treat French, German, Portuguese, Spanish, Maltese, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Hungarian, Romanian, Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian, Finnish one way, and discriminate against Turkish ones. [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 04:00, 23 August 2013 (UTC)
*I think I'd '''support''' this as it is what I have seen elsewhere and a pretty standard spelling. [[User:Casliber|Cas Liber]] ([[User talk:Casliber|talk]] '''·''' [[Special:Contributions/Casliber|contribs]]) 21:06, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Support''': No reason not to. -- [[User:Marek69|<span style="color:DarkBlue;">Marek</span>]]<small>.[[Special:Contributions/Marek69|<span style="color:Blue;">69</span>]]<sup>[[User_talk:Marek69|<span style="color:Green;">'' talk''</span>]]</sup></small> 21:14, 21 August 2013 (UTC)

*'''Support'''. Wikipedia typically does not strip diacritics from placenames (e.g., [[Baħar Iċ-Ċagħaq]], [[Însurăței]]) unless the name in question is an [[exonym]] (e.g., [[Munich]] for ''München'' and, of course, [[Istanbul]]). ''Cf.'' other [[:Category:Cities in Turkey|cities in Turkey]]. — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 03:26, 22 August 2013 (UTC)

*'''Oppose''' The English name is Izmir. As a large, well known city Izmir has a widely used [[WP:COMMONNAME|common English name]], just like Istanbul. --[[User:TU-nor|T*U]] ([[User talk:TU-nor|talk]]) 08:43, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
**No, the English name is [[Smyrna]]. Were someone to propose a move to Smyrna, I would support it. However, İzmir is a Turkish name and we should treat it like we treat [[:Category:Cities in Turkey|other similar cases]]. <small> — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 01:06, 23 August 2013 (UTC)</small>
::As per AjaxSmack - not "just like Istanbul" since the UN Group on Geo names counts Istanbul uniquely in Turkey as an [[exonym]], as does Lonely Planet [[English_exonyms#cite_note-7]], using Istanbul (exonym) and İzmir (endonym) in the same sentence. [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 04:00, 23 August 2013 (UTC)
:::Well, the United Nations ''Manual for the National Standardization of Geographical Names'' 2006, quoted in [[English exonyms]] and probably a more reliable source than Lonely Planet, does not regard Izmir as an exonym: "The omission of diacritical marks usually does not turn an endonym into an exonym"--[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 21:10, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''': The English name doesn't have a dot on "I". In fact, we should change non-English names (which were not a result of a discussion by the way) to English ones, like in the case of Ismit. [[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 14:32, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
::'''Comment''' in WP please check city names such as [[Timișoara]], [[Niš]], [[Hafnarfjörður]], [[České Budějovice]], [[Borås]] and [[Poznań]] (all from different countries). Do we have ș š, ö, ð, é, å, ń in English alphabet ? It is clear that non English characters are permitted in WP. Thus the objection "English names don't have a dot on "I"" doesn't make sense. [[User:Nedim Ardoğa|Nedim Ardoğa]] ([[User talk:Nedim Ardoğa|talk]]) 15:19, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' Most sources in English use the undotted I - including the [http://turkey.usembassy.gov/consular_agent_izmir.html US Embassy], the [http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/travel-and-living-abroad/find-an-embassy/europe/consulate-izmir UK FCO], [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/izmir?show=0&t=1319147008 Merriam-Webster], and the news sources cited in previous discussions. The city is widely known in English as Izmir, as we use Istanbul, not İstanbul, Montreal not Montréal, in contrast with any number of smaller places where we use local spelling. Izmir and Istanbul are not exonyms, they are the preferred forms in English. Lonely Planet is very much in the minority.--[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 19:56, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
**There are some sources that can't type diacritics or have style manuals that prohibit diacritics. Wikipedia does not and, for those readers alarmed by unusual typography, the diacritics can be "read through". i.e., those unfamiliar with them can ignore the dot on the ''i''. Wikipedia is an online, Unicode-based reference work that need be not be dumbed down to reflect archaic typographical limitations. <small> — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 01:06, 23 August 2013 (UTC)</small>
***It's nothing to do with "dumbing down", and I am sure that the US state department and UK FCO can type diacritics. Montreal is not a dumbed-down form of Montréal, it's just the usual form in English. So with Izmir.--[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 21:10, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
****Yet the government of Canada uses the correct spelling even in English pages. [http://www.servicecanada.gc.ca/cgi-bin/sc-dsp.cgi?rc=2385&ln=eng] [[User:Cavann|Cavann]] ([[User talk:Cavann|talk]]) 21:20, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Comment''': There is a tiny minority of small and medium settlements which use non-English letters, but that's not an argument for a move. Well known metropolises avoid that (Istanbul for example). I've also can't find a German city with umlaut or sz here, or a Greek with diacritics.[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 20:17, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
::I guess you have not heard of [[Göttingen]]. And I'm sure your "assessment" of "tiny minority" is empirically based. [[User:Cavann|Cavann]] ([[User talk:Cavann|talk]]) 20:19, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
:::Exactly what I've said, "small and medium settlements" (i.e. 100k inhabitants), not a big metropolis like this one.[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 22:00, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
::::As far as I can tell, Wikipedia always keeps diacritics except for [[exonym]]s whether a small or large city. Cities ''over'' 100,000 with diacritics in their titles include [[São Paulo]], [[Bogotá]], [[Kraków]], [[Ciudad Juárez]], [[Brasília]], [[Cần Thơ]], [[Łódź]], [[São Gonçalo]], [[Málaga]], [[Biên Hòa]], [[Parañaque]], [[Timișoara]], [[Las Piñas]], [[Gdańsk]], [[Iași]], [[Córdoba]], [[Chișinău]], [[A Coruña]], [[Düsseldorf]], [[Białystok]], [[Târgu Mureș]], [[San José]], [[Liège]], [[Częstochowa]], [[Reykjavík]], [[Türkmenabat]], [[Jyväskylä]], [[Bălți]], [[Forlì]], [[Košice]], [[Cap-Haïtien]], [[Plzeň]], [[Orléans]], [[Agualva-Cacém]], [[Västerås]], [[Bærum]], [[Örebro]], and [[Durrës]]. Several of those are national capitals. In Turkey, there are [[List of cities in Turkey|65 cities over 100,000]]. Of those, over 25 have diacritics or dotless/dotted ''i''s in their titles. Far from being hard to find, I can't find an example where Wikipedia strips a diacritic with maybe the exception of [[Zurich]], [[Da Nang]], [[Riga]], and this article. <small> — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 01:06, 23 August 2013 (UTC)</small>
:::[[User:Alexikoua]] "or a Greek with diacritics" - Greek, unlike Turkish, is not written in a Latin alphabet.
*'''Strong support''': "'''İ'''" doesn't exist in English just as (Î,š,ž,đ,ć,ă,ț,ế,Đ,ơ,ắ..) and cities in [[English Wikipedia]] → [[Île-de-France]], [[Cần Thơ]], [[Thừa Thiên–Huế]], [[Książ Wielkopolski]], [[Ærøskøbing]], [[Päijänne Tavastia]]...etc. Also, [[İzmir]] is recognized with the official name by many institutions. [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=50832&eocn=image&eoci=moreiotd NASA], [http://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/311046 BBC] [http://www.expoizmir.org.tr/22-about-izmir-expo2020izmir.aspx EXPO] [[User:Maurice07|Maurice07]] ([[User talk:Maurice07|talk]]) 23:18, 22 August 2013 (UTC)
::The BBC uses Izmir on its news pages - many examples [http://www.bbc.co.uk/search/news/?q=Izmir here]. NASA is inconsistent, e.g. [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=2796&eocn=image&eoci=moreiotd here]. The EXPO page reads like a translation from the Turkish by a non-native English speaker.--[[User:Mhockey|Mhockey]] ([[User talk:Mhockey|talk]]) 21:10, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
:::Mhockey, I'm curious. Your User page indicates you are learning Turkish. The reason en.wp (like Britannica, like Lonely Planet) spells Turkish names fully is to enable pronunciation. This article was at İzmir until 4 editors agreed to remove the dot. How does them removing the dot help you as learner know how to pronunce it İzmir, with a long-İ not Izmir with short-I from this title? (of course the correct name is still there in there in the first line, but how does the title help?) [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 19:45, 26 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' per Athenean, Mhockey, and others. Whatever the status of the dotted capital "I", it is not part of the common name of anything or anywhere in the English language. If we follow the logic of this proposal, goodness only knows where we shall end up. [[User:Moonraker|Moonraker]] ([[User talk:Moonraker|talk]]) 23:44, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
**We'll end up exactly where we are right now with 99% of [[List of cities in Turkey|the cities in question]] carrying diacritics and the 1% that are [[exonym]]s not. <small> — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 05:39, 25 August 2013 (UTC)</small>
:::::Using a number of limited examples isn't engouh to justify such a move. It may be better to initiate a general discussion on that, since the majority of the large cities in Turkey, prefer the English form, like in [[Istanbul]], [[Iznik]].[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 20:03, 25 August 2013 (UTC)
::::::Limited? There are 581 cities in the [[List of cities in Turkey]] and almost all have articles. I can only find [[Iznik]] and [[Izmir]] with the diacritics removed. <small> — [[User talk:AjaxSmack|<span style="border:1px solid #000073;background:#4D4DA6;padding:2px;color:#F9FFFF;text-shadow:black 0.2em 0.2em 0.3em"><font face="Georgia">&nbsp;'''AjaxSmack'''&nbsp;</font></span>]] 03:03, 26 August 2013 (UTC)</small>
:::::::what about Istanbul? No wonder the 1st and 3rd largest cities of the country ignore that criteria, not to take into account the smaller ones.[[User:Alexikoua|Alexikoua]] ([[User talk:Alexikoua|talk]]) 11:13, 26 August 2013 (UTC)
::::::::This question was asked before and answered before, Istanbul is specifically covered by UN conf, İzmir isn't. [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 19:45, 26 August 2013 (UTC)
:''The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a [[WP:RM|requested move]]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a [[WP:move review|move review]]. No further edits should be made to this section.</div><!-- Template:RM bottom -->



Hi there -- I'm seeing the population of Izmir -- as a city -- as 4,320,519 in 2019. E.g., see http://www.izmir.gov.tr/istatistiklerle-izmir
==Etymology of İzmir==
Am I missing something? where do you get the 2.9m number?


==Text sorting==
The user [[User:Ithinkicahn|Ithinkicahn]] has changed (14.08.2014) the etymology, noting that there is ''No source for etymology including the "to" verb, as this is a folk etymology; may as well be the Turkish language inclination to add a vowel to the beginning of words starting with two consonants''. First of all, “to” or "is"( εις) is a proposition, not a verb. I also see no double consonant in the beginning of Nicaea (Iznik) or Polis (Istanbul), only in Sparta (Isparta). I don’ t have yet any reliable source (linguistics book, site, e.t.c.) but the examples of relative Turkish city names provide, I think, a sufficient justification for the etymology '''“is Smirnin> Izmir”''' (which I introduced since Feb. 2011).
I noticed that [[Old Smyrna]], [[Smyrna]], and this article repeated a lot of topics especially on ancient times. Moreover much of it was not referenced and contained obvious editorial opinions. I thought a special effort should be made to define the contents of each article and move the text around accordingly. I brought it up in the talks of the other articles. There was no objection. So, I've been moving material around. I got the material out of here that belongs under Old Smyrna. Some of it is wrong. Now I'm going to concentrate on Old Smyrna. There is still some material here that belongs under Smyrna. This article should start with the Turks. I don't want to move the ancient new smyrna material into smyrna until I am ready to work on Smyrna. Later, but not too long[[User:Botteville|Botteville]] ([[User talk:Botteville|talk]]) 04:08, 8 September 2023 (UTC)


:{{replyto|Botteville}} This article "should start with the Turks"? Then why was everything deleted until Alexander the Great? Also why would you delete everything until "the Turks" as opposed to summarizing? [[User:Bogazicili|Bogazicili]] ([[User talk:Bogazicili|talk]]) 18:58, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
I first learned about this kind of etymology from a (Greek) tour guide, while visiting Istanbul for the first time, lots of years ago. It is true that it is a wide spread etymology, especially in Greece but that does not make it a "folk" or "fake" etymology. Especially, the cases of Istankoy and Istanbul can be analysed as: ''"is tin Ko > is-tan-Ko* > Istankoy"'' and ''"is tin Polin> is-tan-Bol*> Istanbul"'', in a word-by-word translation: "to the Kos> to-the-Koy..." and "to the City > to-the-Bol...". In both ancient and modern Greek, preposition "is" (= to) is always accompanied by articles or names in [[Grammatical case| accusative case]]-form (Greek: "aetiatiki" case). That is the case here, as "tin" (την) form of the feminine article "the" is used, instead of the main (nominative) form ''i'' (η), in front of “is” : Is-tan-koy, not Is-i-Koy*.("Tin" is then turned to "tan", in Turkish pronunciation). -Have in mind that most of city names in Greek are feminine (including all the above), accompanied by feminine articles.- The use of the article in the right form, in both these cases, as part of "to the.." cannot be a coincidence.
::Hi Mr. B. This reply is post my reply below. Whoa, wait a minute! Your standards are way too high to include humble me. Did I stop? Obviously, a gross error. All I did was move material to Smyrna, first pass. You're acting as though you expect to see a polished article. Not today. As for the summarizing, well, I gave some thought to that. The article is not really amenable to summarizing. You'd be summarizing half the article. I expect both articles to be large as it is. We are talking about a city of millions, the second-largest in Turkey. Do you think we could put New York Cily in a small article like this? But, Izmir is at that level. I think you will feel better about this after you check Smyrna. Right now you are asking the questions of an inquisitor. I feel like the target of a Stalinist purge trial or the trial of the perpatrators of the bomb plot against Hitler. Or worse yet, an interrogation by my wife. Oho, you've caught me, b'god. Caught me indeed. I sure am screwed now. I did say it should start with the Turks. And then I DID stop at Alexander, leaving out the Byzantines. Guilty, guilty, guilty. You got me now. I hope you are chuckling. If not, I don't know what to say, except this is not an interrogation. Why don't you put in whatever time you are going to allot for this. When I get back, maybe this year sometime, I will take a look.[[User:Botteville|Botteville]] ([[User talk:Botteville|talk]]) 01:33, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
A last remark: today, when referring to proper nouns in [[Modern Greek|Greek]], the article “the” (“o/ i / toh”) is ''always'' used. However, in [[Katharevousa|older]] and ancient Greek, the article (here: ''tin'') before names could be (not necessarily) omitted: “I go to Athens”, but also “I go to the Athens” (It sounds strange in English, I know). That is why “ is Nikaean > Iznik ” and “ is tin Ko > Istankoy”, are both possible etymologies. All the above prove the etymology in the form '''“ to+(the) + [City Name] ”''' right, or the most probable one, for Izmir and all the respective names.


== Massive amount of deletion in article ==
P.S. I really don’ t see the reason behind such a long discussion- dispute about ''Izmir'' or'' İzmir.'' Even though I have a clear view on it, it is the same word, in the same (Latin) scripture! Needless to mention how many different transcriptions exist for a single Greek name, e.g. in Greek road signs. [[User:Ρουθραμιώτης|Routhramiotis]]/[[User:Ρουθραμιώτης|Ρουθραμιώτης]] ([[User talk:Ρουθραμιώτης|talk]]) 19:00, 19 August 2014 (UTC)


Looks like there was a mass deletion by {{u|Botteville}} in 7-8 September 2023 [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=%C4%B0zmir&diff=1174385688&oldid=1174276572]. Entire sections were deleted such as "Names and etymology" and everything in history section until Alexander the Great. This is the main article. Per [[Wikipedia:Summary style]], it should still have something in history until Alexander the Great. Child articles can be more detailed. The deletion of "Names and etymology" is also inexplicable. We now have an entire paragraph in the lead about:
:While there are many city names that are formed using "is" (εις), that is not the rule; in many cases the city names were borrowed directly, in the case of [[Konya]], even the preceding i was dropped from Ικόνιον - Iconium. I think, the most likely explanation for the addition of i in İzmir's case was, well, it had to be added because the [[Ottoman Turkish alphabet|script]] didn't allow Smyrna to be written. If one tried to write Smyrna ("سميرنا"), then a reader would have read it something like "Samirna". That is why an 'i' was added at the beginning of all loanwords, like station → istasyon, statistique → istatistik. After the transition the [[Turkish alphabet|Latin alphabet]], however, it became possible to write such words, so words borrowed after 1929 didn't have the initial 'i': stade/stadium → stat/stadyum, statique → statik. They could have dropped the initial 'i's from the words already in Turkish, but since the new pronunciation dictated by the alphabet was already common, they were transferred into Latin script keeping the 'i'. If Turks were using Latin alphabet when they arrived Anatolia, in all likelihood Smyrna would remain as "Smirna".


"The modern name İzmir is the Turkish rendering of the Greek name Smyrna and "Smyrne" (Σμύρνη). In medieval times, Westerners used forms like Smire, Zmirra, Esmira, Ismira, which was rendered as İzmir into Turkish, originally written as ازمير with the Ottoman Turkish alphabet."
:An interesting exception seems to be [[Trabzon]]. An 'i' was not added, so "طربزون" would probably be pronounced Tarabzon back then. But with the new alphabet, it was transcribed as Trabzon.--[[User:Cfsenel|Cfsenel]] ([[User talk:Cfsenel|talk]]) 08:16, 14 March 2015 (UTC)


While the lead doesn't cover large parts of the article such as education. Not to mention large amounts of information such as Ti-smurna was also lost without being summarized. Also given the article size, the removal seems unnecessary. [[User:Bogazicili|Bogazicili]] ([[User talk:Bogazicili|talk]]) 18:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
==Name==
Why is this named İzmir while Istanbul isn't İstanbul? <small><span class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Antondimak|Antondimak]] ([[User talk:Antondimak|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Antondimak|contribs]]) 21:38, 5 March 2016 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:<nowiki>Mr. B, Things like this are pretty much subjective. The bottom line is, I think you should follow your judgement. I can tell you what I intended and why, but of course I have no license to push that ahead of someone else's opinion. Now, Izmir is quite a large city, and there is much materal on the modern city there. There is also much material on the ancient city to be covered. It seemed to me all the material was way too much for a single article. But this is not a unique or unusual situation. There are a lot of big cities like that. The usual Wikipedia answer is to split the article. Some stuff should be offloaded to one or more other articles. In my experience, and I think you will find this to be true generally on WP, old cities like this that have gone on into the future and now have a modern history as well as an ancient are usually described by an article for the ancient and an article for the modern. I tentatively split the article. What I did NOT do is clean up and finish either one. We never finish anything around here. I do not see the point however in repeating the historical material twice! We don't need two etymologies, two archaeologies, two ancient histories, etc. My sentiment was that Izmir should cover the Turkish city. Smyrna should cover the Greek and Byzantine city. If necessary we could create a Smyrna (Byzantene) also. Why did I not continue on it? Well, I got careless and slipped in some modern opinions which when it was pointed out to me I quickly deleted. Then I thought I was too close and needed a break. Also this would give people like you a chance. I would like to say, go ahead, do your stuff. I know, however, how much work it is. Unfortunately it can't get any better unless someone does it. I'd rather not get back to this right now. There are articles worse off that I'm on to. I will eventually get there. Meanwhile I accept all your qvetches. Go ahead, do it the way YOU think it should be done. When I DO get back to it I will try to evaluate it afresh and tackle what seems to be the problems of those times. I will be starting with the same view, that the ancient material belongs primarily under Smyrna and should not be extensively under Izmir. The etylomoly for Smyrna, for example, is a Smyrna-article affair and does not belong in Izmir. The Turkish form, Izmir, however, would go under Izmir. Hope this helps. Ciao for now.~~~</nowiki> [[User:Botteville|Botteville]] ([[User talk:Botteville|talk]]) 00:54, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
== External links modified ==
::Oh, Mr. B, looking at your evaluation again I realize that you think I just plain deleted material from Wikipedia. I did not. Check under Smyrna and if you do not find that material there let me know or put it there yourself. Also the key to making the connection is the hatnotes. "This article is about the modern city of Izmir. For the predecessor ancient city, see Smyrna." If they are not there, put them in, will you? And, you comment about how there ought to be more about education in Izmir is undoubtedly true. But, putting it in gives us all the more reason to keep the split so we can have room to put it in. Remember, the name of the game is not to find fault with botteville, which is easy to do no doubt, but to build credible articles. Right now the ball is in your court.[[User:Botteville|Botteville]] ([[User talk:Botteville|talk]]) 01:07, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
:::{{replyto|Botteville}} see [[Wikipedia:Summary style]]. This is the main article for all İzmir related articles, which includes [[Smyrna]] and [[Old Smyrna]]. What you did is equivalent to deleting [[United_States#Economy]] section and moving it to [[Economy of the United States]]. All cities are comprehensive. [[London]] includes "Prehistory" and "Roman London" sections, and doesn't just start with arrival of Anglo-Saxons. I'll be restoring all removed or "moved" material. [[User:Bogazicili|Bogazicili]] ([[User talk:Bogazicili|talk]]) 07:47, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
::::Mr. B, no, not all cities are comprehensive. That is the problem, is it not? For these large city articles, shall they be comprehensive or not? You want us to say by fiat, yes indeed they are so when the problem is still before us. That is begging the question in formal argumentation. You can't logically argue that they are ao when that is the question, whether they should be so. Your second begged issue is whether this should be "the main article for all Izmir related issues." You say it is. I say that is the question. I appear to oppose you on both issues, but that is specious. I don't oppose you at all. Well, yes there should be one continuous article for one continuous place. It should start with the first remains of the stone age. It should govern all articles about any parts of it. So what is my problem? Unexpectedly from a logical point of view it has nothing to do with either issue. Other matters inteject themselves, matters quite unexpected and quite unwanted. That is space! Yes, SPACE is our problem. I'm saying, SPACE forces us to go beyond logic, beyond what we intended. How can we get all that material into one article without resorting to an unacceptably large article? I know you would say it isn't unacceptable. But, it will be. Athens is running into this problem right now. You just can't put every last detail about Athens into one article. Maybe you've seen these solitary gigantic articles to which no one can add anything. The end of it is, someone puts on a tag stating the article is too large. Nobody can do anything with it. Now, Izmir has a good logical break. There was a war there between the Greeks and the Turks. The Turks won. Izmir was totally rebuilt by the street by street, name by name. I thought, this is a good breaking place. Greek Smyrna, Turkish Izmir. This is a serious break in continuity. Well, that's the end of my story. You want a different outcome. It happens on WP. You seem rather passionate about Turkish Izmir. Well, so am I, but we have this SPACE thing hanging over us. What is realistic here? What can fit into one article's space? [[User:Botteville|Botteville]] ([[User talk:Botteville|talk]]) 09:29, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::Again, see [[Wikipedia:Article size]]. The article wasn't too long. Your "moving" was totally unnecessary. Again, I'll be restoring all removed or "moved" material. You haven't given a reasonable reason why not. Your edits also look biased that you removed all pre-Greek history. İzmir has 8,500 years of habitation. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.2478/s13386-012-0013-5] [[User:Bogazicili|Bogazicili]] ([[User talk:Bogazicili|talk]]) 10:01, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
::::::OK. We've reached the impasse. I have too given reasonable reasons, but you don't agree. I proposed. You rejected. I got no counter-proposal. I come out on the losing end of the three reversions. We don't need to go thru that. The next move is to call for a consensus, someone to break the tie. Consider it called. As it may be some time in coming, au revoir for now. Good luck with it. Here's where I go from here: I'm mainly interested in the ancient turquoise coast, which was Anatolian and then Hellenic and then Byzantine. I'm taking a break from it for a bit. When I get back I will not be working on Izmir, as we disagree on that. The future is not an open book. The article might get much longer, as I suspect it will. You might change your mind, as I suspect you will. Someone else might take an interest. In essence you got Izmir for now. Good luck. There is one caution I would make. Not all the ancient material in Izmir is academically sound or referenced. Needs work. Once anyone gets started it might turn into something bigger than you thought. I got to go now. Got other things I want to work on. Ciao.[[Special:Contributions/76.23.135.216|76.23.135.216]] ([[User talk:76.23.135.216|talk]]) 13:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC)


== Semi-protected edit request on 15 April 2024 ==
Hello fellow Wikipedians,


{{edit semi-protected|İzmir|answered=yes}}
I have just modified {{plural:1|one external link|1 external links}} on [[İzmir]]. Please take a moment to review [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=748789407 my edit]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit [[User:Cyberpower678/FaQs#InternetArchiveBot|this simple FaQ]] for additional information. I made the following changes:
The population resing in İzmir increased by 112.274 people compared to 2019 and became 4.479.525 in 2023 according to Turkish Statistical Institution.
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20110304044123/http://bliss.mu.edu.tr:80/tezdb/51008.pdf to http://bliss.mu.edu.tr/tezdb/51008.pdf


Source: https://data.tuik.gov.tr/Bulten/Index?p=The-Results-of-Address-Based-Population-Registration-System-2023-49684 [[User:Papyrus and Parchment|Papyrus and Parchment]] ([[User talk:Papyrus and Parchment|talk]]) 12:46, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the ''checked'' parameter below to '''true''' or '''failed''' to let others know (documentation at {{tlx|Sourcecheck}}).
:[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:ESp --> [[User:Charliehdb|Charliehdb]] ([[User talk:Charliehdb|talk]]) 11:59, 20 April 2024 (UTC)


== İ ==
{{sourcecheck|checked=false}}


Is this just a capital i? Why does it have the dot? It seems to be a Turkish letter, but English doesn't have it, so why would this article use it? [[User:Wikifan153|Wikifan153]] ([[User talk:Wikifan153|talk]]) 10:44, 30 May 2024 (UTC)
Cheers.—[[User:InternetArchiveBot|'''<span style="color:darkgrey;font-family:monospace">InternetArchiveBot</span>''']] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">([[User talk:InternetArchiveBot|Report bug]])</span> 11:35, 10 November 2016 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 20:44, 26 November 2024

Image

[edit]
Entry of Joseph de Bauffremont into İzmir, 28 September 1766.

I would like to make a general comment about the "Smyrna" reference to Izmir, at least to the people that have scientific and historical and not nationalist-driven doubts about it. I think it is wrong to wonder why the name Yerevan (unknown to most, in contrast to Smyrna) is not used for Athens while Smyrna does for Izmir, in wiki. First of all, the etymology of the name Izmir itself is derived from the greek, former name. Also, they name "Smyrna" was indeed kept in use by both Muslims and Christians. In contrast, the turkish name Ayvalik was alwasys used, instead of ancient "Kydonies" term. But there is another, substantial reason: The civilization and activities developed throughout history in Izmir were almost exlusively achieved by its greek citizens. This is proved by the cultural and aesthetical fall of Izmir for many decades, after the greeks left under the Population Exchange. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, born in Salonica and not in Anatolia, was aware of that fact: He knew that there would be a significant financial and cultural downfall after the departure of the urban population of the area, but the stabilisation inside his country was of course of highsest importance at those critical times. Dimitris Chrisafinos

Population according to the cited resources.

[edit]

Hi there -- I'm seeing the population of Izmir -- as a city -- as 4,320,519 in 2019. E.g., see http://www.izmir.gov.tr/istatistiklerle-izmir Am I missing something? where do you get the 2.9m number?

Text sorting

[edit]

I noticed that Old Smyrna, Smyrna, and this article repeated a lot of topics especially on ancient times. Moreover much of it was not referenced and contained obvious editorial opinions. I thought a special effort should be made to define the contents of each article and move the text around accordingly. I brought it up in the talks of the other articles. There was no objection. So, I've been moving material around. I got the material out of here that belongs under Old Smyrna. Some of it is wrong. Now I'm going to concentrate on Old Smyrna. There is still some material here that belongs under Smyrna. This article should start with the Turks. I don't want to move the ancient new smyrna material into smyrna until I am ready to work on Smyrna. Later, but not too longBotteville (talk) 04:08, 8 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]

@Botteville: This article "should start with the Turks"? Then why was everything deleted until Alexander the Great? Also why would you delete everything until "the Turks" as opposed to summarizing? Bogazicili (talk) 18:58, 26 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Mr. B. This reply is post my reply below. Whoa, wait a minute! Your standards are way too high to include humble me. Did I stop? Obviously, a gross error. All I did was move material to Smyrna, first pass. You're acting as though you expect to see a polished article. Not today. As for the summarizing, well, I gave some thought to that. The article is not really amenable to summarizing. You'd be summarizing half the article. I expect both articles to be large as it is. We are talking about a city of millions, the second-largest in Turkey. Do you think we could put New York Cily in a small article like this? But, Izmir is at that level. I think you will feel better about this after you check Smyrna. Right now you are asking the questions of an inquisitor. I feel like the target of a Stalinist purge trial or the trial of the perpatrators of the bomb plot against Hitler. Or worse yet, an interrogation by my wife. Oho, you've caught me, b'god. Caught me indeed. I sure am screwed now. I did say it should start with the Turks. And then I DID stop at Alexander, leaving out the Byzantines. Guilty, guilty, guilty. You got me now. I hope you are chuckling. If not, I don't know what to say, except this is not an interrogation. Why don't you put in whatever time you are going to allot for this. When I get back, maybe this year sometime, I will take a look.Botteville (talk) 01:33, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Massive amount of deletion in article

[edit]

Looks like there was a mass deletion by Botteville in 7-8 September 2023 [1]. Entire sections were deleted such as "Names and etymology" and everything in history section until Alexander the Great. This is the main article. Per Wikipedia:Summary style, it should still have something in history until Alexander the Great. Child articles can be more detailed. The deletion of "Names and etymology" is also inexplicable. We now have an entire paragraph in the lead about:

"The modern name İzmir is the Turkish rendering of the Greek name Smyrna and "Smyrne" (Σμύρνη). In medieval times, Westerners used forms like Smire, Zmirra, Esmira, Ismira, which was rendered as İzmir into Turkish, originally written as ازمير with the Ottoman Turkish alphabet."

While the lead doesn't cover large parts of the article such as education. Not to mention large amounts of information such as Ti-smurna was also lost without being summarized. Also given the article size, the removal seems unnecessary. Bogazicili (talk) 18:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Mr. B, Things like this are pretty much subjective. The bottom line is, I think you should follow your judgement. I can tell you what I intended and why, but of course I have no license to push that ahead of someone else's opinion. Now, Izmir is quite a large city, and there is much materal on the modern city there. There is also much material on the ancient city to be covered. It seemed to me all the material was way too much for a single article. But this is not a unique or unusual situation. There are a lot of big cities like that. The usual Wikipedia answer is to split the article. Some stuff should be offloaded to one or more other articles. In my experience, and I think you will find this to be true generally on WP, old cities like this that have gone on into the future and now have a modern history as well as an ancient are usually described by an article for the ancient and an article for the modern. I tentatively split the article. What I did NOT do is clean up and finish either one. We never finish anything around here. I do not see the point however in repeating the historical material twice! We don't need two etymologies, two archaeologies, two ancient histories, etc. My sentiment was that Izmir should cover the Turkish city. Smyrna should cover the Greek and Byzantine city. If necessary we could create a Smyrna (Byzantene) also. Why did I not continue on it? Well, I got careless and slipped in some modern opinions which when it was pointed out to me I quickly deleted. Then I thought I was too close and needed a break. Also this would give people like you a chance. I would like to say, go ahead, do your stuff. I know, however, how much work it is. Unfortunately it can't get any better unless someone does it. I'd rather not get back to this right now. There are articles worse off that I'm on to. I will eventually get there. Meanwhile I accept all your qvetches. Go ahead, do it the way YOU think it should be done. When I DO get back to it I will try to evaluate it afresh and tackle what seems to be the problems of those times. I will be starting with the same view, that the ancient material belongs primarily under Smyrna and should not be extensively under Izmir. The etylomoly for Smyrna, for example, is a Smyrna-article affair and does not belong in Izmir. The Turkish form, Izmir, however, would go under Izmir. Hope this helps. Ciao for now.~~~ Botteville (talk) 00:54, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, Mr. B, looking at your evaluation again I realize that you think I just plain deleted material from Wikipedia. I did not. Check under Smyrna and if you do not find that material there let me know or put it there yourself. Also the key to making the connection is the hatnotes. "This article is about the modern city of Izmir. For the predecessor ancient city, see Smyrna." If they are not there, put them in, will you? And, you comment about how there ought to be more about education in Izmir is undoubtedly true. But, putting it in gives us all the more reason to keep the split so we can have room to put it in. Remember, the name of the game is not to find fault with botteville, which is easy to do no doubt, but to build credible articles. Right now the ball is in your court.Botteville (talk) 01:07, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Botteville: see Wikipedia:Summary style. This is the main article for all İzmir related articles, which includes Smyrna and Old Smyrna. What you did is equivalent to deleting United_States#Economy section and moving it to Economy of the United States. All cities are comprehensive. London includes "Prehistory" and "Roman London" sections, and doesn't just start with arrival of Anglo-Saxons. I'll be restoring all removed or "moved" material. Bogazicili (talk) 07:47, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Mr. B, no, not all cities are comprehensive. That is the problem, is it not? For these large city articles, shall they be comprehensive or not? You want us to say by fiat, yes indeed they are so when the problem is still before us. That is begging the question in formal argumentation. You can't logically argue that they are ao when that is the question, whether they should be so. Your second begged issue is whether this should be "the main article for all Izmir related issues." You say it is. I say that is the question. I appear to oppose you on both issues, but that is specious. I don't oppose you at all. Well, yes there should be one continuous article for one continuous place. It should start with the first remains of the stone age. It should govern all articles about any parts of it. So what is my problem? Unexpectedly from a logical point of view it has nothing to do with either issue. Other matters inteject themselves, matters quite unexpected and quite unwanted. That is space! Yes, SPACE is our problem. I'm saying, SPACE forces us to go beyond logic, beyond what we intended. How can we get all that material into one article without resorting to an unacceptably large article? I know you would say it isn't unacceptable. But, it will be. Athens is running into this problem right now. You just can't put every last detail about Athens into one article. Maybe you've seen these solitary gigantic articles to which no one can add anything. The end of it is, someone puts on a tag stating the article is too large. Nobody can do anything with it. Now, Izmir has a good logical break. There was a war there between the Greeks and the Turks. The Turks won. Izmir was totally rebuilt by the street by street, name by name. I thought, this is a good breaking place. Greek Smyrna, Turkish Izmir. This is a serious break in continuity. Well, that's the end of my story. You want a different outcome. It happens on WP. You seem rather passionate about Turkish Izmir. Well, so am I, but we have this SPACE thing hanging over us. What is realistic here? What can fit into one article's space? Botteville (talk) 09:29, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Again, see Wikipedia:Article size. The article wasn't too long. Your "moving" was totally unnecessary. Again, I'll be restoring all removed or "moved" material. You haven't given a reasonable reason why not. Your edits also look biased that you removed all pre-Greek history. İzmir has 8,500 years of habitation. [2] Bogazicili (talk) 10:01, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
OK. We've reached the impasse. I have too given reasonable reasons, but you don't agree. I proposed. You rejected. I got no counter-proposal. I come out on the losing end of the three reversions. We don't need to go thru that. The next move is to call for a consensus, someone to break the tie. Consider it called. As it may be some time in coming, au revoir for now. Good luck with it. Here's where I go from here: I'm mainly interested in the ancient turquoise coast, which was Anatolian and then Hellenic and then Byzantine. I'm taking a break from it for a bit. When I get back I will not be working on Izmir, as we disagree on that. The future is not an open book. The article might get much longer, as I suspect it will. You might change your mind, as I suspect you will. Someone else might take an interest. In essence you got Izmir for now. Good luck. There is one caution I would make. Not all the ancient material in Izmir is academically sound or referenced. Needs work. Once anyone gets started it might turn into something bigger than you thought. I got to go now. Got other things I want to work on. Ciao.76.23.135.216 (talk) 13:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 15 April 2024

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The population resing in İzmir increased by 112.274 people compared to 2019 and became 4.479.525 in 2023 according to Turkish Statistical Institution.

Source: https://data.tuik.gov.tr/Bulten/Index?p=The-Results-of-Address-Based-Population-Registration-System-2023-49684 Papyrus and Parchment (talk) 12:46, 15 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

 Not done: it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a "change X to Y" format and provide a reliable source if appropriate. Charliehdb (talk) 11:59, 20 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

İ

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Is this just a capital i? Why does it have the dot? It seems to be a Turkish letter, but English doesn't have it, so why would this article use it? Wikifan153 (talk) 10:44, 30 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]