203
km southeast of Van, is Hakkari, sits at an altitude of 1700
m, with high mountains dominating the land, and wide valleys
separate the great peaks with heights exceeding 4000 m. Mounts
Cilo and Sat are two of the outstanding ones for mountaineering
and winter sports. The snow accumulating on the upper parts
of these mountains form beautiful glaciers.
The Zap Valley, through which the road to the city passes, offers fantastic scenery.
This land has witnessed the passing of tribes since earliest times. The medieval fortress reflects the history of this small region and is worth seeing, together with the Medresse standing nearby.
Formerly ЗЦLEMERIK, city, capital of Hakkвri il (province),
southeastern Turkey. It lies at an altitude of about 5,500
ft (1,700 m), surrounded by mountains and overlooked by a
medieval fortress, the former residence of its Kurdish rulers.
A market for local livestock and livestock products, Hakkвri
has road links to Van to the north and Siirt to the west.
Hakkвri il, with an area of 3,817 sq mi (9,885 sq km), is
drained by the Great Zab River (Bьyьkzap Suyu). Iran borders
it on the east and Iraq on the south. Mostly mountainous,
it is the most sparsely populated and isolated il in Turkey.
East of Hakkвri city rise the high ranges of the Cilo (13,700
ft) and Sat (12,500 ft) mountains. Cropland is scarce, and
the proportion of land under cultivation is among the nation's
lowest. Livestock raising is the main activity. The largely
Kurdish population is semi-nomadic, moving to higher summer
pastures in season. Although the region was annexed to the
Ottoman Empire in 1515-16, it was ruled largely by local Kurdish
amirs under nominal Ottoman suzerainty until the mid-19th
century. Pop. (1980) city, 18,009; (1983 est.) il, 174,200.