Yeniköy ( Turkish : Yeniköy , "New Village"), known in Greek as Neochorion ( Greek : Νεοχώριον ), Neochori ( Νεοχώρι ), or Nichori ( Νιχώρι or Νηχώρι ), sometimes also referred to as Yeni Kioi , is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Sarıyer , Istanbul Province , Turkey . Its population is 14,963 (2022). It is located on the European shores of the Bosphorus strait , between the neighbourhoods of İstinye and Tarabya .
13-2387: Yeniköy ('New Village' in Turkish, written يڭى كوى in Ottoman Turkish), sometimes written as two words Yeni Köy , may refer to one of the following places: In Turkey [ edit ] Yeniköy, Istanbul , a neighborhood in Sarıyer district of Istanbul, Turkey Yeniköy Synagogue , a synagogue in the neighborhood Yeniköy, Adıyaman Yeniköy, Alaca Yeniköy, Alanya Yeniköy, Aydın Yeniköy (Dalama), Aydın Yeniköy, Babadağ Yeniköy, Bala Yeniköy, Bartın Yeniköy, Batman Yeniköy, Bayat Yeniköy, Bayburt Yeniköy, Bayramiç Yeniköy, Besni Yeniköy, Bigadiç Yeniköy, Bilecik Yeniköy, Bolu Yeniköy, Bozdoğan Yeniköy, Bursa Yeniköy, Çerkeş Yeniköy, Çilimli Yeniköy, Çine Yeniköy, Çüngüş Yeniköy, Dodurga Yeniköy, Emirdağ Yeniköy, Ergani Yeniköy, Erzincan Yeniköy, Ezine Yeniköy, Gazipaşa Yeniköy, Gelibolu Yeniköy, Gölbaşı Yeniköy, Göle Yeniköy, Göynücek Yeniköy, Göynük Yeniköy, Gündoğmuş Yeniköy, Hamamözü Yeniköy, Haymana Yeniköy, Hınıs Yeniköy, Kale Yeniköy, Karacasu Yeniköy, Karakoçan Yeniköy, Karayazı Yeniköy, Kaş Yeniköy, Koçarlı Yeniköy, Kovancılar Yeniköy, Kozan Yeniköy, Kurucaşile Yeniköy, Kuşadası Yeniköy, Manavgat Yeniköy, Manyas Yeniköy, Mersin Yeniköy, Ödemiş Yeniköy, Otlukbeli Yeniköy, Pasinler Yeniköy, Posof Yeniköy, Refahiye Yeniköy, Saimbeyli Yeniköy, Şanlıurfa Yeniköy, Sarıkamış Yeniköy, Sason Yeniköy, Silvan Yeniköy, Söke Yeniköy, Tarsus Yeniköy, Ulus Yeniköy, Yenice Yeniköy, Yenişehir Yeniköy, Yumurtalık Yeniköy, Yüreğir Yeniköy, Yusufeli Formerly named Yeniköy [ edit ] Greece [ edit ] Stavroupoli, Xanthi , Greece Plevroma , Pella, Greece Eleftherochori, Kilkis Argillos, Kozani Provatas , Serres, Greece North Macedonia [ edit ] Novo Selo Municipality [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
26-560: A considerable Greek population as well as Armenian and Jewish communities. The Surp Asdvadzadzin Armenian church and the Yeniköy Synagogue survive to this day. Today, Yeniköy is considered an affluent neighbourhood with many restaurants and cafés. Many of the yalıs on the coastline are among the most expensive real estate in Istanbul. The Köybaşı Caddesi (Köybaşı Avenue) runs through
39-546: Is also an independent site where celebrities are located. [REDACTED] Media related to Yeniköy, Sarıyer at Wikimedia Commons This geographical article about a location in Istanbul Province , Turkey is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Yenik%C3%B6y, Sar%C4%B1kam%C4%B1%C5%9F Yeniköy ( Greek : Νεοχώρι ) is a village in the Sarıkamış District , Kars Province , Turkey . It
52-502: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Yenik%C3%B6y, Istanbul Although a Byzantine village had existed in the area, the settlement was in ruin by the time of the Ottoman conquest . After the conquest, the village was repopulated with Greeks and Vlach families from Romania. The Greek population called the village Neohori (Νεοχώρι) which literally meant "new village". This name
65-1104: The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with the Ottoman Empire, returning the Kars region to the Ottomans. In September 1919, fearing that their village will be affected by the Greek genocide and the Turkish–Armenian War , Yeniköy's residents abandoned their village for Kars . The men of the village attempted to return to their village to harvest their crops by were prevented from doing so by Armenian military personnel. Yeniköy's residents eventually fled further to Batumi . Greek refugees lived in camps in squalid conditions, suffering hunger and typhus . The Greek government began organizing evacuations in May 1919, and Yeniköy residents were eventually brought to Thessaloniki . High mortality caused by outbreaks of malaria caused
78-599: The Byzantine , who served the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople as Domestikos , Lambadarios , and Arch-cantor was born here. The Egyptian Greek poet Constantine Cavafy lived here together with his parents in 1882–1885 as an adolescent; his bust is in the yard of the Panagia church. In his poem "Nichori" ( Greek : Το Nιχώρι ) (1885), he praises the place. Tugay apartment building, where Vehbi Koç lived,
91-530: The neighbourhood close to the Bosphorus shoreline. Besides the historic village, the nearby neighborhoods of Yalılar , Bağlar Mevkii , Kalender , as well as sections of Ferahevler are considered within the borders of Yeniköy. The suburb is home to several exclusive yalı houses that used to be owned by the prominent figures of the Ottoman era. The small Osman Reis mosque was built by Alexander Vallaury in 1904 on
104-439: The request of Sultan Mahmud II ′s personal physician Stefanos Karatheodori ( Greek : Στέφανος Καραθεοδωρής ). His and his son Alexander Karatheodori Pasha ′s tombstones are next to the wooden bell tower west of the church. Yeniköy is served by Yeniköy İlkokulu and Yeniköy Mehmetçik İlköğretim Okulu as its main primary and middle education centers respectively. Tarabya British Schools has its Yeniköy campus there. Peter
117-425: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yeniköy&oldid=1186210910 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
130-511: The site of a 17th-century mosque. Vallaury also designed the yalı of Ahmed Afif Pasha behind it, where Agatha Christie stayed as a guest in 1933 while writing Murder on the Orient Express . There are several Christian churches in the neighbourhood. The Greek Orthodox church of Dormition of the Mother of God (Panayia Kumariotisa Rum Ortodoks Kilisesi, Koybaşı Cad. No. 108) was built in 1837 at
143-495: The village its residents began practicing Orthodox Christianity openly once again, building a stone church in 1884. A school was also established at some point. In 1913, Yeniköy had a total population of 1029, by 1918 it had grown to approximately 1600 people. Most of the population was engaged in animal husbandry and farming. On 3 March 1918, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic signed
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#1732869619847156-572: Was founded in 1878 by Pontic Greek settlers who abandoned the region in 1919. As of 2022 the village had a population of 441 people. Yeniköy was founded in 1878 by Pontic Greek Crypto-Christian settlers from Erzurum , Chaldia and Nicopolis shortly after the Kars Province was incorporated into the Russian Empire in the aftermath of the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) . After founding
169-417: Was later translated to Turkish and adopted by the Ottoman officials. Until the 18th century, Yeniköy was a majority Greek maritime trading town with a Turkish (primarily immigrants from the eastern Black Sea coast), Armenian and Jewish minority. Beginning in the 18th century, many wealthy non-muslims built themselves yalıs along the coastline. Yeniköy was until the 1955 Istanbul pogrom a neighbourhood with
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