The Nilufer or Niloufer River (Turkish: Nilüfer Çayı) is a river in Turkey. From its source near Mount Uludağ (the classical Mysian Olympus) and flowing past Bursa, the river tends to the northwest along its course of 203 kilometres (126 mi).
Ancient name of Nilufer is unknown. Some mistakenly think it is Odryses (Cramer contradicts in saying that Nilüfer was Odryses) '[1][2] (Latin: Horisius). Its plain was known as Mygdonia[3] and formed the Persian satrapy of Dascylium.[4] It formerly flowed into the Rhyndacus but now joins the Simav (ancient Macestos) north of Karacabey.
In Turkish, nilüfer means "water lily." The river may have been renamed for the flowers or for Nilüfer Hatun, a wife of the Ottoman sultan Orhan. The district of Nilüfer in Bursa Province is named after the river.
Today, the Doğancı-1 Dam crosses it.
References
edit- ^ Cramer, John A. A Geographical and Historical Description of Asia Minor, with a Map, Vol. 1, p. 172. Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1832. Accessed 4 Sept 2011.
- ^ Hazlitt, Wm. The Classical Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Ancient Geography, Sacred and Profane. "Odrysses." Whittaker & Co. (London), 1851. Accessed 4 Sept 2011.
- ^ Strabo. Geography, XII. 3. 27.
- ^ Hazlitt, Wm. The Classical Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Ancient Geography, Sacred and Profane. "Dascylium Archived 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine." Whittaker & Co. (London), 1851. Accessed 4 Sept 2011.
40°17′58″N 28°27′26″E / 40.29944°N 28.45722°E