Top 10 similar words or synonyms for turgutlu

yenice    0.870028

osmaniye    0.865777

salihli    0.858696

kuyucak    0.857787

nazilli    0.850695

kadirli    0.846919

uzunlu    0.845464

mahmutlu    0.845149

armutlu    0.842366

nizip    0.837937

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for turgutlu

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Turgutlu Turgutlu, also known as Kasaba ("Cassaba" or "Casaba") is a city and district in Manisa Province in the Aegean region of Turkey. According to 2009 census, its district population is 140,753; 115,930 live in the city itself. The district covers an area of at an elevation of . The district is the most populous after the provincial center of Manisa and the second most populous district center, in Turkey's Aegean Region.
Turgutlu Hüsnü Sönmezer, writer of various litruture books including poetry books books; "Bir Büyük Kentti Düşlerindeki" and "Al Sevdani Gönlümden" is born and worked over 20 years in ‘"Turgutlu"’ / ‘"Kasaba"’ (aka ‘"Cassaba"’ or ‘"Casaba’'’). Currently he lives in Izmir and sample of some of his poems can be found in here
Turgutlu Jewish composer Alberto Hemsi (1898 - 1975), famous mostly for his arrangements of Ladino folk songs and Sephardi Jeish music, was born 1898 in ‘"Turgutlu"’ / ‘"Kasaba"’ (aka ‘"Cassaba"’ or ‘"Casaba’'’).
Turgutlu The name derives from the name of the Turkish clan of "Turgutlu" ("also cited as "Turgut" or "Turgutoğlu""), recorded as having provided the main support to the Beylik of Karaman during their time of existence and mentioned in historical records as an important political entity as late as the 18th century Iran. Their settlement in Turgutlu region is thought to have taken place some time in the 15th century at the same time as the Ottoman unification of Anatolia which resulted in the demise of Karamanids. That nearby Manisa was the center where Ottoman shahzades (crown princes) received their education must have placed the clan once again in a non-negligible position in their relations this time with the Ottoman dynasty.
Turgutlu The term Casaba for melons derived from the name of the city, an echo of its 18th-19th century past when it was an important regional trade center and hub, located in the middle of a fertile alluvial plain and with access to outside markets through nearby İzmir.