Kara-Hissar Sharki
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Kara-Hissar Sharki, eastern
Kara-Hissar, also called
Shabin Kara-Hissar from the
alum mines in its vicinity, the chief town of a
sanjak of the same name in the
Sivas vilayet of
Asia Minor. Pop. about 12,000 (1911), two-thirds
Muslim. It is the Roman
colonia, which gradually superseded Pompey's foundation, Nicopolis, whose ruins lie at Purkh about 12 m. west (hence Kara-Hissar is called
Nikopoli by the
Armenians). In later
Byzantine times it was an important frontier station, and did not pass into
Ottoman hands till twelve years after the capture of
Constantinople. The town, altitude 4,860 ft., is built round the foot of a lofty rock, upon which stand the ruins of the Byzantine castle, Maurocastron, the Kara Hissar Daula of early Moslem chroniclers. It is connected with its port,
Kerasund, and with Sivas,
Erzingan and
Erzerum, by carriage roads.
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