Karà Âñyaka () is a municipality and district of ðzmir Province, Turkey. Its area is 51 km<sup>2</sup>, and its population is 346,264 (2022). The district extends for twelve kilometres along the northern and eastern coastline of the tip of the Gulf of ðzmir. Its centre is at a distance of to the north from the traditional centre of ðzmir, which is Konak Square in Konak at the opposite coast. Karà Âñyaka's district area neighbours the district areas of Menemen to the north, Bornova to the east and ÃÂiÃÂli to the west. Besides being an active venue of commerce, culture and educational activities and tourism, Karà Âñyaka also has an urban culture centred on the sports club Karà Âñyaka SK, which commands a large and passionate fan base.
Late created formations around ðzmir consist of sandstone, shale and limestone blocks some of which may be larger than several kilometers. Such formations which are generally observed on hills around the region, are the main reasons for resistance on the hills. In addition to these, the community of neogen age can easily be estimated through the andesitic compounds of volcanic origin, around Mount Yamanlar. Such units can be listed as silicon, aluminum, sodium, lava with magnesium content, tuff and tuff stuffed lava agglomerates. The lava also contains reddish brown and greenish gray large feldspar crystals. Neogen sedimentary rocks are made up of clay stone, sandstone and pebble stones at dept while being made up only of limestone on the top. At some places clay stone is observed on limestone layers. It is possible to say that ground resistance is satisfactory in regions covered with limestone on top, while ground resistance is low in regions which has thin layers of limestone intercalated with mud rocks.
Karà Âñyaka bears the general characteristics of the Mediterranean climate zone. It is rainy in winter and hot in summer. As it is the case for ðzmir's entire coastline, Karà Âñyaka benefits on a daily basis from the north-west wind called "imbat", because of which ships in the Gulf of ðzmir will always be anchored in a northwestâÂÂsoutheast position, and which cools the city during summer days.
The industrial zone bringing together principally firms of local-scale, exception made of the notable presence of Alaybey shipyard are located in the eastern part of Karà Âñyaka. The same eastern corner also covers a zone of sparse settlement around the locality called SoÃÂukkuyu, originally a seaside village of semi-nomadic Turkmens (Yörüks) made to settle here in the 19th century, and to the north is a large forest area. Karà Âñyaka's centre is connected to ðzmir's centre by a busy schedule of railways, roads, and commuter ferries, works for the extension of ðzmir's underground line to Karà Âñyaka currently being carried out at a rapid pace, and there are also good road links to Menemen and AliaÃÂa to the north, to reach ÃÂanakkale in north-west Turkey, and beyond. Originally a hamlet, then a remote suburb of ðzmir in the 19th century, Karà Âñyaka became much larger and grew in stature in the 1960s when its waterfront developed as a prosperous residential neighbourhood.
Karà Âñyaka S.K. is the sports club of Karà Âñyaka. It is also called "KSK", and locally as Kaf Sin Kaf, following the initials in Arabic script since the club's past dates back to Ottoman times. The club has a large and very passionate fan base. Karà Âñyaka supporters like to call the club "The 35 and a half", to differentiate themselves from ðzmir that license plate number is 35. Although its football team is presently in the fourth level of the Turkish football league system mainly due to financial problems that the club has faced over recent years, Karà Âñyaka S.K.'s basketball and volleyball branches, known respectively as Pñnar Karà Âñyaka (by the name of their sponsors) and Karà Âñyaka Women's Volleyball Team, are leading contenders in their fields. Pñnar Karà Âñyaka has won twice Turkish League, twice Turkish President's Cup and a Turkish Cup. Karà Âñyaka have a fierce rivalry with Göztepe.
Karà Âñyaka is deeply associated with commerce, construction of residences, education and literature, and is a prized area for pensioners, not only in the scale of ðzmir but also from across Turkey as a whole. A total of 220,000 residences make up the urban area and the average yearly increase of the district population is 2.3 per cent. The district area having been almost entirely built up, Karà Âñyaka today acts principally as a residential centre for the workforce of ðzmir's industry and services, who generally commute for work to neighbouring ÃÂiÃÂli and Bornova, Alsancak across the gulf, or even to locations further afield like Kemalpaà Âa and Manisa. The share of agriculture and industry in its economy is in constant decrease, while Karà Âñyaka's tourism potential remains an open field.
The waterfront is the wealthier part of Karà Âñyaka and it is here that residents of long date are generally concentrated. The neighbourhoods located along the slopes are poorer, with slum-type residences in parts, and these continue receiving flows of immigration, especially from Turkey's Eastern Anatolia region. The district counts a total of 11,570 enterprises, 207 of which are identified as industrial firms, and 3,180 categorised under commerce. Nine industrial companies have full or partial foreign capital and 143 commercial establishments in Karà Âñyaka are registered exporters. There are eighteen banks providing services through 61 branches in Karà Âñyaka, and a handful of hotels with a total bed capacity of 180. There is one teacher for 24 students and one doctor for 1,127 patients overall. The literacy rate is very high at 92 per cent. An environment of urban consciousness also favoured the foundation of a high number of professional organisations in varied fields in Karà Âñyaka, ranging from trade (such as KASðAD, BESðAD, BOGðAD) to education, usually centred on teachers or alumni of the district's rooted institutions.
Traces of the earliest phases of the timeline of ðzmir, such as "The Tomb of Tantalus" and "Old Smyrna" are located at a stone's throw from Karà Âñyaka, in the very recently constituted metropolitan district of Bayraklñ, which was formerly within the boundaries of the district of Karà Âñyaka.
Karà Âñyaka was described in frequent terms of admiration by travellers who visited ðzmir, and they could not help but mention in detail the dense forests of Mount Yamanlar, reaching as far as the coast, and the gardens and orchards which garnish the shoreline and along the beds of its four streams, namely Ahñrkuyu, Serinkuyu, Laka and Bornova. Named Karà Âñyaka (literally "the opposite shore") in Turkish since the 11th century, the locality was alternatively called Cordelio or Cordelieu or Kordelio (ÃÂÿÃÂôõûùÃÂ) in European or Greek sources until the beginning of the 20th century. These names were supposed to make reference to Richard the Lionheart (Coeur de Lion), who is not attested to have come to these waters in person, but it was usually claimed that the area was named in the 1190s by a contingent of Crusaders of the Third Crusade who was accosted here and had named it in honour of Europe's most famed soldier of the time. This explanation of the name is disputed, some sources taking as point of departure the mention of the name (in the form "Kordeleon") in Byzantine documents of the 14th century and questioning whether the name Cordelio is the continuation of a more ancient settlement yet unexplored, as is most of ancient Aeolia.
Still very leafy and lush generally despite intensive construction of medium- to high-rise apartments and office buildings in recent decades, Karà Âñyaka grew in size after the entry into service of ðzmir-Menemen railroad in 1865, and the start of urban ferry services in 1874 by a British company under an Ottoman imperial lease accorded by Abdülhamid II and named "Hamidiye" for this reason. A second shipping company put two other ferries in service starting 1880, followed in 1884 by a third company. Very rapidly, it became fashionable for European and Levantine inhabitants of ðzmir, concentrated in Bornova and Buca until then, to build or purchase houses in Karà Âñyaka particularly for the dowry of their daughters, which contributed to the growing popularity among the rich of the gulf's northern shores.
In pace with its resort-like atmosphere, Karà Âñyaka saw a number of Ottoman konaks or Levantine mansions erected within its boundaries, especially along the shoreline and serving as secondary residence. Luxury multi-storey residences at immediate seaside quickly rose next to modest inner quartiers around the train station where the working class was concentrated and the Turkish village of SoÃÂukkuyu The commuting movements and the way of life of ðzmir's inhabitants were profoundly changed since then with Karà Âñyaka becoming part of the urban fabric.
By the time of the 1891 census, Karà Âñyaka had already acquired the appearance of a large township with 832 houses and a permanent population of 1080. A sizable Turkish population settled in Karà Âñyaka's SoÃÂukkuyu some time before that date and that area is still distinguished by its rustic houses in the middle of the urban zone. In the meantime, the former village of Papa Scala or Papazkale or Papazköyü or Papaz ðskelesi (Priest's quay) to the west came to be known as Bostanlñ, in reference to melons and watermelons from Menemen which were discharged and loaded on ships here.
The four most important reminders of the Levantine heritage still intact in Karà Âñyaka are the Alliotti, Penetti, Van Der Zee, and Löhner houses. The first was built by a prominent Levantine family of Italian origins in 1914 and was exchanged in the 1920s against property belonging to Durmuà  Yaà Âar, the founder of Yaà Âar Holding. The mansion is known today under Yaà Âar's name and serves as a vocational training centre. The last two have recently been restored; the first floor of the Van Der Zee mansion has been put to public use by the municipality in the form of a café (Eski Ev Cafe).
There is also a 1904-built Catholic Church (Saint Helen church) that served a community of about 200 families and which is recently restored. Edouard Balladur, the former Prime Minister of France, notably, was baptised there.
There are also more modest but still lovely little houses, characterised by their engaged front doors and narrow lines, termed as "Sakñz houses", and which are highly typical of the region surrounding ðzmir.
Karà Âñyaka is also where Zübeyde Hanñm, Atatürk's mother, spent her last days in end-1922 and January 1923, and is where she is buried. The house she died, which belonged to the family of Latife Uà Âà Âaki, Mustafa Kemal Pasha's wife, is restored and it is located right in the centre of the urban zone, near the main commercial street, Karà Âñyaka's famous ÃÂarà Âñ.
Atatürk's feelings and words about Karà Âñyaka: ðzmirâÂÂin Karà Âñyakalñlarñ ... Sizi derin muhabbetle selamlarñm ... Ben bütün ðzmirâÂÂi ve bütün ðzmirlileri severim. Güzel ðzmirâÂÂin temiz kalpli insanlarñnñn da beni sevdiklerine eminim. Yanlñz bir rastlantñ beni Karà ÂñyakaâÂÂya daha fazla baÃÂlamñà Âtñr. Karà Âñyakalñlar, annem sinenizde, sizin topraklarñnñzda yatñyor. Karà Âñyakalñlar, ðzmirâÂÂi gördüÃÂüm gün öncelikle Karà ÂñyakaâÂÂyñ ve orada sizin Türk topraklarñnñzda yatan anamñn mezarñnñ gördüm.
Karà Âñyaka is a stronghold of the social-democrats. Currently, the municipality is administered by Behice Yñldñz ÃÂnsal of the CHP (Republican People's Party).
There are 27 neighbourhoods in Karà Âñyaka District:
Karà Âñyaka is twinned with: