1114 Marash earthquake
The Marash earthquake occurred in the area of Marash during the early morning hours of November 29, 1114. It had an estimated surface-wave magnitude between 7.4 and 7.7 and an epicenter location in modern-day Turkey. The mainshock was preceded by two destructive foreshocks in August and November that same year. At least 40,000 people were killed in the earthquake; a number contested by historians due to the small population in the area at the time. These earthquakes were associated with seismic activity on the East Anatolian Fault.
Earthquake
The magnitude was estimated at 7.4–7.7 Ms and assigned a maximum EMS-92 intensity of IX.[2] The calculated moment magnitude was similar to that of the 6 February 2023 earthquake which measured Mw 7.8.[3] The mainshock and its foreshocks were associated with seismic activity along the East Anatolian Fault. Two large foreshocks were documented on 10 August and 13 November the same year. The 10 August foreshock destroyed several costal and fortified cities although unnamed and considered by historians as rhetoric. Marash was partly destroyed and all surrounding towns were levelled by the 13 November earthquake. There were many deaths in the region associated with the 13 November foreshock. At Antioch, large fissures occurred, causing buildings to settle into the ground.[4]
Damage and casualties
Marash was an important city with a large Christian population at that time. According to the contemporary sources, the city was completely underground. Matthew of Edessa records that no one living in the city survived the earthquake and that about 40,000 people living in Marash died.[5] That number seems excessive since the population of the town is estimated to have been a few thousand only.[6] Another estimate for the city's population suggested 24,000 residents. Michael the Syrian records that the city of Marash is a tomb for its own people. Al-Azimi records that it was dark before the earthquake, and then it snowed and covered with snow on all sides.
Apart from Marash, the earthquake also caused destruction in Elbistan, Sis, Mopsuestia, Keysun, Sümeysat (Samsat), Hısn-ı mansûr (Adıyaman), Raban, Edessa, Antioch, Harran, Aleppo, Azaz, Esârib, Zerdana and Balis. The earthquake caused the thirteen towers of the Edessa city wall and a part of the Harran city wall to collapse. While many monasteries and villages were destroyed in the city of Sis, tens of thousands of people died. It also destroyed the Azez fortress and caused the death of four hundred people. William of Tyre also records that this earthquake caused the most damage in the coastal region of Cilicia, Isauria, and Northern Syria.[1] The lord of Marash and the bishop of Marash, although both unnamed in sources, were killed in the earthquake.[6]
Walter the Chancellor who was in Antioch documented many city residents sought refuge in tents built on courtyards, gardens, groves and abandoned dwellings. Fulcher of Chartres reported most houses in towns around the Antioch region were razed to the ground, killing its residents. According to Ibn al-Qalanisi, many residents of Damascus were frightened. In the history book The Complete History by Ibn al-Athīr, he wrote about widespread destruction and fatalities in Al-Ruha, Harran, Samsat, Balis and other areas. The city of Mopsuestia was also partly destroyed.[7] Damage in Aleppo was limited to some collapsed homes in the city center and upper district where some residents died. A tower at the north gate of Aleppo, Atarib and Azaz fort were badly damaged.[4]
References
- ^ a b Kesik, Muharrem (2012). "Maraş Depremi (1114)" [Marash earthquake (1114)]. Tarih Dergisi (in Turkish). No. 42. Istanbul University. pp. 43–46. ISSN 1015-1818. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ Sbeinati, M. R.; Darawcheh, R.; Mouty, M. (2005). "The historical earthquakes of Syria: an analysis of large and moderate earthquakes from 1365 B.C. to 1900 A.D." (PDF). Annals of Geophysics. 48 (3).
- ^ Sesetyan, K.; Stucchi, M.; Castelli, V.; Capera, A.A. Gomez (16 February 2023). "Large historical earthquakes of the earthquake-affected region: a preliminary report" (PDF). Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ a b Ambraseys, N. N. (2004). "The 12th century seismic paroxysm in the Middle East: A historical perspective". Annals of Geophysics. 47 (2). doi:10.4401/ag-3303.
- ^ Chronique de Matthieu d'Édesse, p. 287-90.
- ^ a b Beech, George (January 1996). "The Crusader Lordship of Marash in Armenian Cilicia, 1104-1149". Viator. 27: 35–52. doi:10.1484/J.VIATOR.2.301121.
- ^ Spacey, Beth (15 February 2023). "Buildings tumbling, survivors living in tents: medieval descriptions of an 1114 CE earthquake in present-day Turkey and Syria feel eerily familiar". The Conversation. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
Sources
- Sünbül, Fatih; Sünbül, Ayşe Bengü (1 June 2018). "Deprem Etkileşimlerinde Coulomb Gerilme Kriteri Değerlendirmesi; Doğu Anadolu Fay Hattı" [Evaluation of Coulomb Stress Criteria in Earthquake Interactions; East Anatolian Fault Line]. Karaelmas Fen ve Mühendislik Dergisi (Research Article) (in Turkish). 8 (2). Zonguldak Bülent Ecevit University: 523–535. doi:10.7212/zkufbd.v8i2.1166. eISSN 2146-7277. ISSN 2146-4987. S2CID 165588705.
- v
- t
- e
- AD 17 Lydia
- 115 Antioch
- 141 Lycia
- 262 SW Anatolia
- 447 Constantinople
- 526 Antioch
- 528 Antioch
- 557 Constantinople
- 840 Erzurum
- 847 Damascus
- 1114 Marash
- 1269 Cilicia
- 1509 Constantinople
- 1513 Marash
- 1598 Amasya–Çorum
- 1653 Smyrna
- 1668 North Anatolia
- 1688 Smyrna
- 1766 Istanbul
- 1766 Marmara
- 1840 Ahora
- 1855 Bursa
- 1856 Heraklion
- 1859 Erzurum
- 1866 Bingöl
- 1872 Antioch
- 1875 Dinar
- 1881 Chios
- 1883 Çeşme
- 1893 Malatya
- 1894 Istanbul
- 1898 Balıkesir
- 1899 Aydın–Denizli
- 1903 Manzikert
- 1912 Mürefte
- 1914 Burdur
- 1919 Ayvalık
- 1924 Pasinler
- 1926 Kars
- 1929 Suşehri
- 1930 Salmas
- 1935 Erdek–Marmara Islands
- 1935 Digor
- 1938 Kırşehir
- 1939 Erzincan
- 1941 Van–Erciş
- 1942 Niksar–Erbaa
- 1943 Adapazarı–Hendek
- 1943 Tosya–Ladik
- 1944 Bolu–Gerede
- 1944 Gulf of Edremit–Ayvacik
- 1946 Varto–Hınıs
- 1949 Karlıova
- 1951 Kurşunlu
- 1952 Hasankale
- 1953 Yenice–Gönen
- 1957 Fethiye
- 1957 Abant
- 1964 Manyas
- 1966 Varto
- 1967 Mudurnu
- 1968 Bartın
- 1969 Alaşehir
- 1970 Gediz
- 1971 Bingöl
- 1975 Lice
- 1976 Çaldıran–Muradiye
- 1983 Erzurum
- 1983 Biga
- 1986 Malatya
- 1992 Erzincan
- 1995 Dinar
- 1998 Adana–Ceyhan
- 1999 İzmit
- 1999 Düzce
- 2002 Afyon
- 2003 Bingöl
- 2004 Doğubayazıt
- 2010 Elazığ
- 2011 Kütahya
- 2011 Van
- 2014 Aegean Sea
- 2017 Aegean Sea
- 2019 Istanbul
- 2020 Elazığ
- 2020 Van
- 2020 Bingöl
- 2020 Aegean Sea
- 2022 Düzce
- 2023 Gaziantep–Kahramanmaraş