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image by Tomislav Šipek, 26 September 2021
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The municipality of Kozluk (61,437 inhabitants in 2018, 24,131 in the town of Kozluk; 11,680 ha) is located 60 km north-east of Batman.
Ivan Sache, 29 September 2020
The new flag depicts the sun behind a castle inside a dark blue crescent.
https://web.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=250569560407317&set=pb.100063628237626.-2207520000..&type=3
Tomislav Šipek, 26 September 2021
Mayor Ayhan Eren explained that the Malabadi bridge was removed from the logo
due to its registration on the Diyarbakır Cultural Inventory. The tobacco leaves
were removed because of the decrease of tobacco cultivation in the municipality.
The new logo is surrounded by a crescent and a star, the symbols of independence
and of the Republic. It features Kozluk castle, the Silk Road, and fertile
lands.
http://www.kozluk.bel.tr/haber/kozluk-belediyesinde-yeni-logo-donemi/176
Municipal website
Kozluk (Hazo) castle was built in 416 on a rocky hill
as a religious center of the Persian dynasty. With time, it exerted a strategic
control on the Silk Road crossing the region. The seat of a Nestorian bishopric
in the 5th century, the castle was seized in 630 by İyaz bin Ganm (582-641), the
companion of Prophet Muhammad who subsequently conquered Southeast Anatolia
(Cezire), during the reign of Caliph Omar.
https://www.kulturportali.gov.tr/turkiye/batman/gezilecekyer/kozluk-hezo-kalesi
Turkey Culture Portal
Ivan Sache, 26 September 2021
image by Ivan Sache, 29 September 2020
The flag of Kozluk (photo,
photo) is white with the municipality's emblem. "Belediyesi" means "Municipality".
The emblem features Malabadi Bridge spanning over river Batman, here the border between the provinces of Diyarbakır and Batman, also featured on the symbols of the municipality of Silvan.
The Malabadi bridge across the Batman River on the road between Silvan and Tatvan was built by Timur Tas of Mardin between 1146 and 1147. It was restored in the late 12th century, and recently in the beginning of the 20th century.
It was once the only bridge across the river in this area, and was in continuous use until the 1950's, when a new road bridge opened upstream. The span of the bridge crosses perpendicular to the river, but the roadway is at an angle to the river, so there are angular breaks in the east and west approaches. The approaches rise from ground level to meet the central span, which is a pointed arch high over the deepest part of the river.
Constructed from solid masonry, the approaches have small arches built into them to let flood-waters through. Two of the piers of the bridge sit in the river; the western support is decorated with two carved figures, one standing and one sitting. The roadway has two toll-booths, one either side of the main span. The spandrels of the main arch incorporate small rooms for weary travelers.
[ArchNet]
Ivan Sache, 29 September 2020