The Hoşap River or Güzelsu River (Turkish: Engil Çayı) is a river in the Van Province of Turkey. Its catchment area approximately coincides with the Gürpınar District.[1]

Hoşap River
Hoşap River bridge at Hoşab
Hoşap River is located in Turkey
Hoşap River
Location
CountryTurkey
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • coordinates37°54′31″N 43°46′51″E / 37.908749°N 43.780944°E / 37.908749; 43.780944
MouthLake Van
 • coordinates
38°21′40″N 43°08′39″E / 38.361034°N 43.144058°E / 38.361034; 43.144058

Geography edit

From its source in the İspiriz Mountains near Başkale on the southeast borders of Van Province, the river tends to the northwest. It is cut by the Zernek Dam in the Gürpınar Plain and feeds into lake Van near Dönemeç. The part of the river flowing out of the dam is also called Dönemeç River.

At the end of the river there is the Dönemeç Delta that extends into lake Van. The delta is used by birds during migration and is a breeding area of the endangered White-headed duck and Caspian tern.[1]

The river regime of the Hoşap is nival. The lowest flow is 1.3 m³/sec in August, September and October. The highest flow is 12.6 m³/sec in May due to the rains and melting of snow. The total annual flow of the river is 334,106 m³/year.[1]

History edit

Historically, the Hoşap River is known as the Khoshab or Anggh River in Armenian.[1]

The Urartians who lived in the region made the best use of water resources. They constructed the Shamiram Canal from the Hoşap river to irrigate arable land around the Lake Van Closed basin in order to practice intensive agricultural activities. A Urartian cuneiform inscription of a temple in Çavuştepe, a Urartian fortified site in the Hoşap valley, says:

I, Khaldi, built this great temple to the god Irmushini and also a great fortress. I built a canal from the Gugunaini [Hoşap] River, I erected vineyards, ploughed fields.[2]

This canal is one of the most remarkable Urartian mastery in water management.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Water Potential af Hoşap River Basin and Recommendations for the Evaluation of this Potential, in: Turkish Studies, Vol.14 Issue 3 2019, pp.1225-1252.
  2. ^ Karapetyan 2015, p. 71.
  3. ^ Veli Sevin, Aynur Özfirat, An Urartian Irrigation Canal in the Gürpınar Plain, Van, Eastern Turkey, in: Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 59, 2022, pp. 5-17.

Sources edit

  • Karapetyan, Samvel (2015). Հայոց Ձոր [Hayotsʻ Dzor] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Research on Armenian Architecture. ISBN 9789939843216.