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The Turks today call it Samsun. Due to its location it played an important role both politically and economically during the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods. During its time under Turkish rule and up until the middle of the 19 th century it was nothing more than an insignificant town.
Things changed dramatically for Amisos after the Crimean War Many contributed to its growth. The rise in use of steamships and sea navigation in the Euxine contributed to the growth of many cities including Amisos.
Later it was the fertility of its land and the geographic location of the town which attracted Greek merchants and tradespeople who brought their trade with them. In this way the Greek community began to flourish and included Greeks from neighbouring Trebizond, Oinoi, Cappadocia, Constantinople as well as other Greeks from Greece itself. The town reached its trade and economic peak when the population of the region started working exclusively in the cultivation of tobacco.
The quality of tobacco in the Amisos region is the best in all of Turkey. Within years the Greek population of Amisos not only increased in number but also grew in economic wealth. Amisos was to also attract many Europeans primarily due to its monopoly in tobacco trade. This gives an indication as to how the town grew economically and politically towards the end of the 19 th and the beginning of the 20 th centuries.
The catholic church Mater Dolorosa of Samsun. The population statistics of the town are not exact however in the year the town had a population of 22, made up of 10, Turks, 9, Greeks, 2, Armenians and other minorities. In the town was made up of 40, residents which comprised 20, Greeks, 16, Turks, 2, Armenians and 1, other ethnicities. After the Greek and Armenian populations was to dwindle considerably due to organised death marches and other methods used by Ottoman or Kemalist authorities during the Greek and Armenian Genocides.