Prehistory and classical antiquity Archeological studies in the region have shown that Ayvalık and its environs were inhabited in the
prehistoric era. Joseph Thacher Clarke believed that he had identified Ayvalık as the site of
Kisthene, which was mentioned by
Strabo as a ruinous place beside a harbour beyond Cape Pyrrha. However, Engin Beksaç of
Trakya University preferred to site Kisthene at Kız Çiftlik, near the centre of
Gömeç. In his survey of the prehistoric and protohistoric settlements on the southern side of the Gulf of Adramytteion (Edremit) carried out in the 1990s and early 2000s, Beksaç studied the Ayvalık region. The survey identified several different settlements near the centre of Ayvalık which appear to relate to the Early Classical period. However, some settlements near the centre of Altınova were related to the prehistoric period, especially the Bronze and Iron Ages.
Kortukaya was identified in the survey as one of the most important settlements in the area and one that aids in the understanding of the interaction between the peoples of the interior and of the coast. The same is true of Yeni Yeldeğirmeni, another settlement near the centre of Altınova. Beksaç identified traces of a hill fort on Çıplak Island (Chalkys). Some Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age pottery fragments related to the
Aeolians were also found here. Two tiny settlements, near the centre of Ayvalık, formed part of the
peraia of
Mytilene. . , the largest of the
Ayvalık Islands. .
Pordoselene, on the eastern side of
Cunda Island, near the sea, was another important settlement in Antiquity. All the archaeological data was related to the Classical and Medieval Ages. During the Byzantine period, the constant threat posed by Arab and Turkish
piracy prevented the islet settlements from growing larger. Only Cunda Island could maintain a higher level of habitation as it is the largest and the closest islet to the mainland.
Early Turkish periods After the
Byzantine period, the region came under the rule of the
Anatolian beylik of
Karasi in the 13th century. Later it was annexed to the territory of the
Ottoman beylik (principality), which would become the
Ottoman Empire. === 1770
Battle of Çeşme and aftermath === In 1770 the Ottoman navy suffered a major defeat against the Russians at Çeşme. The Ottoman admiral
Cezayirli Gazi Hasan Pasha and the men who survived the disaster were lodged on their way back to the capital
Constantinople by an Ayvalık priest. Hasan Pasha did not forget the kindness shown to his sailors in their hour of need, and when he became
Grand Vizier, he granted virtual autonomy to the Greeks of Ayvalık in 1773, paving the way for it to become an important centre of cultures for that community during the late 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. Until 1922 Ayvalık remained an almost entirely Greek settlement.
1821 Greek struggle for independence The then British Ambassador Lord Strangford reported that Osman Pasha accepted the submission of the Aivaliotes, until he could get fresh instructions from Constantinople. However a squadron of Greek insurgents appeared, persuading the inhabitants to hope that it had come to their rescue, and that another revolt might meet with greater success. They accordingly rose en masse, and about fifteen hundred Turks were killed. But the appearance of the squadron turned out to have been merely accidental and it soon sailed away. The Turks then recovered their courage, and an indiscriminate massacre of the Greeks followed. In 1891, there were 21,666 Greeks and 180 Turks living in the town of Ayvalık.
World War I and its aftermath As of 1920, Ayvalık's population was estimated at 60,000. Its small port was used to export
soap, olive oil, animal hides and
flour. Following the
Turkish War of Independence, the Greek population and their properties in the town were exchanged for a
Muslim population from
Greece, and other formerly held Ottoman Turkish lands, under the 1923 agreement for the
Exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey. Most of the new population consisted of
Greek Muslims from
Mytilene (Lesbos),
Crete and
Macedonia, while the surviving Greeks of Ayvalik settled in
Lesbos and
Aigaleo, Greece. Until recently Greek could still be heard being spoken in the streets. Many of the town's older mosques are Greek Orthodox churches that have been given a new use. ==Modern Ayvalık==