Kemaliye
district and town in Erzincan, Turkey
Kemaliye is a town with a population of about 2,000 in the northwestern part of Eastern Anatolia, on the Western Euphrates River (also known as the Karasu River), close to the Karanlık Kanyon.

The town is known for its historic architecture, including many Ottoman-era houses. It is also notable for its commanding view of the Euphrates flowing south through a gorge above the Keban Dam.
In the local area the town is still colloquially known by its former name, Eğin, from Old Armenian Akn ("water spring"). On request of town elders, it was renamed in 1922 in honour of Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish Republic, whom the locals supported with 500 cavalrymen during the recent War of Independence. The locals are equally proud of both names, and use them interchangably, or even simultaneously, as in the town council emblem.
Before the 1920s, the town was home to a Hayhurum community, which formed a large minority of the local population. With origins in the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire, Hayhurums ("Roman Armenians") spoke Armenian but were of Greek Orthodox faith (unlike the majority of Armenians, who has belonged to the Armenian Apostolic Church). As such, they were subjected to the Greek-Turkish population exchange carried out after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire: one account portrays how they trekked for months across Anatolia to the Aegean coastline, from where they were ferried across to the island of Euboea and founded a village they dubbed "New Egin" there.