Turkish people: Difference between revisions
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2013}} |
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{{Infobox ethnic group |
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| group = Turks<br />''Türkler'' |
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| image = |
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| pop = '''{{circa}} 63–69 million'''{{ref label|en|a}} |
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|popplace = {{flagcountry|Turkey}} 55,589,988–59,560,701 (2008 est. of 2015 pop.)<ref name=CIATurkey>{{Cite web|author=CIA|title=The World Factbook|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tu.html|accessdate=27 July 2011}}</ref> <br />{{flagcountry|Northern Cyprus}} 280,000 {{Cref|d}}<ref name=CIACyprus>{{Cite web|author=CIA|title=The World Factbook|url=https://www.cia.gov/Library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/cy.htmll|accessdate=13 June 2015}}</ref><ref>http://www.devplan.org/Nufus-2011/nufus%20son_.pdf</ref> |
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'''<small>Top Immigrant and Expat Destinations</small>''' |
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| region1 = {{flagcountry|Germany}} |
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| pop1 = 2,714,000–2,800,000 '''<small>(including Turkish Kurds)</small>'''{{Cref|f}}{{Cref|b}}<ref>[http://www.bib-demografie.de/SharedDocs/Glossareintraege/DE/B/bevoelkerung_migrationshintergrund.html] German Statistical Office-Bevölkerung mit Migrationshintergrund</ref><ref name=census2011>{{cite web|url=https://ergebnisse.zensus2011.de/#dynTable:statUnit=PERSON;absRel=ANZAHL;ags=00,02,01,13,03,05,09,14,16,08,15,12,11,10,07,06,04;agsAxis=X;yAxis=MHGLAND_HLND|title=Zensusdatenbank - Ergebnisse des Zensus 2011|publisher=|accessdate=25 April 2015}}</ref> |
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| ref1 = <ref name="Kötter et al 2003 loc=53">{{Harvnb|Kötter|Vonthein|Günaydin|Müller|2003|loc=55}}.</ref><ref name="Haviland et al 2010 loc=675">{{Harvnb|Haviland|Prins|Walrath|McBride|2010|loc=675}}.</ref> |
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| region3 = {{flagcountry|France}} |
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| pop3 = 500,000 |
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| ref3 = <ref name="Leveau & Hunter 2002 loc=6">{{Harvnb|Leveau|Hunter|2002|loc=6}}.</ref> |
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| region4 = {{flagcountry|United Kingdom}} |
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| pop4 = 500,000{{Cref|a}} |
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| ref4 = <ref name="Home Affairs Committee 2011 loc=38">{{Harvard citation no brackets|Home Affairs Committee|2011|loc=38}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|work=The Guardian|title=UK immigration analysis needed on Turkish legal migration, say MPs|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/01/turkish-immigration-possibilities-assessed|date= 1 August 2011|accessdate=1 August 2011|deadurl=no}}</ref><ref name="Federation of Turkish Associations UK">{{cite web|author=Federation of Turkish Associations UK|title=Short history of the Federation of Turkish Associations in UK|url=http://www.turkishfederationuk.org/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=26&Itemid=31|date=19 June 2008|accessdate=13 April 2011|archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/5xuhy1DrI|archivedate =13 April 2011|deadurl=no}}</ref> |
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| region5 = {{flagcountry|Netherlands}} |
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| pop5 = 396,414{{Cref|e}}–500,000{{Cref|c}} |
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| ref5 = <ref>{{cite web|title=Foreigners in thee Netherlands|url=http://statline.cbs.nl/StatWeb/publication/?DM=SLNL&PA=37325&D1=0&D2=0&D3=0&D4=0&D5=a&D6=l&VW=T}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author= Netherlands Info Services|title=Dutch Queen Tells Turkey 'First Steps Taken' On EU Membership Road|url=http://www.nisnews.nl/public/010307_2.htm|accessdate=16 December 2008}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author= Dutch News|title=Dutch Turks swindled, AFM to investigate|url=http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2007/03/dutch_turks_swindled_afm_to_in.php|accessdate=16 December 2008}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi|2008|loc=11}}.</ref> |
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| region6 = {{flagcountry|Austria}} |
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| pop6 = 350,000–500,000 |
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| ref6 = <ref>{{Cite news|publisher=BBC News |title=Turkey's ambassador to Austria prompts immigration spat|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11725311|accessdate=10 November 2010|date=10 November 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=CBN|title=Turkey's Islamic Ambitions Grip Austria|url=http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2010/April/Turkeys-Mulism-Influence-in-Austria/|accessdate=16 October 2011}}</ref> |
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| region7 = {{flagcountry|Belgium}} |
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| pop7 = 200,000 |
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| ref7 = <ref>http://statbel.fgov.be/fr/modules/publications/statistiques/population/population_natio_sexe_groupe_classe_d_ges_au_1er_janvier_2010.jsp</ref><ref name="King Baudouin Foundation 2008 loc=5">{{Harvnb|King Baudouin Foundation|2008|loc=5}}.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author=De Morgen|title=Koning Boudewijnstichting doorprikt clichés rond Belgische Turken|url=http://www.demorgen.be/dm/nl/989/Binnenland/article/detail/159126/2008/02/04/Koning-Boudewijnstichting-doorprikt-clich-s-rond-Belgische-Turken.dhtml|accessdate=15 November 2010}}</ref> |
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| region8 = {{flagcountry|United States}} |
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| pop8 = 196,222–500,000 {{Cref|b}} |
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| ref8 = <ref name="2013US">{{cite web |author=U.S. Census Bureau|title=TOTAL ANCESTRY REPORTED Universe: Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2013 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates|url=http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ACS_11_1YR_B04003&prodType=table|accessdate=2012-10-03}}</ref><ref name="EncyclopediaofClevelandHistory">{{cite web |author=Encyclopedia of Cleveland History |title=Immigration and Ethnicity: Turks |url=http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=TIC |accessdate=7 February 2010}}</ref><ref name=WashingtonDiplomat>{{cite web |author=The Washington Diplomat|title=Census Takes Aim to Tally'Hard to Count' Populations|url=http://www.washdiplomat.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6036:census-takes-aim-to-tallyhard-to-count-populations-&catid=205:april-2010&Itemid=239|accessdate=5 May 2011}}</ref><ref name="Farkas 2003 loc=40">{{Harvnb|Farkas|2003|loc=40}}.</ref> |
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| region9 = {{flagcountry|Sweden}} |
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| pop9 = 100,000–150,000 |
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| ref9 = <ref>{{cite web |author=Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency|title=Turkiet är en viktig bro mellan Öst och Väst|url=http://www.sida.se/Svenska/Lander--regioner/Europa/Turkiet/Utvecklingen-i-Turkiet/|accessdate=2011-04-14}}</ref><ref name=SwedishAffairs>{{cite web |author=Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs|title=Ankara Historia|url=http://www.swedenabroad.com/Page____24644.aspx|accessdate=2011-04-14}}</ref> |
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| region10 = {{flagcountry|Switzerland}} |
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| pop10 = 70,440 {{Cref|e}} |
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| ref10 = <ref name=Auslander>[http://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/portal/de/index/themen/01/07/blank/key/01/01.html Ständige ausländische Wohnbevölkerung nach Staatsangehörigkeit, am Ende des Jahres] Swiss Federal Statistical Office, accessed 6 October 2014</ref> |
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| region11 = {{flagcountry|Australia}} |
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| pop11 = 66,919–150,000 {{Cref|b}} |
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| ref11 = <ref>[https://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/statistics/immigration-update/people-australia-2013-statistics.pdf 2011 census]</ref><ref>{{cite news |work=The Sydney Morning Herald|title=Old foes, new friends|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Old-foes-new-friends/2005/04/22/1114152326767.html |accessdate=26 December 2008 | date=23 April 2005}}</ref><ref name=RofT>{{cite web|author=Presidency of the Republic of Turkey|year=2010|title=Turkey-Australia: "From Çanakkale to a Great Friendship|url=http://www.tccb.gov.tr/news/397/49087/turkeyaustralia-from-canakkale-to-a-great-friendship.html|accessdate=14 July 2011}}</ref><ref name=OECD>{{cite web|author=OECD|year=2009|title=International Questionnaire: Migrant Education Policies in Response to Longstanding Diversity: TURKEY|url=http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/43/54/43901805.pdf|publisher=Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development|page=3}}</ref> |
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| region12 = {{flagcountry|Denmark}} |
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| pop12 = 28,892 {{Cref|f}}{{Cref|b}} |
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| ref12 = <ref>{{cite web |author=Statistikbanken|title=Danmarks Statistik|url=http://statistikbanken.dk/statbank5a/SelectVarVal/Define.asp?MainTable=FOLK1&PLanguage=0&PXSId=0|accessdate=2015-06-13}}</ref> |
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| region13 = {{flagcountry|Canada}} |
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| pop13 = 24,910 {{Cref|b}} |
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| ref13 = <ref name="statcan1">{{cite web|url=http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/demo26a-eng.htm |title=Population by selected ethnic origins, by province and territory (2006 Census) |publisher=statcan.gc.ca |date=2009-07-28 |accessdate=2010-09-10}}</ref> |
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|region14 = {{flag|Italy}} |
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|pop14 = 22,580 {{Cref|e}} |
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|ref14 = <ref>http://www.istat.it/it/archivio/129854</ref> |
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| region15 = {{flagcountry|Israel}} |
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| pop15 = 22,000 |
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| ref15 = <ref>{{Harvnb|Council of Europe|2007|loc=131}}.</ref> |
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'''<small>Minority or Immigrant and Expat Communities in the [[Middle East]]</small>''' |
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The Turks are dogs who stole Constantinople |
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| region16 = {{flagcountry|Iraq}} |
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| pop16 = 500,000–600,000 |
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| ref16 = <ref name="Park 2005 loc=37">{{Harvnb|Park|2005|loc=37}}.</ref><ref name="Phillips 2006 loc=112">{{Harvnb|Phillips|2006|loc=112}}.</ref>{{Cref|l}} |
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| region18 = {{flagcountry|Syria}} |
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| pop18 = 100,000 |
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| ref18 = <ref>{{cite book|last=Phillips|first=David J.|title=Peoples on the Move: Introducing the Nomads of the World|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=54gyRnhIugkC&pg=PA301|accessdate=12 November 2012|date=1 January 2001|publisher=William Carey Library|isbn=978-0-87808-352-7|page=301}}</ref> |
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| region19 = {{flagcountry|Saudi Arabia}} |
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| pop19 = 150,000–200,000 {{Cref|b}} |
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| ref19 = <ref name="Akar 1993 loc=95">{{Harvnb|Akar|1993|loc=95}}.</ref><ref name="Karpat 2004 loc=12">{{Harvnb|Karpat|2004|loc=12}}.</ref> |
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| region21 = {{flagcountry|Jordan}} |
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| pop21 = 60,000 |
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| ref21 = <ref name="Akar 1993 loc=95"/> |
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| region22 = {{flagcountry|Lebanon}} |
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| pop22 = 50,000–80,000 |
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| ref22 = <ref name=Al-Akhbar>{{cite web|author=Al-Akhbar|title=Lebanese Turks Seek Political and Social Recognition|url= http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/lebanese-turks-seek-political-and-social-recognition|accessdate=2 March 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |work=Today's Zaman|title=Tension adds to existing wounds in Lebanon|url=http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action;jsessionid=9D641F96F47DDD54F28B8F8B07FFF815?newsId=233911|accessdate=6 April 2011}}</ref> |
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| region23 = {{flagcountry|Libya}} |
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| pop23 = 50,000 {{Cref|b}} |
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| ref23 = <ref name="Akar 1993 loc=95"/> |
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'''<small>Minorities in the [[Balkans]]</small>''' |
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| region24 = {{flagcountry|Bulgaria}} |
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| pop24 = 588,318–800,000 |
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| ref24 = <ref>{{cite web|author=National Statistical Institute of Bulgaria|year=2011|title=2011 Population Census in the Republic of Bulgaria (Final data)|url=http://www.nsi.bg/census2011/PDOCS2/Census2011final_en.pdf|publisher=National Statistical Institute of Bulgaria}}</ref><ref name="Sosyal 2011 loc=369">{{Harvnb|Sosyal|2011|loc=369}}.</ref><ref name="Bokova 2010 loc=170">{{Harvnb|Bokova|2010|loc=170}}.</ref> |
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| region25 = {{flagcountry|Republic of Macedonia}} |
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| pop25 = 77,959 |
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| ref25 =<ref>http://www.stat.gov.mk/pdf/kniga_13.pdf</ref><ref name="Republic of Macedonia State Statistical Office 2005 loc=34">{{Harvnb|Republic of Macedonia State Statistical Office|2005|loc=34}}.</ref><ref name="Knowlton 2005 loc=66">{{Harvnb|Knowlton|2005|loc=66}}.</ref><ref name="Abrahams 1996 loc=53">{{Harvnb|Abrahams|1996|loc=53}}.</ref> |
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| region26 = {{flagcountry|Greece}} |
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| pop26 = 49,000 (official estimate)–80,000 {{Cref|g}} |
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| ref26 = <ref>[http://www.minelres.lv/reports/greece/greece_NGO.htm Greek Helsinki Monitor]</ref><ref name="Demographics of Greece">{{cite web |url=http://www.eurfedling.org/Greece.htm|title=Demographics of Greece|work=European Union National Languages|accessdate=19 December 2010}}</ref> |
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| region27 = {{flagcountry|Romania}} |
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| pop27 = 27,700 |
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| ref27 =<ref name="Romanian National Institute of Statistics 2011 loc=10">{{ro icon}} [http://www.recensamantromania.ro/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/REZULTATE-DEFINITIVE-RPL_2011.pdf "Comunicat de presă privind rezultatele definitive ale Recensământului Populaţiei şi Locuinţelor – 2011"], at the 2011 Romanian census site; accessed July 11, 2013</ref><ref name="Phinnemore 2006 loc=157">{{Harvnb|Phinnemore|2006|loc=157}}.</ref><ref name="Constantin et al 2006 loc=59">{{Harvnb|Constantin|Goschin|Dragusin|2008|loc=59}}.</ref> |
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| region28 = {{flagcountry|Kosovo}} |
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| pop28 = 18,738 |
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| ref28 = <ref name="ReferenceA">2011 census in the Republic of Kosovo</ref> |
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'''<small>Minorities in the [[Post-Soviet states|former USSR states]]</small>''' |
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| region29 = {{flagcountry|Russia}} |
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| pop29 = 109,883–150,000 |
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| ref29 = <ref>2010 Russia census</ref><ref name="Ryazantsev 2009 loc=172">{{Harvnb|Ryazantsev|2009|loc=172}}.</ref> |
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| region30 = {{flagcountry|Kazakhstan}} |
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| pop30 = 104,792–150,000 {{Cref|h}} |
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| ref30 = <ref name="Demogr2013">[http://www.stat.gov.kz/getImg?id=ESTAT081783 Агентство Республики Казахстан по статистике. Этнодемографический сборник Республики Казахстан 2014.]</ref><ref name="Aydıngün et al 2006 loc=13">{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=13}}.</ref> |
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| region31 = {{flagcountry|Kyrgyzstan}} |
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| pop31 = 40,953–50,000 {{Cref|h}} |
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| ref31 = <ref>Kyrgyz 2009 census</ref><ref name="Aydıngün et al 2006 loc=13"/><ref>{{Cite web|author=IRIN Asia|title=KYRGYZSTAN: Focus on Mesketian Turks |url=http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=28663|accessdate=17 March 2010}}</ref> |
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| region32 = {{flagcountry|Azerbaijan}} |
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| pop32 = 38,000–110,000 {{Cref|h}} |
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| ref32 =<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20121130101713/http://www.azstat.org/statinfo/demoqraphic/en/AP_/1_5.xls Переписи населения Азербайджана 1979, 1989, 1999, 2009 годов]</ref><ref name="Aydıngün et al 2006 loc=13"/><ref name="UNHCR 1999 loc=14">{{Harvnb|UNHCR|1999|loc=14}}.</ref><ref name=NATOPA>{{cite web |author=NATO Parliamentary Assembly|title=Minorities in the South Caucasus: Factor of Instability?|url=http://www.nato-pa.int/default.asp?SHORTCUT=683|accessdate=16 January 2012}}</ref> |
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| region33 = {{flagcountry|Uzbekistan}} |
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| pop33 = 15,000–20,000 |
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| ref33 = <ref>{{Harvnb|Council of Europe|2006|loc=23}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=13}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Blacklock|2005|loc=8}}</ref> |
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| region34 = {{flagcountry|Ukraine}} |
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| pop34 = 8,844 |
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| ref34 = <ref name=census>{{cite web |author=State Statistics Service of Ukraine|title=Ukrainian Census (2001):The distribution of the population by nationality and mother tongue|url=http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/nationality_population/nationality_1/|accessdate=2012-01-16}}</ref> |
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| languages = [[Turkish language|Turkish]] |
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| religions = |
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Predominantly [[Sunni Islam]]<ref name="KONDA">{{cite web |url=http://www.konda.com.tr/en/reports.php |title=Religion, Secularism and the Veil in Daily Life Survey |date=September 2007 |website= |publisher=Konda Arastirma |accessdate=24 May 2013|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325005232/http://www.konda.com.tr/html/dosyalar/ghdl&t_en.pdf|archivedate=25 March 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://sorular.rightsagenda.org/soru-cevap/?g=9|title=IHGD - Soru Cevap - Azınlıklar|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.angelfire.com/az/rescon/ALEVI.html|title=THE ALEVI OF ANATOLIA: TURKEY'S LARGEST MINORITY|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.philtar.ac.uk/encyclopedia/islam/shia/shia.html|title=Shi'a|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><br/> |
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<small>([[non-denominational Muslim|nondenominational]]{{·}}[[Alevism|Alevi]]{{·}}[[Bektashi]]{{·}}[[Twelver Shia]]{{·}}[[Ja'fari]]{{·}})</small><br/> Minority [[irreligion|irreligious]]<ref name="KONDA"/><ref>[http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_225_report_en.pdf ReportDGResearchSocialValuesEN2.PDF<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> [[Christianity]]<ref>[http://www.chowk.com/khadijabibi/iLogs/life/35000-Moslems-convert-into-Christianity-each-year-in-Turkey 35,000 Moslems convert into Christianity each year in Turkey.]</ref><ref name="hurriyetdailynews.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/default.aspx?pageid=438&n=christians-in-east-remain-worried-despite-church-opening-2011-07-20|title=TURKEY - Christians in eastern Turkey worried despite church opening|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7355515.stm|title=BBC News - When Muslims become Christians|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref> |
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| footnotes = a. {{note|en|}} The total figure is merely an estimation; sum of all the referenced populations. |
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|related = other [[Turkic peoples]], [[Caucasian peoples]], [[Hungarians]], [[British peoples]], [[Jews]] |
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}} |
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'''Turkish people''' ({{lang-tr|Türk milleti}}), or the '''Turks''' ({{lang-tr|Türkler}}), also known as '''Anatolian Turks''' ({{lang-tr|Anadolu Türkleri}}) are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[ethnic group]] living mainly in [[Turkey]] and they speak [[Turkish language|Turkish]], a [[Turkic language]]. They are the largest ethnic group in Turkey, as well as the largest ethnic group among the speakers of [[Turkic languages]]. Ethnic Turkish minorities exist in the former lands of the [[Ottoman Empire]]. In addition, a [[Turkish diaspora]] has been established with modern migration, particularly in [[Turks in Europe|Western Europe]]. |
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==Etymology and ethnic identity== |
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{{Turkish people}} |
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The ethnonym "Turk" may be first discerned in [[Herodotus]]' (c. 484–425 BCE) reference to Targitas, first king of the Scythians;<ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837">{{Harvnb|Leiser|2005|loc=837}}.</ref> furthermore, during the first century CE., [[Pomponius Mela]] refers to the "Turcae" in the forests north of the [[Sea of Azov]], and [[Pliny the Elder]] lists the "Tyrcae" among the people of the same area.<ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837"/> The first definite references to the "Turks" come mainly from [[China|Chinese]] sources in the sixth century. In these sources, "Turk" appears as "Tujue" ({{zh|c={{linktext|突|厥}}|w=T’u-chüe}}), which referred to the [[Göktürks]].<ref name="Stokes & Gorman 2010 loc=707">{{Harvnb|Stokes|Gorman|2010|loc=707}}.</ref><ref name="Findley 2005 loc=21">{{Harvnb|Findley|2005|loc=21}}.</ref> Although "Turk" refers to Turkish people, it may also sometimes refer to the wider language group of [[Turkic peoples]]. They are closely related to [[Azerbaijani people]], also known as "Azerbaijani Turks", who live primarily in [[Azerbaijan Republic]] and [[Iran]]. [[Azerbaijani language|Azeri Turkish]] and [[Turkish language|Istanbul Turkish]] are mutually intelligible.<ref name=OED>"Turk, n.1". OED Online. September 2012. Oxford University Press. 2 November 2012 <http://www.oed.com></ref> |
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In the 19th century, the word ''Türk'' only referred to Anatolian villagers. The Ottoman ruling class identified themselves as [[Ottoman Turks|Ottoman Turk]], not usually as Turks.<ref>(Kushner 1997: 219; Meeker 1971: 322)</ref> In the late 19th century, as the Ottoman upper classes adopted European ideas of nationalism the term ''Türk'' took on a much more positive connotation.<ref>(Kushner 1997: 220–221)</ref> The Turkish-speakers of [[Anatolia]] were the most loyal supporters of [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] rule. |
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During Ottoman times, the [[Millet (Ottoman Empire)|millet]] system defined communities on a religious basis, and a residue of this remains in that Turkish villagers commonly consider as Turks only those who profess the [[Sunni]] faith. Turkish Jews, Christians, or even [[Alevis]] to may be considered non-Turks.<ref name="Meeker 1971: 322">(Meeker 1971: 322)</ref> On the other hand, Kurdish or Arab followers of the Sunni branch of Islam who live in eastern Anatolia are sometimes considered Turks.<ref>(Meeker 1971: 323)</ref> [[s:Constitution of the Republic of Turkey|Article 66]] of the [[Turkish Constitution]] defines a "''Turk''" as anyone who is "bound to the Turkish state through the bond of [[citizenship]]."<ref name=UNHCR>{{cite web|url=http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/pdfid/4a9d204d2.pdf |title=Turkish Citizenship Law |date=29 May 2009 |accessdate=17 June 2012}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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{{see also|History of Turkey|History of Turkic people}} |
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===Prehistory, Ancient era and Early Middle Ages=== |
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{{further|Turkic peoples|Oghuz Turks|Ancient Anatolians}} |
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[[Anatolia]] was first inhabited by hunter-gatherers during the [[Paleolithic]] era, and in antiquity was inhabited by various [[Ancient Anatolians|ancient Anatolian peoples]].<ref name="Stokes & Gorman 2010 loc=721">{{Harvnb|Stokes|Gorman|2010|loc=721}}.</ref>{{Cref|j}} After [[Alexander the Great]]'s conquest in 334 BC, the area was [[Hellenization|Hellenized]], and by the first century BC it is generally thought that the native [[Anatolian languages]], themselves earlier newcomers to the area a result of the [[Indo-European migrations]], became extinct.<ref name="Hout2011">{{cite book|author=Theo van den Hout|title=The Elements of Hittite|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QDJNg5Nyef0C&pg=PA1|accessdate=24 March 2013|date=27 October 2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-139-50178-1|page=1}}</ref><ref name="SteadmanMcMahon2011">{{cite book|author1=Sharon R. Steadman|author2=Gregory McMahon|title=The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia: (10,000–323 BCE)|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7ND_CE9If3kC|accessdate=23 March 2013|date=15 September 2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-537614-2}}</ref><ref name="López-Menchero2009">{{cite book|author=Carlos Quiles, Fernando López-Menchero|title=A Grammar of Modern Indo-European, Second Edition: Language and Culture, Writing System and Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Texts and Dictionary|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XFtbEd1ojBsC&pg=PA99|accessdate=7 September 2013|date=5 October 2009|publisher=Indo-European Association|isbn=978-1-4486-8206-5|pages=99–}}</ref> |
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In Central Asia, the earliest surviving Turkic-language texts, the eighth-century [[Orkhon inscriptions]], were erected by the [[Göktürks]] in the sixth century CE, and include words not common to Turkic but found in unrelated Inner Asian languages.<ref name="Findley 2005 loc=39">{{Harvnb|Findley|2005|loc=39}}</ref> Although the ancient Turks were [[nomadic]], they traded wool, leather, carpets, and horses for wood, silk, vegetables and grain, as well as having large ironworking stations in the south of the [[Altai Mountains]] during the 600s CE. Most of the Turkic peoples were followers of [[Tengriism]], sharing the cult of the sky god [[Tengri]], although there were also adherents of [[Manichaeism]], [[Nestorian Christianity]] and [[Buddhism]].<ref>Frederik Coene, The Caucasus-An Introduction, p.77 Taylor & Francis, 2009</ref><ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837"/> However, during the [[Muslim conquests]], the Turks entered the [[Muslim world]] proper as [[servants]], during the booty of Arab raids and conquests.<ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837"/> The Turks began converting to [[Islam]] after [[Muslim conquest of Transoxiana]] through the efforts of [[missionaries]], [[Sufis]], and [[merchants]]. Although initiated by the [[Arabs]], the [[Conversion to Islam#Islam|conversion]] of the Turks to Islam was filtered through [[Persian people|Persian]] and Central Asian culture. Under the [[Umayyads]], most were domestic servants, whilst under the [[Abbasids]], increasing numbers were trained as soldiers.<ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837"/> By the ninth century, Turkish commanders were leading the [[caliphs]]’ Turkish troops into battle. As the [[Abbasid caliphate]] declined, Turkish officers assumed more military and political power taking over or establishing provincial dynasties with their own corps of Turkish troops.<ref name="Leiser 2005 loc=837"/> |
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===Seljuk era=== |
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{{Main|Seljuk Turks}} |
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{{See also|Great Seljuq Empire|Sultanate of Rum}} |
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[[File:Seljuqs Eagle.svg|thumb|left|150px|The [[Oksoko|Öksökö]], symbol of the [[Seljuk Turks]].]] |
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During the 11th century the [[Seljuk Turks]] grew in number and were able to occupy the eastern province of the [[Abbasid Empire]]. By 1055, the [[Seljuk Empire]] captured [[Baghdad]] and began to make their first incursions into the edges of [[Anatolia]].<ref name="Duiker & Spielvogel 2012 loc=192">{{Harvnb|Duiker|Spielvogel|2012|loc=192}}.</ref> When the [[Seljuk Turks]] won the [[Battle of Manzikert]] against the [[Byzantine Empire]] in 1071, it opened the gates of [[Anatolia]] to them.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16">{{Harvnb|Darke|2011|loc=16}}.</ref> Although ethnically Turkish, the [[Seljuk Turks]] appreciated and became the purveyors of the [[Persian culture]] rather than the [[Turkish culture]].<ref name="Chaurasia 2005 loc=181">{{Harvnb|Chaurasia|2005|loc=181}}.</ref><ref name="Bainbridge 2009 loc=33">{{Harvnb|Bainbridge|2009|loc=33}}.</ref> Nonetheless, the [[Turkish language]] and [[Islam]] were introduced and gradually spread over the region and the slow transition from a predominantly [[Christian]] and [[Greek language|Greek]]-speaking Anatolia to a predominantly [[Muslim]] and [[Turkish language|Turkish]]-speaking one was underway.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16"/> |
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In dire straits, the Byzantine Empire turned to the West for help setting in motion the pleas that led to the [[First Crusade]].<ref name="Duiker & Spielvogel 2012 loc=193">{{Harvnb|Duiker|Spielvogel|2012|loc=193}}.</ref> Once the [[Crusaders]] took [[Iznik]], the Seljuk Turks established the [[Sultanate of Rum]] from their new capital, [[Konya]], in 1097.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16"/> By the 12th century the Europeans had begun to call the Anatolian region "Turchia" or "Turkey", meaning "the land of the Turks".<ref name="Ágoston & Masters 2010 loc=574">{{Harvnb|Ágoston|2010|loc=574}}.</ref> The Turkish society of [[Anatolia]] was divided into urban, rural and nomadic populations;<ref name="Delibaşı 1994 loc=7">{{Harvnb|Delibaşı|1994|loc=7}}.</ref> the other Turkoman tribes who had also swept into Anatolia at the same time as the Seljuk Turks were those who kept their nomadic ways.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16"/> These tribes were more numerous than the Seljuk Turks, and rejecting the sedentary lifestyle, adhered to an Islam impregnated with [[animism]] and [[shamanism]] from their [[central Asian]] steppeland origins, which then mixed with new Christian influences. From this popular and syncretist Islam, with its mystical and revolutionary aspects, sects such as the [[Alevis]] and [[Bektashis]] emerged.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16"/> Furthermore, the [[Transnational marriage|intermarriage]] between the Turks and local inhabitants, as well as the [[converted to Islam|conversion]] of many to Islam, also increased the Turkish-speaking Muslim population in Anatolia.<ref name="Darke 2011 loc=16"/><ref name="International Business Publications 2004 loc=64">{{Harvnb|International Business Publications|2004|loc=64}}</ref> |
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By 1243, at the [[Battle of Köse Dağ]], the [[Mongols]] defeated the Seljuk Turks and became the new rulers of Anatolia, and in 1256, the second Mongol invasion of Anatolia caused widespread destruction. Particularly after 1277, political stability within the Seljuk territories rapidly disintegrated, leading to the strengthening of Turkoman principalities in the western and southern parts of Anatolia called the "[[beyliks]]".<ref name="Somel 2003 loc=266">{{Harvnb|Somel|2003|loc=266}}.</ref> |
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===Beyliks era=== |
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{{Main|Anatolian Turkish beyliks}} |
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[[File:Anadolu Beylikleri.png|thumb|A map of the independent [[beyliks]] in Anatolia during the early 1300s.]] |
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Once the Seljuk Turks were defeated by the [[Mongol conquest of Anatolia|Mongol's conquest of Anatolia]], the Turks became the [[vassal]] of the [[Ilkhans]] who established their own empire in the vast area stretching from present-day [[Afghanistan]] to present-day [[Turkey]].<ref name="Ágoston2010 loc=xxv"/> As the Mongols occupied more lands in Asia Minor, the Turks moved further to western Anatolia and settled in the Seljuk-Byzantine frontier.<ref name="Ágoston2010 loc=xxv">{{Harvnb|Ágoston|2010|loc=xxv}}.</ref> By the last decades of the 13th century, the Ilkhans and their Seljuk vassals lost control over much of Anatolia to these Turkoman peoples.<ref name="Ágoston2010 loc=xxv"/> A number of Turkish lords managed to establish themselves as rulers of various [[principalities]], known as "[[Beyliks]]" or [[emirate]]s. Amongst these beyliks, along the [[Aegean Region|Aegean]] coast, from north to south, stretched the beyliks of [[Karasids|Karasi]], [[Sarukhanids|Saruhan]], [[Aydinids|Aydin]], [[Beylik of Menteşe|Menteşe]] and [[Beylik of Teke|Teke]]. Inland from Teke was [[Hamidids|Hamid]] and east of Karasi was the beylik of [[Germiyanids|Germiyan]]. |
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To the north-west of Anatolia, around [[Söğüt]], was the small and, at this stage, insignificant, Ottoman beylik. It was hemmed in to the east by other more substantial powers like [[Karamanids|Karaman]] on [[Iconium]], which ruled from the [[Kızılırmak River]] to the [[Mediterranean]]. Although the [[Ottomans]] were only a small principality among the numerous Turkish beyliks, and thus posed the smallest threat to the Byzantine authority, their location in north-western Anatolia, in the former Byzantine province of [[Bithynia]], became a fortunate position for their future conquests. The [[Latins]], who had conquered the city of [[Constantinople]] in 1204 during the [[Fourth Crusade]], established a [[Latin Empire]] (1204–61), divided the former Byzantine territories in the [[Balkans]] and the [[Aegean Region|Aegean]] among themselves, and forced the Byzantine Emperors into exile at [[Nicaea]] (present-day [[Iznik]]). From 1261 onwards, the Byzantines were largely preoccupied with regaining their control in the Balkans.<ref name="Ágoston2010 loc=xxv"/> Toward the end of the 13th century, as Mongol power began to decline, the Turcoman chiefs assumed greater independence.<ref name="Kia 2011 loc=1">{{Harvnb|Kia|2011|loc=1}}.</ref> |
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===Ottoman Empire=== |
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{{Main|Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Turks}} |
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[[File:OttomanEmpireIn1683.png|left|thumb|The [[Ottoman Empire]] was a Turkish empire that lasted from 1299 to 1922.]] |
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[[File:Muhajir.jpg|thumb|right|The loss of almost all [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] territories during the late 19th and early 20th century, and then the establishment of the [[Republic of Turkey]], in 1923, resulted in Turkish refugees, known as "[[Muhacir]]s", from hostile regions of the [[Balkans]], the [[Black Sea]], the [[Aegean islands]], the island of [[Cyprus]], the [[Sanjak of Alexandretta]], the [[Middle East]], and the [[Soviet Union]] to migrate to [[Anatolia]] and [[Eastern Thrace]].]] |
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Under its founder, [[Osman I]], the nomadic Ottoman beylik expanded along the [[Sakarya River]] and westward towards the [[Sea of Marmara]]. Thus, the population of western [[Asia Minor]] had largely become [[Turkish language|Turkish]]-speaking and [[Muslim]] in religion.<ref name="Ágoston2010 loc=xxv"/> It was under his son, [[Orhan I]], who had attacked and conquered the important urban center of [[Bursa]] in 1326, proclaiming it as the Ottoman capital, that the [[Ottoman Empire]] developed considerably. In 1354, the Ottomans crossed into [[Europe]] and established a foothold on the [[Gallipoli Peninsula]] while at the same time pushing east and taking [[Ankara]].<ref name="Fleet 1999 loc=5">{{Harvnb|Fleet|1999|loc=5}}.</ref><ref name="Kia 2011 loc=2">{{Harvnb|Kia|2011|loc=2}}.</ref> Many Turks from Anatolia began to settle in the region abandoned by the inhabitants who had fled [[Thrace]] before the Ottoman invasion.<ref name="Köprülü 1992 loc=110">{{Harvnb|Köprülü|1992|loc=110}}.</ref> However, the Byzantines were not the only ones to suffer from the Ottoman advancement for, in the mid-1330s, Orhan annexed the Turkish beylik of [[Karasids|Karasi]]. This advancement was maintained by [[Murad I]] who more than tripled the territories under his direct rule, reaching some 100,000 square miles, evenly distributed in [[Europe]] and [[Asia Minor]].<ref name="Ágoston 2010 loc=xxvi">{{Harvnb|Ágoston|2010|loc=xxvi}}.</ref> Gains in Anatolia were matched by those in Europe; once the Ottoman forces took [[Edirne]] ([[Adrianople]]), which became the capital of the Ottoman Empire in 1365, they opened their way into [[Bulgaria]] and [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]] in 1371 at the [[Battle of Maritsa]].<ref name="Fleet 1999 loc=6">{{Harvnb|Fleet|1999|loc=6}}.</ref> With the conquests of [[Thrace]], Macedonia, and Bulgaria, significant numbers of Turkish emigrants settled in these regions.<ref name="Köprülü 1992 loc=110"/> This form of Ottoman-Turkish [[colonization]] became a very effective method to consolidate their position and power in the [[Balkans]]. The settlers consisted of soldiers, nomads, farmers, artisans and [[merchants]], [[dervishes]], [[preachers]] and other religious functionaries, and administrative personnel.<ref name="Eminov 1997 loc=27">{{Harvnb|Eminov|1997|loc=27}}.</ref> |
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In 1453, Ottoman armies, under Sultan [[Mehmed II]], conquered [[Constantinople]].<ref name="Ágoston 2010 loc=xxvi"/> Mehmed reconstructed and repopulated the city, and made it the new Ottoman capital.<ref name="Kermeli 2010 loc=111">{{Harvnb|Kermeli|2010|loc=111}}.</ref> After the [[Fall of Constantinople]], the Ottoman Empire entered a long period of [[Growth of the Ottoman Empire|conquest and expansion]] with its borders eventually going deep into [[Europe]], the [[Middle East]], and [[North Africa]].<ref name="Kia 2011 loc=5">{{Harvnb|Kia|2011|loc=5}}.</ref> [[Selim I]] dramatically expanded the empire’s eastern and southern frontiers in the [[Battle of Chaldiran]] and gained recognition as the guardian of the holy cities of [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]].<ref name="Quataert 2000 loc=21">{{Harvnb|Quataert|2000|loc=21}}.</ref> His successor, [[Suleiman the Magnificent]], further expanded the conquests after capturing [[Belgrade]] in 1521 and using its territorial base to conquer [[Kingdom of Hungary|Hungary]], and other Central European territories, after his victory in the [[Battle of Mohács]] as well as also pushing the frontiers of the empire to the east.<ref name="Kia 2011 loc=6">{{Harvnb|Kia|2011|loc=6}}.</ref> Following Suleiman's death, Ottoman victories continued, albeit less frequently than before. The island of [[Cyprus]] was conquered, in 1571, bolstering Ottoman dominance over the sea routes of the eastern [[Mediterranean]].<ref name="Quataert 2000 loc=24">{{Harvnb|Quataert|2000|loc=24}}.</ref> However, after its defeat at the [[Battle of Vienna]], in 1683, the Ottoman army was met by ambushes and further defeats; the 1699 [[Treaty of Karlowitz]], which granted Austria the provinces of Hungary and [[Transylvania]], marked the first time in history that the Ottoman Empire actually relinquished territory.<ref name="Levine 2010 loc=28">{{Harvnb|Levine|2010|loc=28}}.</ref> |
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[[File:Turkish woman in Ottoman costume 2.jpg|thumb|Turkish woman in Ottoman costume]] |
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By the 19th century, the empire began to [[Decline of the Ottoman Empire|decline]] when [[Ethnic nationalism|ethno-nationalist]] uprisings occurred across the empire. Thus, the last quarter of the 19th and the early part of the 20th century saw some 7–9 million Muslim refugees (Turks and some [[Circassians]], [[Bosnians]], [[Georgians]], etc.) from the lost territories of the [[Caucasus]], [[Crimea]], [[Balkans]], and the [[Mediterranean]] islands migrate to [[Anatolia]] and [[Eastern Thrace]].<ref name="Karpat 2004 loc=5-6">{{Harvnb|Karpat|2004|loc=5–6}}.</ref> By 1913, the government of the [[Committee of Union and Progress]] started a program of forcible [[Turkification]] of non-Turkish minorities.<ref>{{cite book|title=Century of Genocide|year=2012|publisher=Routledge|isbn=1135245509|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EDZa0zZ-XCAC|editor=Samuel Totten, William S. Parsons|pages=118–124|quote="By 1913 the advocates of liberalism had lost out to radicals in the party who promoted a program of forcible Turkification.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Jwaideh|first=Wadie|title=The Kurdish national movement : its origins and development|year=2006|publisher=Syracuse Univ. Press|location=Syracuse, NY|isbn=081563093X|page=104|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FCbspX-dGPYC|edition=1.|quote=With the crushing of opposition elements, the Young Turks simultaneously launched their program of forcible Turkification and the creation of a highly centralized administrative system."}}</ref> By 1914, the [[World War I]] broke out, and the Turks scored some success in [[Gallipoli]] during the [[Naval operations in the Dardanelles Campaign|Battle of the Dardanelles]] in 1915. During World War I, the government of the Committee of Union and Progress continued with its Turkification policies, which effected non-Turkish minorities, such as the Armenians during the [[Armenian Genocide]] and the Greeks during [[Greek genocide|various campaigns of ethnic cleansing and expulsion]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Akçam|first=Taner|title=The Young Turks' crime against humanity: the Armenian genocide and ethnic cleansing in the Ottoman Empire|year=2012|publisher=Princeton University Press|location=Princeton, N.J.|isbn=0691153337|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdBKN1j-QhMC|page=29}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Bjornlund|first=Matthias|title=The 1914 cleansing of Aegean Greeks as a case of violent Turkification|journal=Journal of Genocide Research|date=March 2008|volume=10|issue=1|pages=41–57|publisher=Taylor & Francis|issn=1462-3528|quote="In 1914, the aim of Turkification was not to exterminate but to expel as many Greeks of the Aegean region as possible as not only a "security measure," but as an extension of the policy of economic and cultural boycott, while at the same time creating living space for the muhadjirs that had been driven out of their homes under equally brutal circumstances."|doi=10.1080/14623520701850286}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Akçam|first=Taner|title=From Empire to Republic: Turkish Nationalism and the Armenian Genocide|year=2005|publisher=Zed Books|location=London|isbn=9781842775271|page=115|authorlink=Taner Akçam|quote=...the initial stages of the Turkification of the Empire, which affected by attacks on its very heterogeneous structure, thereby ushering in a relentless process of ethnic cleansing that eventually, through the exigencies and opportunities of the First World War, culminated in the Armenian Genocide.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Rummel|first=Rudolph J.|title=Death By Government|year=1996|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=9781412821292|page=235|authorlink=Rudolph Rummel|quote=Through this genocide and the forced deportation of the Greeks, the nationalists completed the Young Turk's program-the Turkification of Turkey and the elimination of a pretext for Great Power meddling.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915|year=2003|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=New York|isbn=9780511163821|page=60|editor=J.M. Winter|quote=The devising of a scheme of a correlative Turkification of the Empire, or what was left of it, included the cardinal goal of the liquidation of that Empire’s residual non-Turkish elements. Given their numbers, their concentration in geo-strategic locations, and the troublesome legacy of the Armenian Question, the Armenians were targeted as the prime object for such liquidation.}}</ref> In 1918, the Ottoman Government agreed to the [[Mudros Armistice]] with the [[Allies of World War I|Allies]]. |
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The [[Treaty of Sèvres]] —signed in 1920 by the government of [[Mehmet VI]]— dismantled the Ottoman Empire. The Turks, under [[Mustafa Kemal]], rejected the treaty and fought the [[Turkish War of Independence]], resulting in the abortion of that text, never ratified,<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lEFSI-qJHSEC&pg=PA91&dq=Treaty+S%C3%A8vres+was+never+ratified&hl=tr&sa=X&ei=zE2nU5GuAu2I7AbWqoGwBw&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAA|title=The Turkish Straits|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref> and the [[Abolition of the Ottoman sultanate|abolition of the Sultanate]]. Thus, the 623-year-old Ottoman Empire ended.<ref name="Levine 2010 loc=29">{{Harvnb|Levine|2010|loc=29}}.</ref> |
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===Modern era=== |
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{{See also|History of the Republic of Turkey}} |
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[[File:Taksim Square 2012.jpg|thumb|[[Taksim Square]].]] |
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Once [[Mustafa Kemal Atatürk]] led the [[Turkish War of Independence]] against the [[Allies of World War I|Allied forces]] that occupied the former [[Ottoman Empire]], he united the Turkish Muslim majority and successfully led them from 1919 to 1922 in overthrowing the occupying forces out of what the [[Turkish National Movement]] considered the Turkish homeland.<ref name="Göcek 2011 loc=22">{{Harvnb|Göcek|2011|loc=22}}.</ref> The Turkish identity became the unifying force when, in 1923, the [[Treaty of Lausanne]] was signed and the newly founded [[Republic of Turkey]] was formally established. Atatürk's presidency was marked by a series of [[Atatürk's Reforms|radical political and social reforms]] that transformed Turkey into a [[Secularism in Turkey|secular]], modern republic with civil and political equality for sectarian minorities and women.<ref name="Göcek 2011 loc=23">{{Harvnb|Göcek|2011|loc=23}}.</ref> |
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Throughout the 1920s and the 1930s, Turks, as well as other [[Muslims]], from the [[Balkans]], the [[Black Sea]], the [[Aegean islands]], the island of [[Cyprus]], the [[Sanjak of Alexandretta]] ([[Hatay Province|Hatay]]), the [[Middle East]], and the [[Soviet Union]] continued to arrive in [[Turkey]], most of whom settled in urban north-western Anatolia.<ref name="Çaǧaptay 2006 loc=82">{{Harvnb|Çaǧaptay|2006|loc=82}}.</ref><ref name="Bosma et al 2012 loc=17">{{Harvnb|Bosma|Lucassen|Oostindie|2012|loc=17}}</ref> The bulk of these immigrants, known as "[[Muhacir]]s", were the Balkan Turks who faced harassment and discrimination in their homelands.<ref name="Çaǧaptay 2006 loc=82"/> However, there were still remnants of a Turkish population in many of these countries because the Turkish government wanted to preserve these communities so that the Turkish character of these neighbouring territories could be maintained.<ref name="Çaǧaptay 2006 loc=84">{{Harvnb|Çaǧaptay|2006|loc=84}}.</ref> One of the last stages of ethnic Turks immigrating to Turkey was between 1940 and 1990 when about 700,000 Turks arrived from Bulgaria. Today, between a third and a quarter of Turkey's population are the descendants of these immigrants.<ref name="Bosma et al 2012 loc=17"/> |
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==Genetics== |
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{{further|Genetic history of the Turkish people|Turkification}} |
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The extent to which gene flow from Central Asia has contributed to the current gene pool of the Turkish people, and the role of the 11th century invasion by Turkic peoples, has been the subject of various studies. Several studies have concluded that the historical and indigenous Anatolian groups are the primary source of the present-day Turkish population.<ref name=Yardumian_et_al>{{cite journal |last=Yardumian |first=Aram |last2=Schurr |first2=Theodore G. |year=2011 |title=Who Are the Anatolian Turks? |url=http://www.pop.upenn.edu/biblio/who-are-anatolian-turks-reappraisal-anthropological-genetic-evidence |journal=Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia |volume=50 |pages=6–42 |doi=10.2753/AAE1061-1959500101|accessdate=21 October 2013|quote="These data further solidify our case for a paternal G/J substratum in Anatolian populations, and for continuity between the Paleolithic/Neolithic and the current populations of Anatolia."}}</ref>{{Cref|k}}<ref name=eurostudy>{{Cite journal | pmid = 11078479 | doi = 10.1086/316890 | last1 = Rosser | first1 = Z. | last2 = Zerjal | first2 = T. | last3 = Hurles | first3 = M. | last4 = Adojaan | first4 = M. | last5 = Alavantic | first5 = D. | last6 = Amorim | first6 = A. | last7 = Amos | first7 = W. | last8 = Armenteros | first8 = M. | last9 = Arroyo | first9 = E. | last10 = Barbujani | first10 = G. | last11 = Beckman | first11 = G. | last12 = Beckman | first12 = L. | last13 = Bertranpetit | first13 = J. | last14 = Bosch | first14 = E. | last15 = Bradley | first15 = D. 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W. | last27 = Jeziorowska | first27 = A. | last28 = Kalaydjieva | first28 = L. | last29 = Kayser | first29 = M. | last30 = Kivisild | first30 = T. | title = Y-Chromosomal Diversity in Europe is Clinal and Influenced Primarily by Geography, Rather than by Language | journal = The American Journal of Human Genetics | volume = 67 | issue = 6 | pages = 1526–1543 | year = 2000 | pmc =1287948 }}[http://evolutsioon.ut.ee/publications/Rosser2000.pdf]</ref><ref name=stanford>{{Cite journal | last1 = Cinnioglu | first1 = C. | last2 = King | first2 = R. | last3 = Kivisild | first3 = T. | last4 = Kalfoğlu | first4 = E. | last5 = Atasoy | first5 = S. | last6 = Cavalleri | first6 = G. L. | last7 = Lillie | first7 = A. S. | last8 = Roseman | first8 = C. C. | last9 = Lin | first9 = A. A. | doi = 10.1007/s00439-003-1031-4 | last10 = Prince | first10 = K. | last11 = Oefner | first11 = P. J. | last12 = Shen | first12 = P. | last13 = Semino | first13 = O. | last14 = Cavalli-Sforza | first14 = L. L. | last15 = Underhill | first15 = P. A. | title = Excavating Y-chromosome haplotype strata in Anatolia | journal = Human Genetics | volume = 114 | issue = 2 | pages = 127–148 | year = 2004 | pmid = 14586639| pmc = }}[http://evolutsioon.ut.ee/publications/Cinnioglu2004.pdf]</ref><ref name=antigens57>{{Cite journal | last1 = Arnaiz-Villena | first1 = A. | last2 = Karin | first2 = M. | last3 = Bendikuze | first3 = N. | last4 = Gomez-Casado | first4 = E. | last5 = Moscoso | first5 = J. | last6 = Silvera | first6 = C. | last7 = Oguz | first7 = F. S. | last8 = Sarper Diler | first8 = A. | last9 = De Pacho | first9 = A. | last10 = Allende | doi = 10.1034/j.1399-0039.2001.057004308.x | first10 = L. | last11 = Guillen | first11 = J. | last12 = Martinez Laso | first12 = J. | title = HLA alleles and haplotypes in the Turkish population: Relatedness to Kurds, Armenians and other Mediterraneans | journal = Tissue Antigens | volume = 57 | issue = 4 | pages = 308–317 | year = 2001 | pmid = 11380939| pmc = }}</ref><ref name=euroasia>{{Cite journal | last1 = Wells | first1 = R. S. | last2 = Yuldasheva | first2 = N. | last3 = Ruzibakiev | first3 = R. | last4 = Underhill | first4 = P. A. | last5 = Evseeva | first5 = I. | last6 = Blue-Smith | first6 = J. | last7 = Jin | first7 = L. | last8 = Su | first8 = B. | last9 = Pitchappan | first9 = R. | doi = 10.1073/pnas.171305098 | last10 = Shanmugalakshmi | first10 = S. | last11 = Balakrishnan | first11 = K. | last12 = Read | first12 = M. | last13 = Pearson | first13 = N. M. | last14 = Zerjal | first14 = T. | last15 = Webster | first15 = M. T. | last16 = Zholoshvili | first16 = I. | last17 = Jamarjashvili | first17 = E. | last18 = Gambarov | first18 = S. | last19 = Nikbin | first19 = B. | last20 = Dostiev | first20 = A. | last21 = Aknazarov | first21 = O. | last22 = Zalloua | first22 = P. | last23 = Tsoy | first23 = I. | last24 = Kitaev | first24 = M. | last25 = Mirrakhimov | first25 = M. | last26 = Chariev | first26 = A. | last27 = Bodmer | first27 = W. F. | title = The Eurasian Heartland: A continental perspective on Y-chromosome diversity | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume = 98 | issue = 18 | pages = 10244–10249| year = 2001 | pmid = 11526236| pmc = 56946}}</ref> This is unsurprising, as the Turkish people are a collection of assimilated peoples who were formed from their adoption of Islam and the Turkish language, with even the Turkish state considering all those who have citizenship there to be Turkish. Furthermore, various studies suggested that, although the early Turkic invaders carried out an invasion with [[cultural]] significance, including the introduction of the [[Old Anatolian Turkish language]] (the predecessor to modern Turkish) and [[Islam]], the ''genetic'' contribution from [[Central Asia]] may have been very small.{{Cref|k}}<ref name=eurostudy/><ref name=med_pops>{{Cite journal | last1 = Arnaiz-Villena | first1 = A. | last2 = Gomez-Casado | first2 = E. | last3 = Martinez-Laso | first3 = J. | doi = 10.1034/j.1399-0039.2002.600201.x | title = Population genetic relationships between Mediterranean populations determined by HLA allele distribution and a historic perspective | journal = Tissue Antigens | volume = 60 | issue = 2 | pages = 111–121 | year = 2002 | pmid = 12392505| pmc = }}</ref> According to ''American Journal of Physical Anthropology'' (2008) Today's Turkish people are more closely related with the [[Balkan]] populations than to the [[Central Asian]] populations,<ref name=METU>{{Cite journal |
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| last1 = Berkman | first1 = C. C. |
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| last2 = Dinc | first2 = H. |
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| last3 = Sekeryapan | first3 = C. |
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| last4 = Togan | first4 = I. |
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| title = Alu insertion polymorphisms and an assessment of the genetic contribution of Central Asia to Anatolia with respect to the Balkans |
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| doi = 10.1002/ajpa.20772 |
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| journal = American Journal of Physical Anthropology |
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| volume = 136 |
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| issue = 1 |
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| pages = 11–18 |
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| year = 2008 |
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| pmid = 18161848 |
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| pmc = |
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}}</ref><ref name=Comas2004>{{Cite journal | last1 = Comas | first1 = D. | last2 = Schmid | first2 = H. | last3 = Braeuer | first3 = S. | last4 = Flaiz | first4 = C. | last5 = Busquets | first5 = A. | last6 = Calafell | first6 = F. | last7 = Bertranpetit | first7 = J. | last8 = Scheil | first8 = H. -G. | last9 = Huckenbeck | first9 = W. | last10 = Efremovska | doi = 10.1046/j.1529-8817.2003.00080.x | first10 = L. | last11 = Schmidt | first11 = H. | title = Alu insertion polymorphisms in the Balkans and the origins of the Aromuns | journal = Annals of Human Genetics | volume = 68 | issue = 2 | pages = 120–127| year = 2004 | pmid = 15008791| pmc = }}</ref> and a study looking into allele frequencies suggested that there was a lack of genetic relationship between the Mongols and the Turks, despite the historical relationship of their languages (The Turks and Germans were equally distant to all three Mongolian populations).<ref name=Machulla>{{Cite journal | last1 = Machulla | first1 = H. K. G. | last2 = Batnasan | first2 = D. | last3 = Steinborn | first3 = F. | last4 = Uyar | first4 = F. A. | last5 = Saruhan-Direskeneli | first5 = G. | last6 = Oguz | first6 = F. S. | last7 = Carin | first7 = M. N. | last8 = Dorak | first8 = M. T. | doi = 10.1034/j.1399-0039.2003.00043.x | title = Genetic affinities among Mongol ethnic groups and their relationship to Turks | journal = Tissue Antigens | volume = 61 | issue = 4 | pages = 292–299 | year = 2003 | pmid = 12753667| pmc = }}</ref> Multiple studies suggested an [[elite]] [[cultural]] dominance-driven [[Language shift|linguistic replacement]] model to explain the adoption of [[Turkish language]] by [[Ancient Anatolians|Anatolian indigenous inhabitants]].<ref name=Yardumian_et_al/>{{Cref|k}}<ref name=euroasia/> A study involving mitochondrial analysis of a [[Byzantine|Byzantine-era]] population, whose samples were gathered from excavations in the archaeological site of [[Sagalassos]], found that the samples had close genetic affinity with modern Turkish and Balkan populations.<ref name=Ottoni_et_al>{{Cite journal | last1 = Ottoni | first1 = C. | last2 = Ricaut | first2 = F. O. X. | last3 = Vanderheyden | first3 = N. | last4 = Brucato | first4 = N. | last5 = Waelkens | first5 = M. | last6 = Decorte | first6 = R. | doi = 10.1038/ejhg.2010.230 | title = Mitochondrial analysis of a Byzantine population reveals the differential impact of multiple historical events in South Anatolia | journal = European Journal of Human Genetics | volume = 19 | issue = 5 | pages = 571–576 | year = 2011 | pmid = 21224890| pmc =3083616 }}</ref> During their research on leukemia, a group of Armenian scientists observed high genetic matching between Turks, Kurds, and Armenians.<ref>{{cite news |title=Turks, Armenians share similar genes, say scientists |author=Cansu ÇAMLIBEL |url=http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/default.aspx?pageid=438&n=turks-armenians-share-similar-genes-say-scientists-2009-12-24 |newspaper=Hürriyet Daily News |date=24 December 2009 |accessdate=22 May 2013}}</ref> Another studies found the [[Peoples of the Caucasus]] (Georgians, Circassians, Armenians) are closest to the Turkish population among sampled European (French, Italian), Middle Eastern (Druze, Palestinian), and Central (Kyrgyz, Hazara, Uygur), South (Pakistani), and East Asian (Mongolian, Han) populations.<ref name=Hodoglugil_et_al>{{Cite journal | last1 = Hodoğlugil | first1 = U. U. | last2 = Mahley | first2 = R. W. | doi = 10.1111/j.1469-1809.2011.00701.x | title = Turkish Population Structure and Genetic Ancestry Reveal Relatedness among Eurasian Populations | journal = Annals of Human Genetics | volume = 76 | issue = 2 | pages = 128–141 | year = 2012 | pmid = 22332727| pmc = }}</ref><ref>http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-iYKtdl7HCQY/Tcl1NyLeNnI/AAAAAAAADsI/dYqMpnclWt4/s1600/1_2.png</ref><ref>http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-UCP5T1pduGU/TzpBa9QbK3I/AAAAAAAAEe4/_uWuqnnb1zQ/s1600/1_2.png</ref><ref>http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/7793/fairyprincesspca.png</ref><ref>http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v466/n7303/images/nature09103-f2.2.jpg</ref><ref>http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ish7688voT0/TPBJmmJLScI/AAAAAAAAC7Y/RezgY2l49Vg/s1600/ADMIXTURE_10.png</ref> |
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[[Image:Turkey Y chromosome(in 20 haplogroups).png|thumb|350px|Y chromosome Haplogroup distribution of Turkish people.<ref name=stanford/>]] |
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===Y-DNA haplogroup distributions in Turkish people=== |
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According to Cinnioglu et al., (2004)<ref name="cinnioglu 2004">[http://hpgl.stanford.edu/publications/HG_2004_v114_p127-148.pdf Excavating Y-chromosome haplotype strata in Anatolia. Hum Genet (2004) 114 : 127–148, Springer-Verlag 2003]</ref> there are many Y-DNA haplogroups present in Turkey. The majority haplogroups are shared with their "West Asian" and "Caucasian' neighbours. By contrast, "Central Asian" haplogroups are rarer, N and Q)- 5.7% (but it rises to 36% if K, R1a, R1b and L- which infrequently occur in Central Asia, but are notable in many other Western Turkic groups), India H, R2 – 1.5% and Africa A, E3*, E3a – 1%. |
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Some of the percentages identified were:<ref name=stanford/> |
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*[[Haplogroup J2 (Y-DNA)|J2]]=24% – J2 (M172)<ref name=stanford/> Typical of west Mediterranean populations |
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*[[Haplogroup R1b (Y-DNA)|R1b]]=14.7%<ref name=stanford/> Widespread in western Eurasia, with distinct 'west Asian' and 'west European' lineages. |
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*[[Haplogroup G (Y-DNA)|G]]=10.9%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of people from the [[Caucasus]] and to a lesser extent the Middle East, southern parts of Central Asia, and Europe. |
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*[[Haplogroup E1b1b (Y-DNA)|E3b-M35]]=10.7%<ref name=stanford/> (E3b1-M78 and E3b3-M123 accounting for all E representatives in the sample, besides a single E3b2-M81 chromosome). E-M78 occurs commonly, and is found in northern and eastern Africa, western Asia<ref>{{Cite journal | last1 = Cruciani | first1 = F. | last2 = La Fratta | first2 = R. | last3 = Torroni | first3 = A. | last4 = Underhill | first4 = P. A. | last5 = Scozzari | first5 = R. | title = Molecular dissection of the Y chromosome haplogroup E-M78 (E3b1a): A posteriori evaluation of a microsatellite-network-based approach through six new biallelic markers | doi = 10.1002/humu.9445 | journal = Human Mutation | volume = 27 | issue = 8 | pages = 831–2 | year = 2006 | pmid = 16835895| pmc = }}</ref> [[Haplogroup E-M123]] is found in both Africa and Eurasia. |
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*[[Haplogroup J1 (Y-DNA)|J1]]=9%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical amongst people from the Arabian Peninsula and [[Dagestan]] (ranging from 3% from Turks around [[Konya]] to 12% in [[Kurds]]). |
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*[[Haplogroup R1a (Y-DNA)|R1a]]=6.9%<ref name=stanford/> – Common in various Central Asian, North Indian, and Eastern European populations. |
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*[[Haplogroup I (Y-DNA)|I]]=5.3%<ref name=stanford/> – Common in Scandinavia, Sardinia, the Balkans and Eastern Europe. |
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*[[Haplogroup K (Y-DNA)|K]]=4.5%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Asian populations and Caucasian populations. |
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*[[Haplogroup L (Y-DNA)|L]]=4.2%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Indian Subcontinent and [[Greater Khorasan|Khorasan]] populations. Found sporadically in the Middle East and the Caucasus. |
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*[[Haplogroup N (Y-DNA)|N]]=3.8%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Uralic, Siberian and Altaic populations. |
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*[[Haplogroup T (Y-DNA)|T]]=2.5%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, Northeast African and South Asian populations |
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*[[Haplogroup Q (Y-DNA)|Q]]=1.9%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Northern Altaic populations. |
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*[[Haplogroup C (Y-DNA)|C]]=1.3%<ref name=stanford/> – Typical of Mongolic and Siberian populations |
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*[[Haplogroup R2 (Y-DNA)|R2]]=0.96% <ref name=stanford/> Typical of South Asian population |
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Others markers than occurs in less than 1% are H, A, E3a, O, R1*. |
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==Geographic distribution== |
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{{main|Turkish population}} |
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===Traditional areas of Turkish settlement=== |
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====Turkey==== |
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In the latter half of the 11th century, the Seljuks began penetrating into the eastern regions of [[Anatolia]]. In 1071, the Seljuk Turks defeated the Byzantines at the [[Battle of Manzikert]], starting [[Turkification]] of the area; the [[Turkish language]] and [[Islam]] were introduced to [[Anatolia]] and gradually spread over the region. The slow transition from a predominantly [[Christian]] and [[Greek language|Greek]]-speaking Anatolia to a predominantly [[Muslim]] and [[Turkish language|Turkish]]-speaking one was underway.<ref name="Abazov2009">{{cite book|author=Rafis Abazov|title=Culture and Customs of Turkey|url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=kx-hnRY6E94C }} |accessdate=25 March 2013|year=2009|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-313-34215-8|p=1071}}</ref> |
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Ethnic Turks make up between 70% to 75% of [[Turkey]]'s population.<ref name=CIATurkey/> |
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====Cyprus==== |
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The [[Turkish Cypriots]] are the ethnic Turks whose Ottoman Turkish forbears colonised the island of [[Cyprus]] in 1571. About 30,000 Turkish soldiers were given land once they settled in Cyprus, which bequeathed a significant Turkish community. In 1960, a census by the new Republic's government revealed that the Turkish Cypriots formed 18.2% of the island's population.<ref name="Hatay 2007 loc=22">{{Harvnb|Hatay|2007|loc=22}}.</ref> However, once inter-communal fighting and ethnic tensions between 1963 and 1974 occurred between the Turkish and [[Greek Cypriots]], known as the "[[Cyprus conflict]]", the Greek Cypriot government conducted a census in 1973, albeit without the Turkish Cypriot populace. A year later, in 1974, the Cypriot government’s Department of Statistics and Research estimated the Turkish Cypriot population was 118,000 (or 18.4%).<ref name="Hatay 2007 loc=23">{{Harvnb|Hatay|2007|loc=23}}.</ref> A [[coup d'état]] in Cyprus on [[1974 Cypriot coup d'état|15 July 1974]] by Greeks and Greek Cypriots favouring union with [[Greece]] (also known as "[[Enosis]]") was followed by [[Turkish invasion of Cyprus|military intervention]] by [[Turkey]] whose troops established Turkish Cypriot control over the northern part of the island.<ref>{{cite web |work=United Nations|title=UNFICYP: United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus|url=http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/missions/unficyp/background.shtml}}</ref> Hence, census's conducted by the Republic of Cyprus have excluded the Turkish Cypriot population that had settled in the unrecognised [[Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus]].<ref name="Hatay 2007 loc=23"/> Between 1975 and 1981, [[Turkey]] encouraged its own citizens to settle in Northern Cyprus; a report by [[CIA]] suggests that 200,000 of the residents of Cyprus are Turkish. |
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====Meskhetia==== |
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The [[Meskhetian Turks]] are the ethnic Turks formerly inhabiting the [[Meskheti]] region of [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], along the border with [[Turkey]]. The Turkish presence in Meskhetia began with the [[Lala Mustafa Pasha's Caucasian campaign|Ottoman invasion of 1578]],<ref name="Aydıngün 2006 loc=4">{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=4}}</ref> although [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] tribes had settled in the region as early as the eleventh and twelfth centuries.<ref name="Aydıngün 2006 loc=4"/> Today, the Meskhetian Turks are widely dispersed throughout the former [[Soviet Union]] (as well as in [[Turkey]] and the [[United States]]) due to forced deportations during [[World War II]]. At the time, the [[Soviet Union]] was preparing to launch a pressure campaign against [[Turkey]], and [[Joseph Stalin]] wanted to clear the strategic Turkish population in Meskheti, who would likely be hostile to Soviet intentions.<ref name="Bennigsen & Broxup 1983 loc=30">{{Harvnb|Bennigsen|Broxup|1983|loc=30}}.</ref> In 1944, the Meskhetian Turks were accused of smuggling, banditry and espionage in collaboration with their kin across the [[Turkey|Turkish]] border;<ref>{{Harvnb|Tomlinson|2005|loc=107}}.</ref> nationalistic policies at the time encouraged the slogan: "Georgia for Georgians" and that the Meskhetian Turks should be sent to [[Turkey]] "where they belong".<ref name="Kurbanov & Kurbanov 1995 loc=237">{{Harvnb|Kurbanov|Kurbanov|1995|loc=237}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Cornell|2001|loc=183}}.</ref> The Meskhetian Turks were a small group expelled by Stalin in 1944 to [[Central Asia]], their number according to the 1939 Soviet census was 115,000. |
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===Modern diaspora=== |
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{{main|Turkish diaspora}} |
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====Western Europe==== |
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{{see also|Turks in Europe}} |
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[[File:Turkisch-day-in-Berlin.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Turks in Germany]] number about 4 million,<ref name="Kötter et al 2003 loc=53"/><ref name="Haviland et al 2010 loc=675"/> which constitutes the largest Turkish community in Western Europe, as well as the largest within the [[Turkish diaspora]].]] |
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After World War II, [[West Germany]] began to experience its greatest economic boom ("[[Wirtschaftswunder]]") and in 1961 invited the Turks as guest workers ("[[Gastarbeiter]]") to make up for the shortage of workers. The concept of the Gastarbeiter continued with [[Turkey]] bearing agreements with [[Austria]], [[Belgium]], and the [[Netherlands]] in 1964, with [[France]] in 1965; and with [[Sweden]] in 1967.<ref name="Abadan-Unat 2011 loc=12">{{Harvnb|Abadan-Unat|2011|loc=12}}.</ref> |
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Current estimates suggests that there is approximately 9 million Turks living in [[Europe]], excluding those who live in [[Turkey]].<ref name="Sosyal 2011 loc=367">{{Harvnb|Sosyal|2011|loc=367}}.</ref> Modern immigration of Turks to [[Western Europe]] began with [[Turkish Cypriots]] migrating to the [[United Kingdom]] in the early 1920s when the [[British Empire]] annexed [[Cyprus]] in 1914 and the residents of Cyprus became subjects of the Crown. However, Turkish Cypriot migration increased significantly in the 1940s and 1950s due to the [[Cyprus conflict]]. Conversely, in 1944, Turks who were forcefully deported from [[Meskheti]] in [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] during the [[Second World War]], known as the [[Meskhetian Turks]], settled in [[Eastern Europe]] (especially in [[Azerbaijan]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Russia]], and [[Ukraine]]). By the early 1960s, migration to Western and [[Northern Europe]] increased significantly from [[Turkey]] when Turkish "[[guest workers]]" arrived under a "Labour Export Agreement" with [[Germany]] in 1961, followed by a similar agreement with the [[Netherlands]], [[Belgium]] and [[Austria]] in 1964; [[France]] in 1965; and [[Sweden]] in 1967.<ref name="Akgündüz 2008 loc=61">{{Harvnb|Akgündüz|2008|loc=61}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Kasaba|2008|loc=192}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Twigg|Schaefer|Austin|Parker|2005|loc=33}}</ref> More recently, [[Bulgarian Turks]], [[Romanian Turks]], and [[Western Thrace Turks]] have also migrated to [[Western Europe]]. |
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====North America==== |
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{{Main|Turkish Americans|Turkish Canadians}} |
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Compared to Turkish immigration to Europe, migration to [[North America]] has been relatively small. According to the US [[Census Bureau]] and Statistics Canada, 196,222 Americans in 2013<ref name="2013US"/> and 24,910 Canadians in 2011<ref name="statcan1"/> were of Turkish descent. However, the actual number of Turks in both countries is considerably larger, as a significant number of ethnic Turks have migrated to North America not just from [[Turkey]] but also from the [[Balkans]] (such as [[Bulgaria]] and [[Republic of Macedonia|Macedonia]]), [[Cyprus]], and the former [[Soviet Union]].<ref name="Karpat 2004 loc=627">{{Harvnb|Karpat|2004|loc=627}}.</ref> Hence, the [[Turkish American]] community is currently estimated to number about 500,000<ref name="Farkas 2003 loc=40" /><ref name=EncyclopediaofClevelandHistory/> whilst the [[Turkish Canadian]] community is believed to number between 50,000–100,000. The largest concentration of Turkish Americans are in [[New York City]], and [[Rochester, New York]]; [[Washington, D.C.]]; and [[Detroit, Michigan]]. The majority of Turkish Canadians live in [[Ontario]], mostly in [[Toronto]], and there is also a sizable Turkish community in [[Montreal]]. With regards to the [[2010 United States Census]], the U.S government was determined to get an accurate count of the American population by reaching segments, such as the Turkish community, that are considered hard to count, a good portion of which falls under the category of foreign-born immigrants.<ref name=WashingtonDiplomat/> The [[Assembly of Turkish American Associations]] and the [[US Census Bureau]] formed a partnership to spearhead a national campaign to count people of Turkish origin with an organisation entitled "Census 2010 SayTurk" (which has a double meaning in [[Turkish language|Turkish]], "Say" means "to count" and "to respect") to identify the estimated 500,000 Turks now living in the United States.<ref name=WashingtonDiplomat/> |
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====Oceania==== |
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{{See also|Turkish Australian}} |
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A notable scale of Turkish migration to [[Australia]] began in the late 1940s when [[Turkish Cypriots]] began to leave the island of [[Cyprus]] for economic reasons, and then, during the [[Cyprus conflict]], for political reasons, marking the beginning of a Turkish Cypriot immigration trend to Australia.<ref name="Hüssein 2007 loc=17">{{Harvnb|Hüssein|2007|loc=17}}</ref> The Turkish Cypriot community were the only [[Muslims]] acceptable under the [[White Australia Policy]];<ref>{{Harvnb|Cleland|2001|loc=24}}</ref> many of these early immigrants found jobs working in factories, out in the fields, or building national infrastructure.<ref name="Hüssein 2007 loc=19">{{Harvnb|Hüssein|2007|loc=19}}</ref> In 1967, the governments of Australia and Turkey signed an agreement to allow Turkish citizens to immigrate to Australia.<ref name="Hüssein 2007 loc=196">{{Harvnb|Hüssein|2007|loc=196}}</ref> Prior to this recruitment agreement, there were less than 3,000 people of Turkish origin in Australia.<ref name="Hopkins 2011 loc=116">{{Harvnb|Hopkins|2011|loc=116}}</ref> According to the [[Australian Bureau of Statistics]], nearly 19,000 Turkish immigrants arrived from 1968–1974.<ref name="Hüssein 2007 loc=196"/> They came largely from [[rural]] areas of Turkey, approximately 30% were skilled and 70% were unskilled workers.<ref name="Saeed 2003 loc=9">{{Harvnb|Saeed|2003|loc=9}}</ref> However, this changed in the 1980s when the number of skilled Turks applying to enter Australia had increased considerably.<ref name="Saeed 2003 loc=9"/> Over the next 35 years the Turkish population rose to almost 100,000.<ref name="Hopkins 2011 loc=116"/> More than half of the Turkish community settled in [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], mostly in the north-western suburbs of [[Melbourne]].<ref name="Hopkins 2011 loc=116"/> According to the [[2006 Australian Census]], 59,402 people claimed Turkish ancestry;<ref name=Ancestry2006census>{{cite web|author=Australian Bureau of Statistics|title=20680-Ancestry (full classification list) by Sex Australia|url=http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/ABSNavigation/prenav/ViewData?breadcrumb=POLTD&method=Place%20of%20Usual%20Residence&subaction=-1&issue=2006&producttype=Census%20Tables&documentproductno=0&textversion=false&documenttype=Details&collection=Census&javascript=true&topic=Ancestry&action=404&productlabel=Ancestry%20(full%20classification%20list)%20by%20Sex&order=1&period=2006&tabname=Details&areacode=0&navmapdisplayed=true&|accessdate=13 July 2011}}</ref> however, this does not show a true reflection of the [[Turkish Australian]] community as it is estimated that between 40,000 to 120,000 Turkish Cypriots<ref name=TRNCMinistryofForeignAffairs>{{cite web|author=TRNC Ministry of Foreign Affairs|title=Briefing Notes on the Cyprus Issue|url=http://www.trncinfo.com/tanitma/en/index.asp?sayfa=cms&dmid=0&cmsid=214&ssid=556095671|accessdate=3 October 2010}}</ref><ref name=KibrisGazetesi>{{cite web |author=Kibris Gazetesi|title=Avustralya'daki Kıbrıslı Türkler ve Temsilcilik...|url=http://www.kibrisgazetesi.com/printa.php?col=119&art=9711|accessdate=31 May 2011}}</ref><ref name=BRT>{{cite web |author=BRT|title=AVUSTURALYA’DA KIBRS TÜRKÜNÜN SESİ|url=http://www.brtk.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=31316:avusturalyada-kibrs-tuerkuenuen-ses&catid=1:kktc&Itemid=3|accessdate=18 July 2011}}</ref><ref name=StarK>{{cite web |author=Star Kıbrıs|title=Sözünüzü Tutun|url=http://www.starkibris.net/index.asp?haberID=125704|accessdate=10 September 2012}}</ref> and 150,000 to 200,000 mainland Turks<ref name=SMH>{{cite news |work=The Sydney Morning Herald|title=Old foes, new friends|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Old-foes-new-friends/2005/04/22/1114152326767.html |accessdate=26 December 2008|date=23 April 2005}}</ref><ref name=Milliyet>{{cite news |work=Milliyet|title=Avustralyalı Türkler'den, TRT Türk'e tepki|url=http://www.milliyet.com.tr/Dunya/SonDakika.aspx?aType=SonDakika&ArticleID=1094744&Date=14.05.2009&Kategori=dunya&b=Avustralyali%20Turklerden,%20TRT%20Turke%20tepki|accessdate=16 May 2012}}</ref> live in Australia. Furthermore, there has also been ethnic Turks who have migrated to Australia from [[Bulgaria]],<ref>{{cite web|author=Department of Immigration and Citizenship|year=2006|title=Community Information Summary:Bulgaria|url=http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/statistics/comm-summ/_pdf/bulgaria.pdf|publisher=Australian Government|page=2}}</ref> [[Greece]],<ref name=2006AustralianCensusEMP>{{cite web|author=Australian Bureau of Statistics|title=2006 Census Ethnic Media Package|url=http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/2914.0.55.0022006?OpenDocument|accessdate=13 July 2011}}</ref> [[Iraq]],<ref>{{cite web|author=Department of Immigration and Citizenship|year=2006|title=Community Information Summary:Iraq|url=http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/statistics/comm-summ/_pdf/iraq.pdf|publisher=Australian Government|page=1}}</ref> and the [[Republic of Macedonia]].<ref name=2006AustralianCensusEMP/> |
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====Former Soviet Union==== |
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The Turkish people traditionally lived in the [[Meskhetia]] region of [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]. However, due to the ordered deportation of over 115,000 [[Meskhetian Turks]] from their homeland in 1944, during the [[Second World War]], the majority settled in [[Central Asia]].<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20">{{Harvnb|UNHCR|1999b|loc=20}}.</ref> According to the [[1989 Soviet Census]], which was the last Soviet Census, 106,000 Meskhetian Turks lived in [[Uzbekistan]], 50,000 in [[Kazakhstan]], and 21,000 in [[Kyrgyzstan]].<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20"/> However, in 1989, the Meshetian Turks who had settled in Uzbekistan became the target of a [[pogrom]] in the [[Fergana valley]], which was the principal destination for Meskhetian Turkish deportees, after an uprising of nationalism by the [[Uzbeks]].<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20"/> The riots had left hundreds of Turks dead or injured and nearly 1,000 properties were destroyed; thus, thousands of Meskhetian Turks were forced into renewed [[exile]].<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20"/> The majority of Meskhetian Turks, about 70,000, went to [[Azerbaijan]], whilst the remainder went to various regions of [[Russia]] (especially [[Krasnodar Krai]]), Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine.<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20"/><ref name="UNHCR 1999 loc=21">{{Harvnb|UNHCR|1999b|loc=21}}.</ref> Soviet authorities recorded many Meskhetian Turks as belonging to other nationalities such as "[[Azerbaijani people|Azeri]]", "[[Kazakhs|Kazakh]]", "[[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]]", and "[[Uzbeks|Uzbek]]".<ref name="UNHCR 1999b loc=20" /><ref name="Aydıngün et al 2006 loc=1">{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=1}}</ref> Hence, official census's have not shown a true reflection of the Turkish population; for example, according to the 2009 Azerbaijani census, there were 38,000 Turks living in the country;<ref name="Azeri2009census">{{cite web |author=The State Statistical Committee of the Republic of Azerbaijan|title=Population by ethnic groups|url=http://www.azstat.org/statinfo/demoqraphic/en/AP_/1_5.xls|accessdate=16 January 2012}}</ref> yet in 1999, the [[United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees]] stated that there were 100,000 Meskhetian Turks living in the country.<ref name=autogenerated3>{{Harvnb|UNHCR|1999a|loc=14}}.</ref> Furthermore, in 2001, the Baku Institute of Peace and Democracy suggested that there was between 90,000 to 110,000 Meskhetian Turks living in Azerbaijan.<ref name=NATOPA /> |
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==Culture== |
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{{Further|Culture of Turkey|Turkey#Culture}} |
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===Arts and Architecture=== |
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[[File:Safranbolu traditional houses.jpg|thumb|left|[[Safranbolu]] was added to the list of [[World Heritage Site|UNESCO World Heritage Sites]] in 1994 due to its well-preserved Ottoman era houses and architecture.]] |
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{{Further|Turkish literature|Music of Turkey|Architecture of Turkey}} |
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{{See also|Ottoman architecture}} |
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{{listen |
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| filename = KatibimUskudaraGiderIken-SafiyeAyla.ogg |
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| title = " Kâtibim (Üsküdar'a Gider iken)" |
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| description = An example of Turkish classical music. |
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| format = [[Ogg]] |
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}} |
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Turkish architecture reached its peak during the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] period. [[Ottoman architecture]], influenced by [[Seljuq dynasty|Seljuk]], [[Byzantine]] and [[Islamic architecture]], came to develop a style all of its own.<ref name=muqarnas12>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/?id=RtbeBrAHhxgC&pg=PA60&lpg=PA60&dq=Ottoman+Architecture|title=Muqarnas: An Annual on Islamic Art and Architecture. Volume 12|last=Necipoğlu|first=Gülru|oclc=33228759|year=1995|publisher= Leiden : E.J. Brill|accessdate= 7 July 2008|page=60|isbn=9789004103146}}</ref> Overall, Ottoman architecture has been described as a synthesis of the architectural traditions of the Mediterranean and the Middle East.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/?id=Xu_L_FJRvUIC&pg=PA92&lpg=PA92&dq=Ottoman+Architecture |title= Muqarnas: An Annual on Islamic Art and Architecture. Volume 3|last=Grabar |first=Oleg |isbn= 9004076115| year=1985 |publisher= Leiden : E.J. Brill,|pages=|accessdate= 7 July 2008}}</ref> |
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As Turkey successfully transformed from the religion-based former Ottoman Empire into a modern nation-state with a very strong separation of state and religion, an increase in the modes of artistic expression followed. During the first years of the republic, the government invested a large amount of resources into fine arts; such as museums, theatres, opera houses and architecture. Diverse historical factors play important roles in defining the modern Turkish identity. Turkish culture is a product of efforts to be a "modern" Western state, while maintaining traditional religious and historical values.<ref name="TR_culture">{{cite book|author=Ibrahim Kaya|title=Social Theory and Later Modernities: The Turkish Experience|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Iy7pJBRgjYC&pg=PA57|accessdate=12 June 2013|year=2004|publisher=Liverpool University Press|isbn=978-0-85323-898-0|pages=57–58}}</ref> The mix of cultural influences is dramatized, for example, in the form of the "new symbols of the clash and interlacing of cultures" enacted in the works of [[Orhan Pamuk]], recipient of the 2006 [[Nobel Prize in Literature]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/6044192.stm|title=Pamuk wins Nobel Literature prize|publisher=BBC|accessdate=12 December 2006|date=12 October 2006}}</ref> |
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Traditional Turkish music include [[Arabesque (Turkish music)|Arabesk]], [[Turkish folk music]] (Halk Müziği), [[Fasıl]], and [[Ottoman classical music]] (sanat music) that originates from the Ottoman court.<ref name="DunfordRichardson2013">{{cite book|author1=Martin Dunford|author2=Terry Richardson|title=The Rough Guide to Turkey|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dPAPeby7JTgC&pg=PA647|accessdate=25 July 2013|date=3 June 2013|publisher=Rough Guides|isbn=978-1-4093-4005-8|pages=647–}}</ref> [[Turkish music#Popular music|Contemporary Turkish music]] include [[Turkish pop music]], rock, and [[Turkish hip hop]] genres.<ref name="DunfordRichardson2013"/> |
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===Language=== |
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{{Main|Turkish language}} |
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{{see also|Cypriot Turkish}} |
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[[File:Ataturk-September 20, 1928.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Mustafa Kemal Atatürk|Atatürk]] introducing the [[Turkish alphabet]] to the people of [[Kayseri]]. 20 September 1928. (Cover of the French ''L'Illustration'' magazine)]] |
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The Turkish language also known as Istanbul Turkish is a southern [[Oghuz languages|Oghuz]] branch of the [[Turkic languages]]. It is natively spoken by the Turkish people in [[Turkey]], [[Balkans]], the island of [[Cyprus]], [[Meskhetia]], and other areas of traditional settlement that formerly, in whole or part, belonged to the [[Ottoman Empire]]. Turkish is the [[official language]] of Turkey. In the Balkans, Turkish is still spoken by Turkish minorities who still live there, especially in [[Bulgaria]], [[Greece]] (mainly in [[Western Thrace]]), [[Kosovo]], the [[Republic of Macedonia]], and [[Romania]] (mainly in [[Gagauzia]]).<ref name="Johanson 2011 loc=734-738">{{Harvnb|Johanson|2011|loc=734–738}}.</ref> The Turkish language was introduced to [[Cyprus]] with the Ottoman conquest in 1571 and became the politically dominant, prestigious language, of the administration.<ref name="Johanson 2011 loc=738">{{Harvnb|Johanson|2011|loc=738}}.</ref> |
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One important change to Turkish literature was enacted in 1928, when Mustafa Kemal initiated the creation and dissemination of a [[Turkish alphabet|modified version]] of the [[Latin alphabet]] to replace the Arabic alphabet based Ottoman script. Over time, this change, together with changes in Turkey's system of education, would lead to more widespread [[literacy]] in the country.<ref>Lester 1997; Wolf-Gazo 1996</ref> Modern standard Turkish is based on the dialect of [[Istanbul]].<ref name="Campbell2003">{{cite book|author=George L. Campbell|title=Concise Compendium of the World's Languages|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A_BIVmjpzmYC&pg=PA547|accessdate=28 July 2013|date=1 September 2003|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-415-11392-2|pages=547–}}</ref> Nonetheless, dialectal variation persists, in spite of the [[Dialect levelling|levelling]] influence of the standard used in mass media and the [[Education in Turkey|Turkish education system]] since the 1930s.<ref name="Johanson 2001 loc=16">{{Harvnb|Johanson|2001|loc=16}}.</ref> The terms ''ağız'' or ''şive'' often refer to the different types of Turkish dialects. |
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There are three major Anatolian Turkish dialect groups spoken in [[Turkey]]: the West Anatolian dialect (roughly to the west of the [[Euphrates]]), the East Anatolian dialect (to the east of the Euphrates), and the North East Anatolian group, which comprises the dialects of the Eastern Black Sea coast, such as [[Trabzon]], [[Rize]], and the littoral districts of [[Artvin]].<ref name="Brendemoen 2002 loc=27">{{Harvnb|Brendemoen|2002|loc=27}}.</ref><ref name="Brendemoen 2006 loc=227">{{Harvnb|Brendemoen|2006|loc=227}}.</ref> The Balkan Turkish dialects are considerably closer to standard Turkish and do not differ significantly from it, despite some contact phenomena, especially in the lexicon.<ref name="Friedman 2003 loc=51">{{Harvnb|Friedman|2003|loc=51}}.</ref> In the post-Ottoman period, Cypriot Turkish was relatively isolated from standard Turkish and had strong influences by the [[Cypriot Greek]] dialect. The condition of coexistence with the [[Greek Cypriots]] led to a certain bilingualism whereby [[Turkish Cypriots]] knowledge of [[Greek language|Greek]] was important in areas where the two communities lived and worked together.<ref name="Johanson 2011 loc=739">{{Harvnb|Johanson|2011|loc=739}}.</ref> The linguistic situation changed radically in 1974, when the island was divided into a Greek south and a Turkish north ([[Northern Cyprus]]). Today, the Cypriot Turkish dialect is being exposed to increasing standard Turkish through immigration from [[Turkey]], new mass media, and new educational institutions.<ref name="Johanson 2011 loc=738"/> The [[Meskhetian Turks]] speak an [[Eastern Anatolia Region|Eastern Anatolian]] dialect of [[Turkish language|Turkish]], which hails from the regions of [[Kars Province|Kars]], [[Ardahan]], and [[Artvin]].<ref name="Aydıngün 2006 loc=23">{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=23}}</ref> The Meskhetian Turkish dialect has also borrowed from other languages (including [[Azerbaijani language|Azerbaijani]], [[Georgian language|Georgian]], [[Kazakh language|Kazakh]], [[Kyrgyz language|Kyrgyz]], [[Russian language|Russian]], and [[Uzbek language|Uzbek]]), which the Meskhetian Turks have been in contact with during the [[Russian Empire|Russian]] and [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] rule.<ref name="Aydıngün 2006 loc=23"/> |
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===Religion=== |
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{{see also|Religion in Turkey|Secularism in Turkey|}} |
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{{Pie chart |
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| thumb = right |
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| caption = Religion in Turkey (2012) <ref name="abs">{{cite web|url = https://joshuaproject.net/countries/TU |title = Turkey |date = | publisher = Joshua Project| accessdate = 2015-04-04}}</ref> |
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| label1 = Islam |
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| value1 = 96.5 |
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| color1 = Green |
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| label2 = Christianity |
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| value2 = 0.3 |
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| color2 = Blue |
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| label3 = other/none |
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| value3 = 3.2 |
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| color3 = yellow |
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}} |
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[[File:Sultan Ahmed Mosque Istanbul Turkey retouched.jpg|thumb|The [[Sultan Ahmed Mosque]] is an example of the most common form of a Turkish [[mosque]] with a central dome and cascading semi-and quarter-domes and minarets.]] |
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According to the CIA factbook, 99.8% of the population in Turkey is [[Islam|Muslim]], most of them being [[Sunni]]. The remaining 0.2% is mostly Christian and Jewish.<ref name="ciawfb">{{cite web |url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tu.html |title=CIA World Factbook|date=March 2011|accessdate=3 March 2011 |publisher=[[CIA]]}}</ref> There are also some estimated 10 to 15 million [[Alevi]] Muslims in Turkey.<ref name=Shankland>{{cite book|title=The Alevis in Turkey: The Emergence of a Secular Islamic Tradition|first=David|last=Shankland|publisher=Routledge (UK)|location=|year=2003|isbn=0-7007-1606-8|url=https://books.google.com/?id=lFFRzTqLp6AC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&dq=Religion+in+Turkey }}</ref> [[Christianity in Turkey|Christians in Turkey]] include [[Assyrians in Turkey|Assyrians/Syriacs]],<ref name="OmtzigtTozman2012">{{cite book|author1=Pieter H. Omtzigt|author2=Markus K. Tozman|author3=Andrea Tyndall|title=The Slow Disappearance of the Syriacs from Turkey: And of the Grounds of the Mor Gabriel Monastery|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=no5_QSBVq7kC&pg=PA99|year=2012|publisher=LIT Verlag Münster|isbn=978-3-643-90268-9}}</ref> [[Armenians in Turkey|Armenians]], and [[Greeks in Turkey|Greeks]].<ref name=USDoS>[http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2008/108476.htm Religious Freedom Report] U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 15 September 2009.</ref> Jewish people in Turkey include those that descend from [[Sephardic Jews]] who escaped Spain in 15th century and Greek-speaking Jews from Byzantine times.<ref name="BaskinSeeskin2010">{{cite book|author1=Judith R. Baskin|author2=Kenneth Seeskin|title=The Cambridge Guide to Jewish History, Religion, and Culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QNYdng4YpNgC&pg=PA145|year=2010|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-86960-7|pages=145–}}</ref> There is an ethnic [[Protestantism in Turkey|Turkish Protestant Christian community]] most of them came from recent Muslim Turkish backgrounds, rather than from ethnic minorities.<ref name="hurriyetdailynews.com"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.christiancentury.org/article/2011-03/turkish-protestants-still-face-long-path-religious-freedom|title=Turkish Protestants still face "long path" to religious freedom - The Christian Century|work=The Christian Century|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6gajAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA93&lpg=PA93&dq=turkish+protestant+muslim&source=bl&ots=KBWhLn8NnO&sig=jxZwxoarOEH_qIIU3l5f4XPuB_o&hl=it&sa=X&ei=Usg6VMqDMpPwaLnHgmA&ved=0CGoQ6AEwCTgK#v=onepage&q=turkish%20protestant%20muslim&f=false|title=Muslim Nationalism and the New Turks|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://churchinchains.ie/node/743|title=TURKEY: Protestant church closed down - Church In Chains - Ireland :: An Irish voice for suffering, persecuted Christians Worldwide|publisher=|accessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref> |
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According to KONDA research, only 9.7% of the population described themselves as "fully devout," while 52.8% described themselves as "religious."<ref name=autogenerated5>{{cite journal |last1=KONDA |year=2007 |title=Religion, Secularism and the Veil in Daily Life Survey |publisher=Konda Arastirma |accessdate=24 May 2013|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325005232/http://www.konda.com.tr/html/dosyalar/ghdl&t_en.pdf|archivedate=25 March 2009|url=http://www.konda.com.tr/html/dosyalar/ghdl&t_en.pdf}}</ref> 69.4% of the respondents reported that they or their wives cover their heads (1.3% reporting [[chador]]), although this rate decreases in several demographics: 53% in ages 18–28, 27.5% in university graduates, 16.1% in masters-or-higher-degree holders.<ref name="KONDA"/> Turkey has also been a [[secular]] state since [[Ataturk]].<ref name="KuruStepan2012">{{cite book|author1=Ahmet T. Kuru|author2=Alfred C. Stepan|title=Democracy, Islam, and secularism in Turkey|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=di6YdRMZMO0C|year=2012|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-53025-5}}</ref> According to a poll, 90% of respondents said the country should be defined as secular in the new Constitution that is being written.<ref>{{cite news |title=More secular, green Turkey wanted: Poll |url=http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/more-secular-green-turkey-wanted-poll.aspx?pageID=238&nid=35272 |newspaper=Hürriyet Daily News |date=23 November 2012 |accessdate=22 May 2013}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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{{Portal|Turkey}} |
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* [[List of Turkish people]] |
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*[[The Ottomans: Europe's Muslim Emperors]] |
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==References and notes== |
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{{refbegin|30em}} |
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{{Cnote|a|According to the [[Home Affairs Committee]] this includes 300,000 [[Turkish Cypriots]].<ref name="Home Affairs Committee 2011 loc=Ev 34">{{Harvard citation no brackets|Home Affairs Committee|2011|loc=Ev 34}}</ref> However, some estimates suggest that the Turkish Cypriot community in the UK has reached between 350,000<ref>{{cite web|title=İngiltere'deki Türkler|url=http://www.hurriyet.de/haberler/yazarlar/999787/ingilteredeki-turkler|first=Armin |
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| last = Laschet|work=Hürriyet Daily News|date=17 September 2011|accessdate=27 September 2011|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/625O54TbO|archivedate=30 September 2011|deadurl=no}}</ref> to 400,000.<ref name=StarKibris>{{cite web|title=Olmalı mı Olmamalı mı?|url=http://www.starkibris.net/index.asp?haberID=51233|first=Gözde|last=Akben|work=Star Kıbrıs|date=11 February 2010|accessdate=21 January 2011|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5xuiYiFpY|archivedate =13 April 2011|deadurl=no}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Dıştaki gençlerin askerlik sorunu çözülmedikçe…|url=http://www.kibrisgazetesi.com/index.php/cat/1/col/119/art/17680/PageName/Ana_sayfa|first=Akay|last=Cemal|work=Kıbrıs Gazetesi|date=2 June 2011|accessdate=17 June 2011|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/60cAVudfH|archivedate=1 August 2011|deadurl=no}}</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|b|Includes people of mixed ethnic background.}} |
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{{Cnote|c|A further 10,000–30,000 people from Bulgaria live in the Netherlands. The majority are [[Turks in Bulgaria|Bulgarian Turks]] and are the fastest-growing group of immigrants in the Netherlands.<ref>{{Cite web|author=The Sophia Echo|title=Turkish Bulgarians fastest-growing group of immigrants in The Netherlands|url=http://www.sofiaecho.com/2009/07/21/758628_turkish-bulgarians-fastest-growing-group-of-immigrants-in-the-netherlands|accessdate=26 July 2009}}</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|d|This includes Turkish settlers. 2,000 of these [[Turkish Cypriots]] currently reside in the southern part of the island, the rest on the northern.<ref name="Hatay 2007 loc=40">{{Harvnb|Hatay|2007|loc=40}}.</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|e|This figure '''only''' includes Turkish '''citizens'''. Therefore, this also includes [[Demographics of Turkey|ethnic minorities from Turkey]]; however, it does '''not''' include ethnic Turks who have either been born and/or have become naturalised citizens. Furthermore, these figures do '''not''' include ethnic [[Turkish minorities]] from Bulgaria, Cyprus, Georgia, Greece, Iraq, Kosovo, Macedonia, Romania or any other traditional area of Turkish settlement because they are registered as citizens from the country they have immigrated from rather than their ethnic Turkish identity.}} |
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{{Cnote|f|In addition to Turkish citizens, this figure includes people with ancestral background related to Turkey, so it includes ethnic minorities of Turkey.}} |
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{{Cnote|g|This figure only includes [[Turks of Western Thrace]]. A further 5,000 live in the [[Rhodes]] and [[Kos]].<ref name="Clogg 2002 loc=84">{{Harvnb|Clogg|2002|loc=84}}.</ref> In addition to this, 8,297 '''immigrants''' live in Greece.<ref>{{Cite web|author=MigrantsInGreece |title=Data on immigrants in Greece, from Census 2001, Legalization applications 1998, and valid Residence Permits, 2004 |url=http://www.migrantsingreece.org/transpartner/Tables.pdf |accessdate=26 March 2009 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/20090325222928/http://www.migrantsingreece.org/transpartner/Tables.pdf |archivedate=25 March 2009 }}</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|h|These figures '''only''' include the [[Meskhetian Turks]]. According to official [[census]]'s there were 38,000 Turks in [[Azerbaijan]] (2009),<ref name="Azeri2009census" /> 97,015 in [[Kazakhstan]] (2009),<ref name=Kazakh2009census>{{cite web |author=Агентство РК по статистике|title=ПЕРЕПИСЬ НАСЕЛЕНИЯ РЕСПУБЛИКИ КАЗАХСТАН 2009 ГОДА|url=http://www.stat.kz/p_perepis/Documents/Перепись%20рус.pdf|page=10|accessdate=13 February 2011}}</ref> 39,133 in [[Kyrgyzstan]] (2009),<ref name="Kyrgyzcensus2009">{{cite web|author=National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic|title=Population and Housing Census 2009|url=http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sources/census/2010_phc/Kyrgyzstan/A5-2PopulationAndHousingCensusOfTheKyrgyzRepublicOf2009.pdf|accessdate=26 March 2013}}</ref> 109,883 in [[Russia]] (2010),<ref name=Russian2010census>{{cite web |author=Демоскоп Weekly|title=Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 г. Национальный состав населения Российской Федерации|url=http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_nac_10.php|accessdate=30 January 2012}}</ref> and 9,180 in Ukraine (2001).<ref>[http://2001.ukrcensus.gov.ua/results/nationality_population/nationality_popul1/select_5/?botton=cens_db&box=5.1W&k_t=00&p=100&rz=1_1&rz_b=2_1%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20&n_page=5 State statistics committee of Ukraine – National composition of population, 2001 census] (Ukrainian)</ref> A further 106,302 Turks were recorded in [[Uzbekistan]]'s last census in 1989<ref>{{cite web |author=Демоскоп Weekly|title=Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года. Национальный состав населения по республикам СССР|url=http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/sng_nac_89.php?reg=4|accessdate=5 June 2011}}</ref> although the majority left for Azerbaijan and Russia during the 1989 pogroms in the [[Ferghana Valley]]. Official data regarding the [[Turks in the former Soviet Union]] is unlikely to provide a true indication of their population as many have been registered as "Azeri", "Kazakh", "Kyrgyz", and "Uzbek".<ref name=autogenerated6>{{Harvnb|Aydıngün|Harding|Hoover|Kuznetsov|2006|loc=1}}.</ref> In [[Kazakhstan]] only a third of them were recorded as Turks, the rest had been arbitrarily declared members of other ethnic groups.<ref>{{Harvnb|Khazanov|1995|loc=202}}.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Babak|Vaisman|Wasserman|2004|loc=253}}.</ref> Similarly, in Azerbaijan, much of the community is officially registered as "Azerbaijani"<ref>{{cite news|title=Meskhetian Turks: Solutions and Human Security|chapter=Chapter Two: Contemporary Conditions and Dilemmas|url=http://www.osi.hu/fmp/html/mesktwo.html|first=Arthur C.|last=Helton|work=Open Society Institute|year=1998|accessdate=17 January 2012}}</ref> even though the [[United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees]] reported, in 1999, that 100,000 Meskhetian Turks were living there.<ref name="UNHCR 1999 loc=14" />}} |
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{{Cnote|i|A further 30,000 [[Bulgarian Turks]] live in Sweden.<ref name="Laczko et al 2002 loc=187">{{Harvnb|Laczko|Stacher|von Koppenfels|2002|loc=187}}.</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|j|"The history of Turkey encompasses, first, the history of Anatolia before the coming of the Turks and of the civilizations—Hittite, Thracian, Hellenistic, and Byzantine—of which the Turkish nation is the heir by assimilation or example. Second, it includes the history of the Turkish peoples, including the Seljuks, who brought Islam and the Turkish language to Anatolia. Third, it is the history of the Ottoman Empire, a vast, cosmopolitan, pan-Islamic state that developed from a small Turkish amirate in Anatolia and that for centuries was a world power."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/turkey/2.htm |title=Turkey: Country Studies |author=Steven A. Glazer |publisher=Federal Research Division, Library of Congress |date=2011-03-22 |accessdate=2013-06-15}}</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|k|The Turks are also defined by the country of origin. Turkey, once Asia Minor or Anatolia, has a very long and complex history. It was one of the major regions of agricultural development in the early Neolithic and may have been the place of origin and spread of lndo-European languages at that time. The Turkish language was imposed on a predominantly lndo-European-speaking population (Greek being the official language of the Byzantine empire), and genetically there is very little difference between Turkey and the neighboring countries. The number of Turkish invaders was probably rather small and was genetically diluted by the large number of aborigines."<br /> |
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"The consideration of demographic quantities suggests that the present genetic picture of the aboriginal world is determined largely by the history of Paleolithic and Neolithic people, when the greatest relative changes in population numbers took place."<ref name="Cavalli-SforzaMenozzi1994">{{cite book|author1=L. Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza|author2=Paolo, Menozzi|author3=Alberto, Piazza|title=The history and geography of human genes|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FrwNcwKaUKoC&pg=PA102|accessdate=14 May 2013|year=1994|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-08750-4|pages=243, 299}}</ref>}} |
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{{Cnote|l|Iraqi Turkmen groups claim a figure of 3,000,000}} |
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{{refend}} |
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{{Reflist|20em}} |
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==Bibliography== |
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{{refbegin|30em}} |
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* {{citation |last=Abadan-Unat|first=Nermin|year=2011|title=Turks in Europe: From Guest Worker to Transnational Citizen|publisher=Berghahn Books|isbn=1-84545-425-1}}. |
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* {{citation |last=Abazov|first=Rafis|year=2009|title=Culture and Customs of Turkey|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=0313342156}}. |
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* {{citation|last=Akar|first=Metin|year=1993|title=Fas Arapçasında Osmanlı Türkçesinden Alınmış Kelimeler|journal=Türklük Araştırmaları Dergisi|publisher=|volume=7|issue=|pages=91–110}} |
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* {{citation |last=Taylor|first=Scott|year=2004|title=Among the Others: Encounters with the Forgotten Turkmen of Iraq|publisher=Esprit de Corps Books|isbn=1-895896-26-6}}. |
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* {{citation |last1=Stokes|first1=Jamie|last2=Gorman|first2=Anthony|year=2010|chapter=Turks: nationality|title=Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=143812676X}}. |
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* {{citation |last=Tomlinson|first=Kathryn|year=2005|chapter=Living Yesterday in Today and Tomorrow: Meskhetian Turks in Southern Russia|title=Writing History, Constructing Religion|editor1-last=Crossley|editor1-first=James G.|editor2-last=Karner|editor2-first=Christian (eds.)|publisher=Ashgate Publishing|isbn=0-7546-5183-5}}. |
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* {{citation |last=Turkish Embassy in Algeria|year=2008|url=http://www.musavirlikler.gov.tr/altdetay.cfm?AltAlanID=368&dil=TR&ulke=DZ|title=Cezayir Ülke Raporu 2008|publisher=Ministry of Foreign Affairs }}. |
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* Wolf-Gazo, Ernest. (1996) [http://www.ake.hacettepe.edu.tr/Install/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=282&Itemid=74 "John Dewey in Turkey: An Educational Mission"]. Retrieved 6 March 2006. |
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{{refend}} |
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==External links== |
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* {{commons category-inline|Turkish people}} |
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{{Demographics of Turkey}} |
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{{European Muslims}} |
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{{Turkish people by country}} |
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{{Turkic peoples}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Turkish People}} |
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in Europe]] |
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in the Middle East]] |
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in Asia]] |
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[[Category:Ethnic Turkish people|Ethnic Turkish people]] |
Revision as of 00:10, 14 March 2016
Total population | |
---|---|
c. 63–69 million[a] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Turkey 55,589,988–59,560,701 (2008 est. of 2015 pop.)[1] Northern Cyprus 280,000 [d][2][3] Top Immigrant and Expat Destinations | |
Germany | 2,714,000–2,800,000 (including Turkish Kurds)[f][b][4][5][6][7] |
France | 500,000[8] |
United Kingdom | 500,000[a][9][10][11] |
Netherlands | 396,414[e]–500,000[c][12][13][14][15] |
Austria | 350,000–500,000[16][17] |
Belgium | 200,000[18][19][20] |
United States | 196,222–500,000 [b][21][22][23][24] |
Sweden | 100,000–150,000[25][26] |
Switzerland | 70,440 [e][27] |
Australia | 66,919–150,000 [b][28][29][30][31] |
Denmark | 28,892 [f][b][32] |
Canada | 24,910 [b][33] |
Italy | 22,580 [e][34] |
Israel | 22,000[35] Minority or Immigrant and Expat Communities in the Middle East |
Iraq | 500,000–600,000[36][37][l] |
Syria | 100,000[38] |
Saudi Arabia | 150,000–200,000 [b][39][40] |
Jordan | 60,000[39] |
Lebanon | 50,000–80,000[41][42] |
Libya | 50,000 [b][39] Minorities in the Balkans |
Bulgaria | 588,318–800,000[43][44][45] |
Macedonia | 77,959[46][47][48][49] |
Greece | 49,000 (official estimate)–80,000 [g][50][51] |
Romania | 27,700[52][53][54] |
Kosovo | 18,738[55] Minorities in the former USSR states |
Russia | 109,883–150,000[56][57] |
Kazakhstan | 104,792–150,000 [h][58][59] |
Kyrgyzstan | 40,953–50,000 [h][60][59][61] |
Azerbaijan | 38,000–110,000 [h][62][59][63][64] |
Uzbekistan | 15,000–20,000[65][66][67] |
Ukraine | 8,844[68] |
Languages | |
Turkish | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Sunni Islam[69][70][71][72] (nondenominational · Alevi · Bektashi · Twelver Shia · Ja'fari · ) Minority irreligious[69][73] Christianity[74][75][76] | |
Related ethnic groups | |
other Turkic peoples, Caucasian peoples, Hungarians, British peoples, Jews | |
a. ^ The total figure is merely an estimation; sum of all the referenced populations. |
Turkish people (Turkish: Türk milleti), or the Turks (Turkish: Türkler), also known as Anatolian Turks (Turkish: Anadolu Türkleri) are a Turkic ethnic group living mainly in Turkey and they speak Turkish, a Turkic language. They are the largest ethnic group in Turkey, as well as the largest ethnic group among the speakers of Turkic languages. Ethnic Turkish minorities exist in the former lands of the Ottoman Empire. In addition, a Turkish diaspora has been established with modern migration, particularly in Western Europe.
Etymology and ethnic identity
Part of a series of articles on |
Turkish people |
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The ethnonym "Turk" may be first discerned in Herodotus' (c. 484–425 BCE) reference to Targitas, first king of the Scythians;[77] furthermore, during the first century CE., Pomponius Mela refers to the "Turcae" in the forests north of the Sea of Azov, and Pliny the Elder lists the "Tyrcae" among the people of the same area.[77] The first definite references to the "Turks" come mainly from Chinese sources in the sixth century. In these sources, "Turk" appears as "Tujue" (Chinese: 突厥; Wade–Giles: T’u-chüe), which referred to the Göktürks.[78][79] Although "Turk" refers to Turkish people, it may also sometimes refer to the wider language group of Turkic peoples. They are closely related to Azerbaijani people, also known as "Azerbaijani Turks", who live primarily in Azerbaijan Republic and Iran. Azeri Turkish and Istanbul Turkish are mutually intelligible.[80]
In the 19th century, the word Türk only referred to Anatolian villagers. The Ottoman ruling class identified themselves as Ottoman Turk, not usually as Turks.[81] In the late 19th century, as the Ottoman upper classes adopted European ideas of nationalism the term Türk took on a much more positive connotation.[82] The Turkish-speakers of Anatolia were the most loyal supporters of Ottoman rule.
During Ottoman times, the millet system defined communities on a religious basis, and a residue of this remains in that Turkish villagers commonly consider as Turks only those who profess the Sunni faith. Turkish Jews, Christians, or even Alevis to may be considered non-Turks.[83] On the other hand, Kurdish or Arab followers of the Sunni branch of Islam who live in eastern Anatolia are sometimes considered Turks.[84] Article 66 of the Turkish Constitution defines a "Turk" as anyone who is "bound to the Turkish state through the bond of citizenship."[85]
History
Prehistory, Ancient era and Early Middle Ages
Anatolia was first inhabited by hunter-gatherers during the Paleolithic era, and in antiquity was inhabited by various ancient Anatolian peoples.[86][j] After Alexander the Great's conquest in 334 BC, the area was Hellenized, and by the first century BC it is generally thought that the native Anatolian languages, themselves earlier newcomers to the area a result of the Indo-European migrations, became extinct.[87][88][89]
In Central Asia, the earliest surviving Turkic-language texts, the eighth-century Orkhon inscriptions, were erected by the Göktürks in the sixth century CE, and include words not common to Turkic but found in unrelated Inner Asian languages.[90] Although the ancient Turks were nomadic, they traded wool, leather, carpets, and horses for wood, silk, vegetables and grain, as well as having large ironworking stations in the south of the Altai Mountains during the 600s CE. Most of the Turkic peoples were followers of Tengriism, sharing the cult of the sky god Tengri, although there were also adherents of Manichaeism, Nestorian Christianity and Buddhism.[91][77] However, during the Muslim conquests, the Turks entered the Muslim world proper as servants, during the booty of Arab raids and conquests.[77] The Turks began converting to Islam after Muslim conquest of Transoxiana through the efforts of missionaries, Sufis, and merchants. Although initiated by the Arabs, the conversion of the Turks to Islam was filtered through Persian and Central Asian culture. Under the Umayyads, most were domestic servants, whilst under the Abbasids, increasing numbers were trained as soldiers.[77] By the ninth century, Turkish commanders were leading the caliphs’ Turkish troops into battle. As the Abbasid caliphate declined, Turkish officers assumed more military and political power taking over or establishing provincial dynasties with their own corps of Turkish troops.[77]
Seljuk era
During the 11th century the Seljuk Turks grew in number and were able to occupy the eastern province of the Abbasid Empire. By 1055, the Seljuk Empire captured Baghdad and began to make their first incursions into the edges of Anatolia.[92] When the Seljuk Turks won the Battle of Manzikert against the Byzantine Empire in 1071, it opened the gates of Anatolia to them.[93] Although ethnically Turkish, the Seljuk Turks appreciated and became the purveyors of the Persian culture rather than the Turkish culture.[94][95] Nonetheless, the Turkish language and Islam were introduced and gradually spread over the region and the slow transition from a predominantly Christian and Greek-speaking Anatolia to a predominantly Muslim and Turkish-speaking one was underway.[93]
In dire straits, the Byzantine Empire turned to the West for help setting in motion the pleas that led to the First Crusade.[96] Once the Crusaders took Iznik, the Seljuk Turks established the Sultanate of Rum from their new capital, Konya, in 1097.[93] By the 12th century the Europeans had begun to call the Anatolian region "Turchia" or "Turkey", meaning "the land of the Turks".[97] The Turkish society of Anatolia was divided into urban, rural and nomadic populations;[98] the other Turkoman tribes who had also swept into Anatolia at the same time as the Seljuk Turks were those who kept their nomadic ways.[93] These tribes were more numerous than the Seljuk Turks, and rejecting the sedentary lifestyle, adhered to an Islam impregnated with animism and shamanism from their central Asian steppeland origins, which then mixed with new Christian influences. From this popular and syncretist Islam, with its mystical and revolutionary aspects, sects such as the Alevis and Bektashis emerged.[93] Furthermore, the intermarriage between the Turks and local inhabitants, as well as the conversion of many to Islam, also increased the Turkish-speaking Muslim population in Anatolia.[93][99]
By 1243, at the Battle of Köse Dağ, the Mongols defeated the Seljuk Turks and became the new rulers of Anatolia, and in 1256, the second Mongol invasion of Anatolia caused widespread destruction. Particularly after 1277, political stability within the Seljuk territories rapidly disintegrated, leading to the strengthening of Turkoman principalities in the western and southern parts of Anatolia called the "beyliks".[100]
Beyliks era
Once the Seljuk Turks were defeated by the Mongol's conquest of Anatolia, the Turks became the vassal of the Ilkhans who established their own empire in the vast area stretching from present-day Afghanistan to present-day Turkey.[101] As the Mongols occupied more lands in Asia Minor, the Turks moved further to western Anatolia and settled in the Seljuk-Byzantine frontier.[101] By the last decades of the 13th century, the Ilkhans and their Seljuk vassals lost control over much of Anatolia to these Turkoman peoples.[101] A number of Turkish lords managed to establish themselves as rulers of various principalities, known as "Beyliks" or emirates. Amongst these beyliks, along the Aegean coast, from north to south, stretched the beyliks of Karasi, Saruhan, Aydin, Menteşe and Teke. Inland from Teke was Hamid and east of Karasi was the beylik of Germiyan.
To the north-west of Anatolia, around Söğüt, was the small and, at this stage, insignificant, Ottoman beylik. It was hemmed in to the east by other more substantial powers like Karaman on Iconium, which ruled from the Kızılırmak River to the Mediterranean. Although the Ottomans were only a small principality among the numerous Turkish beyliks, and thus posed the smallest threat to the Byzantine authority, their location in north-western Anatolia, in the former Byzantine province of Bithynia, became a fortunate position for their future conquests. The Latins, who had conquered the city of Constantinople in 1204 during the Fourth Crusade, established a Latin Empire (1204–61), divided the former Byzantine territories in the Balkans and the Aegean among themselves, and forced the Byzantine Emperors into exile at Nicaea (present-day Iznik). From 1261 onwards, the Byzantines were largely preoccupied with regaining their control in the Balkans.[101] Toward the end of the 13th century, as Mongol power began to decline, the Turcoman chiefs assumed greater independence.[102]
Ottoman Empire
Under its founder, Osman I, the nomadic Ottoman beylik expanded along the Sakarya River and westward towards the Sea of Marmara. Thus, the population of western Asia Minor had largely become Turkish-speaking and Muslim in religion.[101] It was under his son, Orhan I, who had attacked and conquered the important urban center of Bursa in 1326, proclaiming it as the Ottoman capital, that the Ottoman Empire developed considerably. In 1354, the Ottomans crossed into Europe and established a foothold on the Gallipoli Peninsula while at the same time pushing east and taking Ankara.[103][104] Many Turks from Anatolia began to settle in the region abandoned by the inhabitants who had fled Thrace before the Ottoman invasion.[105] However, the Byzantines were not the only ones to suffer from the Ottoman advancement for, in the mid-1330s, Orhan annexed the Turkish beylik of Karasi. This advancement was maintained by Murad I who more than tripled the territories under his direct rule, reaching some 100,000 square miles, evenly distributed in Europe and Asia Minor.[106] Gains in Anatolia were matched by those in Europe; once the Ottoman forces took Edirne (Adrianople), which became the capital of the Ottoman Empire in 1365, they opened their way into Bulgaria and Macedonia in 1371 at the Battle of Maritsa.[107] With the conquests of Thrace, Macedonia, and Bulgaria, significant numbers of Turkish emigrants settled in these regions.[105] This form of Ottoman-Turkish colonization became a very effective method to consolidate their position and power in the Balkans. The settlers consisted of soldiers, nomads, farmers, artisans and merchants, dervishes, preachers and other religious functionaries, and administrative personnel.[108]
In 1453, Ottoman armies, under Sultan Mehmed II, conquered Constantinople.[106] Mehmed reconstructed and repopulated the city, and made it the new Ottoman capital.[109] After the Fall of Constantinople, the Ottoman Empire entered a long period of conquest and expansion with its borders eventually going deep into Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa.[110] Selim I dramatically expanded the empire’s eastern and southern frontiers in the Battle of Chaldiran and gained recognition as the guardian of the holy cities of Mecca and Medina.[111] His successor, Suleiman the Magnificent, further expanded the conquests after capturing Belgrade in 1521 and using its territorial base to conquer Hungary, and other Central European territories, after his victory in the Battle of Mohács as well as also pushing the frontiers of the empire to the east.[112] Following Suleiman's death, Ottoman victories continued, albeit less frequently than before. The island of Cyprus was conquered, in 1571, bolstering Ottoman dominance over the sea routes of the eastern Mediterranean.[113] However, after its defeat at the Battle of Vienna, in 1683, the Ottoman army was met by ambushes and further defeats; the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz, which granted Austria the provinces of Hungary and Transylvania, marked the first time in history that the Ottoman Empire actually relinquished territory.[114]
By the 19th century, the empire began to decline when ethno-nationalist uprisings occurred across the empire. Thus, the last quarter of the 19th and the early part of the 20th century saw some 7–9 million Muslim refugees (Turks and some Circassians, Bosnians, Georgians, etc.) from the lost territories of the Caucasus, Crimea, Balkans, and the Mediterranean islands migrate to Anatolia and Eastern Thrace.[115] By 1913, the government of the Committee of Union and Progress started a program of forcible Turkification of non-Turkish minorities.[116][117] By 1914, the World War I broke out, and the Turks scored some success in Gallipoli during the Battle of the Dardanelles in 1915. During World War I, the government of the Committee of Union and Progress continued with its Turkification policies, which effected non-Turkish minorities, such as the Armenians during the Armenian Genocide and the Greeks during various campaigns of ethnic cleansing and expulsion.[118][119][120][121][122] In 1918, the Ottoman Government agreed to the Mudros Armistice with the Allies.
The Treaty of Sèvres —signed in 1920 by the government of Mehmet VI— dismantled the Ottoman Empire. The Turks, under Mustafa Kemal, rejected the treaty and fought the Turkish War of Independence, resulting in the abortion of that text, never ratified,[123] and the abolition of the Sultanate. Thus, the 623-year-old Ottoman Empire ended.[124]
Modern era
Once Mustafa Kemal Atatürk led the Turkish War of Independence against the Allied forces that occupied the former Ottoman Empire, he united the Turkish Muslim majority and successfully led them from 1919 to 1922 in overthrowing the occupying forces out of what the Turkish National Movement considered the Turkish homeland.[125] The Turkish identity became the unifying force when, in 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne was signed and the newly founded Republic of Turkey was formally established. Atatürk's presidency was marked by a series of radical political and social reforms that transformed Turkey into a secular, modern republic with civil and political equality for sectarian minorities and women.[126]
Throughout the 1920s and the 1930s, Turks, as well as other Muslims, from the Balkans, the Black Sea, the Aegean islands, the island of Cyprus, the Sanjak of Alexandretta (Hatay), the Middle East, and the Soviet Union continued to arrive in Turkey, most of whom settled in urban north-western Anatolia.[127][128] The bulk of these immigrants, known as "Muhacirs", were the Balkan Turks who faced harassment and discrimination in their homelands.[127] However, there were still remnants of a Turkish population in many of these countries because the Turkish government wanted to preserve these communities so that the Turkish character of these neighbouring territories could be maintained.[129] One of the last stages of ethnic Turks immigrating to Turkey was between 1940 and 1990 when about 700,000 Turks arrived from Bulgaria. Today, between a third and a quarter of Turkey's population are the descendants of these immigrants.[128]
Genetics
The extent to which gene flow from Central Asia has contributed to the current gene pool of the Turkish people, and the role of the 11th century invasion by Turkic peoples, has been the subject of various studies. Several studies have concluded that the historical and indigenous Anatolian groups are the primary source of the present-day Turkish population.[130][k][131][132][133][134] This is unsurprising, as the Turkish people are a collection of assimilated peoples who were formed from their adoption of Islam and the Turkish language, with even the Turkish state considering all those who have citizenship there to be Turkish. Furthermore, various studies suggested that, although the early Turkic invaders carried out an invasion with cultural significance, including the introduction of the Old Anatolian Turkish language (the predecessor to modern Turkish) and Islam, the genetic contribution from Central Asia may have been very small.[k][131][135] According to American Journal of Physical Anthropology (2008) Today's Turkish people are more closely related with the Balkan populations than to the Central Asian populations,[136][137] and a study looking into allele frequencies suggested that there was a lack of genetic relationship between the Mongols and the Turks, despite the historical relationship of their languages (The Turks and Germans were equally distant to all three Mongolian populations).[138] Multiple studies suggested an elite cultural dominance-driven linguistic replacement model to explain the adoption of Turkish language by Anatolian indigenous inhabitants.[130][k][134] A study involving mitochondrial analysis of a Byzantine-era population, whose samples were gathered from excavations in the archaeological site of Sagalassos, found that the samples had close genetic affinity with modern Turkish and Balkan populations.[139] During their research on leukemia, a group of Armenian scientists observed high genetic matching between Turks, Kurds, and Armenians.[140] Another studies found the Peoples of the Caucasus (Georgians, Circassians, Armenians) are closest to the Turkish population among sampled European (French, Italian), Middle Eastern (Druze, Palestinian), and Central (Kyrgyz, Hazara, Uygur), South (Pakistani), and East Asian (Mongolian, Han) populations.[141][142][143][144][145][146]
Y-DNA haplogroup distributions in Turkish people
According to Cinnioglu et al., (2004)[147] there are many Y-DNA haplogroups present in Turkey. The majority haplogroups are shared with their "West Asian" and "Caucasian' neighbours. By contrast, "Central Asian" haplogroups are rarer, N and Q)- 5.7% (but it rises to 36% if K, R1a, R1b and L- which infrequently occur in Central Asia, but are notable in many other Western Turkic groups), India H, R2 – 1.5% and Africa A, E3*, E3a – 1%.
Some of the percentages identified were:[132]
- J2=24% – J2 (M172)[132] Typical of west Mediterranean populations
- R1b=14.7%[132] Widespread in western Eurasia, with distinct 'west Asian' and 'west European' lineages.
- G=10.9%[132] – Typical of people from the Caucasus and to a lesser extent the Middle East, southern parts of Central Asia, and Europe.
- E3b-M35=10.7%[132] (E3b1-M78 and E3b3-M123 accounting for all E representatives in the sample, besides a single E3b2-M81 chromosome). E-M78 occurs commonly, and is found in northern and eastern Africa, western Asia[148] Haplogroup E-M123 is found in both Africa and Eurasia.
- J1=9%[132] – Typical amongst people from the Arabian Peninsula and Dagestan (ranging from 3% from Turks around Konya to 12% in Kurds).
- R1a=6.9%[132] – Common in various Central Asian, North Indian, and Eastern European populations.
- I=5.3%[132] – Common in Scandinavia, Sardinia, the Balkans and Eastern Europe.
- K=4.5%[132] – Typical of Asian populations and Caucasian populations.
- L=4.2%[132] – Typical of Indian Subcontinent and Khorasan populations. Found sporadically in the Middle East and the Caucasus.
- N=3.8%[132] – Typical of Uralic, Siberian and Altaic populations.
- T=2.5%[132] – Typical of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, Northeast African and South Asian populations
- Q=1.9%[132] – Typical of Northern Altaic populations.
- C=1.3%[132] – Typical of Mongolic and Siberian populations
- R2=0.96% [132] Typical of South Asian population
Others markers than occurs in less than 1% are H, A, E3a, O, R1*.
Geographic distribution
Traditional areas of Turkish settlement
Turkey
In the latter half of the 11th century, the Seljuks began penetrating into the eastern regions of Anatolia. In 1071, the Seljuk Turks defeated the Byzantines at the Battle of Manzikert, starting Turkification of the area; the Turkish language and Islam were introduced to Anatolia and gradually spread over the region. The slow transition from a predominantly Christian and Greek-speaking Anatolia to a predominantly Muslim and Turkish-speaking one was underway.[149]
Ethnic Turks make up between 70% to 75% of Turkey's population.[1]
Cyprus
The Turkish Cypriots are the ethnic Turks whose Ottoman Turkish forbears colonised the island of Cyprus in 1571. About 30,000 Turkish soldiers were given land once they settled in Cyprus, which bequeathed a significant Turkish community. In 1960, a census by the new Republic's government revealed that the Turkish Cypriots formed 18.2% of the island's population.[150] However, once inter-communal fighting and ethnic tensions between 1963 and 1974 occurred between the Turkish and Greek Cypriots, known as the "Cyprus conflict", the Greek Cypriot government conducted a census in 1973, albeit without the Turkish Cypriot populace. A year later, in 1974, the Cypriot government’s Department of Statistics and Research estimated the Turkish Cypriot population was 118,000 (or 18.4%).[151] A coup d'état in Cyprus on 15 July 1974 by Greeks and Greek Cypriots favouring union with Greece (also known as "Enosis") was followed by military intervention by Turkey whose troops established Turkish Cypriot control over the northern part of the island.[152] Hence, census's conducted by the Republic of Cyprus have excluded the Turkish Cypriot population that had settled in the unrecognised Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.[151] Between 1975 and 1981, Turkey encouraged its own citizens to settle in Northern Cyprus; a report by CIA suggests that 200,000 of the residents of Cyprus are Turkish.
Meskhetia
The Meskhetian Turks are the ethnic Turks formerly inhabiting the Meskheti region of Georgia, along the border with Turkey. The Turkish presence in Meskhetia began with the Ottoman invasion of 1578,[153] although Turkic tribes had settled in the region as early as the eleventh and twelfth centuries.[153] Today, the Meskhetian Turks are widely dispersed throughout the former Soviet Union (as well as in Turkey and the United States) due to forced deportations during World War II. At the time, the Soviet Union was preparing to launch a pressure campaign against Turkey, and Joseph Stalin wanted to clear the strategic Turkish population in Meskheti, who would likely be hostile to Soviet intentions.[154] In 1944, the Meskhetian Turks were accused of smuggling, banditry and espionage in collaboration with their kin across the Turkish border;[155] nationalistic policies at the time encouraged the slogan: "Georgia for Georgians" and that the Meskhetian Turks should be sent to Turkey "where they belong".[156][157] The Meskhetian Turks were a small group expelled by Stalin in 1944 to Central Asia, their number according to the 1939 Soviet census was 115,000.
Modern diaspora
Western Europe
After World War II, West Germany began to experience its greatest economic boom ("Wirtschaftswunder") and in 1961 invited the Turks as guest workers ("Gastarbeiter") to make up for the shortage of workers. The concept of the Gastarbeiter continued with Turkey bearing agreements with Austria, Belgium, and the Netherlands in 1964, with France in 1965; and with Sweden in 1967.[158]
Current estimates suggests that there is approximately 9 million Turks living in Europe, excluding those who live in Turkey.[159] Modern immigration of Turks to Western Europe began with Turkish Cypriots migrating to the United Kingdom in the early 1920s when the British Empire annexed Cyprus in 1914 and the residents of Cyprus became subjects of the Crown. However, Turkish Cypriot migration increased significantly in the 1940s and 1950s due to the Cyprus conflict. Conversely, in 1944, Turks who were forcefully deported from Meskheti in Georgia during the Second World War, known as the Meskhetian Turks, settled in Eastern Europe (especially in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine). By the early 1960s, migration to Western and Northern Europe increased significantly from Turkey when Turkish "guest workers" arrived under a "Labour Export Agreement" with Germany in 1961, followed by a similar agreement with the Netherlands, Belgium and Austria in 1964; France in 1965; and Sweden in 1967.[160][161][162] More recently, Bulgarian Turks, Romanian Turks, and Western Thrace Turks have also migrated to Western Europe.
North America
Compared to Turkish immigration to Europe, migration to North America has been relatively small. According to the US Census Bureau and Statistics Canada, 196,222 Americans in 2013[21] and 24,910 Canadians in 2011[33] were of Turkish descent. However, the actual number of Turks in both countries is considerably larger, as a significant number of ethnic Turks have migrated to North America not just from Turkey but also from the Balkans (such as Bulgaria and Macedonia), Cyprus, and the former Soviet Union.[163] Hence, the Turkish American community is currently estimated to number about 500,000[24][22] whilst the Turkish Canadian community is believed to number between 50,000–100,000. The largest concentration of Turkish Americans are in New York City, and Rochester, New York; Washington, D.C.; and Detroit, Michigan. The majority of Turkish Canadians live in Ontario, mostly in Toronto, and there is also a sizable Turkish community in Montreal. With regards to the 2010 United States Census, the U.S government was determined to get an accurate count of the American population by reaching segments, such as the Turkish community, that are considered hard to count, a good portion of which falls under the category of foreign-born immigrants.[23] The Assembly of Turkish American Associations and the US Census Bureau formed a partnership to spearhead a national campaign to count people of Turkish origin with an organisation entitled "Census 2010 SayTurk" (which has a double meaning in Turkish, "Say" means "to count" and "to respect") to identify the estimated 500,000 Turks now living in the United States.[23]
Oceania
A notable scale of Turkish migration to Australia began in the late 1940s when Turkish Cypriots began to leave the island of Cyprus for economic reasons, and then, during the Cyprus conflict, for political reasons, marking the beginning of a Turkish Cypriot immigration trend to Australia.[164] The Turkish Cypriot community were the only Muslims acceptable under the White Australia Policy;[165] many of these early immigrants found jobs working in factories, out in the fields, or building national infrastructure.[166] In 1967, the governments of Australia and Turkey signed an agreement to allow Turkish citizens to immigrate to Australia.[167] Prior to this recruitment agreement, there were less than 3,000 people of Turkish origin in Australia.[168] According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, nearly 19,000 Turkish immigrants arrived from 1968–1974.[167] They came largely from rural areas of Turkey, approximately 30% were skilled and 70% were unskilled workers.[169] However, this changed in the 1980s when the number of skilled Turks applying to enter Australia had increased considerably.[169] Over the next 35 years the Turkish population rose to almost 100,000.[168] More than half of the Turkish community settled in Victoria, mostly in the north-western suburbs of Melbourne.[168] According to the 2006 Australian Census, 59,402 people claimed Turkish ancestry;[170] however, this does not show a true reflection of the Turkish Australian community as it is estimated that between 40,000 to 120,000 Turkish Cypriots[171][172][173][174] and 150,000 to 200,000 mainland Turks[175][176] live in Australia. Furthermore, there has also been ethnic Turks who have migrated to Australia from Bulgaria,[177] Greece,[178] Iraq,[179] and the Republic of Macedonia.[178]
Former Soviet Union
The Turkish people traditionally lived in the Meskhetia region of Georgia. However, due to the ordered deportation of over 115,000 Meskhetian Turks from their homeland in 1944, during the Second World War, the majority settled in Central Asia.[180] According to the 1989 Soviet Census, which was the last Soviet Census, 106,000 Meskhetian Turks lived in Uzbekistan, 50,000 in Kazakhstan, and 21,000 in Kyrgyzstan.[180] However, in 1989, the Meshetian Turks who had settled in Uzbekistan became the target of a pogrom in the Fergana valley, which was the principal destination for Meskhetian Turkish deportees, after an uprising of nationalism by the Uzbeks.[180] The riots had left hundreds of Turks dead or injured and nearly 1,000 properties were destroyed; thus, thousands of Meskhetian Turks were forced into renewed exile.[180] The majority of Meskhetian Turks, about 70,000, went to Azerbaijan, whilst the remainder went to various regions of Russia (especially Krasnodar Krai), Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine.[180][181] Soviet authorities recorded many Meskhetian Turks as belonging to other nationalities such as "Azeri", "Kazakh", "Kyrgyz", and "Uzbek".[180][182] Hence, official census's have not shown a true reflection of the Turkish population; for example, according to the 2009 Azerbaijani census, there were 38,000 Turks living in the country;[183] yet in 1999, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees stated that there were 100,000 Meskhetian Turks living in the country.[184] Furthermore, in 2001, the Baku Institute of Peace and Democracy suggested that there was between 90,000 to 110,000 Meskhetian Turks living in Azerbaijan.[64]
Culture
Arts and Architecture
Turkish architecture reached its peak during the Ottoman period. Ottoman architecture, influenced by Seljuk, Byzantine and Islamic architecture, came to develop a style all of its own.[185] Overall, Ottoman architecture has been described as a synthesis of the architectural traditions of the Mediterranean and the Middle East.[186]
As Turkey successfully transformed from the religion-based former Ottoman Empire into a modern nation-state with a very strong separation of state and religion, an increase in the modes of artistic expression followed. During the first years of the republic, the government invested a large amount of resources into fine arts; such as museums, theatres, opera houses and architecture. Diverse historical factors play important roles in defining the modern Turkish identity. Turkish culture is a product of efforts to be a "modern" Western state, while maintaining traditional religious and historical values.[187] The mix of cultural influences is dramatized, for example, in the form of the "new symbols of the clash and interlacing of cultures" enacted in the works of Orhan Pamuk, recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature.[188]
Traditional Turkish music include Arabesk, Turkish folk music (Halk Müziği), Fasıl, and Ottoman classical music (sanat music) that originates from the Ottoman court.[189] Contemporary Turkish music include Turkish pop music, rock, and Turkish hip hop genres.[189]
Language
The Turkish language also known as Istanbul Turkish is a southern Oghuz branch of the Turkic languages. It is natively spoken by the Turkish people in Turkey, Balkans, the island of Cyprus, Meskhetia, and other areas of traditional settlement that formerly, in whole or part, belonged to the Ottoman Empire. Turkish is the official language of Turkey. In the Balkans, Turkish is still spoken by Turkish minorities who still live there, especially in Bulgaria, Greece (mainly in Western Thrace), Kosovo, the Republic of Macedonia, and Romania (mainly in Gagauzia).[190] The Turkish language was introduced to Cyprus with the Ottoman conquest in 1571 and became the politically dominant, prestigious language, of the administration.[191]
One important change to Turkish literature was enacted in 1928, when Mustafa Kemal initiated the creation and dissemination of a modified version of the Latin alphabet to replace the Arabic alphabet based Ottoman script. Over time, this change, together with changes in Turkey's system of education, would lead to more widespread literacy in the country.[192] Modern standard Turkish is based on the dialect of Istanbul.[193] Nonetheless, dialectal variation persists, in spite of the levelling influence of the standard used in mass media and the Turkish education system since the 1930s.[194] The terms ağız or şive often refer to the different types of Turkish dialects.
There are three major Anatolian Turkish dialect groups spoken in Turkey: the West Anatolian dialect (roughly to the west of the Euphrates), the East Anatolian dialect (to the east of the Euphrates), and the North East Anatolian group, which comprises the dialects of the Eastern Black Sea coast, such as Trabzon, Rize, and the littoral districts of Artvin.[195][196] The Balkan Turkish dialects are considerably closer to standard Turkish and do not differ significantly from it, despite some contact phenomena, especially in the lexicon.[197] In the post-Ottoman period, Cypriot Turkish was relatively isolated from standard Turkish and had strong influences by the Cypriot Greek dialect. The condition of coexistence with the Greek Cypriots led to a certain bilingualism whereby Turkish Cypriots knowledge of Greek was important in areas where the two communities lived and worked together.[198] The linguistic situation changed radically in 1974, when the island was divided into a Greek south and a Turkish north (Northern Cyprus). Today, the Cypriot Turkish dialect is being exposed to increasing standard Turkish through immigration from Turkey, new mass media, and new educational institutions.[191] The Meskhetian Turks speak an Eastern Anatolian dialect of Turkish, which hails from the regions of Kars, Ardahan, and Artvin.[199] The Meskhetian Turkish dialect has also borrowed from other languages (including Azerbaijani, Georgian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Russian, and Uzbek), which the Meskhetian Turks have been in contact with during the Russian and Soviet rule.[199]
Religion
According to the CIA factbook, 99.8% of the population in Turkey is Muslim, most of them being Sunni. The remaining 0.2% is mostly Christian and Jewish.[201] There are also some estimated 10 to 15 million Alevi Muslims in Turkey.[202] Christians in Turkey include Assyrians/Syriacs,[203] Armenians, and Greeks.[204] Jewish people in Turkey include those that descend from Sephardic Jews who escaped Spain in 15th century and Greek-speaking Jews from Byzantine times.[205] There is an ethnic Turkish Protestant Christian community most of them came from recent Muslim Turkish backgrounds, rather than from ethnic minorities.[75][206][207][208]
According to KONDA research, only 9.7% of the population described themselves as "fully devout," while 52.8% described themselves as "religious."[209] 69.4% of the respondents reported that they or their wives cover their heads (1.3% reporting chador), although this rate decreases in several demographics: 53% in ages 18–28, 27.5% in university graduates, 16.1% in masters-or-higher-degree holders.[69] Turkey has also been a secular state since Ataturk.[210] According to a poll, 90% of respondents said the country should be defined as secular in the new Constitution that is being written.[211]
See also
References and notes
^ a: According to the Home Affairs Committee this includes 300,000 Turkish Cypriots.[212] However, some estimates suggest that the Turkish Cypriot community in the UK has reached between 350,000[213] to 400,000.[214][215]
^ b: Includes people of mixed ethnic background.
^ c: A further 10,000–30,000 people from Bulgaria live in the Netherlands. The majority are Bulgarian Turks and are the fastest-growing group of immigrants in the Netherlands.[216]
^ d: This includes Turkish settlers. 2,000 of these Turkish Cypriots currently reside in the southern part of the island, the rest on the northern.[217]
^ e: This figure only includes Turkish citizens. Therefore, this also includes ethnic minorities from Turkey; however, it does not include ethnic Turks who have either been born and/or have become naturalised citizens. Furthermore, these figures do not include ethnic Turkish minorities from Bulgaria, Cyprus, Georgia, Greece, Iraq, Kosovo, Macedonia, Romania or any other traditional area of Turkish settlement because they are registered as citizens from the country they have immigrated from rather than their ethnic Turkish identity.
^ f: In addition to Turkish citizens, this figure includes people with ancestral background related to Turkey, so it includes ethnic minorities of Turkey.
^ g: This figure only includes Turks of Western Thrace. A further 5,000 live in the Rhodes and Kos.[218] In addition to this, 8,297 immigrants live in Greece.[219]
^ h: These figures only include the Meskhetian Turks. According to official census's there were 38,000 Turks in Azerbaijan (2009),[183] 97,015 in Kazakhstan (2009),[220] 39,133 in Kyrgyzstan (2009),[221] 109,883 in Russia (2010),[222] and 9,180 in Ukraine (2001).[223] A further 106,302 Turks were recorded in Uzbekistan's last census in 1989[224] although the majority left for Azerbaijan and Russia during the 1989 pogroms in the Ferghana Valley. Official data regarding the Turks in the former Soviet Union is unlikely to provide a true indication of their population as many have been registered as "Azeri", "Kazakh", "Kyrgyz", and "Uzbek".[225] In Kazakhstan only a third of them were recorded as Turks, the rest had been arbitrarily declared members of other ethnic groups.[226][227] Similarly, in Azerbaijan, much of the community is officially registered as "Azerbaijani"[228] even though the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees reported, in 1999, that 100,000 Meskhetian Turks were living there.[63]
^ i: A further 30,000 Bulgarian Turks live in Sweden.[229]
^ j: "The history of Turkey encompasses, first, the history of Anatolia before the coming of the Turks and of the civilizations—Hittite, Thracian, Hellenistic, and Byzantine—of which the Turkish nation is the heir by assimilation or example. Second, it includes the history of the Turkish peoples, including the Seljuks, who brought Islam and the Turkish language to Anatolia. Third, it is the history of the Ottoman Empire, a vast, cosmopolitan, pan-Islamic state that developed from a small Turkish amirate in Anatolia and that for centuries was a world power."[230]
^ k: The Turks are also defined by the country of origin. Turkey, once Asia Minor or Anatolia, has a very long and complex history. It was one of the major regions of agricultural development in the early Neolithic and may have been the place of origin and spread of lndo-European languages at that time. The Turkish language was imposed on a predominantly lndo-European-speaking population (Greek being the official language of the Byzantine empire), and genetically there is very little difference between Turkey and the neighboring countries. The number of Turkish invaders was probably rather small and was genetically diluted by the large number of aborigines."
"The consideration of demographic quantities suggests that the present genetic picture of the aboriginal world is determined largely by the history of Paleolithic and Neolithic people, when the greatest relative changes in population numbers took place."[231]
^ l: Iraqi Turkmen groups claim a figure of 3,000,000
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ignored (|url-status=
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ignored (|url-status=
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"By 1913 the advocates of liberalism had lost out to radicals in the party who promoted a program of forcible Turkification.
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With the crushing of opposition elements, the Young Turks simultaneously launched their program of forcible Turkification and the creation of a highly centralized administrative system."
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In 1914, the aim of Turkification was not to exterminate but to expel as many Greeks of the Aegean region as possible as not only a "security measure," but as an extension of the policy of economic and cultural boycott, while at the same time creating living space for the muhadjirs that had been driven out of their homes under equally brutal circumstances.
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...the initial stages of the Turkification of the Empire, which affected by attacks on its very heterogeneous structure, thereby ushering in a relentless process of ethnic cleansing that eventually, through the exigencies and opportunities of the First World War, culminated in the Armenian Genocide.
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Through this genocide and the forced deportation of the Greeks, the nationalists completed the Young Turk's program-the Turkification of Turkey and the elimination of a pretext for Great Power meddling.
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The devising of a scheme of a correlative Turkification of the Empire, or what was left of it, included the cardinal goal of the liquidation of that Empire's residual non-Turkish elements. Given their numbers, their concentration in geo-strategic locations, and the troublesome legacy of the Armenian Question, the Armenians were targeted as the prime object for such liquidation.
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These data further solidify our case for a paternal G/J substratum in Anatolian populations, and for continuity between the Paleolithic/Neolithic and the current populations of Anatolia.
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External links
- Media related to Turkish people at Wikimedia Commons