HISTORY
Prehistoric
period 100.000 - 2000 BC
First signs of inhabitation in Anatolia are from the
Paleolithic period (500.000 - 12.000 BC). Most important
cave inhabitations are those that have been discovered
in the area of Kemer and Antalya. The first known
settlement of the world, Catalhoyuk, northeast from
Konya, dates back to 6500 BC. Houses were built of mud
bricks and the entrance was through the roof. Houses
were decorated by wall paintings and the first known
landscape painting has been found there. In the
beginning of the Bronze period there were several towns
in Anatolia. Alacahoyuk and Hattusas were important
religious and administrative centers of the Hattis in
the Central Anatolia. Troy was the most important town
in the Aegean region. Around 2300 BC Troy was destroyed
by fire and the whole of Anatolia went through great
many changes.
Hittite period 2000 - 1250 BC
Hittites arrived in Anatolia in 2000 BC from Caucasus
and settled in Kussara and Hattusas. They ruled the
entirety of Turkey. They mainly concentrated on wars and
they had very high level of culture. During Hittites
Troy was the most important city of the west Anatolia.
In the 1200s Troy was destroyed again and the Hittite
state broke into small states.
Anatolian small states 1250-494 BC
In the 1200s Greeks gained more power in western
Anatolia. Ionia was established around Smyrna (Izmir).
Ionians also lived in Miletos, Ephesus and Priene in the
1000s. Many famous western poets and philosophers lived
in Ionia. Caria was established south of Ionia, near the
area where Bodrum, Fethiye and Marmaris are located
today. The most well known of the Carian kings was King
Mausolus who built an enormous monument in Halikarnassos
(Bodrum). Lycia was located east of Caria and Pamphylia, around
Antalya. In the 1200s Urartu Kingdom was developed
around Lake Van. Urartian colonies covered wide areas in
the eastern Anatolia. Urartian Kingdom was destroyed by
the Medians in 500 BC.
Phrygians came into the country in the 1200s and
established a kingdom. Its capital was Gordion and Midas
was the most famous king. When Phrygians disappeared in
700 BC, Lydians who made Sart their capital replaced
them. The most famous Lydian king, King Kroisos
conquered almost all of the Ionian areas.
Persians 494 - 334 BC
Persia was the first conqueror that ruled the whole area
of the present-day Turkey. Continuous wars with the
Greeks hampered the welfare of Persians. The culture was
kept inside the palaces so the Persian influence in the
region was not very significant.
Hellenistic period 334 - 133 BC
Macedonian king Alexander the Great first conquered
Greece, Anatolia and then in 331 BC the whole of Persia.
The Hellenes ruled regions from the western Greece to
the border of the present-day Pakistan. During the
Hellenistic period, towns were developed strongly. They
had their own laws, autonomy and defense and they lived
on agriculture.
Roman Empire 133 BC - 395 AD
Romans conquered all Anatolian states during 133 - 129
BC. Roman Empire brought Pax Romana, the period of
peace. Roman Emperor Constantin made Constantinople the
capital in 330 AD and declared Christianity as the
official religion. Gradually the western and eastern
parts of the Empire were driven further from each other
and in 395 the Empire was divided into two.
Byzantium 395-1453 AD
Byzantines ruled in the mid 500s the whole Mediterranean
from Palestine to the Iberian Peninsula. However, the
borders changed continuously. In the east Persians,
Arabs and Turks were the threats and in the west it was
from Bulgarians and Slavics. In 1071 Turkish Seljuks
conquered Byzantium. As a result of the crusades
relationships between the eastern and western Christians
became worse and in 1201 the western army conquered
Constantinople. The city was under the Latin rule until
year 1261 when Emperor Micael I conquered it back to
Byzantium. Byzantium collapsed totally when Ottoman
Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) conquered
Constantinople in 1453.
Seljuk state 1038 - 1318
Islam that was born in the Arab Peninsula in the 600s
tried to conquer the Middle East but with no success
before year 1071, when Seljuks won Byzantine troops in
Manzikent. After this victory several small Turkish
states were established in Anatolia. In addition to
Turkish language and Islamic religion, Seljuks also left
behind high-standard architecture.
Ottoman Empire 1299 - 1923
While the Christians in west and east fought with each
other,
Ottoman Empire was established around Nikea (Iznik) and
grew stronger and stronger and it gradually spread to
the whole Anatolia. When the Ottomans conquered
Constantinople it became the capital of the whole
Empire. In its widest, Ottoman Empire covered areas from
the Gulf Bay in the east to Algeria in the west and from
Vienna in the north to Egypt in the south. In the 1400s
and 1500s the Empire was the mistress of the
Mediterranean.
Ottoman Empire was for hundreds of years just and
tolerant and arts and sciences flourished. During the
times the Empire fell into decay and the Emperors were
untalented. In 1870 a constitution was materialized and
the country got a parliament. The reformation was
brought about, however, it was too late and the power
fell into the hands of the British, French and Germans.
Turkey was an ally of Germany in the First World War and
lost the war. The Allies occupied Istanbul and planned
the division of the country.
Greece occupied western Anatolia with the permission of
England. In the Sevres Treaty in 1920 the country was
divided between England, Italy, France, Greece and
Armenia. Istanbul belonged to the British and Turkey
only governed Central Anatolia and the Black Sea coast.
General Mustafa Kemal set off for Samsun and collected
local representatives from all over the country and
founded a government. He also formed an army from the
Ottoman troops and peasants and threw away the Greeks,
who formed the troops of occupation by the Allies. In
the Lausanne Treaty in 1923 Turkey got her present-day
borders.
Republic of Turkey
Turkey was declared a republic on 29 October 1923 and
Mustafa Kemal became the first president. Ataturk died
in 1938 and Ismet Inonu followed him as president.
Source:gototurkey.co.uk/booklet/?link=9
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