Kurds of Anatolia

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from Kurds of Central Anatolia)
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Kurds of Anatolia
Kurdên Anatolyayê
Total population
1.5-2.0 million[citation needed]
Regions with significant populations
Central Anatolia (Turkey)
Languages
Kurdish (Kurmancî, Şexbizinî, Zazakî)
Turkish
Religion
Islam (Sunni, Alevi)
Related ethnic groups
Kurd, Kurds in Turkey, Kurds of Khorasan
Map of Kurds of Central Anatolia

The Kurds of Anatolia or the Kurds of Central Anatolia[1] (Kurdish: Kurdên Anatolyayê/Anatolê, Turkish: Orta Anadolu Kürtleri[2] or İç Anadolu Kürtleri[3]) also Anatolian Kurds (Kurdish: Kurdên Anatolyayî/Anatolî), are the Kurdish people who have immigrated and been in Central Anatolia (present day Aksaray, Ankara, Çankırı, Çorum, Eskişehir, Karaman, Kayseri, Kırıkkale, Kırşehir, Konya, Nevşehir, Niğde, Sivas, Yozgat provinces) since about 16th century.[4][5]

The core of the Kurds of Central Anatolia is formed by Tuz Gölü Kürtleri (Kurds of Lake Tuz) who live in Ankara, Konya and Aksaray provinces.[6] Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) mentioned them as "Konya çöllerindeki Kürtler" (Kurds in the Konya deserts) in the interview with Ahmet Emin (Yalman) dated January 16/17, 1923.[7]

History

The first Kurdish tribe that arrived at Central Anatolia is Modanlı tribe. They settled in Haymana in 1184[8] and spread to not only different places of Central Anatolia but also to Hasha-i İstanbul and Rumeli: Aksaray, Kütahya, Rumeli, Çatalca, Koçhisar, Haymana, Ipsala and Evreşe. And Modanlı tribe belonged to Merdisi tribe.[9] The first Central Anatolian Kurdish village named Kürtler (Kurds) was founded in Yaban Âbâd (present day Kızılcahamam-Çamlıdere, Ankara) in 1463.[10]

According to Mark Sykes, the first Kurdish exile to Central Anatolia was carried out during the reign of Selim I (1512–1520).[11]

According to Hermann Wenzel, the original breeders of the Angora goat were these Kurdish people of Inner Anatolia.[12][13]

Tribes

The largest tribes of the Kurds of Central Anatolia are the Şeyhbızın, Reşvan and Canbeg.[14]

There are also many Kurds who are not connected with any tribes.

Languages

Generally, their mother languages are Kurdish (Kurmanji) and Kurmanji-speaking people have difficulty to understand the language spoken in Haymana where Şeyhbızın (Şêxbizinî) tribe members live.[15] It is said that the new generation of Kurdish people in some settlements no longer speak Kurdish.[16]

Notable figures

  • Hatice Yaşar, Xace Xan; politician, writer, founder of the Kurdish resistance organisation Ala Rizgari (the flag of freedom), and women's rights activist of Shexbizeni tribe.
  • Burhan G, musician, Shexbizeni tribe.
  • Prof. Dr. Ömer Özkan (who made simultaneously the first face and limbs transplantation operation in Turkey). Shexbizeni tribe.
  • Ömer Kart (one of the founders of National Party, deputy of the Republican National Party).
  • Musa Kart (Ömer Kart's son, caricaturist)
  • Vedat Yıldırım (one of the soloist singers of Kardeş Türküler)

List of villages

Villages of Aksaray

Village [17] Ethnic group
Akin Kurmanj
Alayhan Kurmanj/Dimily
Babakonağı Kurmanj
Bebek Kurmanj
Borucu Dimily
Büyük Pörnek Kurmanj/Dimily
Cami Kurmanj
Cankilli Dimily
Çavdarlı Kurmanj
Çalı Bekir Dimily
Çekiçler Dimily
Çolaknebi Kurmanj
Düğüz Kurmanj
Ekecikgödeler Dimily
Ekeciktolu Dimily
Ekecikyeni Dimily
Fatmauşagi Kurmanj
Gökkaya Kurmanj
Göksugüzel Kurmanj
Kalebalta Kurmanj
Karaçayir Dimily
Karakova Kurmanj
Karakuyu Dimily
Koyakköy Dimily
Küçükpörnek Dimily
Macir Kurmanj
Macarli Kurmanj
Kışla Sor Kurmanj
Reşadiye Kurmanj
Sağırkaraca Kurmanj
Salmanli Dimily
Sarıağı Kurmanj
Susadi Kurmanj
Şeyhler Dimily
Taptuk Dimily
Tepesidelik Kurmanj
Yalnizceviz Kurmanj
Yanyurt Dimily

Resources

  1. Ingvar Svanberg, Kazak refugees in Turkey: a study of cultural persistence and social change, Academiae Ubsaliensis, 1989, ISBN 978-91-554-2438-1, p. 28. (English)
  2. Rohat Alakom, Orta Anadolu Kürtleri, Evrensel Basım Yayım, 2004, ISBN 975-6525-77-0. (Turkish)
  3. Nuh Ateş, İç Anadolu Kürtleri-Konya, Ankara, Kırlşehir, Komkar Yayınları, Köln, 1992, ISBN 3-927213-07-1. (Turkish)
  4. Rohat Alakom, ibid, p. 14. (Turkish)
  5. Ayşe Yıldırım, Ç. Ceyhan Suvari, İlker M. İşoğlu, Tülin Bozkurt, Artakalanlar: Anadolu'dan etnik manzaralar, E Yayınları, ISBN 975-390-205-0, p. 166. (Turkish)
  6. Müslüm Yücel, "Tuz Gölü Kürtleri", I-VIII, Yeni Gündem gazetesi, 2000, İstanbul. (Turkish)
  7. Atatürk'ün bütün Eserleri, Kaynak Yayınları, Cilt: 14, ISBN 975-343-400-6, pp. 273-274. (Turkish)
  8. Rohat Alakom, ibid, p. 33. (Turkish)
  9. Cevdet Türkay, Başbakanlık Arşiv Belgelerine Göre Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Oymak, Aşiret ve Cemaatler, Tercüman Yayınları, 1979, p. 502. (Turkish)
  10. Ahmet Nezili Turan, Yaninâbâd Tarihini Ararken, Kızılcahamam Belediye Yayınları, 1999. (Turkish)
  11. Mark Sykes, "The Kurdish Tribes of the Ottoman Empire", The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. XXXVIII, 1908.
  12. Hermann Wenzel, Sultan-Dagh und Akschehir-Ova, Kiel, 1932. (German)
  13. Hermann Wenzel, Forschungen in Inneranatolien II: Die Steppe als Lebensraum, Schriften des Geographische institut Kiel, VII, 3, Kiel, 1937. (German)
  14. Rohat Alkom, ibid, p. 63. (Turkish)
  15. Peter Alford Andrews, Türkiye'de Etnik Gruplar, ANT Yayınları, Aralık 1992, ISBN 975-7350-03-6, s. 155.
  16. Dr. Mikaili, "Devlet Kürtçe'ye Kapıları Açtı, Ya Biz Orta Anadolu Kürtleri ? ", Bîrnebûn, Sayı: 45, Bahar 2010, ISSN 1402-7488
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

See also

External links