Historical Setting of Turkey
TURKEY IS A NEW COUNTRY in an old land. The modern Turkish
state--beginning with the creation of the Republic of Turkey in the years
immediately after World War I--drew on a national consciousness that had
developed only in the late nineteenth century. But the history of nomadic
Turkish tribes can be traced with certainty to the sixth century A.D., when
they wandered the steppes of central Asia. Asia Minor, which the Turks
invaded in the eleventh century, has a recorded history that dates back to
the Hittites, who flourished there in the second millennium B.C.
Archaeological evidence of far older cultures has been found in the region,
however.
The term Turkey , although sometimes used to signify the Ottoman Empire,
was not assigned to a specific political entity or geographic area until the
republic was founded in 1923. The conquering Turks called Asia Minor, the
large peninsular territory they had wrested from the Byzantine Empire, by
its Greek name, Anatolé (sunrise; figuratively, the East), or Anatolia. The
term Anatolia is also used when events described affected both that region
and Turkish Thrace ("Turkey-in-Europe") because of the two areas' closely
linked political, social, and cultural development.
Anatolia is a bridge connecting the Middle East and Europe, and it shares
in the history of both those parts of the world. Despite the diversity of
its peoples and their cultures, and the constantly shifting borders of its
ethnic map, Anatolia has a history characterized by remarkable continuity.
Wave after wave of conquerors and settlers have imposed their language and
other unique features of their culture on it, but they also have invariably
assimilated the customs of the peoples who preceded them.
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.
Finally, Turkey's history is that of the republic established in 1923
under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal (1881-1938), called Atatürk--the
"Father Turk." The creation of the new republic in the heartland of the old
Islamic empire was achieved in the face of internal traditionalist
opposition and foreign intervention. Atatürk's goal was to build on the
ruins of Ottoman Turkey a new country and society patterned directly on
Western Europe. He equated Westernization with the introduction of
technology, the modernization of administration, and the evolution of
democratic institutions.
The Turkish horsemen who stormed into Anatolia in the eleventh century
were called gazis (warriors of the faith), but they followed their tribal
leaders to win booty and to take land as well as to spread Islam. The
Ottoman Empire, built on the conquests of the gazis , was Islamic but not
specifically Turkish. Engendered in reaction to this Ottoman universalism,
early Turkish nationalism was often pan-Turanian, envisioning a common
destiny for all Turkic-speaking peoples. By contrast, Atatürk narrowed the
focus of his nationalism to the Turks of Turkey. Under his influence,
twentieth-century Turkish historiography bypassed the Islamic Ottoman period
to link the Turkish nation with ancient Anatolia in such a way that the
Hittites, for instance, were recognized as proto-Turks from whom modern
Turks can trace descent. Although contemporary Turkey is relatively
homogeneous linguistically, it is estimated that perhaps 75 percent of the
country's genetic pool is non-Turkish in origin.
Atatürk's ideological legacy--known as Kemalism--consists of the "Six
Arrows": republicanism, nationalism, populism, reformism, etatism (see
Glossary), and secularism. These principles have been embodied in successive
constitutions, and appeals for both reforms and retrenchment have been made
in their name.
In the late 1940s, Atatürk's long-time lieutenant and successor, Ismet
Inönü (earlier known as Ismet Pasha), introduced democratic elections and
opened the political system to multiparty activity. In 1950 the Republican
People's Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi--CHP)--Atatürk's party--was badly
defeated at the polls by the new Democrat Party, headed by Adnan Menderes.
The Menderes government attempted to redirect the economy, allowing for
greater private initiative, and was more tolerant of traditional religious
and social attitudes in the countryside. In their role as guardians of
Kemalism, military leaders became convinced in 1960 that the Menderes
government had departed dangerously from the principles of the republic's
founder, and overthrew it in a military coup. After a brief interval of
military rule, a new, liberal constitution was adopted for the so-called
Second Republic, and the government returned to civilian hands.
The 1960s witnessed coalition governments led, until 1965, by the CHP
under Inönü. A new grouping--the right-wing Justice Party organized under
Süleyman Demirel and recognized as the successor to the outlawed Democrat
Party--came to power in that year. In opposition, the new leader of the CHP,
Bülent Ecevit, introduced a platform that shifted Atatürk's party leftward.
Political factionalism became so extreme as to prejudice public order and
the smooth functioning of the government and economy.
In 1971 the leaders of the armed forces demanded appointment of a
government "above parties" charged with restoring law and order. A
succession of nonparty governments came to power, but, unable to gain
adequate parliamentary support, each quickly fell during a period of
political instability that lasted until 1974. Demirel and Ecevit alternated
in office as head of government during the remainder of the 1970s, a period
marked by the rise of political extremism and religious revivalism,
terrorist activities, and rapid economic changes accompanied by high
inflation and severe unemployment. The apparent inability of parliamentary
government to deal with the situation prompted another military coup in
1980, led by Chief of Staff General Kenan Evren. The new regime's National
Security Council acted to restore order and stabilize the economy. It also
moved deliberately toward reinstating civilian rule. A constitution for the
Third Republic, promulgated in 1982, increased the executive authority of
the president and provided for Evren's appointment to a seven-year term in
that office. General elections to the new National Assembly held the
following year enabled Turgut Özal to form a one-party majority government
that promised to bring stability to the political process.
In two subsequent parliamentary elections, in 1987 and 1991, Turkey
demonstrated a commitment to pluralist politics and a peaceful transfer of
power. The 1991 election ended the eight-year rule of Özal's Motherland
Party and brought to power the True Path Party, headed by Süleyman Demirel.
Upon the death of Özal in 1993, Demirel ascended to the presidency, and
Tansu Çiller became Turkey's first woman prime minister.
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