The Turkish republican

 

The capital:             Ankara

The inhabitants enumerated:             67,308,928 breath of air (estimate of July 2002)

The language:            Ural - [aalTaay'yt]

The sweat:             Turk (80%), [krdsh] (20%)

The climate:             [me'tdl] with hot and dry in the summer, [waalshtaa'aat] the rainy [me'tdl]

Regime of the governing:             The democratic republican

The economy                        

- the currency:             [lyraa] Turkish

- [aalmwaaryd]:             Carbonized, iron ore, as Romen, bauxite, copper, borate, as land.

The religion:             The Islam (99.8%), Christ and the Jew (0.2%)

 


History

Turkey is one of the oldest inhabited regions of the world. Traces of human settlement dating back to early neolithic times (7000-6500 BC) have been found in Anatolia. Anatolia was first united under the Romans, who formed the province of Asia Minor in 129 BC. The first Turkish tribes settled in the region in the 6th century AD. 

The legendary Mustafa Kemal, a Turkish World War I hero later known as "Ataturk" or "father of the Turks," founded the Republic of Turkey in 1923 after the collapse of the 600-year-old Ottoman Empire. The empire, which at its peak controlled vast stretches of northern Africa, southeastern Europe, and western Asia, had failed to keep pace with European social and technological developments. The rise of nationalism impelled several ethnic groups to seek independence, leading to the empire's fragmentation. This process culminated in the disastrous Ottoman participation in World War I as a German ally. Defeated, shorn of much of its former territory, and partly occupied by forces of the victorious European states, the Ottoman structure was repudiated by Turkish nationalists who rallied under Ataturk's leadership. The nationalists expelled invading Greek forces from Anatolia after a bitter war. The temporal and religious ruling institutions of the old empire (the sultanate and caliphate) were abolished. 

The new republic concentrated on Westernizing the empire's Turkish core -- Anatolia and a small part of Thrace. Social, political, linguistic, and economic reforms and attitudes introduced by Ataturk before his death in 1938 continue to form the ideological base of modern Turkey. Referred to as "Kemalism," it comprises secularism, nationalism, and modernization and turns toward the West for inspiration and support. The continued validity and applicability of Kemalism are the subject of frequent discussion and debate in Turkey's political life. 

Turkey entered World War II on the Allied side shortly before the war ended and became a charter member of the United Nations. Difficulties faced by Greece after World War II in quelling a communist rebellion and demands by the Soviet Union for military bases in the Turkish Straits caused the United States to declare the Truman Doctrine in 1947. The doctrine enunciated American intentions to guarantee the security of Turkey and Greece and resulted in largescale U.S. military and economic aid. After participating with United Nations forces in the Korean conflict, Turkey in 1952 joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). 

Turkey occupied the northern portion of Cyprus in 1974 to prevent a Greek takeover of the island; relations between the two countries remain strained. Periodic military offensives against Kurdish terrorists have dislocated part of the population in southeast Turkey and have drawn international condemnation. There was a military takeover in 1980, but control was returned to an elected parliament in 1983.