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Anatolia

Anatolia,[a] also known as Asia Minor,[b][c] is a large peninsula in West Asia and is the western-most extension of continental Asia. The land mass of Anatolia constitutes most of the territory of contemporary Turkey. Geographically, the Anatolian region is bounded by the Turkish Straits to the north-west, the Black Sea to the north, the Armenian Highlands to the east, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, and the Aegean Sea to the west. Topographically, the Sea of Marmara connects the Black Sea with the Aegean Sea through the Bosporus strait and the Dardanelles strait, and separates Anatolia from Thrace in the Balkan peninsula of Southeastern Europe.

Anatolia
Native name:
Anadolu, Ἀνατολή
One definition of Anatolia within modern Turkey, excluding most of the Southeastern and Eastern Anatolia Regions.[1][2] Other definitions are coterminous with Turkey's eastern and southern borders.
Etymology"the East", from Greek
Geography
Location
Coordinates39°N 35°E / 39°N 35°E / 39; 35
Area756,000 km2 (292,000 sq mi)[3]
(incl. Southeastern and Eastern Anatolia Region)
Administration
Turkey
Largest cityAnkara (pop. 5,700,000[4])
Demographics
DemonymAnatolian (Turkish: Anadolulu)
LanguagesTurkish
Minority: Kurdish, Armenian, Greek, Kabardian, North Caucasian languages, various others
Ethnic groupsTurks, Kurds, Armenians, Chechens, Circassians, Greeks, Laz, various others
Additional information
Time zone

The eastern border of Anatolia is a line between the Gulf of Alexandretta and the Black Sea, bounded by the Armenian Highlands to the east and Mesopotamia to the south-east, thus Anatolia comprises approximately the western two-thirds of the Asian territory of Turkey. Anatolia sometimes is synonymous with Asian Turkey, thereby including the western part of the Armenian Highlands and northern Mesopotamia[5] and making its eastern and southern borders coterminous with Turkey's borders.[6][7][8]

The ancient Anatolian peoples spoke the now-extinct Anatolian languages of the Indo-European language family, which were largely replaced by the Greek language during classical antiquity as well as during the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods. The major Anatolian languages included Hittite, Luwian, and Lydian, while other, poorly attested local languages included Phrygian and Mysian. Hurro-Urartian languages were spoken in the southeastern kingdom of Mitanni, while Galatian, a Celtic language, was spoken in Galatia, central Anatolia. Ancient peoples in the region included Galatians, Hurrians, Assyrians, Hattians, Cimmerians, as well as Ionian, Dorian, and Aeolic Greeks. The Turkification of Anatolia began under the rule of the Seljuk Empire in the late 11th century, continued under the Ottoman Empire between the late 13th and early 20th centuries, and continues today under the Republic of Turkey. However, various non-Turkic languages continue to be spoken by minorities in Anatolia, including Kurdish, Neo-Aramaic, Armenian, North Caucasian languages, Laz, Georgian, and Greek.

Geography Edit

 
Europe during the Last Glacial Maximum, c. 20,000 years ago. Anatolia was connected to the European mainland until c. 5600 BCE,[9][10][11] when the melting ice sheets caused the sea level in the Mediterranean to rise around 120 m (390 ft),[10][11] triggering the formation of the Turkish Straits.[9][10][11] As a result, two former lakes (the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea)[9] were connected to the Mediterranean Sea, which separated Anatolia from Europe.

Traditionally, Anatolia is considered to extend in the east to an indefinite line running from the Gulf of Alexandretta to the Black Sea,[12] coterminous with the Anatolian Plateau. This traditional geographical definition is used, for example, in the latest edition of Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary.[1] Under this definition, Anatolia is bounded to the east by the Armenian Highlands, and the Euphrates before that river bends to the southeast to enter Mesopotamia.[2] To the southeast, it is bounded by the ranges that separate it from the Orontes valley in Syria and the Mesopotamian plain.[2]

Following the Armenian genocide, Western Armenia was renamed the Eastern Anatolia Region by the newly established Turkish government.[13][14] In 1941, with the First Geography Congress which divided Turkey into seven geographical regions based on differences in climate and landscape, the eastern provinces of Turkey were placed into the Eastern Anatolia Region,[15] which largely corresponds to the historical region of Western Armenia (named as such after the division of Greater Armenia between the Roman/Byzantine Empire (Western Armenia) and Sassanid Persia (Eastern Armenia) in 387 AD). Vazken Davidian terms the expanded use of "Anatolia" to apply to territory in eastern Turkey that was formerly referred to as Armenia (which had a sizeable Armenian population before the Armenian genocide) an "ahistorical imposition" and notes that a growing body of literature is uncomfortable with referring to the Ottoman East as "Eastern Anatolia".[16][13][14]

The highest mountain in the Eastern Anatolia Region (also the highest peak in the Armenian Highlands) is Mount Ararat (5123 m).[17] The Euphrates, Aras, Karasu and Murat rivers connect the Armenian Highlands to the South Caucasus and the Upper Euphrates Valley. Along with the Çoruh, these rivers are the longest in the Eastern Anatolia Region.[18]

Etymology Edit

The English-language name Anatolia derives from the Greek Ἀνατολή (Anatolḗ) meaning "the East" and designating (from a Greek point of view) eastern regions in general. The Greek word refers to the direction where the sun rises, coming from ἀνατέλλω anatello '(Ι) rise up', comparable to terms in other languages such as "levant" from Latin levo 'to rise', "orient" from Latin orior 'to arise, to originate', Hebrew מִזְרָח mizraḥ 'east' from זָרַח zaraḥ 'to rise, to shine', Aramaic מִדְנָח midnaḥ from דְּנַח denaḥ 'to rise, to shine'.[19][20]

The use of Anatolian designations has varied over time, perhaps originally referring to the Aeolian, Ionian and Dorian colonies situated along the eastern coasts of the Aegean Sea, but also encompassing eastern regions in general. Such use of Anatolian designations was employed during the reign of Roman Emperor Diocletian (r. 284–305), who created the Diocese of the East, known in Greek as the Eastern Diocese, but completely unrelated to the regions of Asia Minor. In their widest territorial scope, Anatolian designations were employed during the reign of Roman Emperor Constantine I (306–337), who created the Praetorian prefecture of the East, known in Greek as the Eastern Prefecture, encompassing all eastern regions of the Late Roman Empire and spanning from Thrace to Egypt.

Only after the loss of other eastern regions during the 7th century and the reduction of Byzantine eastern domains to Asia Minor, that region became the only remaining part of the Byzantine East, and thus commonly referred to (in Greek) as the Eastern part of the Empire. At the same time, the Anatolic Theme (Ἀνατολικὸν θέμα / "the Eastern theme") was created, as a province (theme) covering the western and central parts of Turkey's present-day Central Anatolia Region, centered around Iconium, but ruled from the city of Amorium.[21][22]

The Latinized form "Anatolia", with its -ia ending, is probably a Medieval Latin innovation.[20] The modern Turkish form Anadolu derives directly from the Greek name Aνατολή (Anatolḗ). The Russian male name Anatoly, the French Anatole and plain Anatol, all stemming from saints Anatolius of Laodicea (d. 283) and Anatolius of Constantinople (d. 458; the first Patriarch of Constantinople), share the same linguistic origin.

Names Edit

The oldest known name for any region within Anatolia is related to its central area, known as the "Land of Hatti" – a designation that was initially used for the land of ancient Hattians, but later became the most common name for the entire territory under the rule of ancient Hittites.[23]

The first recorded name the Greeks used for the Anatolian peninsula, though not particularly popular at the time, was Ἀσία (Asía),[24] perhaps from an Akkadian expression for the "sunrise" or possibly echoing the name of the Assuwa league in western Anatolia.[citation needed] The Romans used it as the name of their province, comprising the west of the peninsula plus the nearby Aegean Islands. As the name "Asia" broadened its scope to apply to the vaster region east of the Mediterranean, some Greeks in Late Antiquity came to use the name Asia Minor (Μικρὰ Ἀσία, Mikrà Asía), meaning "Lesser Asia" to refer to present-day Anatolia, whereas the administration of the Empire preferred the description Ἀνατολή (Anatolḗ; lit.'the East').

The endonym Ῥωμανία (Rōmanía "the land of the Romans, i.e. the Eastern Roman Empire") was understood as another name for the province by the invading Seljuq Turks, who founded a Sultanate of Rûm in 1077. Thus (land of the) Rûm became another name for Anatolia. By the 12th century Europeans had started referring to Anatolia as Turchia.[25]

During the era of the Ottoman Empire, mapmakers outside the Empire referred to the mountainous plateau in eastern Anatolia as Armenia. Other contemporary sources called the same area Kurdistan.[26] Geographers have variously used the terms East Anatolian Plateau and Armenian Plateau to refer to the region, although the territory encompassed by each term largely overlaps with the other. According to archaeologist Lori Khatchadourian, this difference in terminology "primarily result[s] from the shifting political fortunes and cultural trajectories of the region since the nineteenth century".[27]

Turkey's First Geography Congress in 1941 created two geographical regions of Turkey to the east of the Gulf of Iskenderun-Black Sea line, the Eastern Anatolia Region and the Southeastern Anatolia Region,[28] the former largely corresponding to the western part of the Armenian Highlands, the latter to the northern part of the Mesopotamian plain. According to Richard Hovannisian, this changing of toponyms was "necessary to obscure all evidence" of the Armenian presence as part of the policy of Armenian genocide denial embarked upon by the newly established Turkish government and what Hovannisian calls its "foreign collaborators".[29]

History Edit

Prehistoric Anatolia Edit

 
The henges in Göbekli Tepe were erected as far back as 9600 BC.

Human habitation in Anatolia dates back to the Paleolithic.[30] Neolithic settlements include Çatalhöyük, Çayönü, Nevali Cori, Aşıklı Höyük, Boncuklu Höyük, Hacilar, Göbekli Tepe, Norşuntepe, Köşk Höyük, and Yumuktepe. Çatalhöyük (7.000 BCE) is considered the most advanced of these.[31] Neolithic Anatolia has been proposed as the homeland of the Indo-European language family, although linguists tend to favour a later origin in the steppes north of the Black Sea. However, it is clear that the Anatolian languages, the earliest attested branch of Indo-European, have been spoken in Anatolia since at least the 19th century BCE.[32][33]

Recent advances in archaeogenetics have confirmed that the spread of agriculture from the Middle East to Europe was strongly correlated with the migration of early farmers from Anatolia about 9,000 years ago, and was not just a cultural exchange.[34] Anatolian Neolithic farmers derived a significant portion of their ancestry from the Anatolian hunter-gatherers, suggesting that agriculture was adopted in site by these hunter-gatherers and not spread by demic diffusion into the region.[35]

Ancient Anatolia Edit

The earliest historical data related to Anatolia appear during the Bronze Age and continue throughout the Iron Age. The most ancient period in the history of Anatolia spans from the emergence of ancient Hattians, up to the conquest of Anatolia by the Achaemenid Empire in the 6th century BCE.

Hattians and Hurrians Edit

The earliest historically attested populations of Anatolia were the Hattians in central Anatolia, and Hurrians further to the east. The Hattians were an indigenous people, whose main center was the city of Hattush. Affiliation of Hattian language remains unclear, while Hurrian language belongs to a distinctive family of Hurro-Urartian languages. All of those languages are extinct; relationships with indigenous languages of the Caucasus have been proposed,[36] but are not generally accepted. The region became famous for exporting raw materials. Organized trade between Anatolia and Mesopotamia started to emerge during the period of the Akkadian Empire, and was continued and intensified during the period of the Old Assyrian Empire, between the 21st and the 18th centuries BCE. Assyrian traders were bringing tin and textiles in exchange for copper, silver or gold. Cuneiform records, dated c. 20th century BCE, found in Anatolia at the Assyrian colony of Kanesh, use an advanced system of trading computations and credit lines.[37][38][39]

Hittite Anatolia (18th–12th century BCE) Edit

 
The Sphinx Gate in Hattusa

Unlike the Akkadians and Assyrians, whose Anatolian trading posts were peripheral to their core lands in Mesopotamia, the Hittites were centered at Hattusa (modern Boğazkale) in north-central Anatolia by the 17th century BCE. They were speakers of an Indo-European language, the Hittite language, or nesili (the language of Nesa) in Hittite. The Hittites originated from local ancient cultures that grew in Anatolia, in addition to the arrival of Indo-European languages. Attested for the first time in the Assyrian tablets of Nesa around 2000 BCE, they conquered Hattusa in the 18th century BCE, imposing themselves over Hattian- and Hurrian-speaking populations. According to the widely accepted Kurgan theory on the Proto-Indo-European homeland, however, the Hittites (along with the other Indo-European ancient Anatolians) were themselves relatively recent immigrants to Anatolia from the north. However, they did not necessarily displace the population genetically; they assimilated into the former peoples' culture, preserving the Hittite language.

The Hittites adopted the Mesopotamian cuneiform script. In the Late Bronze Age, Hittite New Kingdom (c. 1650 BCE) was founded, becoming an empire in the 14th century BCE after the conquest of Kizzuwatna in the south-east and the defeat of the Assuwa league in western Anatolia. The empire reached its height in the 13th century BCE, controlling much of Asia Minor, northwestern Syria, and northwest upper Mesopotamia. However, the Hittite advance toward the Black Sea coast was halted by the semi-nomadic pastoralist and tribal Kaskians, a non-Indo-European people who had earlier displaced the Palaic-speaking Indo-Europeans.[40] Much of the history of the Hittite Empire concerned war with the rival empires of Egypt, Assyria and the Mitanni.[41]

The Ancient Egyptians eventually withdrew from the region after failing to gain the upper hand over the Hittites and becoming wary of the power of Assyria, which had destroyed the Mitanni Empire.[41] The Assyrians and Hittites were then left to battle over control of eastern and southern Anatolia and colonial territories in Syria. The Assyrians had better success than the Egyptians, annexing much Hittite (and Hurrian) territory in these regions.[42]

Post-Hittite Anatolia (12th–6th century BCE) Edit

 
The Theatre at Halicarnassus (modern Bodrum) was built in the 4th century BC by Mausolus, the Persian satrap (governor) of Caria. The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.[43][44]
 
The Library of Celsus in Ephesus was built by the Romans in 114–117.[45] The Temple of Artemis in Ephesus, built by king Croesus of Lydia in the 6th century BC, was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.[46]

After 1180 BCE, during the Late Bronze Age collapse, the Hittite Empire disintegrated into several independent Syro-Hittite states, subsequent to losing much territory to the Middle Assyrian Empire and being finally overrun by the Phrygians, another Indo-European people who are believed to have migrated from the Balkans. The Phrygian expansion into southeast Anatolia was eventually halted by the Assyrians, who controlled that region.[42]

Luwians

Another Indo-European people, the Luwians, rose to prominence in central and western Anatolia c. 2000 BCE. Their language belonged to the same linguistic branch as Hittite.[47] The general consensus amongst scholars is that Luwian was spoken across a large area of western Anatolia, including (possibly) Wilusa (Troy), the Seha River Land (to be identified with the Hermos and/or Kaikos valley), and the kingdom of Mira-Kuwaliya with its core territory of the Maeander valley.[48] From the 9th century BCE, Luwian regions coalesced into a number of states such as Lydia, Caria, and Lycia, all of which had Hellenic influence.

Arameans

Arameans encroached over the borders of south-central Anatolia in the century or so after the fall of the Hittite empire, and some of the Syro-Hittite states in this region became an amalgam of Hittites and Arameans. These became known as Syro-Hittite states.

Neo-Assyrian Empire
 
Fairy chimneys in Cappadocia

From the 10th to late 7th centuries BCE, much of Anatolia (particularly the southeastern regions) fell to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, including all of the Syro-Hittite states, Tabal, Commagene, the Cimmerians and Scythians, and swathes of Cappadocia.

The Neo-Assyrian empire collapsed due to a bitter series of civil wars followed by a combined attack by Medes, Persians, Scythians and their own Babylonian relations. The last Assyrian city to fall was Harran in southeast Anatolia. This city was the birthplace of the last king of Babylon, the Assyrian Nabonidus and his son and regent Belshazzar. Much of the region then fell to the short-lived Iran-based Median Empire, with the Babylonians and Scythians briefly appropriating some territory.

Cimmerian and Scythian invasions

From the late 8th century BCE, a new wave of Indo-European-speaking raiders entered northern and northeast Anatolia: the Cimmerians and Scythians. The Cimmerians overran Phrygia and the Scythians threatened to do the same to Urartu and Lydia, before both were finally checked by the Assyrians.

Early Greek presence
 
 
The Sebasteion (left) and Tetrapylon (right) in Aphrodisias of Caria, which was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage Site List in 2017.

The north-western coast of Anatolia was inhabited by Greeks of the Achaean/Mycenaean culture from the 20th century BCE, related to the Greeks of southeastern Europe and the Aegean.[49] Beginning with the Bronze Age collapse at the end of the 2nd millennium BCE, the west coast of Anatolia was settled by Ionian Greeks, usurping the area of the related but earlier Mycenaean Greeks. Over several centuries, numerous Ancient Greek city-states were established on the coasts of Anatolia. Greeks started Western philosophy on the western coast of Anatolia (Pre-Socratic philosophy).[49]

Classical Anatolia Edit

In Classical antiquity, Anatolia was described by the Ancient Greek historian Herodotus and later historians as divided into regions that were diverse in culture, language, and religious practices.[50] The northern regions included Bithynia, Paphlagonia, and Pontus; to the west were Mysia, Lydia, and Caria; and Lycia, Pamphylia, and Cilicia belonged to the southern shore. There were also several inland regions: Phrygia, Cappadocia, Pisidia, and Galatia.[50] Languages spoken included the late surviving Anatolic languages, Isaurian,[51] and Pisidian, Greek in western and coastal regions, Phrygian spoken until the 7th century CE,[52] local variants of Thracian in the northwest, the Galatian variant of Gaulish in Galatia until the 6th century CE,[53][54][55] Cappadocian in the homonymous region,[56] Armenian in the east, and Kartvelian languages in the northeast.

Anatolia is known as the birthplace of minted coinage (as opposed to unminted coinage, which first appears in Mesopotamia at a much earlier date) as a medium of exchange, some time in the 7th century BCE in Lydia. The use of minted coins continued to flourish during the Greek and Roman eras.[57][58]

During the 6th century BCE, all of Anatolia was conquered by the Persian Achaemenid Empire, the Persians having usurped the Medes as the dominant dynasty of Persia. In 499 BCE, the Ionian city-states on the west coast of Anatolia rebelled against Persian rule. The Ionian Revolt, as it became known, though quelled, initiated the Greco-Persian Wars, which ended in a Greek victory in 449 BCE, and the Ionian cities regained their independence. By the Peace of Antalcidas (387 BCE), which ended the Corinthian War, Persia regained control over Ionia.[59][60]

In 334 BCE, the Macedonian Greek king Alexander the Great conquered the Anatolian peninsula from the Achaemenid Persian Empire.[61] Alexander's conquest opened up the interior of Asia Minor to Greek settlement and influence.

 
Sanctuary of the Kings of Commagene on Mount Nemrut (1st century BCE)

Following the death of Alexander the Great and the subsequent breakup of the Macedonian Empire, Anatolia was ruled by a series of Hellenistic kingdoms, such as the Attalids of Pergamum and the Seleucids, the latter controlling most of Anatolia. A period of peaceful Hellenization followed, such that the local Anatolian languages had been supplanted by Greek by the 1st century BCE. In 133 BCE the last Attalid king bequeathed his kingdom to the Roman Republic; western and central Anatolia came under Roman control, but Hellenistic culture remained predominant.

Mithridates VI Eupator, ruler of the Kingdom of Pontus in northern Anatolia, waged war against the Roman Republic in the year 88 BCE in order to halt the advance of Roman hegemony in the Aegean Sea region. Mithridates VI sought to dominate Asia Minor and the Black Sea region, waging several hard-fought but ultimately unsuccessful wars (the Mithridatic Wars) to break Roman dominion over Asia and the Hellenic world.[62] He has been called the greatest ruler of the Kingdom of Pontus.[63] Further annexations by Rome, in particular of the Kingdom of Pontus by Pompey, brought all of Anatolia under Roman control, except for the southeastern frontier with the Parthian Empire, which remained unstable for centuries, causing a series of military conflicts that culminated in the Roman–Parthian Wars (54 BCE – 217 CE).

Early Christian Period Edit

 
  Roman Empire in 117 CE at its greatest extent, at the time of Trajan's death.

After the first division of the Roman Empire, Anatolia became part of the Eastern Roman Empire, otherwise known as the Byzantine Empire or Byzantium.[65] In the 1st century CE, Anatolia became one of the first places where Christianity spread, so that by the 4th century CE, western and central Anatolia were overwhelmingly Christian and Greek-speaking.[65]

Byzantine Anatolia was one of the wealthiest and most densely populated places in the Later Roman Empire. Anatolia's wealth grew during the 4th and 5th centuries thanks, in part, to the Pilgrim's Road that ran through the peninsula. Literary evidence about the rural landscape stems from the Christian hagiographies of the 6th-century Nicholas of Sion and 7th-century Theodore of Sykeon. Large and prosperous urban centers of Byzantine Anatolia included Assos, Ephesus, Miletus, Nicaea, Pergamum, Priene, Sardis, and Aphrodisias.[65]

From the mid-5th century onwards, urbanism was affected negatively and began to decline, while the rural areas reached unprecedented levels of prosperity in the region.[65] Historians and scholars continue to debate the cause of the urban decline in Byzantine Anatolia between the 6th and 7th centuries,[65] variously attributing it to the Plague of Justinian (541), the Byzantine–Sasanian War (602–628), and the Arab invasion of the Levant (634–638).[66]

Medieval Period Edit

 
Byzantine Anatolia and the Byzantine-Arab frontier zone in the mid-9th century

In the 10 years following the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, the Seljuk Turks from Central Asia migrated over large areas of Anatolia, with particular concentrations around the northwestern rim.[67] The Turkish language and the Islamic religion were gradually introduced as a result of the Seljuk conquest, and this period marks the start of Anatolia's slow transition from predominantly Christian and Greek-speaking, to predominantly Muslim and Turkish-speaking (although ethnic groups such as Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians remained numerous and retained Christianity and their native languages). In the following century, the Byzantines managed to reassert their control in western and northern Anatolia. Control of Anatolia was then split between the Byzantine Empire and the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm, with the Byzantine holdings gradually being reduced.[68]

 
Settlements and regions affected during the first wave of Turkish invasions in Asia Minor (11th–13th century)

In 1255, the Mongols swept through eastern and central Anatolia, and would remain until 1335. The Ilkhanate garrison was stationed near Ankara.[68][69] After the decline of the Ilkhanate from 1335 to 1353, the Mongol Empire's legacy in the region was the Uyghur Eretna Dynasty that was overthrown by Kadi Burhan al-Din in 1381.[70]

By the end of the 14th century, most of Anatolia was controlled by various Anatolian beyliks. Smyrna fell in 1330, and the last Byzantine stronghold in Anatolia, Philadelphia, fell in 1390. The Turkmen Beyliks were under the control of the Mongols, at least nominally, through declining Seljuk sultans.[71][72] The Beyliks did not mint coins in the names of their own leaders while they remained under the suzerainty of the Mongol Ilkhanids.[73] The Osmanli ruler Osman I was the first Turkish ruler who minted coins in his own name in 1320s; they bear the legend "Minted by Osman son of Ertugrul".[74] Since the minting of coins was a prerogative accorded in Islamic practice only to a sovereign, it can be considered that the Osmanli, or Ottoman Turks, had become formally independent from the Mongol Khans.[75]

Ottoman Empire Edit

 
Territorial evolution of the Ottoman Empire between 1359 and 1683

Among the Turkish leaders, the Ottomans emerged as great power under Osman I and his son Orhan.[76][77] The Anatolian beyliks were successively absorbed into the rising Ottoman Empire during the 15th century.[78] It is not well understood how the Osmanlı, or Ottoman Turks, came to dominate their neighbours, as the history of medieval Anatolia is still little known.[79] The Ottomans completed the conquest of the peninsula in 1517 with the taking of Halicarnassus (modern Bodrum) from the Knights of Saint John.[80]

Modern times Edit

 
Ethnic map of Asia Minor in 1905–06

With the acceleration of the decline of the Ottoman Empire in the early 19th century, and as a result of the expansionist policies of the Russian Empire in the Caucasus, many Muslim nations and groups in that region, mainly Circassians, Tatars, Azeris, Lezgis, Chechens and several Turkic groups left their homelands and settled in Anatolia. As the Ottoman Empire further shrank in the Balkan regions and then fragmented during the Balkan Wars, much of the non-Christian populations of its former possessions, mainly Balkan Muslims (Bosniaks, Albanians, Turks, Muslim Bulgarians and Greek Muslims such as the Vallahades from Greek Macedonia), were resettled in various parts of Anatolia, mostly in formerly Christian villages throughout Anatolia.

A continuous reverse migration occurred since the early 19th century, when Greeks from Anatolia, Constantinople and Pontus area migrated toward the newly independent Kingdom of Greece, and also towards the United States, the southern part of the Russian Empire, Latin America, and the rest of Europe.

Following the Russo-Persian Treaty of Turkmenchay (1828) and the incorporation of Eastern Armenia into the Russian Empire, another migration involved the large Armenian population of Anatolia, which recorded significant migration rates from Western Armenia (Eastern Anatolia) toward the Russian Empire, especially toward its newly established Armenian provinces.

Anatolia remained multi-ethnic until the early 20th century (see the rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire). During World War I, the Armenian genocide, the Greek genocide (especially in Pontus), and the Assyrian genocide almost entirely removed the ancient indigenous communities of Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian populations in Anatolia and surrounding regions. Following the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922, most remaining ethnic Anatolian Greeks were forced out during the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey. Of the remainder, most have left Turkey since then, leaving fewer than 5,000 Greeks in Anatolia today.

Geology Edit

 
Salty shores of Lake Tuz

Anatolia's terrain is structurally complex. A central massif composed of uplifted blocks and downfolded troughs, covered by recent deposits and giving the appearance of a plateau with rough terrain, is wedged between two folded mountain ranges that converge in the east. True lowland is confined to a few narrow coastal strips along the Aegean, Mediterranean, and the Black Sea coasts. Flat or gently sloping land is rare and largely confined to the deltas of the Kızıl River, the coastal plains of Çukurova and the valley floors of the Gediz River and the Büyük Menderes River as well as some interior high plains in Anatolia, mainly around Lake Tuz (Salt Lake) and the Konya Basin (Konya Ovasi).

There are two mountain ranges in southern Anatolia: the Taurus and the Zagros mountains.[81]

Climate Edit

Anatolia has a varied range of climates. The central plateau is characterized by a continental climate, with hot summers and cold snowy winters. The south and west coasts enjoy a typical Mediterranean climate, with mild rainy winters, and warm dry summers.[82] The Black Sea and Marmara coasts have a temperate oceanic climate, with cool foggy summers and much rainfall throughout the year.

Ecoregions Edit

 
Mediterranean climate is prevalent in the Turkish Riviera
 
Anatolia's dry central plateau

There is a diverse number of plant and animal communities.

The mountains and coastal plain of northern Anatolia experience a humid and mild climate. There are temperate broadleaf, mixed and coniferous forests. The central and eastern plateau, with its drier continental climate, has deciduous forests and forest steppes. Western and southern Anatolia, which have a Mediterranean climate, contain Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub ecoregions.

 
A panorama of the Pontic Mountains in the Black Sea Region of northern Anatolia, Turkey

Demographics Edit

The largest cities in Anatolia (aside from the Asian side of Istanbul) are Ankara, İzmir, Bursa, Antalya, Konya, Adana, İzmit, Mersin, Manisa, Kayseri, Samsun, Balıkesir, Kahramanmaraş, Aydın, Adapazarı, Denizli, Muğla, Eskişehir, Trabzon, Ordu, Afyonkarahisar, Sivas, Tokat, Zonguldak, Kütahya, Çanakkale, Osmaniye, Şırnak and Çorum. All have populations of more than 500,000.[citation needed]

See also Edit

Explanatory notes Edit

  1. ^ From Ancient Greek: Ἀνατολή, romanizedAnatolḗ, lit. 'east' or 'sunrise'; Turkish: Anadolu
  2. ^ Medieval and Modern Greek: Μικρὰ Ἀσία, romanizedMikrá Asía; Turkish: Küçük Asya
  3. ^ Additional alternative names include Asian Turkey, the Anatolian peninsula (Greek: Χερσόνησος της Ανατολίας, romanizedChersónisos tis Anatolías; Turkish: Anadolu Yarımadası), and the Anatolian plateau.

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Hopkins, Daniel J.; Staff, Merriam-Webster; 편집부 (2001). Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. p. 46. ISBN 0-87779-546-0. from the original on 28 November 2021. Retrieved 18 May 2001.
  2. ^ a b c Stephen Mitchell (1995). Anatolia: Land, Men, and Gods in Asia Minor. The Celts in Anatolia and the impact of Roman rule. Clarendon Press, 266 pp. ISBN 978-0198150299 [1] 29 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine
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General and cited sources Edit

  • Akurgal, Ekrem (2001). The Hattian and Hittite Civilizations. Ankara: Ministry of Culture. ISBN 978-9751727565. from the original on 28 April 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  • Barjamovic, Gojko (2011). A Historical Geography of Anatolia in the Old Assyrian Colony Period. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 978-8763536455. from the original on 28 April 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2005) [1998]. The Kingdom of the Hittites (2nd revised ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199279081. from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  • Bryce, Trevor R. (2009). The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia: The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the fall of the Persian Empire. London & New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1134159079.
  • Steadman, Sharon R.; McMahon, Gregory (2011). McMahon, Gregory; Steadman, Sharon (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia:(10,000–323 BCE). Oxford University Press Inc. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376142.001.0001. hdl:11693/51311. ISBN 978-0195376142.

Further reading Edit

  • Akat, Yücel, Neşe Özgünel, and Aynur Durukan. 1991. Anatolia: A World Heritage. Ankara: Kültür Bakanliǧi.
  • Brewster, Harry. 1993. Classical Anatolia: The Glory of Hellenism. London: I. B. Tauris.
  • Donbaz, Veysel, and Şemsi Güner. 1995. The Royal Roads of Anatolia. Istanbul: Dünya.
  • Dusinberre, Elspeth R. M. 2013. Empire, Authority, and Autonomy In Achaemenid Anatolia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Gates, Charles, Jacques Morin, and Thomas Zimmermann. 2009. Sacred Landscapes In Anatolia and Neighboring Regions. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Mikasa, Takahito, ed. 1999. Essays On Ancient Anatolia. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
  • Takaoğlu, Turan. 2004. Ethnoarchaeological Investigations In Rural Anatolia. İstanbul: Ege Yayınları.
  • Taracha, Piotr. 2009. Religions of Second Millennium Anatolia. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
  • Taymaz, Tuncay, Y. Yilmaz, and Yildirim Dilek. 2007. The Geodynamics of the Aegean and Anatolia. London: Geological Society.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Anatolia at Wikimedia Commons

anatolia, other, uses, disambiguation, asia, minor, redirects, here, other, uses, asia, minor, disambiguation, also, known, asia, minor, large, peninsula, west, asia, western, most, extension, continental, asia, land, mass, constitutes, most, territory, contem. For other uses see Anatolia disambiguation Asia Minor redirects here For other uses see Asia Minor disambiguation Anatolia a also known as Asia Minor b c is a large peninsula in West Asia and is the western most extension of continental Asia The land mass of Anatolia constitutes most of the territory of contemporary Turkey Geographically the Anatolian region is bounded by the Turkish Straits to the north west the Black Sea to the north the Armenian Highlands to the east the Mediterranean Sea to the south and the Aegean Sea to the west Topographically the Sea of Marmara connects the Black Sea with the Aegean Sea through the Bosporus strait and the Dardanelles strait and separates Anatolia from Thrace in the Balkan peninsula of Southeastern Europe AnatoliaNative name Anadolu ἈnatolhOne definition of Anatolia within modern Turkey excluding most of the Southeastern and Eastern Anatolia Regions 1 2 Other definitions are coterminous with Turkey s eastern and southern borders Etymology the East from GreekGeographyLocationWest AsiaCoordinates39 N 35 E 39 N 35 E 39 35Area756 000 km2 292 000 sq mi 3 incl Southeastern and Eastern Anatolia Region AdministrationTurkeyLargest cityAnkara pop 5 700 000 4 DemographicsDemonymAnatolian Turkish Anadolulu LanguagesTurkishMinority Kurdish Armenian Greek Kabardian North Caucasian languages various othersEthnic groupsTurks Kurds Armenians Chechens Circassians Greeks Laz various othersAdditional informationTime zoneTRT UTC 3 The eastern border of Anatolia is a line between the Gulf of Alexandretta and the Black Sea bounded by the Armenian Highlands to the east and Mesopotamia to the south east thus Anatolia comprises approximately the western two thirds of the Asian territory of Turkey Anatolia sometimes is synonymous with Asian Turkey thereby including the western part of the Armenian Highlands and northern Mesopotamia 5 and making its eastern and southern borders coterminous with Turkey s borders 6 7 8 The ancient Anatolian peoples spoke the now extinct Anatolian languages of the Indo European language family which were largely replaced by the Greek language during classical antiquity as well as during the Hellenistic Roman and Byzantine periods The major Anatolian languages included Hittite Luwian and Lydian while other poorly attested local languages included Phrygian and Mysian Hurro Urartian languages were spoken in the southeastern kingdom of Mitanni while Galatian a Celtic language was spoken in Galatia central Anatolia Ancient peoples in the region included Galatians Hurrians Assyrians Hattians Cimmerians as well as Ionian Dorian and Aeolic Greeks The Turkification of Anatolia began under the rule of the Seljuk Empire in the late 11th century continued under the Ottoman Empire between the late 13th and early 20th centuries and continues today under the Republic of Turkey However various non Turkic languages continue to be spoken by minorities in Anatolia including Kurdish Neo Aramaic Armenian North Caucasian languages Laz Georgian and Greek Contents 1 Geography 2 Etymology 3 Names 4 History 4 1 Prehistoric Anatolia 4 2 Ancient Anatolia 4 2 1 Hattians and Hurrians 4 2 2 Hittite Anatolia 18th 12th century BCE 4 2 3 Post Hittite Anatolia 12th 6th century BCE 4 3 Classical Anatolia 4 4 Early Christian Period 4 5 Medieval Period 4 6 Ottoman Empire 4 7 Modern times 5 Geology 5 1 Climate 5 2 Ecoregions 6 Demographics 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 General and cited sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeography EditMain article Geography of Turkey nbsp Europe during the Last Glacial Maximum c 20 000 years ago Anatolia was connected to the European mainland until c 5600 BCE 9 10 11 when the melting ice sheets caused the sea level in the Mediterranean to rise around 120 m 390 ft 10 11 triggering the formation of the Turkish Straits 9 10 11 As a result two former lakes the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea 9 were connected to the Mediterranean Sea which separated Anatolia from Europe Traditionally Anatolia is considered to extend in the east to an indefinite line running from the Gulf of Alexandretta to the Black Sea 12 coterminous with the Anatolian Plateau This traditional geographical definition is used for example in the latest edition of Merriam Webster s Geographical Dictionary 1 Under this definition Anatolia is bounded to the east by the Armenian Highlands and the Euphrates before that river bends to the southeast to enter Mesopotamia 2 To the southeast it is bounded by the ranges that separate it from the Orontes valley in Syria and the Mesopotamian plain 2 Following the Armenian genocide Western Armenia was renamed the Eastern Anatolia Region by the newly established Turkish government 13 14 In 1941 with the First Geography Congress which divided Turkey into seven geographical regions based on differences in climate and landscape the eastern provinces of Turkey were placed into the Eastern Anatolia Region 15 which largely corresponds to the historical region of Western Armenia named as such after the division of Greater Armenia between the Roman Byzantine Empire Western Armenia and Sassanid Persia Eastern Armenia in 387 AD Vazken Davidian terms the expanded use of Anatolia to apply to territory in eastern Turkey that was formerly referred to as Armenia which had a sizeable Armenian population before the Armenian genocide an ahistorical imposition and notes that a growing body of literature is uncomfortable with referring to the Ottoman East as Eastern Anatolia 16 13 14 The highest mountain in the Eastern Anatolia Region also the highest peak in the Armenian Highlands is Mount Ararat 5123 m 17 The Euphrates Aras Karasu and Murat rivers connect the Armenian Highlands to the South Caucasus and the Upper Euphrates Valley Along with the Coruh these rivers are the longest in the Eastern Anatolia Region 18 Etymology EditThe English language name Anatolia derives from the Greek Ἀnatolh Anatolḗ meaning the East and designating from a Greek point of view eastern regions in general The Greek word refers to the direction where the sun rises coming from ἀnatellw anatello I rise up comparable to terms in other languages such as levant from Latin levo to rise orient from Latin orior to arise to originate Hebrew מ ז ר ח mizraḥ east from ז ר ח zaraḥ to rise to shine Aramaic מ ד נ ח midnaḥ from ד נ ח denaḥ to rise to shine 19 20 The use of Anatolian designations has varied over time perhaps originally referring to the Aeolian Ionian and Dorian colonies situated along the eastern coasts of the Aegean Sea but also encompassing eastern regions in general Such use of Anatolian designations was employed during the reign of Roman Emperor Diocletian r 284 305 who created the Diocese of the East known in Greek as the Eastern Diocese but completely unrelated to the regions of Asia Minor In their widest territorial scope Anatolian designations were employed during the reign of Roman Emperor Constantine I 306 337 who created the Praetorian prefecture of the East known in Greek as the Eastern Prefecture encompassing all eastern regions of the Late Roman Empire and spanning from Thrace to Egypt Only after the loss of other eastern regions during the 7th century and the reduction of Byzantine eastern domains to Asia Minor that region became the only remaining part of the Byzantine East and thus commonly referred to in Greek as the Eastern part of the Empire At the same time the Anatolic Theme Ἀnatolikὸn 8ema the Eastern theme was created as a province theme covering the western and central parts of Turkey s present day Central Anatolia Region centered around Iconium but ruled from the city of Amorium 21 22 The Latinized form Anatolia with its ia ending is probably a Medieval Latin innovation 20 The modern Turkish form Anadolu derives directly from the Greek name Anatolh Anatolḗ The Russian male name Anatoly the French Anatole and plain Anatol all stemming from saints Anatolius of Laodicea d 283 and Anatolius of Constantinople d 458 the first Patriarch of Constantinople share the same linguistic origin Names EditFurther information Geographical name changes in Turkey The oldest known name for any region within Anatolia is related to its central area known as the Land of Hatti a designation that was initially used for the land of ancient Hattians but later became the most common name for the entire territory under the rule of ancient Hittites 23 The first recorded name the Greeks used for the Anatolian peninsula though not particularly popular at the time was Ἀsia Asia 24 perhaps from an Akkadian expression for the sunrise or possibly echoing the name of the Assuwa league in western Anatolia citation needed The Romans used it as the name of their province comprising the west of the peninsula plus the nearby Aegean Islands As the name Asia broadened its scope to apply to the vaster region east of the Mediterranean some Greeks in Late Antiquity came to use the name Asia Minor Mikrὰ Ἀsia Mikra Asia meaning Lesser Asia to refer to present day Anatolia whereas the administration of the Empire preferred the description Ἀnatolh Anatolḗ lit the East The endonym Ῥwmania Rōmania the land of the Romans i e the Eastern Roman Empire was understood as another name for the province by the invading Seljuq Turks who founded a Sultanate of Rum in 1077 Thus land of the Rum became another name for Anatolia By the 12th century Europeans had started referring to Anatolia as Turchia 25 During the era of the Ottoman Empire mapmakers outside the Empire referred to the mountainous plateau in eastern Anatolia as Armenia Other contemporary sources called the same area Kurdistan 26 Geographers have variously used the terms East Anatolian Plateau and Armenian Plateau to refer to the region although the territory encompassed by each term largely overlaps with the other According to archaeologist Lori Khatchadourian this difference in terminology primarily result s from the shifting political fortunes and cultural trajectories of the region since the nineteenth century 27 Turkey s First Geography Congress in 1941 created two geographical regions of Turkey to the east of the Gulf of Iskenderun Black Sea line the Eastern Anatolia Region and the Southeastern Anatolia Region 28 the former largely corresponding to the western part of the Armenian Highlands the latter to the northern part of the Mesopotamian plain According to Richard Hovannisian this changing of toponyms was necessary to obscure all evidence of the Armenian presence as part of the policy of Armenian genocide denial embarked upon by the newly established Turkish government and what Hovannisian calls its foreign collaborators 29 History EditMain article History of Anatolia Prehistoric Anatolia Edit nbsp The henges in Gobekli Tepe were erected as far back as 9600 BC Main article Prehistory of Anatolia Human habitation in Anatolia dates back to the Paleolithic 30 Neolithic settlements include Catalhoyuk Cayonu Nevali Cori Asikli Hoyuk Boncuklu Hoyuk Hacilar Gobekli Tepe Norsuntepe Kosk Hoyuk and Yumuktepe Catalhoyuk 7 000 BCE is considered the most advanced of these 31 Neolithic Anatolia has been proposed as the homeland of the Indo European language family although linguists tend to favour a later origin in the steppes north of the Black Sea However it is clear that the Anatolian languages the earliest attested branch of Indo European have been spoken in Anatolia since at least the 19th century BCE 32 33 Recent advances in archaeogenetics have confirmed that the spread of agriculture from the Middle East to Europe was strongly correlated with the migration of early farmers from Anatolia about 9 000 years ago and was not just a cultural exchange 34 Anatolian Neolithic farmers derived a significant portion of their ancestry from the Anatolian hunter gatherers suggesting that agriculture was adopted in site by these hunter gatherers and not spread by demic diffusion into the region 35 Ancient Anatolia Edit Main articles List of ancient kingdoms of Anatolia and Ancient regions of Anatolia The earliest historical data related to Anatolia appear during the Bronze Age and continue throughout the Iron Age The most ancient period in the history of Anatolia spans from the emergence of ancient Hattians up to the conquest of Anatolia by the Achaemenid Empire in the 6th century BCE Hattians and Hurrians Edit Main articles Hattians and Hurrians The earliest historically attested populations of Anatolia were the Hattians in central Anatolia and Hurrians further to the east The Hattians were an indigenous people whose main center was the city of Hattush Affiliation of Hattian language remains unclear while Hurrian language belongs to a distinctive family of Hurro Urartian languages All of those languages are extinct relationships with indigenous languages of the Caucasus have been proposed 36 but are not generally accepted The region became famous for exporting raw materials Organized trade between Anatolia and Mesopotamia started to emerge during the period of the Akkadian Empire and was continued and intensified during the period of the Old Assyrian Empire between the 21st and the 18th centuries BCE Assyrian traders were bringing tin and textiles in exchange for copper silver or gold Cuneiform records dated c 20th century BCE found in Anatolia at the Assyrian colony of Kanesh use an advanced system of trading computations and credit lines 37 38 39 Hittite Anatolia 18th 12th century BCE Edit Main article Hittites nbsp The Sphinx Gate in HattusaUnlike the Akkadians and Assyrians whose Anatolian trading posts were peripheral to their core lands in Mesopotamia the Hittites were centered at Hattusa modern Bogazkale in north central Anatolia by the 17th century BCE They were speakers of an Indo European language the Hittite language or nesili the language of Nesa in Hittite The Hittites originated from local ancient cultures that grew in Anatolia in addition to the arrival of Indo European languages Attested for the first time in the Assyrian tablets of Nesa around 2000 BCE they conquered Hattusa in the 18th century BCE imposing themselves over Hattian and Hurrian speaking populations According to the widely accepted Kurgan theory on the Proto Indo European homeland however the Hittites along with the other Indo European ancient Anatolians were themselves relatively recent immigrants to Anatolia from the north However they did not necessarily displace the population genetically they assimilated into the former peoples culture preserving the Hittite language The Hittites adopted the Mesopotamian cuneiform script In the Late Bronze Age Hittite New Kingdom c 1650 BCE was founded becoming an empire in the 14th century BCE after the conquest of Kizzuwatna in the south east and the defeat of the Assuwa league in western Anatolia The empire reached its height in the 13th century BCE controlling much of Asia Minor northwestern Syria and northwest upper Mesopotamia However the Hittite advance toward the Black Sea coast was halted by the semi nomadic pastoralist and tribal Kaskians a non Indo European people who had earlier displaced the Palaic speaking Indo Europeans 40 Much of the history of the Hittite Empire concerned war with the rival empires of Egypt Assyria and the Mitanni 41 The Ancient Egyptians eventually withdrew from the region after failing to gain the upper hand over the Hittites and becoming wary of the power of Assyria which had destroyed the Mitanni Empire 41 The Assyrians and Hittites were then left to battle over control of eastern and southern Anatolia and colonial territories in Syria The Assyrians had better success than the Egyptians annexing much Hittite and Hurrian territory in these regions 42 Post Hittite Anatolia 12th 6th century BCE Edit nbsp The Theatre at Halicarnassus modern Bodrum was built in the 4th century BC by Mausolus the Persian satrap governor of Caria The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World 43 44 nbsp The Library of Celsus in Ephesus was built by the Romans in 114 117 45 The Temple of Artemis in Ephesus built by king Croesus of Lydia in the 6th century BC was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World 46 After 1180 BCE during the Late Bronze Age collapse the Hittite Empire disintegrated into several independent Syro Hittite states subsequent to losing much territory to the Middle Assyrian Empire and being finally overrun by the Phrygians another Indo European people who are believed to have migrated from the Balkans The Phrygian expansion into southeast Anatolia was eventually halted by the Assyrians who controlled that region 42 LuwiansAnother Indo European people the Luwians rose to prominence in central and western Anatolia c 2000 BCE Their language belonged to the same linguistic branch as Hittite 47 The general consensus amongst scholars is that Luwian was spoken across a large area of western Anatolia including possibly Wilusa Troy the Seha River Land to be identified with the Hermos and or Kaikos valley and the kingdom of Mira Kuwaliya with its core territory of the Maeander valley 48 From the 9th century BCE Luwian regions coalesced into a number of states such as Lydia Caria and Lycia all of which had Hellenic influence ArameansArameans encroached over the borders of south central Anatolia in the century or so after the fall of the Hittite empire and some of the Syro Hittite states in this region became an amalgam of Hittites and Arameans These became known as Syro Hittite states Neo Assyrian Empire nbsp Fairy chimneys in CappadociaFrom the 10th to late 7th centuries BCE much of Anatolia particularly the southeastern regions fell to the Neo Assyrian Empire including all of the Syro Hittite states Tabal Commagene the Cimmerians and Scythians and swathes of Cappadocia The Neo Assyrian empire collapsed due to a bitter series of civil wars followed by a combined attack by Medes Persians Scythians and their own Babylonian relations The last Assyrian city to fall was Harran in southeast Anatolia This city was the birthplace of the last king of Babylon the Assyrian Nabonidus and his son and regent Belshazzar Much of the region then fell to the short lived Iran based Median Empire with the Babylonians and Scythians briefly appropriating some territory Cimmerian and Scythian invasionsFrom the late 8th century BCE a new wave of Indo European speaking raiders entered northern and northeast Anatolia the Cimmerians and Scythians The Cimmerians overran Phrygia and the Scythians threatened to do the same to Urartu and Lydia before both were finally checked by the Assyrians Early Greek presence nbsp nbsp The Sebasteion left and Tetrapylon right in Aphrodisias of Caria which was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage Site List in 2017 The north western coast of Anatolia was inhabited by Greeks of the Achaean Mycenaean culture from the 20th century BCE related to the Greeks of southeastern Europe and the Aegean 49 Beginning with the Bronze Age collapse at the end of the 2nd millennium BCE the west coast of Anatolia was settled by Ionian Greeks usurping the area of the related but earlier Mycenaean Greeks Over several centuries numerous Ancient Greek city states were established on the coasts of Anatolia Greeks started Western philosophy on the western coast of Anatolia Pre Socratic philosophy 49 Classical Anatolia Edit Main article Classical Anatolia In Classical antiquity Anatolia was described by the Ancient Greek historian Herodotus and later historians as divided into regions that were diverse in culture language and religious practices 50 The northern regions included Bithynia Paphlagonia and Pontus to the west were Mysia Lydia and Caria and Lycia Pamphylia and Cilicia belonged to the southern shore There were also several inland regions Phrygia Cappadocia Pisidia and Galatia 50 Languages spoken included the late surviving Anatolic languages Isaurian 51 and Pisidian Greek in western and coastal regions Phrygian spoken until the 7th century CE 52 local variants of Thracian in the northwest the Galatian variant of Gaulish in Galatia until the 6th century CE 53 54 55 Cappadocian in the homonymous region 56 Armenian in the east and Kartvelian languages in the northeast Anatolia is known as the birthplace of minted coinage as opposed to unminted coinage which first appears in Mesopotamia at a much earlier date as a medium of exchange some time in the 7th century BCE in Lydia The use of minted coins continued to flourish during the Greek and Roman eras 57 58 During the 6th century BCE all of Anatolia was conquered by the Persian Achaemenid Empire the Persians having usurped the Medes as the dominant dynasty of Persia In 499 BCE the Ionian city states on the west coast of Anatolia rebelled against Persian rule The Ionian Revolt as it became known though quelled initiated the Greco Persian Wars which ended in a Greek victory in 449 BCE and the Ionian cities regained their independence By the Peace of Antalcidas 387 BCE which ended the Corinthian War Persia regained control over Ionia 59 60 In 334 BCE the Macedonian Greek king Alexander the Great conquered the Anatolian peninsula from the Achaemenid Persian Empire 61 Alexander s conquest opened up the interior of Asia Minor to Greek settlement and influence nbsp Sanctuary of the Kings of Commagene on Mount Nemrut 1st century BCE Following the death of Alexander the Great and the subsequent breakup of the Macedonian Empire Anatolia was ruled by a series of Hellenistic kingdoms such as the Attalids of Pergamum and the Seleucids the latter controlling most of Anatolia A period of peaceful Hellenization followed such that the local Anatolian languages had been supplanted by Greek by the 1st century BCE In 133 BCE the last Attalid king bequeathed his kingdom to the Roman Republic western and central Anatolia came under Roman control but Hellenistic culture remained predominant Mithridates VI Eupator ruler of the Kingdom of Pontus in northern Anatolia waged war against the Roman Republic in the year 88 BCE in order to halt the advance of Roman hegemony in the Aegean Sea region Mithridates VI sought to dominate Asia Minor and the Black Sea region waging several hard fought but ultimately unsuccessful wars the Mithridatic Wars to break Roman dominion over Asia and the Hellenic world 62 He has been called the greatest ruler of the Kingdom of Pontus 63 Further annexations by Rome in particular of the Kingdom of Pontus by Pompey brought all of Anatolia under Roman control except for the southeastern frontier with the Parthian Empire which remained unstable for centuries causing a series of military conflicts that culminated in the Roman Parthian Wars 54 BCE 217 CE Early Christian Period Edit Main articles Christianity as the Roman state religion and Spread of Christianity Further information Christianity in late antiquity and Crisis of the Third Century nbsp Roman Empire in 117 CE at its greatest extent at the time of Trajan s death vassal states 64 After the first division of the Roman Empire Anatolia became part of the Eastern Roman Empire otherwise known as the Byzantine Empire or Byzantium 65 In the 1st century CE Anatolia became one of the first places where Christianity spread so that by the 4th century CE western and central Anatolia were overwhelmingly Christian and Greek speaking 65 Byzantine Anatolia was one of the wealthiest and most densely populated places in the Later Roman Empire Anatolia s wealth grew during the 4th and 5th centuries thanks in part to the Pilgrim s Road that ran through the peninsula Literary evidence about the rural landscape stems from the Christian hagiographies of the 6th century Nicholas of Sion and 7th century Theodore of Sykeon Large and prosperous urban centers of Byzantine Anatolia included Assos Ephesus Miletus Nicaea Pergamum Priene Sardis and Aphrodisias 65 From the mid 5th century onwards urbanism was affected negatively and began to decline while the rural areas reached unprecedented levels of prosperity in the region 65 Historians and scholars continue to debate the cause of the urban decline in Byzantine Anatolia between the 6th and 7th centuries 65 variously attributing it to the Plague of Justinian 541 the Byzantine Sasanian War 602 628 and the Arab invasion of the Levant 634 638 66 Medieval Period Edit Further information Byzantine Anatolia See also List of states in late medieval Anatolia nbsp Byzantine Anatolia and the Byzantine Arab frontier zone in the mid 9th centuryIn the 10 years following the Battle of Manzikert in 1071 the Seljuk Turks from Central Asia migrated over large areas of Anatolia with particular concentrations around the northwestern rim 67 The Turkish language and the Islamic religion were gradually introduced as a result of the Seljuk conquest and this period marks the start of Anatolia s slow transition from predominantly Christian and Greek speaking to predominantly Muslim and Turkish speaking although ethnic groups such as Armenians Greeks and Assyrians remained numerous and retained Christianity and their native languages In the following century the Byzantines managed to reassert their control in western and northern Anatolia Control of Anatolia was then split between the Byzantine Empire and the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum with the Byzantine holdings gradually being reduced 68 nbsp Settlements and regions affected during the first wave of Turkish invasions in Asia Minor 11th 13th century In 1255 the Mongols swept through eastern and central Anatolia and would remain until 1335 The Ilkhanate garrison was stationed near Ankara 68 69 After the decline of the Ilkhanate from 1335 to 1353 the Mongol Empire s legacy in the region was the Uyghur Eretna Dynasty that was overthrown by Kadi Burhan al Din in 1381 70 By the end of the 14th century most of Anatolia was controlled by various Anatolian beyliks Smyrna fell in 1330 and the last Byzantine stronghold in Anatolia Philadelphia fell in 1390 The Turkmen Beyliks were under the control of the Mongols at least nominally through declining Seljuk sultans 71 72 The Beyliks did not mint coins in the names of their own leaders while they remained under the suzerainty of the Mongol Ilkhanids 73 The Osmanli ruler Osman I was the first Turkish ruler who minted coins in his own name in 1320s they bear the legend Minted by Osman son of Ertugrul 74 Since the minting of coins was a prerogative accorded in Islamic practice only to a sovereign it can be considered that the Osmanli or Ottoman Turks had become formally independent from the Mongol Khans 75 Ottoman Empire Edit Further information Ottoman Empire nbsp Territorial evolution of the Ottoman Empire between 1359 and 1683Among the Turkish leaders the Ottomans emerged as great power under Osman I and his son Orhan 76 77 The Anatolian beyliks were successively absorbed into the rising Ottoman Empire during the 15th century 78 It is not well understood how the Osmanli or Ottoman Turks came to dominate their neighbours as the history of medieval Anatolia is still little known 79 The Ottomans completed the conquest of the peninsula in 1517 with the taking of Halicarnassus modern Bodrum from the Knights of Saint John 80 Modern times Edit Further information History of Turkey This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Ethnic map of Asia Minor in 1905 06With the acceleration of the decline of the Ottoman Empire in the early 19th century and as a result of the expansionist policies of the Russian Empire in the Caucasus many Muslim nations and groups in that region mainly Circassians Tatars Azeris Lezgis Chechens and several Turkic groups left their homelands and settled in Anatolia As the Ottoman Empire further shrank in the Balkan regions and then fragmented during the Balkan Wars much of the non Christian populations of its former possessions mainly Balkan Muslims Bosniaks Albanians Turks Muslim Bulgarians and Greek Muslims such as the Vallahades from Greek Macedonia were resettled in various parts of Anatolia mostly in formerly Christian villages throughout Anatolia A continuous reverse migration occurred since the early 19th century when Greeks from Anatolia Constantinople and Pontus area migrated toward the newly independent Kingdom of Greece and also towards the United States the southern part of the Russian Empire Latin America and the rest of Europe Following the Russo Persian Treaty of Turkmenchay 1828 and the incorporation of Eastern Armenia into the Russian Empire another migration involved the large Armenian population of Anatolia which recorded significant migration rates from Western Armenia Eastern Anatolia toward the Russian Empire especially toward its newly established Armenian provinces Anatolia remained multi ethnic until the early 20th century see the rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire During World War I the Armenian genocide the Greek genocide especially in Pontus and the Assyrian genocide almost entirely removed the ancient indigenous communities of Armenian Greek and Assyrian populations in Anatolia and surrounding regions Following the Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 most remaining ethnic Anatolian Greeks were forced out during the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey Of the remainder most have left Turkey since then leaving fewer than 5 000 Greeks in Anatolia today Geology Edit nbsp Salty shores of Lake TuzAnatolia s terrain is structurally complex A central massif composed of uplifted blocks and downfolded troughs covered by recent deposits and giving the appearance of a plateau with rough terrain is wedged between two folded mountain ranges that converge in the east True lowland is confined to a few narrow coastal strips along the Aegean Mediterranean and the Black Sea coasts Flat or gently sloping land is rare and largely confined to the deltas of the Kizil River the coastal plains of Cukurova and the valley floors of the Gediz River and the Buyuk Menderes River as well as some interior high plains in Anatolia mainly around Lake Tuz Salt Lake and the Konya Basin Konya Ovasi There are two mountain ranges in southern Anatolia the Taurus and the Zagros mountains 81 Climate Edit Main article Climate of Turkey Temperatures of Anatolia nbsp Ankara central Anatolia nbsp Antalya southern Anatolia nbsp Van eastern Anatolia Anatolia has a varied range of climates The central plateau is characterized by a continental climate with hot summers and cold snowy winters The south and west coasts enjoy a typical Mediterranean climate with mild rainy winters and warm dry summers 82 The Black Sea and Marmara coasts have a temperate oceanic climate with cool foggy summers and much rainfall throughout the year Ecoregions Edit nbsp Mediterranean climate is prevalent in the Turkish Riviera nbsp Anatolia s dry central plateauThere is a diverse number of plant and animal communities The mountains and coastal plain of northern Anatolia experience a humid and mild climate There are temperate broadleaf mixed and coniferous forests The central and eastern plateau with its drier continental climate has deciduous forests and forest steppes Western and southern Anatolia which have a Mediterranean climate contain Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub ecoregions Euxine Colchic deciduous forests These temperate broadleaf and mixed forests extend across northern Anatolia lying between the mountains of northern Anatolia and the Black Sea They include the enclaves of temperate rainforest lying along the southeastern coast of the Black Sea in eastern Turkey and Georgia 83 Northern Anatolian conifer and deciduous forests These forests occupy the mountains of northern Anatolia running east and west between the coastal Euxine Colchic forests and the drier continental climate forests of central and eastern Anatolia 84 Central Anatolian deciduous forests These forests of deciduous oaks and evergreen pines cover the plateau of central Anatolia 85 Central Anatolian steppe These dry grasslands cover the drier valleys and surround the saline lakes of central Anatolia and include halophytic salt tolerant plant communities 86 nbsp A panorama of the Pontic Mountains in the Black Sea Region of northern Anatolia TurkeyEastern Anatolian deciduous forests This ecoregion occupies the plateau of eastern Anatolia The drier and more continental climate is beneficial for steppe forests dominated by deciduous oaks with areas of shrubland montane forest and valley forest 87 Anatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests These forests occupy the western Mediterranean climate portion of the Anatolian plateau Pine forests and mixed pine and oak woodlands and shrublands are predominant 88 Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests These Mediterranean climate forests occupy the coastal lowlands and valleys of western Anatolia bordering the Aegean Sea The ecoregion has forests of Turkish pine Pinus brutia oak forests and woodlands and maquis shrubland of Turkish pine and evergreen sclerophyllous trees and shrubs including Olive Olea europaea Strawberry Tree Arbutus unedo Arbutus andrachne Kermes Oak Quercus coccifera and Bay Laurel Laurus nobilis 89 Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests These mountain forests occupy the Mediterranean climate Taurus Mountains of southern Anatolia Conifer forests are predominant chiefly Anatolian black pine Pinus nigra Cedar of Lebanon Cedrus libani Taurus fir Abies cilicica and juniper Juniperus foetidissima and J excelsa Broadleaf trees include oaks hornbeam and maples 90 Eastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forests This ecoregion occupies the coastal strip of southern Anatolia between the Taurus Mountains and the Mediterranean Sea Plant communities include broadleaf sclerophyllous maquis shrublands forests of Aleppo Pine Pinus halepensis and Turkish Pine Pinus brutia and dry oak Quercus spp woodlands and steppes 91 Demographics EditMain article Demographics of Turkey The largest cities in Anatolia aside from the Asian side of Istanbul are Ankara Izmir Bursa Antalya Konya Adana Izmit Mersin Manisa Kayseri Samsun Balikesir Kahramanmaras Aydin Adapazari Denizli Mugla Eskisehir Trabzon Ordu Afyonkarahisar Sivas Tokat Zonguldak Kutahya Canakkale Osmaniye Sirnak and Corum All have populations of more than 500 000 citation needed See also Edit nbsp Turkey portalAeolis Anatolian hypothesis Anatolianism Anatolian leopard Anatolian Plate Anatolian Shepherd Ancient kingdoms of Anatolia Antigonid dynasty Doris Asia Minor Empire of Nicaea Empire of Trebizond Gordium Lycaonia Midas Miletus Myra Pentarchy Pontic Greeks Rumi Saint Anatolia Saint John Saint Nicholas Saint Paul Seleucid Empire Seven churches of Asia Seven Sleepers Tarsus Troad Turkic migrationExplanatory notes Edit From Ancient Greek Ἀnatolh romanized Anatolḗ lit east or sunrise Turkish Anadolu Medieval and Modern Greek Mikrὰ Ἀsia romanized Mikra Asia Turkish Kucuk Asya Additional alternative names include Asian Turkey the Anatolian peninsula Greek Xersonhsos ths Anatolias romanized Chersonisos tis Anatolias Turkish Anadolu Yarimadasi and the Anatolian plateau References EditCitations Edit a b Hopkins Daniel J Staff Merriam Webster 편집부 2001 Merriam Webster s Geographical Dictionary Merriam Webster p 46 ISBN 0 87779 546 0 Archived from the original on 28 November 2021 Retrieved 18 May 2001 a b c Stephen Mitchell 1995 Anatolia Land Men and Gods in Asia Minor The Celts in Anatolia and the impact of Roman rule Clarendon Press 266 pp ISBN 978 0198150299 1 Archived 29 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sansal Burak History of Anatolia Archived from the original on 6 April 2002 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Turkish Statistical Institute 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September 2009 Mark Cartwright Celsus Library World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 February 2017 The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus The Un Greek Temple and Wonder World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 17 February 2017 Melchert 2003 Watkins 1994 id 1995 144 51 Starke 1997 Melchert 2003 for the geography Hawkins 1998 a b Carl Roebuck The World of Ancient Times a b Yavuz Mehmet Fatih 2010 Anatolia The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195170726 001 0001 ISBN 978 0195170726 Archived from the original on 6 December 2018 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Honey Linda 5 December 2016 Justifiably Outraged or Simply Outrageous The Isaurian Incident of Ammianus Marcellinus Violence in Late Antiquity Perceptions and Practices Routledge p 50 ISBN 978 1351875745 Archived from the original on 19 May 2022 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Swain Simon Adams J Maxwell Janse Mark 2002 Bilingualism in Ancient Society Language Contact and the Written Word Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press pp 246 66 ISBN 0199245061 Freeman Philip The Galatian Language Edwin Mellen 2001 pp 11 12 Clackson James Language maintenance and language shift in the Mediterranean world during the Roman Empire Multilingualism in the Graeco Roman Worlds 2012 36 57 p 46 The second testimonium for the late survival of Galatian appears in the Life of Saint Euthymius who died in ad 487 Norton Tom 2 Archived 2 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine A question of identity who were the Galatians University of Wales p 62 The final reference to Galatian comes two hundred years later in the sixth century CE when Cyril of Scythopolis attests that Galatian was still being spoken eight hundred years after the Galatians arrived in Asia Minor Cyril tells of the temporary possession of a monk from Galatia by Satan and rendered speechless but when he recovered he spoke only in his native Galatian when questioned If he were pressed he spoke only in Galatian 180 After this the rest is silence and further archaeological or literary discoveries are awaited to see if Galatian survived any later In this regard the example of Crimean Gothic is instructive It was presumed to have died out in the fifth century CE but the discovery of a small corpus of the language dating from the sixteenth century altered this perception J Eric Cooper Michael J Decker Life and Society in Byzantine Cappadocia ISBN 0230361064 p 14 Howgego C J 1995 Ancient History from Coins Routledge ISBN 978 0415089920 Asia Minor Coins Archived 17 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine an index of Greek and Roman coins from Asia Minor ancient Anatolia Dandamaev M A 1989 A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire Brill p 294 ISBN 978 9004091726 Schmitt R 1986 ARTAXERXES II Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol II Fasc 6 pp 656 58 Archived from the original on 9 April 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2019 Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1405179362 Archived from the original on 16 April 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2015 Mithradates VI Eupator Encyclopaedia Britannica Hewsen Robert H 2009 Armenians on the Black Sea The Province of Trebizond In Richard G Hovannisian ed Armenian Pontus The Trebizond Black Sea Communities Costa Mesa CA Mazda Publishers Inc pp 41 37 66 ISBN 978 1 56859 155 1 Bennett Julian 1997 Trajan Optimus Princeps a Life and Times Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 16524 2 Fig 1 Regions east of the Euphrates river were held only in the years 116 117 a b c d e Niewohner Philipp 2017 Chapter 3 Urbanism The Archaeology of Byzantine Anatolia In Niewohner Philipp ed The Archaeology of Byzantine Anatolia From the End of Late Antiquity until the Coming of the Turks Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 39 59 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780190610463 003 0004 ISBN 9780190610487 Thonemann Peter 2018 Anatolia The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Vol 1 Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0198662778 Archived from the original on 6 December 2018 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Angold Michael 1997 The Byzantine Empire 1025 1204 Longman p 117 ISBN 978 0582294684 a b H M Balyuzi Muḥammad and the course of Islam p 342 John Freely Storm on Horseback The Seljuk Warriors of Turkey p 83 Clifford Edmund Bosworth The new Islamic dynasties a chronological and genealogical manual p 234 Mehmet Fuat Koprulu Gary Leiser The origins of the Ottoman Empire p 33 Peter Partner God of battles holy wars of Christianity and Islam p 122 Osman s Dream The History of the Ottoman Empire p 13 Artuk Osmanli Beyliginin Kurucusu 27f Pamuk A Monetary History pp 30 31 Osman I Ottoman sultan Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 24 April 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Orhan Ottoman sultan Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 10 March 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Fleet Kate 2010 The rise of the Ottomans The rise of the Ottomans Chapter 11 The New Cambridge History of Islam pp 313 31 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521839570 013 ISBN 978 1139056151 Archived from the original on 24 April 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Finkel Caroline 2007 Osman s Dream The History of the Ottoman Empire Basic Books p 5 ISBN 978 0465008506 Archived from the original on 2 January 2014 Retrieved 6 June 2013 electricpulp com Halicarnassus Encyclopaedia Iranica iranicaonline org Archived from the original on 24 April 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Cemen Ibrahim Yilmaz Yucel 2017 Active Global Seismology Neotectonics and Earthquake Potential of the Eastern Mediterranean Region John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1118945018 Prothero W G 1920 Anatolia London H M Stationery Office Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 6 September 2013 Euxine Colchic deciduous forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Northern Anatolian conifer and deciduous forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Central Anatolian deciduous forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Central Anatolian steppe Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Eastern Anatolian deciduous forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Anatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 Eastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 25 May 2008 General and cited sources Edit Akurgal Ekrem 2001 The Hattian and Hittite Civilizations Ankara Ministry of Culture ISBN 978 9751727565 Archived from the original on 28 April 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Barjamovic Gojko 2011 A Historical Geography of Anatolia in the Old Assyrian Colony Period Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 978 8763536455 Archived from the original on 28 April 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Bryce Trevor R 2005 1998 The Kingdom of the Hittites 2nd revised ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199279081 Archived from the original on 5 May 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Bryce Trevor R 2009 The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the fall of the Persian Empire London amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 1134159079 Steadman Sharon R McMahon Gregory 2011 McMahon Gregory Steadman Sharon eds The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia 10 000 323 BCE Oxford University Press Inc doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780195376142 001 0001 hdl 11693 51311 ISBN 978 0195376142 Further reading EditAkat Yucel Nese Ozgunel and Aynur Durukan 1991 Anatolia A World Heritage Ankara Kultur Bakanliǧi Brewster Harry 1993 Classical Anatolia The Glory of Hellenism London I B Tauris Donbaz Veysel and Semsi Guner 1995 The Royal Roads of Anatolia Istanbul Dunya Dusinberre Elspeth R M 2013 Empire Authority and Autonomy In Achaemenid Anatolia Cambridge Cambridge University Press Gates Charles Jacques Morin and Thomas Zimmermann 2009 Sacred Landscapes In Anatolia and Neighboring Regions Oxford Archaeopress Mikasa Takahito ed 1999 Essays On Ancient Anatolia Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Takaoglu Turan 2004 Ethnoarchaeological Investigations In Rural Anatolia Istanbul Ege Yayinlari Taracha Piotr 2009 Religions of Second Millennium Anatolia Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Taymaz Tuncay Y Yilmaz and Yildirim Dilek 2007 The Geodynamics of the Aegean and Anatolia London Geological Society External links Edit nbsp Media related to Anatolia at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anatolia amp oldid 1173572732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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