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Gallipoli

The Gallipoli peninsula (/ɡəˈlɪpəli, ɡæ-/;[1] Turkish: Gelibolu Yarımadası; Greek: Χερσόνησος της Καλλίπολης, romanizedChersónisos tis Kallípolis) is located in the southern part of East Thrace, the European part of Turkey, with the Aegean Sea to the west and the Dardanelles strait to the east.

Satellite image of the Gallipoli peninsula and surrounding area
Anzac Cove in Gallipoli

Gallipoli is the Italian form of the Greek name Καλλίπολις (Kallípolis), meaning 'beautiful city',[2] the original name of the modern town of Gelibolu. In antiquity, the peninsula was known as the Thracian Chersonese (Ancient Greek: Θρακικὴ Χερσόνησος, romanizedThrakiké Chersónesos; Latin: Chersonesus Thracica).

The peninsula runs in a south-westerly direction into the Aegean Sea, between the Dardanelles (formerly known as the Hellespont), and the Gulf of Saros (formerly the bay of Melas). In antiquity, it was protected by the Long Wall,[3][4][5][6] a defensive structure built across the narrowest part of the peninsula near the ancient city of Agora. The isthmus traversed by the wall was only 36 stadia in breadth[7] or about 6.5 km (4.0 mi), but the length of the peninsula from this wall to its southern extremity, Cape Mastusia, was 420 stadia[7] or about 77.5 km (48.2 mi).

History

Antiquity and Middle Ages

 
Map of the Thracian Chersonese

In ancient times, the Gallipoli Peninsula was known as the Thracian Chersonese (from Greek χερσόνησος, 'peninsula'[2]) to the Greeks and later the Romans. It was the location of several prominent towns, including Cardia, Pactya, Callipolis (Gallipoli), Alopeconnesus (Ἀλωπεκόννησος), Sestos, Madytos, and Elaeus. The peninsula was renowned for its wheat. It also benefited from its strategic importance on the main route between Europe and Asia, as well as from its control of the shipping route from Crimea. The city of Sestos was the main crossing-point on the Hellespont.

According to Herodotus, the Thracian tribe of Dolonci (Δόλογκοι) (or 'barbarians' according to Cornelius Nepos) held possession of the peninsula before the Greek colonization. Then, settlers from Ancient Greece, mainly of Ionian and Aeolian stock, founded about 12 cities on the peninsula in the 7th century BC.[8] The Athenian statesman Miltiades the Elder founded a major Athenian colony there around 560 BC. He took authority over the entire peninsula, augmenting its defences against incursions from the mainland. It eventually passed to his nephew, the more famous Miltiades the Younger, about 524 BC. The peninsula was abandoned to the Persians in 493 BC after the beginning of the Greco-Persian Wars (499–478 BC).

The Persians were eventually expelled, after which the peninsula was for a time ruled by Athens, which enrolled it into the Delian League in 478 BC. The Athenians established a number of cleruchies on the Thracian Chersonese and sent an additional 1,000 settlers around 448 BC. Sparta gained control after the decisive battle of Aegospotami in 404 BC, but the peninsula subsequently reverted to the Athenians. During the 4th century BC, the Thracian Chersonese became the focus of a bitter territorial dispute between Athens and Macedon, whose king Philip II sought possession. It was eventually ceded to Philip in 338 BC.

After the death of Philip's son Alexander the Great in 323 BC, the Thracian Chersonese became the object of contention among Alexander's successors. Lysimachus established his capital Lysimachia here. In 278 BC, Celtic tribes from Galatia in Asia Minor settled in the area. In 196 BC, the Seleucid king Antiochus III seized the peninsula. This alarmed the Greeks and prompted them to seek the aid of the Romans, who conquered the Thracian Chersonese, which they gave to their ally Eumenes II of Pergamon in 188 BC. At the extinction of the Attalid dynasty in 133 BC it passed again to the Romans, who from 129 BC administered it in the Roman province of Asia. It was subsequently made a state-owned territory (ager publicus) and during the reign of the emperor Augustus it was imperial property.

 
Map of the peninsula and its surroundings

The Thracian Chersonese was part of the Eastern Roman Empire from its foundation in 395 AD. In 443 AD, Attila the Hun invaded the Gallipoli Peninsula during one of the last stages of his grand campaign that year. He captured both Callipolis and Sestus.[9] Aside from a brief period from 1204 to 1235, when it was controlled by the Republic of Venice, the Byzantine Empire ruled the territory until 1356. During the night between 1 and 2 March 1354, a strong earthquake destroyed the city of Gallipoli and its city walls, weakening its defenses.

Ottoman era

Ottoman conquest

Within a month after the devastating 1354 earthquake the Ottomans besieged and captured the town of Gallipoli, making it the first Ottoman stronghold in Europe and the staging area for Ottoman expansion across the Balkans.[10] The Savoyard Crusade recaptured Gallipoli for Byzantium in 1366, but the beleaguered Byzantines were forced to hand it back in September 1376. The Greeks living there were allowed to continue their everyday activities. In the 19th century, Gallipoli (Ottoman Turkish: گلیبولو, Gelibolu) was a district (kaymakamlik) in the Vilayet of Adrianople, with about thirty thousand inhabitants: comprising Greeks, Turks, Armenians and Jews.[11]

Crimean War (1853–1856)

 
The port of Gallipoli, c. 1880

Gallipoli became a major encampment for British and French forces in 1854 during the Crimean War, and the harbour was also a stopping-off point between the western Mediterranean and Istanbul (formerly Constantinople).[12][13]

In March 1854 British and French engineers constructed an 11.5 km (7.1 mi) line of defence to protect the peninsula from a possible Russian attack and so secure control of the route to the Mediterranean Sea.[14]: 414 

First Balkan War (1912–1913)

During the First Balkan War, the 1913 Battle of Bulair and several minor skirmishes took place where the Ottoman army "destroyed, looted, and burned all the Greek villages near Gallipoli".[15][16][17] The Report of the International Commission on the Balkan Wars mention destruction and massacres in the area by the Ottoman army against Greek and Bulgarian population.[18]

The Ottoman Government, under the pretext that a village was within the firing line, ordered its evacuation within three hours. The residents abandoned everything they possessed, left their village and went to Gallipoli. Seven of the Greek villagers who stayed two minutes later than the three-hour limit allowed for the evacuation were shot by the soldiers. After the end of the Balkan War the exiles were allowed to return. But as the Government allowed only the Turks to rebuild their houses and furnish them, the exiled Greeks were compelled to remain in Gallipoli.[19]

World War I: Gallipoli Campaign (1914–1918)

 
Landing at Gallipoli in April 1915
 
The Sphinx overlooking Anzac Cove

During World War I (1914-1918), French, British and allied forces (Australian, New Zealand, Newfoundland, Irish and Indian) fought the Gallipoli campaign (1915-1916) in and near the peninsula, seeking to secure a sea route to relieve their eastern ally, Russia. The Ottomans set up defensive fortifications along the peninsula and contained the invading forces.

In early 1915, attempting to seize a strategic advantage in World War I by capturing Istanbul (formerly Constantinople), the British authorised an attack on the peninsula by French, British and British Empire forces. The first Australian troops landed at ANZAC Cove early in the morning of 25 April 1915. After eight months of heavy fighting the last Allied soldiers withdrew by 9 January 1916.

The campaign, one of the greatest Ottoman victories during the war, is considered by historians as a major Allied failure. Turks regard it as a defining moment in their nation's history: a final surge in the defence of the motherland as the Ottoman Empire crumbled. The struggle formed the basis for the Turkish War of Independence[citation needed] and the founding of the Republic of Turkey[citation needed] eight years later under President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who first rose to prominence as a commander at Gallipoli.

The Ottoman Empire instituted the Gallipoli Star as a military decoration in 1915 and awarded it throughout the rest of World War I.

The campaign was the first major military action of Australia and New Zealand (or Anzacs) as independent dominions. The date of the landing, 25 April, is known as "Anzac Day". It remains the most significant commemoration of military casualties and "returned soldiers" in Australia and New Zealand.

On the Allied side one of the promoters of the expedition was Britain's First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, whose bullish optimism caused damage to his reputation that took years to repair.

Whilst the underlying strategic concept of the campaign was sound the military forces of the WW1 lacked the logistical, technological and tactical capabilities to undertake an operation of this scope against a determined, well equipped defender.

The all arms coordination and logistical capabilities required to successfully prosecute such a campaign would only be achieved three decades later, during the successful Allied amphibious invasions of Europe and the Pacific during WW2.

Prior to the Allied landings in April 1915,[20] the Ottoman Empire deported Greek residents from Gallipoli and surrounding region and from the islands in the sea of Marmara, to the interior where they were at the mercy of hostile Turks.[21] The Greeks had little time to pack and the Ottoman authorities permitted them to take only some bedding and the rest was handed over to the Government.[21] The Turks then plundered the houses and properties.[22] A testimony of a deportee described how the deportees were forced onto crowded steamers, standing-room only then on disembarking, men of military age were removed (for forced labour in the labour battalions of the Ottoman army.) The rest were "scattered… among the farms like ownerless cattle.[citation needed]

The Metropolitan of Gallipoli wrote on 17 July 1915 that the extermination of the Christian refugees was methodical.[19] He also mentions that "The Turks, like beasts of prey, immediately plundered all the Christians' property and carried it off. The inhabitants and refugees of my district are entirely without shelter, awaiting to be sent no one knows where ...".[19] Many Greeks died from hunger and there were frequent cases of rape among women and young girls, as well as their forced conversion to Islam.[19] In some cases, Muhacirs appeared in the villages even before the Greek inhabitants deported and stoned the houses and threatened the inhabitants that they would kill them if they did not leave.[23]

Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922)

Greek troops occupied Gallipoli on 4 August 1920 during the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22, considered part of the Turkish War of Independence. After the Armistice of Mudros of 30 October 1918 it became a Greek prefecture centre as Kallipolis. However, Greece was forced to withdraw from Eastern Thrace after the Armistice of Mudanya of October 1922. Gallipoli was briefly handed over to British troops on 20 October 1922, but finally returned to Turkish rule on 26 November 1922.

In 1920, after the defeat of the Russian White army of General Pyotr Wrangel, a significant number of émigré soldiers and their families evacuated to Gallipoli from the Crimean Peninsula. From there, many went to European countries, such as Yugoslavia, where they found refuge.

There are now many cemeteries and war memorials on the Gallipoli peninsula.

Turkish Republic

Between 1923 and 1926 Gallipoli became the centre of Gelibolu Province, comprising the districts of Gelibolu, Eceabat, Keşan and Şarköy. After the dissolution of the province, it became a district centre in Çanakkale Province.

Notable people

References

  1. ^ Jones, Daniel (2003) [1917], Peter Roach; James Hartmann; Jane Setter (eds.), English Pronouncing Dictionary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 3-12-539683-2
  2. ^ a b Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). "Καλλίπολις". A Greek–English Lexicon. Revised and augmented throughout by Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Retrieved 28 August 2020 – via Perseus Digital Library Project.
  3. ^ Xenophon (January 1921). Hellenica, Volume II. Translated by Brownson, Carleton L. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674990999.
  4. ^ Diodorus Siculus (January 1933). Library of History, Volume I. Translated by Oldfather, Charles H. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674993075.
  5. ^ Plinius Secundus, Gaius (1855). Bostock, John; Riley, Henry Thomas (eds.). The Natural History. London: H. G. Bohn.
  6. ^ Plutarch (January 1919). Lives (in Ancient Greek). Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674991101.
  7. ^ a b Herodotus, The Histories, vi. 36; Xenophon, ibid.; Pseudo-Scylax, Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax, 67 (PDF)
  8. ^ Herodotus, vi. 34; Nepos, Cornelius, Lives of Eminent Commanders, "Miltiades", 1
  9. ^ Attila the Hun: Barbarian Terror and the Fall of the Roman Empire. Vintage. 2011. p. 105. ISBN 978-1844139156.
  10. ^ Crowley, Roger. 1453: The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West. New York: Hyperion, 2005. p 31 ISBN 1-4013-0850-3.
  11. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Callipolis". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 February 2006. Retrieved 11 October 2006.
  13. ^ "Charles Usherwood's Service Journal, 1852–1856: despatch". victorianweb.org.
  14. ^ Porter, Maj Gen Whitworth (1889). History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol I. Chatham: The Institution of Royal Engineers.
  15. ^ Shirinian, George N. (2017). Genocide in the Ottoman Empire: Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks, 1913-1923. Berghahn Books. p. 42. ISBN 978-1785334320.
  16. ^ Astourian, Stephan (2020). Collective and State Violence in Turkey: The Construction of a National Identity from Empire to Nation-State. Berghahn Books. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-78920-450-6.
  17. ^ Brown, Carroll N; Papadopoulos, Alexander (1919). Persecutions of the Greeks in Turkey before the European war. Oxford university press. p. 52.
  18. ^ Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan War. Washington, D.C. 1914. p. 132.
  19. ^ a b c d Persecution of the Greeks in Turkey, 1914–1918. Constantinople [London, Printed by the Hesperia Press]. 1919.
  20. ^ McMeekin, Sean (7 May 2012). The Berlin-Baghdad Express: The Ottoman Empire and Germany's Bid for World Power. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674058538 – via Google Books.
  21. ^ a b Lieberman, Benjamin (December 2013). Terrible Fate: Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-1442223196.
  22. ^ "The Meaning of Gallipoli to Hellenism".
  23. ^ Morris, Benny; Ze'evi, Dror (April 2019). The Thirty-Year Genocide: Turkey's Destruction of Its Christian Minorities, 1894–1924. Harvard University Press. p. 338. ISBN 978-0674916456.
  24. ^ "Ana Sayfa" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 6 February 2020.

External links

  •   Gallipoli travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Tours of Gallipoli 17 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Australia's role in the Gallipoli Campaign – Website (ABC and Dept of Veteran's Affairs)

Coordinates: 40°21′N 26°28′E / 40.350°N 26.467°E / 40.350; 26.467

gallipoli, this, article, about, peninsula, other, uses, disambiguation, peninsula, turkish, gelibolu, yarımadası, greek, Χερσόνησος, της, Καλλίπολης, romanized, chersónisos, kallípolis, located, southern, part, east, thrace, european, part, turkey, with, aege. This article is about the peninsula For other uses see Gallipoli disambiguation The Gallipoli peninsula ɡ e ˈ l ɪ p el i ɡ ae 1 Turkish Gelibolu Yarimadasi Greek Xersonhsos ths Kallipolhs romanized Chersonisos tis Kallipolis is located in the southern part of East Thrace the European part of Turkey with the Aegean Sea to the west and the Dardanelles strait to the east Satellite image of the Gallipoli peninsula and surrounding area Anzac Cove in Gallipoli Gallipoli is the Italian form of the Greek name Kallipolis Kallipolis meaning beautiful city 2 the original name of the modern town of Gelibolu In antiquity the peninsula was known as the Thracian Chersonese Ancient Greek 8rakikὴ Xersonhsos romanized Thrakike Chersonesos Latin Chersonesus Thracica The peninsula runs in a south westerly direction into the Aegean Sea between the Dardanelles formerly known as the Hellespont and the Gulf of Saros formerly the bay of Melas In antiquity it was protected by the Long Wall 3 4 5 6 a defensive structure built across the narrowest part of the peninsula near the ancient city of Agora The isthmus traversed by the wall was only 36 stadia in breadth 7 or about 6 5 km 4 0 mi but the length of the peninsula from this wall to its southern extremity Cape Mastusia was 420 stadia 7 or about 77 5 km 48 2 mi Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity and Middle Ages 1 2 Ottoman era 1 2 1 Ottoman conquest 1 2 2 Crimean War 1853 1856 1 2 3 First Balkan War 1912 1913 1 2 4 World War I Gallipoli Campaign 1914 1918 1 2 5 Greco Turkish War 1919 1922 1 3 Turkish Republic 2 Notable people 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditAntiquity and Middle Ages Edit Map of the Thracian Chersonese In ancient times the Gallipoli Peninsula was known as the Thracian Chersonese from Greek xersonhsos peninsula 2 to the Greeks and later the Romans It was the location of several prominent towns including Cardia Pactya Callipolis Gallipoli Alopeconnesus Ἀlwpekonnhsos Sestos Madytos and Elaeus The peninsula was renowned for its wheat It also benefited from its strategic importance on the main route between Europe and Asia as well as from its control of the shipping route from Crimea The city of Sestos was the main crossing point on the Hellespont According to Herodotus the Thracian tribe of Dolonci Dologkoi or barbarians according to Cornelius Nepos held possession of the peninsula before the Greek colonization Then settlers from Ancient Greece mainly of Ionian and Aeolian stock founded about 12 cities on the peninsula in the 7th century BC 8 The Athenian statesman Miltiades the Elder founded a major Athenian colony there around 560 BC He took authority over the entire peninsula augmenting its defences against incursions from the mainland It eventually passed to his nephew the more famous Miltiades the Younger about 524 BC The peninsula was abandoned to the Persians in 493 BC after the beginning of the Greco Persian Wars 499 478 BC The Persians were eventually expelled after which the peninsula was for a time ruled by Athens which enrolled it into the Delian League in 478 BC The Athenians established a number of cleruchies on the Thracian Chersonese and sent an additional 1 000 settlers around 448 BC Sparta gained control after the decisive battle of Aegospotami in 404 BC but the peninsula subsequently reverted to the Athenians During the 4th century BC the Thracian Chersonese became the focus of a bitter territorial dispute between Athens and Macedon whose king Philip II sought possession It was eventually ceded to Philip in 338 BC After the death of Philip s son Alexander the Great in 323 BC the Thracian Chersonese became the object of contention among Alexander s successors Lysimachus established his capital Lysimachia here In 278 BC Celtic tribes from Galatia in Asia Minor settled in the area In 196 BC the Seleucid king Antiochus III seized the peninsula This alarmed the Greeks and prompted them to seek the aid of the Romans who conquered the Thracian Chersonese which they gave to their ally Eumenes II of Pergamon in 188 BC At the extinction of the Attalid dynasty in 133 BC it passed again to the Romans who from 129 BC administered it in the Roman province of Asia It was subsequently made a state owned territory ager publicus and during the reign of the emperor Augustus it was imperial property Map of the peninsula and its surroundings The Thracian Chersonese was part of the Eastern Roman Empire from its foundation in 395 AD In 443 AD Attila the Hun invaded the Gallipoli Peninsula during one of the last stages of his grand campaign that year He captured both Callipolis and Sestus 9 Aside from a brief period from 1204 to 1235 when it was controlled by the Republic of Venice the Byzantine Empire ruled the territory until 1356 During the night between 1 and 2 March 1354 a strong earthquake destroyed the city of Gallipoli and its city walls weakening its defenses Ottoman era Edit Further information Sanjak of Gelibolu Ottoman conquest Edit Within a month after the devastating 1354 earthquake the Ottomans besieged and captured the town of Gallipoli making it the first Ottoman stronghold in Europe and the staging area for Ottoman expansion across the Balkans 10 The Savoyard Crusade recaptured Gallipoli for Byzantium in 1366 but the beleaguered Byzantines were forced to hand it back in September 1376 The Greeks living there were allowed to continue their everyday activities In the 19th century Gallipoli Ottoman Turkish گلیبولو Gelibolu was a district kaymakamlik in the Vilayet of Adrianople with about thirty thousand inhabitants comprising Greeks Turks Armenians and Jews 11 Crimean War 1853 1856 Edit The port of Gallipoli c 1880 Gallipoli became a major encampment for British and French forces in 1854 during the Crimean War and the harbour was also a stopping off point between the western Mediterranean and Istanbul formerly Constantinople 12 13 In March 1854 British and French engineers constructed an 11 5 km 7 1 mi line of defence to protect the peninsula from a possible Russian attack and so secure control of the route to the Mediterranean Sea 14 414 First Balkan War 1912 1913 Edit During the First Balkan War the 1913 Battle of Bulair and several minor skirmishes took place where the Ottoman army destroyed looted and burned all the Greek villages near Gallipoli 15 16 17 The Report of the International Commission on the Balkan Wars mention destruction and massacres in the area by the Ottoman army against Greek and Bulgarian population 18 The Ottoman Government under the pretext that a village was within the firing line ordered its evacuation within three hours The residents abandoned everything they possessed left their village and went to Gallipoli Seven of the Greek villagers who stayed two minutes later than the three hour limit allowed for the evacuation were shot by the soldiers After the end of the Balkan War the exiles were allowed to return But as the Government allowed only the Turks to rebuild their houses and furnish them the exiled Greeks were compelled to remain in Gallipoli 19 World War I Gallipoli Campaign 1914 1918 Edit Main articles Gallipoli Campaign and Gallipoli Peninsula Historical Site Landing at Gallipoli in April 1915 The Sphinx overlooking Anzac Cove During World War I 1914 1918 French British and allied forces Australian New Zealand Newfoundland Irish and Indian fought the Gallipoli campaign 1915 1916 in and near the peninsula seeking to secure a sea route to relieve their eastern ally Russia The Ottomans set up defensive fortifications along the peninsula and contained the invading forces In early 1915 attempting to seize a strategic advantage in World War I by capturing Istanbul formerly Constantinople the British authorised an attack on the peninsula by French British and British Empire forces The first Australian troops landed at ANZAC Cove early in the morning of 25 April 1915 After eight months of heavy fighting the last Allied soldiers withdrew by 9 January 1916 The campaign one of the greatest Ottoman victories during the war is considered by historians as a major Allied failure Turks regard it as a defining moment in their nation s history a final surge in the defence of the motherland as the Ottoman Empire crumbled The struggle formed the basis for the Turkish War of Independence citation needed and the founding of the Republic of Turkey citation needed eight years later under President Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who first rose to prominence as a commander at Gallipoli The Ottoman Empire instituted the Gallipoli Star as a military decoration in 1915 and awarded it throughout the rest of World War I The campaign was the first major military action of Australia and New Zealand or Anzacs as independent dominions The date of the landing 25 April is known as Anzac Day It remains the most significant commemoration of military casualties and returned soldiers in Australia and New Zealand On the Allied side one of the promoters of the expedition was Britain s First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill whose bullish optimism caused damage to his reputation that took years to repair Whilst the underlying strategic concept of the campaign was sound the military forces of the WW1 lacked the logistical technological and tactical capabilities to undertake an operation of this scope against a determined well equipped defender The all arms coordination and logistical capabilities required to successfully prosecute such a campaign would only be achieved three decades later during the successful Allied amphibious invasions of Europe and the Pacific during WW2 Prior to the Allied landings in April 1915 20 the Ottoman Empire deported Greek residents from Gallipoli and surrounding region and from the islands in the sea of Marmara to the interior where they were at the mercy of hostile Turks 21 The Greeks had little time to pack and the Ottoman authorities permitted them to take only some bedding and the rest was handed over to the Government 21 The Turks then plundered the houses and properties 22 A testimony of a deportee described how the deportees were forced onto crowded steamers standing room only then on disembarking men of military age were removed for forced labour in the labour battalions of the Ottoman army The rest were scattered among the farms like ownerless cattle citation needed The Metropolitan of Gallipoli wrote on 17 July 1915 that the extermination of the Christian refugees was methodical 19 He also mentions that The Turks like beasts of prey immediately plundered all the Christians property and carried it off The inhabitants and refugees of my district are entirely without shelter awaiting to be sent no one knows where 19 Many Greeks died from hunger and there were frequent cases of rape among women and young girls as well as their forced conversion to Islam 19 In some cases Muhacirs appeared in the villages even before the Greek inhabitants deported and stoned the houses and threatened the inhabitants that they would kill them if they did not leave 23 Greco Turkish War 1919 1922 Edit Greek troops occupied Gallipoli on 4 August 1920 during the Greco Turkish War of 1919 22 considered part of the Turkish War of Independence After the Armistice of Mudros of 30 October 1918 it became a Greek prefecture centre as Kallipolis However Greece was forced to withdraw from Eastern Thrace after the Armistice of Mudanya of October 1922 Gallipoli was briefly handed over to British troops on 20 October 1922 but finally returned to Turkish rule on 26 November 1922 In 1920 after the defeat of the Russian White army of General Pyotr Wrangel a significant number of emigre soldiers and their families evacuated to Gallipoli from the Crimean Peninsula From there many went to European countries such as Yugoslavia where they found refuge There are now many cemeteries and war memorials on the Gallipoli peninsula Turkish Republic Edit Between 1923 and 1926 Gallipoli became the centre of Gelibolu Province comprising the districts of Gelibolu Eceabat Kesan and Sarkoy After the dissolution of the province it became a district centre in Canakkale Province Notable people EditAhmed Bican 1398 c 1466 author Piri Reis 1465 70 1553 24 admiral geographer and cartographer Mustafa Ali 1541 1600 Ottoman historian politician and writer Sofia Vembo 1910 1978 Greek singer and actressReferences Edit Jones Daniel 2003 1917 Peter Roach James Hartmann Jane Setter eds English Pronouncing Dictionary Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 3 12 539683 2 a b Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 Kallipolis A Greek English Lexicon Revised and augmented throughout by Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie Oxford Clarendon Press Retrieved 28 August 2020 via Perseus Digital Library Project Xenophon January 1921 Hellenica Volume II Translated by Brownson Carleton L Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674990999 Diodorus Siculus January 1933 Library of History Volume I Translated by Oldfather Charles H Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674993075 Plinius Secundus Gaius 1855 Bostock John Riley Henry Thomas eds The Natural History London H G Bohn Plutarch January 1919 Lives in Ancient Greek Translated by Perrin Bernadotte Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674991101 a b Herodotus The Histories vi 36 Xenophon ibid Pseudo Scylax Periplus of Pseudo Scylax 67 PDF Herodotus vi 34 Nepos Cornelius Lives of Eminent Commanders Miltiades 1 Attila the Hun Barbarian Terror and the Fall of the Roman Empire Vintage 2011 p 105 ISBN 978 1844139156 Crowley Roger 1453 The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West New York Hyperion 2005 p 31 ISBN 1 4013 0850 3 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Callipolis Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Crimea Archived from the original on 22 February 2006 Retrieved 11 October 2006 Charles Usherwood s Service Journal 1852 1856 despatch victorianweb org Porter Maj Gen Whitworth 1889 History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol I Chatham The Institution of Royal Engineers Shirinian George N 2017 Genocide in the Ottoman Empire Armenians Assyrians and Greeks 1913 1923 Berghahn Books p 42 ISBN 978 1785334320 Astourian Stephan 2020 Collective and State Violence in Turkey The Construction of a National Identity from Empire to Nation State Berghahn Books p 192 ISBN 978 1 78920 450 6 Brown Carroll N Papadopoulos Alexander 1919 Persecutions of the Greeks in Turkey before the European war Oxford university press p 52 Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan War Washington D C 1914 p 132 a b c d Persecution of the Greeks in Turkey 1914 1918 Constantinople London Printed by the Hesperia Press 1919 McMeekin Sean 7 May 2012 The Berlin Baghdad Express The Ottoman Empire and Germany s Bid for World Power Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674058538 via Google Books a b Lieberman Benjamin December 2013 Terrible Fate Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 96 97 ISBN 978 1442223196 The Meaning of Gallipoli to Hellenism Morris Benny Ze evi Dror April 2019 The Thirty Year Genocide Turkey s Destruction of Its Christian Minorities 1894 1924 Harvard University Press p 338 ISBN 978 0674916456 Ana Sayfa PDF Archived PDF from the original on 6 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gallipoli Turkey Gallipoli travel guide from Wikivoyage Gallipoli Peninsula Historical National Park photos with info Tours of Gallipoli Archived 17 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Australia s role in the Gallipoli Campaign Website ABC and Dept of Veteran s Affairs Coordinates 40 21 N 26 28 E 40 350 N 26 467 E 40 350 26 467 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gallipoli amp oldid 1130129065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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