fbpx
Wikipedia

Tunceli Province

Tunceli Province (Turkish: Tunceli ili), formerly Dersim Province (Kurdish: Parêzgeha Dêrsim; Zazaki: Dêsim wilayet; Armenian: Դերսիմի մարզ), is located in the Eastern Anatolia Region of Turkey.[3] It was originally named Dersim Province (Dersim vilayeti), then demoted to a district (Dersim kazası) and incorporated into Elazığ Province in 1926.[4] The province is considered part of Turkish Kurdistan and has a Kurdish majority. Moreover, it is the only province in Turkey with an Alevi majority.[5][6]

Tunceli Province
Munzur River runs through the province
Location within Turkey
CountryTurkey
Established25 December 1935
SeatTunceli
Government
 • MayorMehmet Ali Özkan
Area
7,774 km2 (3,002 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)[1]
84,366
 • Density11/km2 (28/sq mi)
Time zoneTRT (UTC+3)
Area code0428[2]

The province, apart from the central district, is divided into seven districts named Çemişgezek, Hozat, Mazgirt, Nazımiye, Ovacık, Pertek and Pülümür.[3]

The province has eight municipalities, 366 villages and 1,087 hamlets.[3]

Geography

 
A map of Dersim by the British Vice-Consul in Van, L. Molyneux-Seel, 1911

The adjacent provinces are Erzincan to the north and west, Elazığ to the south, and Bingöl to the east. The province covers an area of 7,774 km2 (3,002 sq mi) and has a population of 76,699. Tunceli is traversed by the northeasterly line of equal latitude and longitude. The Munzur Valley National Park is also situated in the province.[7]

Tunceli Province is a plateau characterized by its high, thickly forested mountain ranges. The historical region of Dersim, which largely corresponds to Tunceli Province, lies roughly between the Karasu and Murat rivers, both tributaries of the Euphrates.[8]

Name

Tunceli, which is a modern name, literally means "bronze fist" in Turkish (tunç meaning "bronze" and eli (in this context) meaning "fist"). It shares the name with the military operation that the Dersim Massacre was conducted under.[9]

It has been proposed that the name Dersim is connected with various placenames mentioned by ancient and classical writers, such as Daranis, Derxene (a district of Armenia mentioned by Pliny), and Daranalis/Daranaghi (a district of Armenia mentioned by Ptolemy, Agathangelos, and Faustus of Byzantium).[10][11] One theory as to the origin of the name associates it with Darius the Great.[10]

One Armenian folk tradition derives the name Dersim from a certain 17th-century priest named Der Simon, who, fearing the maurading Celali rebels, proposed that his parishioners convert to the Alevi faith of their Kurdish neighbors. The proposal was accepted, and the Armenian converts renamed their home region Dersimon in honor of their religious leader, which later transformed into Dersim.[12]

History

 
The Armenian district of Daranaghi (partly corresponding with Tunceli province) shown as a part of the holdings of the Mamikonian dynasty

Antiquity

This region was known as Ishuva in the 2000s BC. As a result of the struggle of the Ishuva Kingdom, which was established by the Hurrians in the region, with the Hittites, the region came under the rule of the Hittites in the 1600s BC. Then, it came under the domination of the Urartians and formed the westernmost part of the country of Urartu. After that, it was ruled by Medes and the Persian Achaemenid Empire, and after that it was ruled by Alexander the Great, king of Macedon.[13]

Ottoman Empire rule

Although the presence of Ottoman Empire was beginning to be felt in the region after Mehmed II the Conqueror defeated the Aq Qoyunlu in 1473, its incorporation into Ottoman lands took place after the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514, during the reign of Selim the Grim. However, the harsh and rugged geographical structure of the region helped preserved its autonomy, keeping the control of the region away from the centralized government. The people of Dersim displayed rebellious attitudes during the weak periods of the central administrations.[13] Various Armenian and Alevi Kurdish rebellions took place in the region in 1877, 1885, 1892, 1907, 1911, 1914 and 1916.[13]

In Turkey

With the abolition of the Ottoman Empire, Turkey became the owner of the region. In 1935, the Tunceli Law was passed, which established a state of emergency in the region, changed its name to Tunceli and made it a separate province consisting of the Nazımiye, Hozat, Mazgirt, Pertek, Ovacık, and Çemişgezek districts of Elazığ Province and the Pülümür District of Erzincan Province.[14][15] In January 1936, the Fourth Inspectorate-General (Umumi Müfettişlik, UM) was created, which spanned the provinces of Elazığ, Erzincan, Bingöl and Tunceli and was governed by a Governor-Commander, who had the authority to evacuate whole villages and resettle them in other regions.[16] This effectively established military rule in those provinces, and significant military infrastructure was established in the region.[15] Judicial guarantees such as the right to appeal were suspended, and the Governor-Commander had the right to apply the death penalty, whereas normally this would have to be approved by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey.[16] In 1937–1938, the Dersim rebellion took place in Tunceli Province and the adjacent regions, which resulted in the massacre of 30,000 Kurds and displacement of tens of thousands of inhabitants of the region by Turkish forces.[15] In 1946 the Tunceli Law was abolished and the state of emergency removed but the authority of the Fourth UM was transferred to the military.[16] Some of the deported families were allowed to return home.[17] The Inspectorates-General were dissolved in 1952 during the government of the Democrat Party.[18]

Since the 1970s, Tunceli Province has been a stronghold for insurgent groups such as the Communist Party of Turkey/Marxist–Leninist and the Kurdistan Workers' Party.[19]

Name changes

Before and after the Dersim rebellion, any villages and towns deemed to have non-Turkish names were renamed and given Turkish names in order to suppress any non-Turkish heritage.[20][21][22] During the Turkish Republican era, the words Kurdistan and Kurds were banned. The Turkish government had disguised the presence of the Kurds statistically by categorizing them as Mountain Turks.[23][24]

Linguist Sevan Nişanyan estimates that 4,000 Kurdish geographical locations have been changed (both Zazaki and Kurmanji).[25] Prior to the name changes, Many villages in Tunceli had recognizably Armenian names, often in corrupted forms.[8][26] The people of Tunceli have been actively fighting to get their province reverted to its old Kurdish name "Dersim". Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) claimed they are working on what it called a “democratization package” that includes the restoration of the Kurdish name of the eastern province of Tunceli back to Dersim in early 2013, but there has been no updates or news of it since then.[27] The local authority decided to call it Dersim in May 2019, while the Governor said it was against the law to call it Dersim.[28]

 
Topographic map of Tunceli Province

Demographics

 
Armenian family in 1915 from Çemişgezek district, Dersim (Tunceli)
 
Kurdish tribal leaders of Dersim (Tunceli) in 1895

Tunceli Province has the lowest population density of any province in Turkey, at just 11 inhabitants/km2.

Language

In 1927, Tunceli's language distribution was 69.5% Kurmanji Kurdish and Zazaki, 29.8% Turkish and 0.74% Armenian.[29] Kurmanji Kurdish is the main dialect around Pertek, while Zazaki is spoken in Hozat, Pülümür, Ovacık and Nazımiye. Both Kurmanji and Zaza are spoken in Tunceli town and Mazgirt.[30]

Alevis

The heartland and sacred land of Kurdish Alevis is the Dersim region.[31] The region's isolation has insulated it from the influence of Turkey's dominant Sunni sect of Islam, helping to keep its unique Alevi character relatively pure.[32]

Armenians of Dersim

Dersim had a large Armenian population prior to the Armenian genocide, with one estimate placing it at 45 percent of the total population of the region.[33] The districts of Mazgirt, Nazımiye and Çemişgezek had large Armenian populations during the Ottoman period.

The region is home to the ruins of a number of Armenian monasteries and churches, such as St. Karapet Monastery, which remains an object of reverence for Alevi Zaza-Kurds in Dersim today.[8][33] The Armenians and Alevi Zaza-Kurds of the region had generally good relations.[8][33] During the Armenian genocide, many of the Kurds of Dersim saved thousands of Armenians by hiding them or helping them reach the positions of the Russian army.[33] Some of the region's Armenian inhabitants that managed to survive converted to Alevism, and an unknown number of inhabitants of the province today have Armenian roots.[33][34] Distinctly Armenian settlements continued to exist in parts of Dersim until the massacre of 1938, after which the remaining Armenians completely assimilated into the Alevi Kurdish population.[34] An organization called Union of Dersim Armenians has been founded in Turkey by people from Dersim seeking to reconnect with their Armenian identity.[35]

Muslim[a] and Armenian population of the region according to Ottoman censuses
Year Muslims Armenians Notes
1881/82–1893[36] 41,089 (75.33%) 13,050 (23.92%)
1906/7[37] 56,266 (81.19%) 12,591 (18.16%) 9,167 "Armenians", 3,424 "Armenian Catholics"
1914[38] 65,976 (82.39%) 13,825 (17.26%) 13,367 "Armenians", 458 "Armenian Catholics"

Politics

In the municipal elections held in March 2019, Fatih Mehmet Maçoğlu was elected mayor of Tunceli municipality with 32% of the votes cast (Maçoğlu had previously been elected mayor of Ovacık in 2014).[39] He ran as the candidate of the Communist Party of Turkey (TKP), making him the first communist mayor of a municipality in Turkey.[40] In his first year in office, he has established free public transport in parts of the city. The development of industrial and agricultural cooperatives, which are meant to tackle unemployment, has already begun.[41]

Tunceli recorded the strongest "No" vote at 80.42% during the 2017 Turkish constitutional referendum. Previously, the province had recorded the strongest "No" vote at 81.02% during the 2010 Turkish constitutional referendum.

The province is a stronghold for pro-Kurdish parties as well as the Republican People's Party.

Latest general election results

June 2015

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Peoples' Democratic Party32,28160.94new2+2
Republican People's Party10,90620.59–36.910–2
Justice and Development Party5,63110.63–5.10
Nationalist Movement Party3,1315.91+3.78
Other1,0261.94
Total52,975100.002
Valid votes52,97598.63
Invalid/blank votes7361.37
Total votes53,711100.00
Registered voters/turnout63,61484.43

November 2015

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Peoples' Democratic Party27,88256.42–4.521+1
Republican People's Party14,09428.52+7.931–1
Justice and Development Party5,83711.81+1.18
Nationalist Movement Party1,2922.61–3.30
Other3150.64
Total49,420100.002
Valid votes49,92098.90
Invalid/blank votes5541.10
Total votes50,474100.00
Registered voters/turnout62,60880.62

2018

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Peoples' Democratic Party28,21952.07–4.3510
Republican People's Party14,35826.49–2.0310
Justice and Development Party7,22813.34+1.53
Nationalist Movement Party3,0195.57+2.96
Good Party8491.57new
Other5210.96
Total54,194100.002
Valid votes54,19497.74
Invalid/blank votes1,2552.26
Total votes55,449100.00
Registered voters/turnout64,29086.25

Education

Tunceli University was established on May 22, 2008.[42] Tunceli is famous for excellent rankings in National Education statistics.[43]

Places of interest

Tunceli is known for its old buildings such as the Çelebi Ağa Mosque,[44] Elti Hatun Mosque,[45] Mazgirt Castle,[46] Pertek Castle,[47] and the Derun-i Hisar Castle.[48][49]

Notable people

 
John I Tzimiskes, who was born in Çemişgezek, Tunceli on 925. He ruled as Byzantine Emperor from 969 to 976, an intuitive and successful general, he strengthened the Empire and expanded its borders during his reign.
  • John I Tzimiskes (925–976)[50] - Byzantine emperor between 969 and 976
  • Seyid Riza (1863–1937) - Alevi Zaza-Kurdish political leader of the Alevi Zaza-Kurds of Dersim, a religious figure and the leader of the Dersim movement in Turkey during the 1937–1938 Dersim Rebellion
  • Nuri Dersimi (1893–1973) - Kurdish nationalist writer, revolutionary and intellectual
  • Aurora Mardiganian (1901–1994) - Armenian author, actress, and a survivor of the Armenian genocide
  • Vazken Andréassian (1903–1995) - Armenian engineer, author, and a survivor of the Armenian genocide
  • Andranik Andréassian [hy] (1909–1996) - Armenian author, editor, and a survivor of the Armenian genocide
  • Sait Kırmızıtoprak [ku] (1935–1971) - Kurdish nationalist writer and revolutionary
  • Kemal Burkay (1937) - Kurdish writer and politician
  • Kamer Genç (1940–2016) - Turkish politician
  • Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu (1948) - economist, retired civil servant, social democratic politician and leader of the Republican People's Party
  • Mehmet Ali Eren (1951) - Kurdish politician
  • Ali Haydar Kaytan (1952–2021) - Kurdish militant, co-founder of the Kurdistan Workers' Party
  • Gülşen Aktaş (1957) - educator and social worker of Kurdish origin
  • Hıdır Aslan (1958–1984) - Kurdish rebel
  • Sakine Cansız (1958–2013) - Kurdish activist, co-founder of the Kurdistan Workers' Party
  • Hamide Akbayir (1959) - German politician of Kurdish descent
  • Edibe Şahin (1960) - Kurdish politician, former mayor of the municipality of Tunceli
  • Hüseyin Kenan Aydın (1962) - German politician of Kurdish descent
  • Hasan Saltık (1964) - Turkish record producer of mixed Turkish and Kurdish descent
  • Ferhat Tunç (1964) - Kurdish singer, songwriter and musician
  • Hozan Diyar (1966) - Kurdish singer
  • Alican Önlü (1967) - Kurdish politician
  • Fatih Mehmet Maçoğlu (1968) - Kurdish politician, currently the mayor of the municipality of Tunceli
  • Hüseyin Aygün (1970) - Zaza-Kurdish lawyer and politician
  • Kenan Engin (1974) - German-Kurdish political scientist
  • Nilüfer Gündoğan (1974) - Dutch politician of Kurdish descent
  • Aynur Doğan (1975) - Kurdish singer and songwriter
  • Hülya Oran (1978) - Kurdish militant, one of leaders of Kurdistan Workers' Party and is the co-chair of the Kurdistan Communities Union
  • Volga Sorgu [tr] (1981) - actor of Zaza-Kurdish descent

Originating from Tunceli

References

  1. ^ "TÜİK Kurumsal".
  2. ^ Area codes page of Turkish Telecom website 2011-08-22 at the Wayback Machine (in Turkish)
  3. ^ a b c "Türkiye Mülki İdare Bölümleri Envanteri". T.C. İçişleri Bakanlığı (in Turkish). Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  4. ^ Album of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey 2013-08-01 at the Wayback Machine, Vol. 1, p. XXII, Dersim İli, 26.06.1926 tarih ve 404 sayılı Resmi Ceride'de yayımlanan 30.5.1926 tarih ve 877 sayılı Kanunla ilçeye dönüstürülerek Elazıg'a bağlanmıştır.
  5. ^ Watts, Nicole F. (2010). Activists in Office: Kurdish Politics and Protest in Turkey (Studies in Modernity and National Identity). Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-295-99050-7.
  6. ^ "Kurds, Kurdistān". Encyclopaedia of Islam (2 ed.). BRILL. 2002. ISBN 9789004161214.
  7. ^ "Munzur Valley National Park | National Parks Of Turkey". www.nationalparksofturkey.org. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  8. ^ a b c d Arakelova, Victoria; Grigorian, Christine. "The Halvori Vank': An Armenian Monastery and a Zaza Sanctuary". academia.edu. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  9. ^ "The Massacre in Dersim Still Haunts Kurds in Turkey". jacobin.com. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  10. ^ a b Korkmaz, M. (2012). . Ankara: Alter Yayıncılık, pp. 164–169. Archived from the original on 2022-05-04.
  11. ^ "Daranaghi". Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia (in Armenian). Vol. 3. 1977. p. 311.
  12. ^ Halajyan, Gevorg (1973). Dersimi hayeri azgagrutʻyuně, masn A [Ethnography of the Dersim Armenians, part I] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Haykakan SSH GA hratarakchʻutʻyun. pp. 249–250.
  13. ^ a b c Tuncel 2012, p. 380–381.
  14. ^ "Hükümet Konağı Tarihçe". tunceli.gov.tr. Retrieved 2022-05-05.
  15. ^ a b c Kieser, Hans-Lukas (2016-01-19). "Dersim Massacre, 1937-1938". www.sciencespo.fr. Retrieved 2022-05-06.
  16. ^ a b c Bayir, Derya (2016-04-22). Minorities and Nationalism in Turkish Law. Routledge. pp. 139–141. ISBN 978-1-317-09579-8.
  17. ^ McDowall, David (2007). A Modern History of the Kurds. London and New York: I. B. Tauris. pp. 105, 209. ISBN 9781850434160. OCLC 939584596.
  18. ^ Fleet, Kate; Kunt, I. Metin; Kasaba, Reşat; Faroqhi, Suraiya (2008-04-17). The Cambridge History of Turkey. Cambridge University Press. p. 343. ISBN 978-0-521-62096-3.
  19. ^ Dinc, Pinar; Eklund, Lina; Shahpurwala, Aiman; Mansourian, Ali; Aturinde, Augustus; Pilesjö, Petter (2021-08-01). "Fighting Insurgency, Ruining the Environment: the Case of Forest Fires in the Dersim Province of Turkey". Human Ecology. 49 (4): 481–493. doi:10.1007/s10745-021-00243-y. ISSN 1572-9915. S2CID 237770099.
  20. ^ Nişanyan 2011, p. 14.
  21. ^ Tuncel 2000, p. 1.
  22. ^ T.C İçişleri Bakanlığı İller İdaresi Genel Müdürlüğü (1968). .
  23. ^ Hooglund 1996, p. 95.
  24. ^ Bartkus 1999, p. 91.
  25. ^ Nişanyan 2011, p. 54.
  26. ^ Gasparyan, H. H. (1979). [Dersim (historical-ethnographical outline)] (PDF). Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). 2: 195–210. Archived from the original on 2014-03-06.
  27. ^ . Today's Zaman. (in Turkish). "Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) is working on what it called a “democratization package” that includes the restoration of the Kurdish name of the eastern province of Tunceli. The original name of the province was Dersim and was changed to Tunceli in 1935."
  28. ^ . Ahval. (in Turkish). "The local authority in Tunceli in eastern Turkey decided this month to call the city and the province by its Kurdish name–Dersim–saying the Turkish name, which means bronze fist, did not represent the culture, history or religious beliefs of an area often at odds with central government."
  29. ^ Sertel, Savaş (2016-01-31). "TÜRKİYE CUMHURİYETİ'NİN İLK GENEL NÜFUS SAYIMINA GÖRE DERSİM BÖLGESİNDE DEMOGRAFİK YAPI". Fırat Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi. 24 (1). doi:10.18069/fusbed.82073. ISSN 1300-9702.
  30. ^ Malmîsanij, Mehemed (1988). "Dımıli ve Kurmanci Lehçelerinin Köylere Göre. Dağılımı". Berhem (in Kurdish and Turkish). 3: 62–67.
  31. ^ Gültekin (2019), p. 4.
  32. ^ Benanav, Michael (26 June 2015). "Finding Paradise in Turkey's Munzur Valley". The New York Times. from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  33. ^ a b c d e Hakobyan, T. Kh.; Melik-Bakhshyan, St. T.; Barseghyan, H. Kh. (1988). Hayastani ev harakitsʻ shrjanneri teghanunneri baṛaran [Dictionary of toponymy of Armenian and adjacent territories] (in Armenian). Vol. 2. Yerevan: Yerevan State University. pp. 93–94.
  34. ^ a b Kharatyan, Hranush (2014-06-25). . repairfuture.net. Archived from the original on 2022-05-04.
  35. ^ Abrahamyan, Gayane (2015-04-23). "Turkey's Armenians Rediscover Their Identity". eurasianet.org. Retrieved 2022-05-04.
  36. ^ Karpat 1985, p. 144, Ottoman General Census of 1881/82-1893 (continued), see the Hozat (Dersim) and Mazgirt.
  37. ^ Karpat 1985, p. 164, Summary of Census of Ottoman Population, 1906/7 (continued), see the Dersim.
  38. ^ Karpat 1985, p. 182, Summary of Ottoman Population, 1914 see the Dersim, Çemişgezek, Çarsancak, Ovacık, Nazımiye and Mazgirt.
  39. ^ "Communist Party of Turkey (TKP) wins Dersim province in local elections". Liberation. March 31, 2019. from the original on February 6, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
  40. ^ Malzahn, Philip (April 1, 2019). "TKP gewinnt in Dersim". Neues Deutschland. from the original on February 6, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
  41. ^ Ashly, Jaclynn (February 3, 2020). "The Communist Mayor of Dersim". The Indypendent. from the original on February 6, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
  42. ^ "Tunceli University Signs Protocol with 4 American Universities". Turkish Daily Mail. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  43. ^ "Eğitim sıralamasında Tunceli birinci".
  44. ^ "ÇELEBİ AĞA CAMİİ". Kültür Portalı. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  45. ^ (PDF). Semantic Scholar. S2CID 194452128. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  46. ^ Sinclair, T. A. (31 December 1989). Eastern Turkey: An Architectural & Archaeological Survey, Volume III. Pindar Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-904597-78-0.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-10-20. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  49. ^ "DERUN-İ HİSAR (SAĞMAN) KALESİ". Kültür Portalı. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  50. ^ "Çemişgezek" in The Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names, 2005, by John Everett-Heath, Oxford University Press.
  51. ^ . Sabah. (in Turkish). Retrieved 9 February 2023. "8. Cumhurbaşkanı Turgut Özal'ın annesi Hafize Özal, Çemişgezek Mezire Köyü doğumlu."
  52. ^ "Turgut Özal'ı rahmetle anıyoruz". Yeni Akit. (in Turkish). Retrieved 9 February 2023. "Babası Malatya/Çırmıktı'lı Ünlüoğulları'ndan banka memuru Mehmet Sıddık Özal, annesi ise Tunceli Çemişgezekli, ilkokul öğretmeni Hafize Hanım (d. 1906 - ö. 1988) olan Turgut Özal kısmen Kürt kökenlidir."
  53. ^ "Gültan Kışanak Kimdir?". Bianet. (in Turkish). 9 February 2023. "Ailesi zamanında Dersim'den göçerek Elazığ'ın merkez köylerinden Sünköy'e yerleşmiş bulunan Ağuce aşiretine mensuptur."
  54. ^ . Haber Vitrini. (in Turkish). Retrieved 9 February 2023. "Programın ilerki bölümlerinde Yıldız Tilbe, “Ulaştırma Bakanından uyarı gelmiş. Benim anam Tuncelili, hem Zaza hem Kürt, babam Ağrılı Kürt. Ben bu topraklarda doğdum, büyüdüm. Kürt neyse benim için Türk de odur, Laz da odur, Çerkez de odur. Hiç bir farkı yoktur birbirinden asla” dedi."
  55. ^ "Belçika’nın Kürt asıllı bakanı Zuhal Demir tehdit edildi". Ahval. (in Turkish). Retrieved 9 February 2023. "Tunceli ve Elazığ kökenli, maden işçisi bir babanın üçüncü çocuğu olan Zuhal Demir, 12 Mart 1980'de Belçika'nın Genk kentinde dünyaya geldi."

Notes

  1. ^ Most of them are Alevis, ethnically Kurdish.

External links

  • Official Homepage of the Province Governor
  • Official Homepage of the Culture and Tourism head office
  • Official Homepage of the Education head office
  • Official Homepage of the health head office

tunceli, province, turkish, tunceli, formerly, dersim, province, kurdish, parêzgeha, dêrsim, zazaki, dêsim, wilayet, armenian, Դերսիմի, մարզ, located, eastern, anatolia, region, turkey, originally, named, dersim, province, dersim, vilayeti, then, demoted, dist. Tunceli Province Turkish Tunceli ili formerly Dersim Province Kurdish Parezgeha Dersim Zazaki Desim wilayet Armenian Դերսիմի մարզ is located in the Eastern Anatolia Region of Turkey 3 It was originally named Dersim Province Dersim vilayeti then demoted to a district Dersim kazasi and incorporated into Elazig Province in 1926 4 The province is considered part of Turkish Kurdistan and has a Kurdish majority Moreover it is the only province in Turkey with an Alevi majority 5 6 Tunceli ProvinceProvinceMunzur River runs through the provinceLocation within TurkeyCountryTurkeyEstablished25 December 1935SeatTunceliGovernment MayorMehmet Ali OzkanArea7 774 km2 3 002 sq mi Population 2022 1 84 366 Density11 km2 28 sq mi Time zoneTRT UTC 3 Area code0428 2 The province apart from the central district is divided into seven districts named Cemisgezek Hozat Mazgirt Nazimiye Ovacik Pertek and Pulumur 3 The province has eight municipalities 366 villages and 1 087 hamlets 3 Contents 1 Geography 2 Name 3 History 3 1 Antiquity 3 2 Ottoman Empire rule 3 3 In Turkey 3 3 1 Name changes 4 Demographics 4 1 Language 4 2 Alevis 4 3 Armenians of Dersim 5 Politics 5 1 Latest general election results 5 2 June 2015 5 3 November 2015 5 4 2018 6 Education 7 Places of interest 8 Notable people 8 1 Originating from Tunceli 9 References 10 Notes 11 External linksGeography EditSee also Munzur Valley National Park A map of Dersim by the British Vice Consul in Van L Molyneux Seel 1911 Sariyayla in Nazimiye District The adjacent provinces are Erzincan to the north and west Elazig to the south and Bingol to the east The province covers an area of 7 774 km2 3 002 sq mi and has a population of 76 699 Tunceli is traversed by the northeasterly line of equal latitude and longitude The Munzur Valley National Park is also situated in the province 7 Tunceli Province is a plateau characterized by its high thickly forested mountain ranges The historical region of Dersim which largely corresponds to Tunceli Province lies roughly between the Karasu and Murat rivers both tributaries of the Euphrates 8 Munzur Valley National Park Name EditTunceli which is a modern name literally means bronze fist in Turkish tunc meaning bronze and eli in this context meaning fist It shares the name with the military operation that the Dersim Massacre was conducted under 9 It has been proposed that the name Dersim is connected with various placenames mentioned by ancient and classical writers such as Daranis Derxene a district of Armenia mentioned by Pliny and Daranalis Daranaghi a district of Armenia mentioned by Ptolemy Agathangelos and Faustus of Byzantium 10 11 One theory as to the origin of the name associates it with Darius the Great 10 One Armenian folk tradition derives the name Dersim from a certain 17th century priest named Der Simon who fearing the maurading Celali rebels proposed that his parishioners convert to the Alevi faith of their Kurdish neighbors The proposal was accepted and the Armenian converts renamed their home region Dersimon in honor of their religious leader which later transformed into Dersim 12 History Edit The Armenian district of Daranaghi partly corresponding with Tunceli province shown as a part of the holdings of the Mamikonian dynasty Antiquity Edit This region was known as Ishuva in the 2000s BC As a result of the struggle of the Ishuva Kingdom which was established by the Hurrians in the region with the Hittites the region came under the rule of the Hittites in the 1600s BC Then it came under the domination of the Urartians and formed the westernmost part of the country of Urartu After that it was ruled by Medes and the Persian Achaemenid Empire and after that it was ruled by Alexander the Great king of Macedon 13 Ottoman Empire rule Edit Although the presence of Ottoman Empire was beginning to be felt in the region after Mehmed II the Conqueror defeated the Aq Qoyunlu in 1473 its incorporation into Ottoman lands took place after the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514 during the reign of Selim the Grim However the harsh and rugged geographical structure of the region helped preserved its autonomy keeping the control of the region away from the centralized government The people of Dersim displayed rebellious attitudes during the weak periods of the central administrations 13 Various Armenian and Alevi Kurdish rebellions took place in the region in 1877 1885 1892 1907 1911 1914 and 1916 13 In Turkey Edit With the abolition of the Ottoman Empire Turkey became the owner of the region In 1935 the Tunceli Law was passed which established a state of emergency in the region changed its name to Tunceli and made it a separate province consisting of the Nazimiye Hozat Mazgirt Pertek Ovacik and Cemisgezek districts of Elazig Province and the Pulumur District of Erzincan Province 14 15 In January 1936 the Fourth Inspectorate General Umumi Mufettislik UM was created which spanned the provinces of Elazig Erzincan Bingol and Tunceli and was governed by a Governor Commander who had the authority to evacuate whole villages and resettle them in other regions 16 This effectively established military rule in those provinces and significant military infrastructure was established in the region 15 Judicial guarantees such as the right to appeal were suspended and the Governor Commander had the right to apply the death penalty whereas normally this would have to be approved by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey 16 In 1937 1938 the Dersim rebellion took place in Tunceli Province and the adjacent regions which resulted in the massacre of 30 000 Kurds and displacement of tens of thousands of inhabitants of the region by Turkish forces 15 In 1946 the Tunceli Law was abolished and the state of emergency removed but the authority of the Fourth UM was transferred to the military 16 Some of the deported families were allowed to return home 17 The Inspectorates General were dissolved in 1952 during the government of the Democrat Party 18 Since the 1970s Tunceli Province has been a stronghold for insurgent groups such as the Communist Party of Turkey Marxist Leninist and the Kurdistan Workers Party 19 Name changes Edit Before and after the Dersim rebellion any villages and towns deemed to have non Turkish names were renamed and given Turkish names in order to suppress any non Turkish heritage 20 21 22 During the Turkish Republican era the words Kurdistan and Kurds were banned The Turkish government had disguised the presence of the Kurds statistically by categorizing them as Mountain Turks 23 24 Linguist Sevan Nisanyan estimates that 4 000 Kurdish geographical locations have been changed both Zazaki and Kurmanji 25 Prior to the name changes Many villages in Tunceli had recognizably Armenian names often in corrupted forms 8 26 The people of Tunceli have been actively fighting to get their province reverted to its old Kurdish name Dersim Turkey s ruling Justice and Development Party AK Party claimed they are working on what it called a democratization package that includes the restoration of the Kurdish name of the eastern province of Tunceli back to Dersim in early 2013 but there has been no updates or news of it since then 27 The local authority decided to call it Dersim in May 2019 while the Governor said it was against the law to call it Dersim 28 Topographic map of Tunceli ProvinceDemographics Edit Armenian family in 1915 from Cemisgezek district Dersim Tunceli Kurdish tribal leaders of Dersim Tunceli in 1895 Tunceli Province has the lowest population density of any province in Turkey at just 11 inhabitants km2 Language Edit In 1927 Tunceli s language distribution was 69 5 Kurmanji Kurdish and Zazaki 29 8 Turkish and 0 74 Armenian 29 Kurmanji Kurdish is the main dialect around Pertek while Zazaki is spoken in Hozat Pulumur Ovacik and Nazimiye Both Kurmanji and Zaza are spoken in Tunceli town and Mazgirt 30 Alevis Edit Further information Kurdish Alevism The heartland and sacred land of Kurdish Alevis is the Dersim region 31 The region s isolation has insulated it from the influence of Turkey s dominant Sunni sect of Islam helping to keep its unique Alevi character relatively pure 32 Armenians of Dersim Edit Dersim had a large Armenian population prior to the Armenian genocide with one estimate placing it at 45 percent of the total population of the region 33 The districts of Mazgirt Nazimiye and Cemisgezek had large Armenian populations during the Ottoman period The region is home to the ruins of a number of Armenian monasteries and churches such as St Karapet Monastery which remains an object of reverence for Alevi Zaza Kurds in Dersim today 8 33 The Armenians and Alevi Zaza Kurds of the region had generally good relations 8 33 During the Armenian genocide many of the Kurds of Dersim saved thousands of Armenians by hiding them or helping them reach the positions of the Russian army 33 Some of the region s Armenian inhabitants that managed to survive converted to Alevism and an unknown number of inhabitants of the province today have Armenian roots 33 34 Distinctly Armenian settlements continued to exist in parts of Dersim until the massacre of 1938 after which the remaining Armenians completely assimilated into the Alevi Kurdish population 34 An organization called Union of Dersim Armenians has been founded in Turkey by people from Dersim seeking to reconnect with their Armenian identity 35 Muslim a and Armenian population of the region according to Ottoman censusesYear Muslims Armenians Notes1881 82 1893 36 41 089 75 33 13 050 23 92 1906 7 37 56 266 81 19 12 591 18 16 9 167 Armenians 3 424 Armenian Catholics 1914 38 65 976 82 39 13 825 17 26 13 367 Armenians 458 Armenian Catholics Politics EditFurther information Tunceli electoral district In the municipal elections held in March 2019 Fatih Mehmet Macoglu was elected mayor of Tunceli municipality with 32 of the votes cast Macoglu had previously been elected mayor of Ovacik in 2014 39 He ran as the candidate of the Communist Party of Turkey TKP making him the first communist mayor of a municipality in Turkey 40 In his first year in office he has established free public transport in parts of the city The development of industrial and agricultural cooperatives which are meant to tackle unemployment has already begun 41 Tunceli recorded the strongest No vote at 80 42 during the 2017 Turkish constitutional referendum Previously the province had recorded the strongest No vote at 81 02 during the 2010 Turkish constitutional referendum The province is a stronghold for pro Kurdish parties as well as the Republican People s Party Latest general election results Edit June 2015 Edit PartyVotes Seats Peoples Democratic Party32 28160 94new2 2Republican People s Party10 90620 59 36 910 2Justice and Development Party5 63110 63 5 10 Nationalist Movement Party3 1315 91 3 78 Other1 0261 94 Total52 975100 00 2 Valid votes52 97598 63Invalid blank votes7361 37Total votes53 711100 00Registered voters turnout63 61484 43November 2015 Edit PartyVotes Seats Peoples Democratic Party27 88256 42 4 521 1Republican People s Party14 09428 52 7 931 1Justice and Development Party5 83711 81 1 18 Nationalist Movement Party1 2922 61 3 30 Other3150 64 Total49 420100 00 2 Valid votes49 92098 90Invalid blank votes5541 10Total votes50 474100 00Registered voters turnout62 60880 622018 Edit PartyVotes Seats Peoples Democratic Party28 21952 07 4 3510Republican People s Party14 35826 49 2 0310Justice and Development Party7 22813 34 1 53 Nationalist Movement Party3 0195 57 2 96 Good Party8491 57new Other5210 96 Total54 194100 00 2 Valid votes54 19497 74Invalid blank votes1 2552 26Total votes55 449100 00Registered voters turnout64 29086 25Education EditTunceli University was established on May 22 2008 42 Tunceli is famous for excellent rankings in National Education statistics 43 Places of interest Edit Pertek Castle in Pertek District Tunceli Tunceli is known for its old buildings such as the Celebi Aga Mosque 44 Elti Hatun Mosque 45 Mazgirt Castle 46 Pertek Castle 47 and the Derun i Hisar Castle 48 49 Notable people Edit John I Tzimiskes who was born in Cemisgezek Tunceli on 925 He ruled as Byzantine Emperor from 969 to 976 an intuitive and successful general he strengthened the Empire and expanded its borders during his reign John I Tzimiskes 925 976 50 Byzantine emperor between 969 and 976 Seyid Riza 1863 1937 Alevi Zaza Kurdish political leader of the Alevi Zaza Kurds of Dersim a religious figure and the leader of the Dersim movement in Turkey during the 1937 1938 Dersim Rebellion Nuri Dersimi 1893 1973 Kurdish nationalist writer revolutionary and intellectual Aurora Mardiganian 1901 1994 Armenian author actress and a survivor of the Armenian genocide Vazken Andreassian 1903 1995 Armenian engineer author and a survivor of the Armenian genocide Andranik Andreassian hy 1909 1996 Armenian author editor and a survivor of the Armenian genocide Sait Kirmizitoprak ku 1935 1971 Kurdish nationalist writer and revolutionary Kemal Burkay 1937 Kurdish writer and politician Kamer Genc 1940 2016 Turkish politician Kemal Kilicdaroglu 1948 economist retired civil servant social democratic politician and leader of the Republican People s Party Mehmet Ali Eren 1951 Kurdish politician Ali Haydar Kaytan 1952 2021 Kurdish militant co founder of the Kurdistan Workers Party Gulsen Aktas 1957 educator and social worker of Kurdish origin Hidir Aslan 1958 1984 Kurdish rebel Sakine Cansiz 1958 2013 Kurdish activist co founder of the Kurdistan Workers Party Hamide Akbayir 1959 German politician of Kurdish descent Edibe Sahin 1960 Kurdish politician former mayor of the municipality of Tunceli Huseyin Kenan Aydin 1962 German politician of Kurdish descent Hasan Saltik 1964 Turkish record producer of mixed Turkish and Kurdish descent Ferhat Tunc 1964 Kurdish singer songwriter and musician Hozan Diyar 1966 Kurdish singer Alican Onlu 1967 Kurdish politician Fatih Mehmet Macoglu 1968 Kurdish politician currently the mayor of the municipality of Tunceli Huseyin Aygun 1970 Zaza Kurdish lawyer and politician Kenan Engin 1974 German Kurdish political scientist Nilufer Gundogan 1974 Dutch politician of Kurdish descent Aynur Dogan 1975 Kurdish singer and songwriter Hulya Oran 1978 Kurdish militant one of leaders of Kurdistan Workers Party and is the co chair of the Kurdistan Communities Union Volga Sorgu tr 1981 actor of Zaza Kurdish descentOriginating from Tunceli Edit Turgut Ozal 1927 1993 51 52 8th president of Turkey he was of mixed Turkish and Kurdish descent Gultan Kisanak 1961 53 Kurdish journalist author and politician Yildiz Tilbe 54 1966 singer of Kurdish descent Gulnaz Karatas 1971 1992 Kurdish female fighter Dilan Yesilgoz Zegerius 1977 Dutch politician of Kurdish descent current Minister of Justice and Security in Netherlands Zuhal Demir 1980 55 Belgian lawyer and politician of Kurdish origin current Flemish minister of Environment Justice Tourism and Energy Firat Celik 1981 German Turkish actor of Zaza Kurdish descentReferences Edit TUIK Kurumsal Area codes page of Turkish Telecom website Archived 2011 08 22 at the Wayback Machine in Turkish a b c Turkiye Mulki Idare Bolumleri Envanteri T C Icisleri Bakanligi in Turkish Retrieved 19 December 2022 Album of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey Archived 2013 08 01 at the Wayback Machine Vol 1 p XXII Dersim Ili 26 06 1926 tarih ve 404 sayili Resmi Ceride de yayimlanan 30 5 1926 tarih ve 877 sayili Kanunla ilceye donusturulerek Elazig a baglanmistir Watts Nicole F 2010 Activists in Office Kurdish Politics and Protest in Turkey Studies in Modernity and National Identity Seattle University of Washington Press p 167 ISBN 978 0 295 99050 7 Kurds Kurdistan Encyclopaedia of Islam 2 ed BRILL 2002 ISBN 9789004161214 Munzur Valley National Park National Parks Of Turkey www nationalparksofturkey org Retrieved 2020 04 11 a b c d Arakelova Victoria Grigorian Christine The Halvori Vank An Armenian Monastery and a Zaza Sanctuary academia edu Retrieved 1 May 2018 The Massacre in Dersim Still Haunts Kurds in Turkey jacobin com Retrieved 2022 11 05 a b Korkmaz M 2012 Deylem den Dersim e Dersimliler Ankara Alter Yayincilik pp 164 169 Archived from the original on 2022 05 04 Daranaghi Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia in Armenian Vol 3 1977 p 311 Halajyan Gevorg 1973 Dersimi hayeri azgagrutʻyune masn A Ethnography of the Dersim Armenians part I in Armenian Yerevan Haykakan SSH GA hratarakchʻutʻyun pp 249 250 a b c Tuncel 2012 p 380 381 sfn error no target CITEREFTuncel2012 help Hukumet Konagi Tarihce tunceli gov tr Retrieved 2022 05 05 a b c Kieser Hans Lukas 2016 01 19 Dersim Massacre 1937 1938 www sciencespo fr Retrieved 2022 05 06 a b c Bayir Derya 2016 04 22 Minorities and Nationalism in Turkish Law Routledge pp 139 141 ISBN 978 1 317 09579 8 McDowall David 2007 A Modern History of the Kurds London and New York I B Tauris pp 105 209 ISBN 9781850434160 OCLC 939584596 Fleet Kate Kunt I Metin Kasaba Resat Faroqhi Suraiya 2008 04 17 The Cambridge History of Turkey Cambridge University Press p 343 ISBN 978 0 521 62096 3 Dinc Pinar Eklund Lina Shahpurwala Aiman Mansourian Ali Aturinde Augustus Pilesjo Petter 2021 08 01 Fighting Insurgency Ruining the Environment the Case of Forest Fires in the Dersim Province of Turkey Human Ecology 49 4 481 493 doi 10 1007 s10745 021 00243 y ISSN 1572 9915 S2CID 237770099 Nisanyan 2011 p 14 sfn error no target CITEREFNisanyan2011 help Tuncel 2000 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFTuncel2000 help T C Icisleri Bakanligi Iller Idaresi Genel Mudurlugu 1968 Koylerimiz Hooglund 1996 p 95 sfn error no target CITEREFHooglund1996 help Bartkus 1999 p 91 sfn error no target CITEREFBartkus1999 help Nisanyan 2011 p 54 sfn error no target CITEREFNisanyan2011 help Gasparyan H H 1979 Dersim Patmaazgagrakan aknark Dersim historical ethnographical outline PDF Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian 2 195 210 Archived from the original on 2014 03 06 After 78 years Turkey to restore Tunceli s original name Today s Zaman in Turkish Turkey s ruling Justice and Development Party AK Party is working on what it called a democratization package that includes the restoration of the Kurdish name of the eastern province of Tunceli The original name of the province was Dersim and was changed to Tunceli in 1935 A short history of Turkification From Dersim to Tunceli Ahval in Turkish The local authority in Tunceli in eastern Turkey decided this month to call the city and the province by its Kurdish name Dersim saying the Turkish name which means bronze fist did not represent the culture history or religious beliefs of an area often at odds with central government Sertel Savas 2016 01 31 TURKIYE CUMHURIYETI NIN ILK GENEL NUFUS SAYIMINA GORE DERSIM BOLGESINDE DEMOGRAFIK YAPI Firat Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi 24 1 doi 10 18069 fusbed 82073 ISSN 1300 9702 Malmisanij Mehemed 1988 Dimili ve Kurmanci Lehcelerinin Koylere Gore Dagilimi Berhem in Kurdish and Turkish 3 62 67 Gultekin 2019 p 4 sfnp error no target CITEREFGultekin2019 help Benanav Michael 26 June 2015 Finding Paradise in Turkey s Munzur Valley The New York Times Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 a b c d e Hakobyan T Kh Melik Bakhshyan St T Barseghyan H Kh 1988 Hayastani ev harakitsʻ shrjanneri teghanunneri baṛaran Dictionary of toponymy of Armenian and adjacent territories in Armenian Vol 2 Yerevan Yerevan State University pp 93 94 a b Kharatyan Hranush 2014 06 25 The search for identity in Dersim Part 2 the Alevized Armenians in Dersim repairfuture net Archived from the original on 2022 05 04 Abrahamyan Gayane 2015 04 23 Turkey s Armenians Rediscover Their Identity eurasianet org Retrieved 2022 05 04 Karpat 1985 p 144 Ottoman General Census of 1881 82 1893 continued see the Hozat Dersim and Mazgirt sfn error no target CITEREFKarpat1985 help Karpat 1985 p 164 Summary of Census of Ottoman Population 1906 7 continued see the Dersim sfn error no target CITEREFKarpat1985 help Karpat 1985 p 182 Summary of Ottoman Population 1914 see the Dersim Cemisgezek Carsancak Ovacik Nazimiye and Mazgirt sfn error no target CITEREFKarpat1985 help Communist Party of Turkey TKP wins Dersim province in local elections Liberation March 31 2019 Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved February 7 2021 Malzahn Philip April 1 2019 TKP gewinnt in Dersim Neues Deutschland Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved February 7 2021 Ashly Jaclynn February 3 2020 The Communist Mayor of Dersim The Indypendent Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved February 7 2021 Tunceli University Signs Protocol with 4 American Universities Turkish Daily Mail Retrieved 1 May 2018 Egitim siralamasinda Tunceli birinci CELEBI AGA CAMII Kultur Portali Retrieved 2020 04 11 Pushover Analysis of Historical Elti Hatun Mosque PDF Semantic Scholar S2CID 194452128 Archived from the original PDF on 11 April 2020 Retrieved 11 April 2020 Sinclair T A 31 December 1989 Eastern Turkey An Architectural amp Archaeological Survey Volume III Pindar Press p 148 ISBN 978 1 904597 78 0 Pertek Kalesi Archived from the original on 2016 10 20 Retrieved 2016 10 19 Derun i Hisar Sagman Kalesi Archived from the original on 2017 12 01 Retrieved 2017 11 18 DERUN I HISAR SAGMAN KALESI Kultur Portali Retrieved 2020 04 11 Cemisgezek in The Concise Dictionary of World Place Names 2005 by John Everett Heath Oxford University Press Cemisgezek e bir gelen geri donmek istemiyor Sabah in Turkish Retrieved 9 February 2023 8 Cumhurbaskani Turgut Ozal in annesi Hafize Ozal Cemisgezek Mezire Koyu dogumlu Turgut Ozal i rahmetle aniyoruz Yeni Akit in Turkish Retrieved 9 February 2023 Babasi Malatya Cirmikti li Unluogullari ndan banka memuru Mehmet Siddik Ozal annesi ise Tunceli Cemisgezekli ilkokul ogretmeni Hafize Hanim d 1906 o 1988 olan Turgut Ozal kismen Kurt kokenlidir Gultan Kisanak Kimdir Bianet in Turkish 9 February 2023 Ailesi zamaninda Dersim den gocerek Elazig in merkez koylerinden Sunkoy e yerlesmis bulunan Aguce asiretine mensuptur Star daki Yildiz Tilbe nin Programinda Turk Kurt Gerginligi Haber Vitrini in Turkish Retrieved 9 February 2023 Programin ilerki bolumlerinde Yildiz Tilbe Ulastirma Bakanindan uyari gelmis Benim anam Tuncelili hem Zaza hem Kurt babam Agrili Kurt Ben bu topraklarda dogdum buyudum Kurt neyse benim icin Turk de odur Laz da odur Cerkez de odur Hic bir farki yoktur birbirinden asla dedi Belcika nin Kurt asilli bakani Zuhal Demir tehdit edildi Ahval in Turkish Retrieved 9 February 2023 Tunceli ve Elazig kokenli maden iscisi bir babanin ucuncu cocugu olan Zuhal Demir 12 Mart 1980 de Belcika nin Genk kentinde dunyaya geldi Notes Edit Most of them are Alevis ethnically Kurdish External links EditOfficial Homepage of the Province Governor Official Homepage of the Culture and Tourism head office Official Homepage of the Education head office Official Homepage of the health head office Tunceli University Archived 7 August 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tunceli Province amp oldid 1143547622, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.