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Turan

Turan (Avestan: Tūiriiānəm, Middle Persian: Tūrān; Persian: توران, romanizedTurân, pronounced [tʰuːˈɾɒːn], "The Land of Tur") is a historical region in Central Asia. The term is of Iranian origin[1][2] and may refer to a particular prehistoric human settlement, a historic geographical region, or a culture. The original Turanians were an Iranian[3][4][5] tribe of the Avestan age.

Overview edit

 
German "Map of Iran and Turan", dated 1843 (during the Qajar dynasty), Turan territory indicated by orange line (here enhanced). According to the legend (bottom right of the map), Turan encompasses regions including modern Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, northern parts of Afghanistan and northern Pakistan. This area roughly corresponds to what is called Central Asia today. List of the areas mentioned in the map as part of Turan: 1. Khwarazm 2. Bukhara with Balkh 3. Shehersebz (near Bukhara) 4. Hissar 5. Kokand 6. Durwaz 7. Karategin 8. Kunduz 9. Kafiristan 10. Chitral 11. Gilgit 12. Iskardu 13. & 14. The northern steppes (Kazakhstan).

In ancient Iranian mythology, Tūr or Turaj (Tuzh in Middle Persian)[6][better source needed] is the son of the emperor Fereydun. According to the account in the Shahnameh, the nomadic tribes who inhabited these lands were ruled by Tūr. In that sense, the Turanians could be members of two Iranian peoples both descending from Fereydun, but with different geographical domains and often at war with each other.[7][8] Turan, therefore, comprised five areas: the Kopet Dag region, the Atrek valley, parts of Bactria, Sogdia and Margiana.[9]

A later association of the original Turanians with Turkic peoples is based primarily on the subsequent Turkification of Central Asia, including the above areas.[10][11] According to C. E. Bosworth, however, there was no cultural relationship between the ancient Turkic cultures and the Turanians of the Shahnameh.[12]

History edit

Ancient literature edit

Avesta edit

The oldest existing mention of Turan is in the Farvardin yashts, which are in the Young Avestan language and have been dated by linguists to about 2500 years ago.[13] According to Gherardo Gnoli, the Avesta contains the names of various tribes who lived in proximity to each other: "the Airyas [Aryans], Tuiryas [Turanians], Sairimas [Sarmatians], Sainus [Sacae] and Dahis [Dahae]".[14] In the hymns of the Avesta, the adjective Tūrya is attached to various enemies of Zoroastrism like Fraŋrasyan (Shahnameh: Afrāsīāb). The word occurs only once in the Gathas, but 20 times in the later parts of the Avesta. The Tuiryas as they were called in Avesta play a more important role in the Avesta than the Sairimas, Sainus and Dahis. Zoroaster himself hailed from the Airya people but he also preached his message to other neighboring tribes.[14][15]

According to Mary Boyce, in the Farvardin Yasht, "In it (verses 143–144) are praised the fravashis of righteous men and women not only among the Aryas (as the "Avestan" people called themselves), but also among the Turiyas, Sairimas, Sainus and Dahis; and the personal names, like those of the people, all seem Iranian in character".[16] Hostility between Tuirya and Airya is indicated also in the Farvardtn Yast (vv. 37-8), where the Fravashis of the Just are said to have provided support in battle against the Danus, who appear to be a clan of the Tura people.[17] Thus in the Avesta, some of the Tuiryas believed in the message of Zoroaster while others rejected the religion.

Similar to the ancient homeland of Zoroaster, the precise geography and location of Turan is unknown.[18] In post-Avestan traditions they were thought to inhabit the region north of the Oxus, the river separating them from the Iranians. Their presence accompanied by incessant wars with the Iranians, helped to define the latter as a distinct nation, proud of their land and ready to spill their blood in its defense.[19] The common names of Turanians in Avesta and Shahnameh include Frarasyan,[20] Aghraethra,[21] Biderafsh,[22] Arjaspa[23] Namkhwast.[22] The names of Iranian tribes including those of the Turanians that appear in Avesta have been studied by Manfred Mayrhofer in his comprehensive book on Avesta personal name etymologies.[24]

Sassanian Empire edit

From the 5th century CE, the Sasanian Empire defined "Turan" in opposition to "Iran", as the land where lay its enemies to the northeast.[25]

The continuation of nomadic invasions on the north-eastern borders in historical times kept the memory of the Turanians alive.[19] After the 6th century the Turks, who had been pushed westward by other tribes, became neighbours of Iran and were identified with the Turanians.[19][26] The identification of the Turanians with the Turks was a late development, possibly made in the early 7th century; the Turks first came into contact with the Iranians only in the 6th century.[20]

Middle literature edit

Early Islamic era edit

According to Clifford E. Bosworth:[27]

In early Islamic times Persians tended to identify all the lands to the northeast of Khorasan and lying beyond the Oxus with the region of Turan, which in the Shahnama of Ferdowsi is regarded as the land allotted to Fereydun's son Tur. The denizens of Turan were held to include the Turks, in the first four centuries of Islam essentially those nomadizing beyond the Jaxartes, and behind them the Chinese (see Kowalski; Minorsky, "Turan"). Turan thus became both an ethnic and a geographical term, but always containing ambiguities and contradictions, arising from the fact that all through Islamic times the lands immediately beyond the Oxus and along its lower reaches were the homes not of Turks but of Iranian peoples, such as the Sogdians and Khwarezmians.

The terms "Turk" and "Turanian" became used interchangeably during the Islamic era. The Shahnameh, or the Book of Kings, the compilation of Iranian mythical heritage, uses the two terms equivalently. Other authors, including Tabari, Hakim Iranshah and many other texts follow like. A notable exception is the Abl-Hasan Ali ibn Masudi, an Arab historian who writes: "The birth of Afrasiyab was in the land of Turks and the error that historians and non-historians have made about him being a Turk is due to this reason".[28] By the 10th century, the myth of Afrasiyab was adopted by the Qarakhanid dynasty.[20] During the Safavid era, following the common geographical convention of the Shahnameh, the term Turan was used to refer to the domain of the Uzbek empire in conflict with the Safavids.[citation needed]

Some linguists derive the word from the Indo-Iranian root *tura- "strong, quick, sword(Pashto)", Pashto turan (thuran) "swordsman". Others link it to old Iranian *tor "dark, black", related to the New Persian tār(ik), Pashto tor (thor), and possibly English dark. In this case, it is a reference to the "dark civilization" of Central Asian nomads in contrast to the "illuminated" Zoroastrian civilization of the settled Ārya.[citation needed]

Shahnameh edit

In the Persian epic Shahnameh, the term Tūrān ("land of the Tūrya" like Ērān, Īrān = "land of the Ārya") refers to the inhabitants of the eastern-Iranian border and beyond the Oxus. According to the foundation myth given in the Shahnameh, King Firēdūn (= Avestan Θraētaona) had three sons, Salm, Tūr and Iraj, among whom he divided the world: Asia Minor was given to Salm, Turan to Tur and Iran to Īraj. The older brothers killed the younger, but he was avenged by his grandson, and the Iranians became the rulers of the world. However, the war continued for generations. In the Shahnameh, the word Turan appears nearly 150 times and that of Iran nearly 750 times.

Some examples from the Shahnameh:

نه خاکست پیدا نه دریا نه کوه

ز بس تیغداران توران گروه

No earth is visible, no sea, no mountain,

From the many blade-wielders of the Turan horde

تهمتن به توران سپه شد به جنگ

بدانسان که نخجیر بیند پلنگ

Tahamtan (Powerful-Bodied) Rostam took the fight to the Turan army

Just as a leopard sights its prey.

Modern literature edit

Geography edit

 
Another 19th-century "Map of Iran and Turan", drawn by Adolf Stieler

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Western languages borrowed the word Turan as a general designation for modern Central Asia, although this expression has now fallen into disuse. Turan appears next to Iran on numerous maps of the 19th century[29] to designate a region encompassing modern Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and northern parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan. This area roughly corresponds to what is called Central Asia today.

The phrase Turan Plain or Turan Depression became a geographical term referring to a part of Central Asia.

Linguistics edit

The term Turanian, now obsolete, formerly[when?] occurred in the classifications used by European (especially German, Hungarian, and Slovak) ethnologists, linguists, and Romantics to designate populations speaking non-Indo-European, non-Semitic, and non-Hamitic languages[30] and specially speakers of Altaic, Dravidian, Uralic, Japanese, Korean and other languages.[31]

Max Müller (1823–1900) identified different sub-branches within the Turanian language family:

  • the Middle Altaic division branch, comprising Tungusic, Mongolic, Turkic.
  • The Northern Ural Samoyedic, Ugriche and Finnic.
  • the Southern branch consisted of Dravidian languages such as Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, and other Dravidian languages.
  • the languages of the Caucasus which Müller classified as the scattered languages of the Turanian family.

Müller also began to muse whether Chinese belonged to the Northern branch or Southern branch.[32]

The main relationships between Dravidian, Uralic, and Altaic languages were considered[by whom?] typological. According to Crystal & Robins, "Language families, as conceived in the historical study of languages, should not be confused with the quite separate classifications of languages by reference to their sharing certain predominant features of grammatical structure."[33] As of 2013 linguists classify languages according to the method of comparative linguistics rather than using their typological features. According to Encyclopædia Britannica, Max's Müller's "efforts were most successful in the case of the Semites, whose affinities are easy to demonstrate, and probably least successful in the case of the Turanian peoples, whose early origins are hypothetical".[34] As of 2014 the scholarly community no longer uses the word Turanian to denote a classification of language families. The relationship between Uralic and Altaic, whose speakers were also designated as Turanian people in 19th-century European literature, remains uncertain.[35]

Ideology edit

In European discourse, the words Turan and Turanian can designate a certain mentality, i.e. the nomadic in contrast to the urbanized agricultural civilizations. This usage probably[original research?] matches the Zoroastrian concept of the Tūrya, which is not primarily a linguistic or ethnic designation, but rather a name of the infidels that opposed the civilization based on the preaching of Zoroaster.

Combined with physical anthropology, the concept of the Turanian mentality has a clear potential for cultural polemic. Thus in 1838 the scholar J.W. Jackson described the Turanid or Turanian race in the following words:[36]

The Turanian is the impersonation of material power. He is the merely muscular man at his maximum of collective development. He is not inherently a savage, but he is radically a barbarian. He does not live from hand to mouth, like a beast, but neither has he in full measure the moral and intellectual endowments of the true man. He can labour and he can accumulate, but he cannot think and aspire like a Caucasian. Of the two grand elements of superior human life, he is more deficient in the sentiments than in the faculties. And of the latter, he is better provided with those that conduce to the acquisition of knowledge than the origination of ideas.

Polish philosopher Feliks Koneczny claimed the existence of a distinctive Turanian civilization, encompassing both Turkic and some Slavs, such as Russians. This alleged civilization's hallmark would be militarism, anti-intellectualism and an absolute obedience to the ruler. Koneczny saw this civilization as inherently inferior to Latin (Western European) civilization.[citation needed]

Politics edit

In the declining days of the Ottoman Empire, some Turkish nationalists adopted the word Turanian to express a pan-Turkic ideology, also called Turanism. As of 2013 Turanism forms an important aspect of the ideology of the Turkish Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), whose members are also known as Grey Wolves.

In recent times[when?], the word Turanian has sometimes expressed a pan-Altaic nationalism (theoretically including Manchus and Mongols in addition to Turks), though no political organization seems to have adopted such an ambitious platform.

Names edit

 
Poster of the opera by Giacomo Puccini, Turandot (1926)

Turandot – or Turandokht – is a female name in Iran and it means "Turan's Daughter" in Persian (it is best known in the West through Puccini's famous opera Turandot (1921–24)).

Turan is also a common name in the Middle East, and as family surnames in some countries including Bahrain, Iran, Bosnia and Turkey.

The Ayyubid ruler Saladin had an older brother with the name Turan-Shah.

Turaj, whom ancient Iranian myths depict as the ancestor of the Turanians, is also a popular name and means Son of Darkness. The name Turan according to Iranian myths derives from the homeland of Turaj. The Pahlavi pronunciation of Turaj is Tuzh, according to the Dehkhoda dictionary. Similarly, Iraj, which is also a popular name, is the brother of Turaj in the Shahnameh. An altered version of Turaj is Zaraj, which means son of gold.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Houtsma, M. Th.; Arnold, T.W.; Basset, R.; Hartmann, R., eds. (1913–1936). "Tūrān". Encyclopaedia of Islam (First ed.). doi:10.1163/2214-871X_ei1_COM_0206. an Iranian term applied to the country to the north-east of Iran.
  2. ^ van Donzel, Emeri (1994). Islamic Reference Desk. Brill Academic. p. 461. ISBN 9789004097384. Iranian term applied to region lying to the northeast of Iran and ultimately indicating very vaguely the country of the Turkic peoples.
  3. ^ Allworth, Edward A. (1994). Central Asia: A Historical Overview. Duke University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-8223-1521-6.
  4. ^ Diakonoff, I. M. (1999). The Paths of History. Cambridge University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-521-64348-1. Turan was one of the nomadic Iranian tribes mentioned in the Avesta. However, in Firdousi's poem, and in the later Iranian tradition generally, the term Turan is perceived as denoting 'lands inhabited by Turkic speaking tribes.'
  5. ^ Gnoli, Gherardo (1980). Zoroaster's Time and Homeland. Naples: Instituto Univ. Orientale. OCLC 07307436. Iranian tribes that also keep on recurring in the Yasht, Airyas, Tuiryas, Sairimas, Sainus and Dahis
  6. ^ Dehkhoda dictionary: Turaj
  7. ^ Yarshater, Ehsan (2004). "Iran iii. Traditional History of Persia". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  8. ^ Menges, Karl Heinrich (1989). "Altaic". Encyclopædia Iranica. In a series of relatively minor movements, Turkic groups began to occupy territories in western Central Asia and eastern Europe which had previously been held by Iranians (i.e. Turan). The Volga Bulgars, following the Avars, proceeded to the Volga and Ukraine in the 6th–7th centuries.
  9. ^ Possehl, Raymond (2002). The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective. Rowman Altamira Press. p. 276.
  10. ^ Firdawsi (2004). . Translated by Zimmern, Helen. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 – via eBooks@Adelaide.
  11. ^ Inlow, Edgar Burke (1979). Shahanshah: A Study of the Monarchy of Iran. Motilal Banarsidass Pub. p. 17. Faridun divided his vast empire between his three sons, Iraj, the youngest receiving Iran. After his murder by his brothers and the avenging Manuchihr, one would have thought the matter was ended. But, the fraternal strife went on between the descendants of Tur and Selim (Salm) and those of Iraj. The former – the Turanians – were the Turks or Tatars of Central Asia, seeking access to Iran. The descendants of Iraj were the resisting Iranians.
  12. ^ Bosworth, C. Edmund (1973). "Barbarian Incursions: The Coming of the Turks into the Islamic World". In Richards, D.S. (ed.). Islamic Civilization. Oxford. p. 2. Hence as Kowalski has pointed out, a Turkologist seeking for information in the Shahnama on the primitive culture of the Turks would definitely be disappointed.
  13. ^ Prods Oktor Skjærvø, "Avestan Quotations in Old Persian?" in S. Shaked and A. Netzer, eds., Irano-Judaica IV, Jerusalem, 1999, pp. 1–64
  14. ^ a b G. Gnoli, Zoroaster's time and homeland, Naples 1980
  15. ^ M. Boyce, History of Zoroastrianism. 3V. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1991. (Handbuch Der Orientalistik/B. Spuler)
  16. ^ M. Boyce, History of Zoroastrianism. 3V. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1991. (Handbuch Der Orientalistik/B. Spuler)., pg 250
  17. ^ G. Gnoli, Zoroaster's time and homeland, Naples 1980, pg 107
  18. ^ G. Gnoli, Zoroaster's time and homeland, Naples 1980, pg 99–130
  19. ^ a b c Ehsan Yarshater, "Iranian National History," in The Cambridge History of Iran 3(1)(1983), 408–409
  20. ^ a b c Yarshater, Ehsan (1984). "Afrāsīāb". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  21. ^ Khaleghi-Motlagh, Djalal (1984). "Aḡrēraṯ". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  22. ^ a b Tafażżolī, Aḥmad (1989). "Bīderafš". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  23. ^ Tafażżolī, Aḥmad (1986). "Arjasp". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  24. ^ Mayrhofer, Manfred (1977). Iranisches Personennamenbuch (in German). Vol. I/1 – Die altiranischen Namen/Die Avestischen Namen. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. pp. 74f. Reviewed in Dresden, Mark J. (1981). "Iranisches Personennamenbuch". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 101 (4): 466. doi:10.2307/601282. JSTOR 601282.
  25. ^ Maas, Michael (2014). The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila. Cambridge University Press. p. 284. ISBN 9781316060858.
  26. ^ Frye, R. (1963). The Heritage of Persia: The pre-Islamic History of One of the World's Great Civilizations. New York: World Publishing Company. p. 41.
  27. ^ Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (1990). "Central Asia iv. In the Islamic Period up to the Mongols". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  28. ^ Abi al-Ḥasan Ali ibn al-Ḥusayn ibn Ali al-Masudi (2005). Muruj al-dhahab wa-maadin al-jawhar. Beirut, Lebanon: Dar al-Marifah.
  29. ^ File:Iran Turan map 1843.jpg
  30. ^ Abel Hovelacque, The Science of Language: Linguistics, Philology, Etymology, pg 144, [1]
  31. ^ Chevallier, Elisabeth; Lenormant, François (1871). A Manual of the Ancient History of the East. J. B. Lippincott & co. p. 68.
  32. ^ van Driem, George (2001). Handbuch Der Orientalistik [Handbook of Oriental Studies] (in German). Brill Academic Publishers. pp. 335–336. ISBN 9004120629.
  33. ^ Crystal, David; Robins, Robert Henry. "Language". Encyclopædia Britannica. 5 – Linguistic change / Language typology.
  34. ^ "religions, classification of." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
  35. ^ "Ural–Altaic languages." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007
  36. ^ "The Iran and Turan", Anthropological Review 6:22 (1868), p. 286

Further reading edit

  • Biscione, R. (1981). "Centre and Periphery in Late Protohistoric Turan: the Settlement Pattern". In Härtel, H. (ed.). South Asian Archaeology 1979 : Papers from the fifth International Conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists. Berlin: D. Reimer. ISBN 3-496-00158-5.
  • Archäologie in Iran und Turan, Verlag Philipp von Zabern GmbH. Publisher – Verlag Marie Leidorf GmbH (Volume 1–3) ISSN 1433-8734

External links edit

  • Iranians and Turanians in the Avesta

turan, other, uses, disambiguation, nationalist, ideology, avestan, tūiriiānəm, middle, persian, tūrān, persian, توران, romanized, turân, pronounced, tʰuːˈɾɒːn, land, historical, region, central, asia, term, iranian, origin, refer, particular, prehistoric, hum. For other uses see Turan disambiguation For the nationalist ideology see Turanism Turan Avestan Tuiriianem Middle Persian Turan Persian توران romanized Turan pronounced tʰuːˈɾɒːn The Land of Tur is a historical region in Central Asia The term is of Iranian origin 1 2 and may refer to a particular prehistoric human settlement a historic geographical region or a culture The original Turanians were an Iranian 3 4 5 tribe of the Avestan age Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Ancient literature 2 1 1 Avesta 2 1 2 Sassanian Empire 2 2 Middle literature 2 2 1 Early Islamic era 2 2 2 Shahnameh 2 3 Modern literature 2 3 1 Geography 2 3 2 Linguistics 2 3 3 Ideology 2 3 4 Politics 2 3 5 Names 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksOverview edit nbsp German Map of Iran and Turan dated 1843 during the Qajar dynasty Turan territory indicated by orange line here enhanced According to the legend bottom right of the map Turan encompasses regions including modern Uzbekistan Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Turkmenistan northern parts of Afghanistan and northern Pakistan This area roughly corresponds to what is called Central Asia today List of the areas mentioned in the map as part of Turan 1 Khwarazm 2 Bukhara with Balkh 3 Shehersebz near Bukhara 4 Hissar 5 Kokand 6 Durwaz 7 Karategin 8 Kunduz 9 Kafiristan 10 Chitral 11 Gilgit 12 Iskardu 13 amp 14 The northern steppes Kazakhstan In ancient Iranian mythology Tur or Turaj Tuzh in Middle Persian 6 better source needed is the son of the emperor Fereydun According to the account in the Shahnameh the nomadic tribes who inhabited these lands were ruled by Tur In that sense the Turanians could be members of two Iranian peoples both descending from Fereydun but with different geographical domains and often at war with each other 7 8 Turan therefore comprised five areas the Kopet Dag region the Atrek valley parts of Bactria Sogdia and Margiana 9 A later association of the original Turanians with Turkic peoples is based primarily on the subsequent Turkification of Central Asia including the above areas 10 11 According to C E Bosworth however there was no cultural relationship between the ancient Turkic cultures and the Turanians of the Shahnameh 12 History editAncient literature edit Avesta edit The oldest existing mention of Turan is in the Farvardin yashts which are in the Young Avestan language and have been dated by linguists to about 2500 years ago 13 According to Gherardo Gnoli the Avesta contains the names of various tribes who lived in proximity to each other the Airyas Aryans Tuiryas Turanians Sairimas Sarmatians Sainus Sacae and Dahis Dahae 14 In the hymns of the Avesta the adjective Turya is attached to various enemies of Zoroastrism like Fraŋrasyan Shahnameh Afrasiab The word occurs only once in the Gathas but 20 times in the later parts of the Avesta The Tuiryas as they were called in Avesta play a more important role in the Avesta than the Sairimas Sainus and Dahis Zoroaster himself hailed from the Airya people but he also preached his message to other neighboring tribes 14 15 According to Mary Boyce in the Farvardin Yasht In it verses 143 144 are praised the fravashis of righteous men and women not only among the Aryas as the Avestan people called themselves but also among the Turiyas Sairimas Sainus and Dahis and the personal names like those of the people all seem Iranian in character 16 Hostility between Tuirya and Airya is indicated also in the Farvardtn Yast vv 37 8 where the Fravashis of the Just are said to have provided support in battle against the Danus who appear to be a clan of the Tura people 17 Thus in the Avesta some of the Tuiryas believed in the message of Zoroaster while others rejected the religion Similar to the ancient homeland of Zoroaster the precise geography and location of Turan is unknown 18 In post Avestan traditions they were thought to inhabit the region north of the Oxus the river separating them from the Iranians Their presence accompanied by incessant wars with the Iranians helped to define the latter as a distinct nation proud of their land and ready to spill their blood in its defense 19 The common names of Turanians in Avesta and Shahnameh include Frarasyan 20 Aghraethra 21 Biderafsh 22 Arjaspa 23 Namkhwast 22 The names of Iranian tribes including those of the Turanians that appear in Avesta have been studied by Manfred Mayrhofer in his comprehensive book on Avesta personal name etymologies 24 Sassanian Empire edit From the 5th century CE the Sasanian Empire defined Turan in opposition to Iran as the land where lay its enemies to the northeast 25 The continuation of nomadic invasions on the north eastern borders in historical times kept the memory of the Turanians alive 19 After the 6th century the Turks who had been pushed westward by other tribes became neighbours of Iran and were identified with the Turanians 19 26 The identification of the Turanians with the Turks was a late development possibly made in the early 7th century the Turks first came into contact with the Iranians only in the 6th century 20 Middle literature edit Early Islamic era edit According to Clifford E Bosworth 27 In early Islamic times Persians tended to identify all the lands to the northeast of Khorasan and lying beyond the Oxus with the region of Turan which in the Shahnama of Ferdowsi is regarded as the land allotted to Fereydun s son Tur The denizens of Turan were held to include the Turks in the first four centuries of Islam essentially those nomadizing beyond the Jaxartes and behind them the Chinese see Kowalski Minorsky Turan Turan thus became both an ethnic and a geographical term but always containing ambiguities and contradictions arising from the fact that all through Islamic times the lands immediately beyond the Oxus and along its lower reaches were the homes not of Turks but of Iranian peoples such as the Sogdians and Khwarezmians The terms Turk and Turanian became used interchangeably during the Islamic era The Shahnameh or the Book of Kings the compilation of Iranian mythical heritage uses the two terms equivalently Other authors including Tabari Hakim Iranshah and many other texts follow like A notable exception is the Abl Hasan Ali ibn Masudi an Arab historian who writes The birth of Afrasiyab was in the land of Turks and the error that historians and non historians have made about him being a Turk is due to this reason 28 By the 10th century the myth of Afrasiyab was adopted by the Qarakhanid dynasty 20 During the Safavid era following the common geographical convention of the Shahnameh the term Turan was used to refer to the domain of the Uzbek empire in conflict with the Safavids citation needed Some linguists derive the word from the Indo Iranian root tura strong quick sword Pashto Pashto turan thuran swordsman Others link it to old Iranian tor dark black related to the New Persian tar ik Pashto tor thor and possibly English dark In this case it is a reference to the dark civilization of Central Asian nomads in contrast to the illuminated Zoroastrian civilization of the settled Arya citation needed Shahnameh edit Main articles Shahnameh and Tur Shahnameh 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 February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the Persian epic Shahnameh the term Turan land of the Turya like Eran iran land of the Arya refers to the inhabitants of the eastern Iranian border and beyond the Oxus According to the foundation myth given in the Shahnameh King Firedun Avestan 8raetaona had three sons Salm Tur and Iraj among whom he divided the world Asia Minor was given to Salm Turan to Tur and Iran to iraj The older brothers killed the younger but he was avenged by his grandson and the Iranians became the rulers of the world However the war continued for generations In the Shahnameh the word Turan appears nearly 150 times and that of Iran nearly 750 times Some examples from the Shahnameh نه خاکست پیدا نه دریا نه کوهز بس تیغداران توران گروهNo earth is visible no sea no mountain From the many blade wielders of the Turan horde تهمتن به توران سپه شد به جنگبدانسان که نخجیر بیند پلنگTahamtan Powerful Bodied Rostam took the fight to the Turan armyJust as a leopard sights its prey Modern literature edit Geography edit nbsp Another 19th century Map of Iran and Turan drawn by Adolf StielerIn the 19th and early 20th centuries Western languages borrowed the word Turan as a general designation for modern Central Asia although this expression has now fallen into disuse Turan appears next to Iran on numerous maps of the 19th century 29 to designate a region encompassing modern Uzbekistan Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Turkmenistan and northern parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan This area roughly corresponds to what is called Central Asia today The phrase Turan Plain or Turan Depression became a geographical term referring to a part of Central Asia Linguistics edit Main article Turanian languages The term Turanian now obsolete formerly when occurred in the classifications used by European especially German Hungarian and Slovak ethnologists linguists and Romantics to designate populations speaking non Indo European non Semitic and non Hamitic languages 30 and specially speakers of Altaic Dravidian Uralic Japanese Korean and other languages 31 Max Muller 1823 1900 identified different sub branches within the Turanian language family the Middle Altaic division branch comprising Tungusic Mongolic Turkic The Northern Ural Samoyedic Ugriche and Finnic the Southern branch consisted of Dravidian languages such as Tamil Kannada Telugu Malayalam and other Dravidian languages the languages of the Caucasus which Muller classified as the scattered languages of the Turanian family Muller also began to muse whether Chinese belonged to the Northern branch or Southern branch 32 The main relationships between Dravidian Uralic and Altaic languages were considered by whom typological According to Crystal amp Robins Language families as conceived in the historical study of languages should not be confused with the quite separate classifications of languages by reference to their sharing certain predominant features of grammatical structure 33 As of 2013 update linguists classify languages according to the method of comparative linguistics rather than using their typological features According to Encyclopaedia Britannica Max s Muller s efforts were most successful in the case of the Semites whose affinities are easy to demonstrate and probably least successful in the case of the Turanian peoples whose early origins are hypothetical 34 As of 2014 update the scholarly community no longer uses the word Turanian to denote a classification of language families The relationship between Uralic and Altaic whose speakers were also designated as Turanian people in 19th century European literature remains uncertain 35 Ideology edit Main article Turanid race In European discourse the words Turan and Turanian can designate a certain mentality i e the nomadic in contrast to the urbanized agricultural civilizations This usage probably original research matches the Zoroastrian concept of the Turya which is not primarily a linguistic or ethnic designation but rather a name of the infidels that opposed the civilization based on the preaching of Zoroaster Combined with physical anthropology the concept of the Turanian mentality has a clear potential for cultural polemic Thus in 1838 the scholar J W Jackson described the Turanid or Turanian race in the following words 36 The Turanian is the impersonation of material power He is the merely muscular man at his maximum of collective development He is not inherently a savage but he is radically a barbarian He does not live from hand to mouth like a beast but neither has he in full measure the moral and intellectual endowments of the true man He can labour and he can accumulate but he cannot think and aspire like a Caucasian Of the two grand elements of superior human life he is more deficient in the sentiments than in the faculties And of the latter he is better provided with those that conduce to the acquisition of knowledge than the origination of ideas Polish philosopher Feliks Koneczny claimed the existence of a distinctive Turanian civilization encompassing both Turkic and some Slavs such as Russians This alleged civilization s hallmark would be militarism anti intellectualism and an absolute obedience to the ruler Koneczny saw this civilization as inherently inferior to Latin Western European civilization citation needed Politics edit 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 February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the declining days of the Ottoman Empire some Turkish nationalists adopted the word Turanian to express a pan Turkic ideology also called Turanism As of 2013 update Turanism forms an important aspect of the ideology of the Turkish Nationalist Movement Party MHP whose members are also known as Grey Wolves In recent times when the word Turanian has sometimes expressed a pan Altaic nationalism theoretically including Manchus and Mongols in addition to Turks though no political organization seems to have adopted such an ambitious platform Names edit nbsp Poster of the opera by Giacomo Puccini Turandot 1926 Turandot or Turandokht is a female name in Iran and it means Turan s Daughter in Persian it is best known in the West through Puccini s famous opera Turandot 1921 24 Turan is also a common name in the Middle East and as family surnames in some countries including Bahrain Iran Bosnia and Turkey The Ayyubid ruler Saladin had an older brother with the name Turan Shah Turaj whom ancient Iranian myths depict as the ancestor of the Turanians is also a popular name and means Son of Darkness The name Turan according to Iranian myths derives from the homeland of Turaj The Pahlavi pronunciation of Turaj is Tuzh according to the Dehkhoda dictionary Similarly Iraj which is also a popular name is the brother of Turaj in the Shahnameh An altered version of Turaj is Zaraj which means son of gold See also editScythia Ariana Bactria Dahistan Khorasan Khwarazm Margiana Parthia Sogdia Tokharistan Transoxiana TurkestanReferences edit Houtsma M Th Arnold T W Basset R Hartmann R eds 1913 1936 Turan Encyclopaedia of Islam First ed doi 10 1163 2214 871X ei1 COM 0206 an Iranian term applied to the country to the north east of Iran van Donzel Emeri 1994 Islamic Reference Desk Brill Academic p 461 ISBN 9789004097384 Iranian term applied to region lying to the northeast of Iran and ultimately indicating very vaguely the country of the Turkic peoples Allworth Edward A 1994 Central Asia A Historical Overview Duke University Press p 86 ISBN 978 0 8223 1521 6 Diakonoff I M 1999 The Paths of History Cambridge University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 521 64348 1 Turan was one of the nomadic Iranian tribes mentioned in the Avesta However in Firdousi s poem and in the later Iranian tradition generally the term Turan is perceived as denoting lands inhabited by Turkic speaking tribes Gnoli Gherardo 1980 Zoroaster s Time and Homeland Naples Instituto Univ Orientale OCLC 07307436 Iranian tribes that also keep on recurring in the Yasht Airyas Tuiryas Sairimas Sainus and Dahis Dehkhoda dictionary Turaj Yarshater Ehsan 2004 Iran iii Traditional History of Persia Encyclopaedia Iranica Menges Karl Heinrich 1989 Altaic Encyclopaedia Iranica In a series of relatively minor movements Turkic groups began to occupy territories in western Central Asia and eastern Europe which had previously been held by Iranians i e Turan The Volga Bulgars following the Avars proceeded to the Volga and Ukraine in the 6th 7th centuries Possehl Raymond 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira Press p 276 Firdawsi 2004 The Epic of Kings Translated by Zimmern Helen Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 via eBooks Adelaide Inlow Edgar Burke 1979 Shahanshah A Study of the Monarchy of Iran Motilal Banarsidass Pub p 17 Faridun divided his vast empire between his three sons Iraj the youngest receiving Iran After his murder by his brothers and the avenging Manuchihr one would have thought the matter was ended But the fraternal strife went on between the descendants of Tur and Selim Salm and those of Iraj The former the Turanians were the Turks or Tatars of Central Asia seeking access to Iran The descendants of Iraj were the resisting Iranians Bosworth C Edmund 1973 Barbarian Incursions The Coming of the Turks into the Islamic World In Richards D S ed Islamic Civilization Oxford p 2 Hence as Kowalski has pointed out a Turkologist seeking for information in the Shahnama on the primitive culture of the Turks would definitely be disappointed Prods Oktor Skjaervo Avestan Quotations in Old Persian in S Shaked and A Netzer eds Irano Judaica IV Jerusalem 1999 pp 1 64 a b G Gnoli Zoroaster s time and homeland Naples 1980 M Boyce History of Zoroastrianism 3V Leiden E J Brill 1991 Handbuch Der Orientalistik B Spuler M Boyce History of Zoroastrianism 3V Leiden E J Brill 1991 Handbuch Der Orientalistik B Spuler pg 250 G Gnoli Zoroaster s time and homeland Naples 1980 pg 107 G Gnoli Zoroaster s time and homeland Naples 1980 pg 99 130 a b c Ehsan Yarshater Iranian National History in The Cambridge History of Iran 3 1 1983 408 409 a b c Yarshater Ehsan 1984 Afrasiab Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 24 April 2016 Khaleghi Motlagh Djalal 1984 Aḡreraṯ Encyclopaedia Iranica a b Tafazzoli Aḥmad 1989 Biderafs Encyclopaedia Iranica Tafazzoli Aḥmad 1986 Arjasp Encyclopaedia Iranica Mayrhofer Manfred 1977 Iranisches Personennamenbuch in German Vol I 1 Die altiranischen Namen Die Avestischen Namen Vienna Austrian Academy of Sciences Press pp 74f Reviewed in Dresden Mark J 1981 Iranisches Personennamenbuch Journal of the American Oriental Society 101 4 466 doi 10 2307 601282 JSTOR 601282 Maas Michael 2014 The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila Cambridge University Press p 284 ISBN 9781316060858 Frye R 1963 The Heritage of Persia The pre Islamic History of One of the World s Great Civilizations New York World Publishing Company p 41 Bosworth Clifford Edmund 1990 Central Asia iv In the Islamic Period up to the Mongols Encyclopaedia Iranica Abi al Ḥasan Ali ibn al Ḥusayn ibn Ali al Masudi 2005 Muruj al dhahab wa maadin al jawhar Beirut Lebanon Dar al Marifah File Iran Turan map 1843 jpg Abel Hovelacque The Science of Language Linguistics Philology Etymology pg 144 1 Chevallier Elisabeth Lenormant Francois 1871 A Manual of the Ancient History of the East J B Lippincott amp co p 68 van Driem George 2001 Handbuch Der Orientalistik Handbook of Oriental Studies in German Brill Academic Publishers pp 335 336 ISBN 9004120629 Crystal David Robins Robert Henry Language Encyclopaedia Britannica 5 Linguistic change Language typology religions classification of Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Ural Altaic languages Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 The Iran and Turan Anthropological Review 6 22 1868 p 286Further reading editBiscione R 1981 Centre and Periphery in Late Protohistoric Turan the Settlement Pattern In Hartel H ed South Asian Archaeology 1979 Papers from the fifth International Conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists Berlin D Reimer ISBN 3 496 00158 5 Archaologie in Iran und Turan Verlag Philipp von Zabern GmbH Publisher Verlag Marie Leidorf GmbH Volume 1 3 ISSN 1433 8734External links editIranians and Turanians in the Avesta Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turan amp oldid 1191822609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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