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Syria–Turkey border

The border between the Syrian Arab Republic and the Republic of Turkey (Arabic: الحدود السورية التركية, romanizedalhudud alsuwriat alturkia; Turkish: Suriye–Türkiye sınırı) is about 909 kilometres (565 mi) long, and runs from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to the tripoint with Iraq in the east.[2] It runs across Upper Mesopotamia for some 400 kilometres (250 mi), crossing the Euphrates and reaching as far as the Tigris. Much of the border follows the Southern Turkish stretch of the Baghdad Railway, roughly along the 37th parallel between the 37th and 42nd eastern meridians. In the west, it almost surrounds the Turkish Hatay Province, partly following the course of the Orontes River and reaching the Mediterranean coast at the foot of Jebel Aqra.

Syria-Turkey border
الحدود السورية التركية
Suriye–Türkiye sınırı
Characteristics
Entities Syria  Turkey
Length911 km (566 mi)[1]
Map of Syria, with Turkey to the north

Description Edit

 
Karadouran/al-Samara beach near Kessab, Syria, along the Syrian-Turkish borderline, where Mount Dyunag touches the Mediterranean Sea

Since Turkey's 1939 appropriation of the Hatay State, the Syrian–Turkish border now touches the Mediterranean coast at Ras al-Bassit, south of Mount Aqra (35°55′44″N 35°55′04″E / 35.9288°N 35.9178°E / 35.9288; 35.9178). Hatay province borders the Syrian Latakia and Idlib governorates. The westernmost (and southernmost) border crossing is at 35°54′18″N 36°00′36″E / 35.905°N 36.010°E / 35.905; 36.010, some 3 km west of Yayladağı. The border reaches its southernmost point at 35°48′29″N 36°09′07″E / 35.808°N 36.152°E / 35.808; 36.152, 2 km west of Bidama, to include the now-abandoned village of Topraktutan (Beysun) in Hatay.[3]

The border now runs north and east, following the Orontes River for a part of its course, where in 2011 construction of a Syria–Turkey Friendship Dam began (but has since been delayed due to the Syrian Civil War),[4] and east to the Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing on the İskenderunAleppo road, then further north to the border between Hatay and Gaziantep Province, where it turns sharply east outside of Meidan Ekbis (Afrin District), at 36°49′48″N 36°39′54″E / 36.830°N 36.665°E / 36.830; 36.665.

With the exception of Hatay province, the Turkish side of the border is entirely within the Southeastern Anatolia Region. East of Meidan Ekbis, the border stretches eastward for some 400 km, roughly following the 37th parallel north and passing the 37th to 42nd meridians. From Al-Rai to Nusaybin/Qamishli, the border follows the tracks of the Konya-Baghdad Railway. It crosses the Euphrates River at Jarabulus/Karkamış and passes north of the border town of Kobanî (Ayn al Arab) (built in 1912 as part of the Baghdad Railway construction project). The Raqqa Governorate's Tell Abyad District borders the Turkish Şanlıurfa Province, including the divided border town of Tell Abyad/Akçakale. The Al-Hasakah Governorate, still bordering Şanlıurfa Province, has a border crossing at Ras al-Ayn, connecting to Ceylanpınar. Some 100 km east of Ceylanpınar, the border passes the border town of Nusaybin in the Turkish Mardin Province (ancient Nisibis, the birthplace of Ephraim the Syrian), next to Syrian Qamishli. The Syrian Aleppo Governorate has a 221 kilometres (137 mi) long northern boundary with the Turkish Kilis, Gaziantep, and Şanlıurfa provinces.[citation needed]

On the Turkish side, the European route E90 runs alongside the length of the border, crossing the Euphrates at Birecik and the Tigris at Cizre. For the final 30 km the border follows the course of the Tigris, turning towards the south-east, until it reaches the Iraq-Syria-Turkey tripoint at 37°06′22″N 42°21′18″E / 37.106°N 42.355°E / 37.106; 42.355.

History Edit

 
Turkey's borders as determined by the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres.

At the start of the 20th century the entire border region was part of the Ottoman Empire. During the First World War, an Arab Revolt (supported by the British) successfully ousted the Ottomans from Syria and Mesopotamia, however Britain and France had secretly agreed to partition the area between them in 1916 via the Sykes–Picot Agreement.[5]

In 1920 Syria formally became a French mandatory territory, being initially split into a number of states, including the French-controlled Sanjak of Alexandretta (modern Hatay province).[5] By the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres Anatolian Turkey was to be partitioned, with the Syrian-Turkish frontier placed further north than its current position.[6] Turkish nationalists were outraged at the treaty, contributing to the outbreak the Turkish War of Independence; the Turkish success in this conflict rendered Sèvres obsolete.[5] A new border more favourable to Turkey was drawn by the Franco-Turkish Treaty of Ankara in 1921 after negotiations between French Prime Minister Aristide Briand and Turkish Foreign Minister Yusuf Kemal Bey.[5][7][8] By the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne Turkey's independence was recognised and a far more generous territorial settlement was agreed upon, albeit at the cost of Turkey formally renouncing any claim to Arab lands.[9] Following Lausanne, the Syrian-Turkish frontier was delimited more precisely between Meidan Ekbis and Nusaybin in 1926, and between Nusaybin and the tripoint with Iraq in 1929.[5] A Final Delimitation Protocol covering the entire boundary east of Hatay was then confirmed and deposited with the League of Nations on 3 May 1930.[5]

 
Turkey's borders as determined by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne. Note that Hatay province is shown as Syrian territory.

A special case was what is now Turkey's Hatay province, which remained autonomous until 1923, then became part of Syria as the Sanjak of Alexandretta, briefly became independent as the Hatay State in 1938, before being annexed by Turkey as Hatay Province in 1939.[10] The Hatay section of the boundary was delimited in 1938 and then confirmed the following year, being marked on the ground by numerous pillars. Hatay was then formally transferred to Turkey on 23 July 1939.[5]

Syria gained independence in 1944, and the frontier then became one between two sovereign states;[5] when Turkey joined NATO (1952) and the OSCE (1973), its boundary with Syria also then formed an outer border of these organisations. Syria continued to claim Hatay province as part of Greater Syria, often depicting the region as part of Syria on official maps, though in recent decades their claims have been less pronounced.[11][12][13][14]

Since the Syrian Civil War broke out in 2011, tensions across the border have increased, and there have been a number of clashes; there has also been a substantial influx of refugees across the border to Turkey.[15] Turkey began construction of a border barrier in 2014.[16][17]

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, around 471 Syrians civilians, including 86 children and 45 women, have been killed by the Turkish gendarmerie at the Syrian–Turkish border since the beginning of the Syrian civil war.[18]

Border crossings Edit

From west to east, as of 28 December 2022.[19]

# Turkey Syria Type Status Control on Syrian side
1 Yayladağı Kessab Road Closed Syria
2 Kızılçat Samira Closed Syrian National Army affiliated groups
3 Topraktutan Yunesiyeh Closed Syrian National Army affiliated groups
4 Aşağıpulluyazı Ein al-Bayda Closed Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
5 Güveççi Kherbet Eljoz Restricted Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
6 Karbeyaz (Yiğitoğlu) Darkush Closed Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
7 Ziyaret Al-Alani Closed Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
8 Cilvegözü, near Reyhanlı Bab al-Hawa Road Open Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
9 Bükülmez Atme Closed Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
10 Hatay Hammamı Al Hammam Open Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
11 İslahiye Meidan Ekbis Railway Closed Syrian National Army
12 Öncüpınar al-Salameh Road Open Syrian National Army
13 Çobanbey Al-Rai Railway Open Syrian National Army
14 Karkamış Jarabulus Road Open Syrian National Army
15 Mürşitpınar Ayn al-Arab Railway Closed Syria and Autonomous administration (Kurdish-led)
16 Akçakale Tall Abyad Road Restricted Syrian National Army
17 Ceylanpınar Ras al-Ayn Road Restricted Syrian National Army
18 Şenyurt Al-Darbasiyah Road Closed Syria and Autonomous administration (Kurdish-led)
19 Nusaybin Qamishli Road, railway Closed Syria
20 Cizre Al-Malikiyah Closed Syria and Autonomous administration (Kurdish-led)
21 Kumlu Afrin Open Hayat Tahrir al-Sham

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ . 14 February 2016. Archived from the original on 14 February 2016.
  2. ^ CIA World Factbook - Syria, 4 April 2020
  3. ^ The village's population was 583 in 1980 (Türk Dünyası Araştırmaları Vakfı, 1986, p. 142); it was later evacuated due to landslides. There is now a police station and a monument marking the southernmost point of Turkey. Topraktutan forms a small salient into Syrian territory. It corresponds to the Turkish airspace claimed to have been violated prior to the 2015 Russian Sukhoi Su-24 shootdown.
  4. ^ "Construction interrupted for friendship dam along Turkey-Syria border". Today's Zaman. 29 June 2011. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h International Boundary Study No. 163 Syria-Turkey Boundary (PDF), 7 March 1978, retrieved 4 April 2020
  6. ^ Helmreich, Paul C. (1974). From Paris to Sèvres: The Partition of the Ottoman Empire at the Peace Conference of 1919–1920. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press. p. 320. ISBN 9780814201701. OCLC 694027.
  7. ^ Steiner, Zara (2005). The lights that failed : European international history, 1919-1933. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-151881-2. OCLC 86068902.
  8. ^ "Ankara, Treaty of" in The New Encyclopædia Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 15th edn., 1992, Vol. 1, p. 423.
  9. ^ Treaty of Peace with Turkey signed at Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland, 24 July 1923, retrieved 28 November 2012{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ "Franco-Turkish agreement of Ankara" (PDF) (in French and English). Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  11. ^ parliament.gov.sy – معلومات عن الجمهورية العربية السورية 2007-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "The Alexandretta Dispute", American Journal of International Law
  13. ^ Lundgren Jörum, Emma: "The Importance of the Unimportant" in Hinnebusch, Raymond & Tür, Özlem: Turkey-Syria Relations: Between Enmity and Amity (Farnham: Ashgate), p 114-122.
  14. ^ Lundgren Jörum, Emma, Beyond Syria's Borders: A history of territorial disputes in the Middle East, (London & New York: I.B. Tauris), p 108
  15. ^ "Syria refugees brave mines, machineguns to reach Turkish sanctuary". Reuters. 6 April 2012. "IOM distributes aid to Syrian refugees – Society". KUNA. 6 April 2012. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  16. ^ Reuters: "Turkish developer confident Syria wall in place by spring" By Nevzat Devranoglu and Orhan Coskun December 9, 2016
  17. ^ The Daily Telegraph: "Turkey to build 500-mile wall on Syria border after Isil Suruc bombing" by Nabih Bulos 23 Jul 2015
  18. ^ . www.syriahr.com. April 22, 2021. Archived from the original on 23 April 2021.
  19. ^ "Turkey / Syria: Border Crossings Status (21 July 2020)". ReliefWeb. UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 1 July 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2019.

syria, turkey, border, border, between, syrian, arab, republic, republic, turkey, arabic, الحدود, السورية, التركية, romanized, alhudud, alsuwriat, alturkia, turkish, suriye, türkiye, sınırı, about, kilometres, long, runs, from, mediterranean, west, tripoint, w. The border between the Syrian Arab Republic and the Republic of Turkey Arabic الحدود السورية التركية romanized alhudud alsuwriat alturkia Turkish Suriye Turkiye siniri is about 909 kilometres 565 mi long and runs from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to the tripoint with Iraq in the east 2 It runs across Upper Mesopotamia for some 400 kilometres 250 mi crossing the Euphrates and reaching as far as the Tigris Much of the border follows the Southern Turkish stretch of the Baghdad Railway roughly along the 37th parallel between the 37th and 42nd eastern meridians In the west it almost surrounds the Turkish Hatay Province partly following the course of the Orontes River and reaching the Mediterranean coast at the foot of Jebel Aqra Syria Turkey borderالحدود السورية التركيةSuriye Turkiye siniriCharacteristicsEntities Syria TurkeyLength911 km 566 mi 1 Map of Syria with Turkey to the north Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Border crossings 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 ReferencesDescription Edit Karadouran al Samara beach near Kessab Syria along the Syrian Turkish borderline where Mount Dyunag touches the Mediterranean SeaSince Turkey s 1939 appropriation of the Hatay State the Syrian Turkish border now touches the Mediterranean coast at Ras al Bassit south of Mount Aqra 35 55 44 N 35 55 04 E 35 9288 N 35 9178 E 35 9288 35 9178 Hatay province borders the Syrian Latakia and Idlib governorates The westernmost and southernmost border crossing is at 35 54 18 N 36 00 36 E 35 905 N 36 010 E 35 905 36 010 some 3 km west of Yayladagi The border reaches its southernmost point at 35 48 29 N 36 09 07 E 35 808 N 36 152 E 35 808 36 152 2 km west of Bidama to include the now abandoned village of Topraktutan Beysun in Hatay 3 The border now runs north and east following the Orontes River for a part of its course where in 2011 construction of a Syria Turkey Friendship Dam began but has since been delayed due to the Syrian Civil War 4 and east to the Bab al Hawa Border Crossing on the Iskenderun Aleppo road then further north to the border between Hatay and Gaziantep Province where it turns sharply east outside of Meidan Ekbis Afrin District at 36 49 48 N 36 39 54 E 36 830 N 36 665 E 36 830 36 665 With the exception of Hatay province the Turkish side of the border is entirely within the Southeastern Anatolia Region East of Meidan Ekbis the border stretches eastward for some 400 km roughly following the 37th parallel north and passing the 37th to 42nd meridians From Al Rai to Nusaybin Qamishli the border follows the tracks of the Konya Baghdad Railway It crosses the Euphrates River at Jarabulus Karkamis and passes north of the border town of Kobani Ayn al Arab built in 1912 as part of the Baghdad Railway construction project The Raqqa Governorate s Tell Abyad District borders the Turkish Sanliurfa Province including the divided border town of Tell Abyad Akcakale The Al Hasakah Governorate still bordering Sanliurfa Province has a border crossing at Ras al Ayn connecting to Ceylanpinar Some 100 km east of Ceylanpinar the border passes the border town of Nusaybin in the Turkish Mardin Province ancient Nisibis the birthplace of Ephraim the Syrian next to Syrian Qamishli The Syrian Aleppo Governorate has a 221 kilometres 137 mi long northern boundary with the Turkish Kilis Gaziantep and Sanliurfa provinces citation needed On the Turkish side the European route E90 runs alongside the length of the border crossing the Euphrates at Birecik and the Tigris at Cizre For the final 30 km the border follows the course of the Tigris turning towards the south east until it reaches the Iraq Syria Turkey tripoint at 37 06 22 N 42 21 18 E 37 106 N 42 355 E 37 106 42 355 History Edit Turkey s borders as determined by the 1920 Treaty of Sevres At the start of the 20th century the entire border region was part of the Ottoman Empire During the First World War an Arab Revolt supported by the British successfully ousted the Ottomans from Syria and Mesopotamia however Britain and France had secretly agreed to partition the area between them in 1916 via the Sykes Picot Agreement 5 In 1920 Syria formally became a French mandatory territory being initially split into a number of states including the French controlled Sanjak of Alexandretta modern Hatay province 5 By the 1920 Treaty of Sevres Anatolian Turkey was to be partitioned with the Syrian Turkish frontier placed further north than its current position 6 Turkish nationalists were outraged at the treaty contributing to the outbreak the Turkish War of Independence the Turkish success in this conflict rendered Sevres obsolete 5 A new border more favourable to Turkey was drawn by the Franco Turkish Treaty of Ankara in 1921 after negotiations between French Prime Minister Aristide Briand and Turkish Foreign Minister Yusuf Kemal Bey 5 7 8 By the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne Turkey s independence was recognised and a far more generous territorial settlement was agreed upon albeit at the cost of Turkey formally renouncing any claim to Arab lands 9 Following Lausanne the Syrian Turkish frontier was delimited more precisely between Meidan Ekbis and Nusaybin in 1926 and between Nusaybin and the tripoint with Iraq in 1929 5 A Final Delimitation Protocol covering the entire boundary east of Hatay was then confirmed and deposited with the League of Nations on 3 May 1930 5 Turkey s borders as determined by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne Note that Hatay province is shown as Syrian territory A special case was what is now Turkey s Hatay province which remained autonomous until 1923 then became part of Syria as the Sanjak of Alexandretta briefly became independent as the Hatay State in 1938 before being annexed by Turkey as Hatay Province in 1939 10 The Hatay section of the boundary was delimited in 1938 and then confirmed the following year being marked on the ground by numerous pillars Hatay was then formally transferred to Turkey on 23 July 1939 5 Syria gained independence in 1944 and the frontier then became one between two sovereign states 5 when Turkey joined NATO 1952 and the OSCE 1973 its boundary with Syria also then formed an outer border of these organisations Syria continued to claim Hatay province as part of Greater Syria often depicting the region as part of Syria on official maps though in recent decades their claims have been less pronounced 11 12 13 14 Since the Syrian Civil War broke out in 2011 tensions across the border have increased and there have been a number of clashes there has also been a substantial influx of refugees across the border to Turkey 15 Turkey began construction of a border barrier in 2014 16 17 According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights around 471 Syrians civilians including 86 children and 45 women have been killed by the Turkish gendarmerie at the Syrian Turkish border since the beginning of the Syrian civil war 18 Border crossings EditFrom west to east as of 28 December 2022 19 Turkey Syria Type Status Control on Syrian side1 Yayladagi Kessab Road Closed Syria2 Kizilcat Samira Closed Syrian National Army affiliated groups3 Topraktutan Yunesiyeh Closed Syrian National Army affiliated groups4 Asagipulluyazi Ein al Bayda Closed Hayat Tahrir al Sham5 Guvecci Kherbet Eljoz Restricted Hayat Tahrir al Sham6 Karbeyaz Yigitoglu Darkush Closed Hayat Tahrir al Sham7 Ziyaret Al Alani Closed Hayat Tahrir al Sham8 Cilvegozu near Reyhanli Bab al Hawa Road Open Hayat Tahrir al Sham9 Bukulmez Atme Closed Hayat Tahrir al Sham10 Hatay Hammami Al Hammam Open Hayat Tahrir al Sham11 Islahiye Meidan Ekbis Railway Closed Syrian National Army12 Oncupinar al Salameh Road Open Syrian National Army13 Cobanbey Al Rai Railway Open Syrian National Army14 Karkamis Jarabulus Road Open Syrian National Army15 Mursitpinar Ayn al Arab Railway Closed Syria and Autonomous administration Kurdish led 16 Akcakale Tall Abyad Road Restricted Syrian National Army17 Ceylanpinar Ras al Ayn Road Restricted Syrian National Army18 Senyurt Al Darbasiyah Road Closed Syria and Autonomous administration Kurdish led 19 Nusaybin Qamishli Road railway Closed Syria20 Cizre Al Malikiyah Closed Syria and Autonomous administration Kurdish led 21 Kumlu Afrin Open Hayat Tahrir al ShamGallery Edit Map of the Syria Turkey border A section of the border wall built by Turkey Map of the Tigris Euphrates river system across the eastern part of the Syro Turkish border The Syrian town of Kessab with the peak of Mount Aqra Turkey in the backgroundSee also EditSyria Turkey barrier Syria Turkey relations Syrian Turkish border clashes during the Syrian Civil War Northern Syria Buffer Zone Syrian Turkmen Kurdistan Refugees of the Syrian Civil WarReferences Edit Turkiyenin Komsulari ve Cografi Sinirlari 14 February 2016 Archived from the original on 14 February 2016 CIA World Factbook Syria 4 April 2020 The village s population was 583 in 1980 Turk Dunyasi Arastirmalari Vakfi 1986 p 142 it was later evacuated due to landslides There is now a police station and a monument marking the southernmost point of Turkey Topraktutan forms a small salient into Syrian territory It corresponds to the Turkish airspace claimed to have been violated prior to the 2015 Russian Sukhoi Su 24 shootdown Construction interrupted for friendship dam along Turkey Syria border Today s Zaman 29 June 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2012 a b c d e f g h International Boundary Study No 163 Syria Turkey Boundary PDF 7 March 1978 retrieved 4 April 2020 Helmreich Paul C 1974 From Paris to Sevres The Partition of the Ottoman Empire at the Peace Conference of 1919 1920 Columbus Ohio Ohio State University Press p 320 ISBN 9780814201701 OCLC 694027 Steiner Zara 2005 The lights that failed European international history 1919 1933 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 151881 2 OCLC 86068902 Ankara Treaty of in The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 15th edn 1992 Vol 1 p 423 Treaty of Peace with Turkey signed at Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland 24 July 1923 retrieved 28 November 2012 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Franco Turkish agreement of Ankara PDF in French and English Retrieved 8 August 2014 parliament gov sy معلومات عن الجمهورية العربية السورية Archived 2007 06 02 at the Wayback Machine The Alexandretta Dispute American Journal of International Law Lundgren Jorum Emma The Importance of the Unimportant in Hinnebusch Raymond amp Tur Ozlem Turkey Syria Relations Between Enmity and Amity Farnham Ashgate p 114 122 Lundgren Jorum Emma Beyond Syria s Borders A history of territorial disputes in the Middle East London amp New York I B Tauris p 108 Syria refugees brave mines machineguns to reach Turkish sanctuary Reuters 6 April 2012 IOM distributes aid to Syrian refugees Society KUNA 6 April 2012 Retrieved 23 February 2013 Reuters Turkish developer confident Syria wall in place by spring By Nevzat Devranoglu and Orhan Coskun December 9 2016 The Daily Telegraph Turkey to build 500 mile wall on Syria border after Isil Suruc bombing by Nabih Bulos 23 Jul 2015 In 72 hours Number of people killed by Turkish border guards increases to four as woman shot dead in northern Idlib www syriahr com April 22 2021 Archived from the original on 23 April 2021 Turkey Syria Border Crossings Status 21 July 2020 ReliefWeb UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 1 July 2019 Retrieved 22 July 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syria Turkey border amp oldid 1154453962, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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