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Turkmens

Turkmens (Turkmen: Türkmenler, Түркменлер, توركمنلر, [tʏɾkmønˈløɾ];[15] historically "the Turkmen"), sometimes referred to as Turkmen Turks (Turkmen: Türkmen türkleri, توركمن تورکلری),[16][17] are a Turkic ethnic group native to Central Asia, living mainly in Turkmenistan, northern and northeastern regions of Iran and north-western Afghanistan. Sizeable groups of Turkmens are found also in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and the North Caucasus (Stavropol Krai). They speak the Turkmen language,[12] which is classified as a part of the Eastern Oghuz branch of the Turkic languages. Examples of other Oghuz languages are Turkish, Azerbaijani, Qashqai, Gagauz, Khorasani, and Salar.[18]

Turkmens
Türkmenler
Түркменлер
توركمنلر
Turkmens in folk costume at the 20th Independence Day parade, 2011
Total population
c. 7–8 million[a]
Regions with significant populations
Turkmenistan4.7 million[1]
 Iran1.7 million[2]
 Afghanistan1.2 million[3][4]
 Turkey230,000–1 million[5][6]
 Uzbekistan152,000[7]
 Russia46,885[8]
 Tajikistan15,171[9]
 Ukraine7,709[10]
 Pakistan6,000[11]
Languages
Turkmen
Religion
Predominantly Sunni Islam[12]
Related ethnic groups
Other Turkic peoples
(especially Azerbaijanis,[13][14] and Turks)[13]

a. ^ The total figure is merely an estimation; a sum of all the referenced populations.

In the early Middle ages, Turkmens called themselves Oghuz and in the Middle Ages they took the ethnonym Turkmen.[19] These early Oghuz Turkmens moved westward from the Altai Mountains through the Siberian steppes, and settled in the region now known as Turkmenistan. Further westward migration of the Turkmen tribes from the territory of modern Turkmenistan and the rest of Central Asia started from the 11th century and continued until the 18th century. These Turkmen tribes played a significant role in the ethnic formation of such peoples as Anatolian Turks, Turkmens of Iraq and Syria, as well as the Turkic population of Iran and Azerbaijan.[20][21][22] To preserve their independence, those tribes that remained in Turkmenistan were united in military alliances, although remnants of tribal relations remained until the 20th century. Their traditional occupations were farming, cattle breeding, and various crafts. Ancient samples of applied art (primarily carpets and jewelry) indicate a high level of folk art culture.

The Seljuks, Khwarazmians, Qara Qoyunlu, Aq Qoyunlu, Ottomans, and Afsharids are also believed to descend from the Turkmen tribes of Qiniq, Begdili, Yiwa, Bayandur, Kayi, and Afshar respectively.[23]

Etymology

 
Helmet of Ya'qub Beg, ruler of the Turkoman Aq Qoyunlu state (15th century)

The term Turkmen is generally applied to the Turkic tribes that have been distributed across the Near and Middle East, as well as Central Asia, from the 11th century to modern times.[24] Originally, all Turkic tribes who belonged to the Turkic dynastic mythological system and/or converted to Islam (e.g. Karluks, Oghuz Turks, Khalajes, Kanglys, Kipchaks, etc.) were designated "Turkmens".[25][26] Only later did this word come to refer to a specific ethnonym. The current majority view for the etymology of the name is that it comes from Türk and the Turkic emphasizing suffix -men, meaning "'most Turkish of the Turks' or 'pure-blooded Turks.'"[27] A folk etymology, dating back to the Middle Ages and found in al-Biruni and Mahmud al-Kashgari, instead derives the suffix -men from the Persian suffix -mānind, with the resulting word meaning "like a Turk". While formerly the dominant etymology in modern scholarship, this mixed Turkic-Persian derivation is now viewed as incorrect.[28]

Today the terms are usually restricted to two Turkic groups: the Turkmen people of Turkmenistan and adjacent parts of Central Asia and Iran, and the Turkomans of Iraq and Syria.

Origins

 
Turkmen women's headwear and jewelry

Türkmens were mentioned near the end of the 10th century A.D in Islamic literature by the Arab geographer al-Muqaddasi in Ahsan Al-Taqasim Fi Ma'rifat Al-Aqalim.[29] In his work, which was completed in 987 A.D, al-Muqaddasi writes about Turkmens twice while depicting the region as the frontier of the Muslim possessions in Central Asia.[30]

Earlier references to Türkmen might be trwkkmˀn (if not trkwmˀn "translator"), mentioned in an 8th-century Sogdian letter and 特拘夢 Tejumeng (< MC ZS *dək̚-kɨo-mɨuŋH), another name of Sogdia, besides Suyi 粟弋 and Sute 粟特, according to the Chinese encyclopedia Tongdian.[31][32] However, even if 特拘夢 might have transcribed Türkmen, these "Türkmens" might be Karluks instead of modern Türkmens' Oghuz-speaking ancestors;[33] as Türkmen might be the Karluks' equivalent of the Göktürks' political term Kök Türk.[34] Zuev (1960) links the tribal name 餘沒渾 Yumeihun (< MC *iʷо-muət-хuən) in Tang Huiyao to the name Yomut of a modern Turkmen clan.[35][36]

Towards the end of the 11th century, in Divânü Lügat'it-Türk (Compendium of the Turkic Dialects), Mahmud Kashgari uses "Türkmen" synonymously with "Oğuz".[37] He describes Oghuz as a Turkic tribe and says that Oghuz and Karluks were both known as Turkmens.[38][39]

The origins of the Turkic peoples has been a topic of much discussion, but evidence point either to a homeland in South Central Siberia, close to the Altai Mountains and Lake Baikal or further East in Mongolia. Archaeogenetic, historical and linguistic evidence suggests that the earliest Turkic peoples were "within or close to the Northeast Asian genepool" but made up of multiple heterogeneous groups, with their exact location of their homeland remains disputed.[40][41] The genetic and historical evidence suggests that the early Turkic peoples, including the ancestors of the Turkmen people - Oghuz Turks,[42][43] harbored both West-Eurasian and Northeast Asian ancestry and were located in and around the Altai region and western Mongolia. Later medieval Turkic groups exhibited a wide range of both West-Eurasian and East Asian physical appearances and genetic origins, in part through long-term contact with neighboring Iranian and Mongolic peoples.[44][45][46]

Before the formation of the Turkmen ethnicity, the Oghuz Turks inhabited parts of Transoxiana, the western portion of Turkestan, a region that largely corresponds to much of Central Asia as far east as Xinjiang. Famous historian and ruler of Khwarazm of the XVII century Abu al-Ghazi Bahadur links the origin of all Turkmens to 24 Oghuz tribes in his literary work "Genealogy of the Turkmens".[47] In Byzantine, then in the European sources and later in the American tradition, Turkmens were called Turkomans,[48][49][50][51] in the countries of the Near and Middle East - Turkmens, as well as Torkaman, Terekeme; in Kievan Rus - Torkmens;[52] in the Duchy of Moscow - Taurmen;[53] and in the Tsarist Russia - Turkoman and Trukhmen.[54]

In the 7th century AD, Oghuz tribes had moved westward from the Altai Mountains through the Siberian steppes, and settled in this region. They also penetrated as far west as the Volga basin and the Balkans. These early Turkmens are believed to have mixed with native Sogdian peoples and lived as pastoral nomads until being conquered by the Russians in the 19th century.[55]

 
Two Turkmen men standing on a carpet in front of a yurt. Photo by Prokudin-Gorsky between 1905 and 1915.

Migration of the Turkmen tribes from the territory of Turkmenistan and the rest of Central Asia in the south-west direction began mainly from the 11th century and continued until the 18th century. These Turkmen tribes played a significant role in the ethnic formation of such peoples as Anatolian Turks, Turkmens of Iraq and Syria, as well as the Turkic population of Iran and Azerbaijan.[20][21][22] To preserve their independence, those tribes that remained in Turkmenistan were united in military alliances, although remnants of tribal relations remained until the 20th century. Their traditional occupations were farming, cattle breeding, and various crafts. Ancient samples of applied art (primarily carpets and jewelry) indicate a high level of folk art culture.

Genetics

 
Teke Turkmen Family in traditional clothing near Bairam-Ali. Photo taken by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky between 1903 and 1916

Haplogroup Q-M242 is commonly found in Siberia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia. This haplogroup forms a large percentage of the paternal lineages of Turkmens.

Grugni et al. (2012) found Q-M242 in 42.6% (29/68) of a sample of Turkmens from Golestan, Iran.[56] Di Cristofaro et al. (2013) found Q-M25 in 31.1% (23/74) and Q-M346 in 2.7% (2/74) for a total of 33.8% (25/74) Q-M242 in a sample of Turkmens from Jawzjan.[57] Karafet et al. (2018) found Q-M25 in 50.0% (22/44) of another sample of Turkmens from Turkmenistan.[58] Haplogroup Q have seen its highest frequencies in the Turkmens from Karakalpakstan (mainly Yomut) at 73%.[59]

A genetic study on maternal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups of a Turkmen sample describes a mixture of mostly West Eurasian lineages maternal lineages and minority of East Eurasian lineages. Turkmens also have two unusual mtDNA markers with polymorphic characteristics, only found in Turkmens and southern Siberians.[60]

History

Turkmens belong to the Oghuz tribes, who originated on the periphery of Central Asia and founded gigantic empires beginning from the 3rd millennium BC. Subsequently, Turkmen tribes founded lasting dynasties in Central Asia, Middle East, Persia and Anatolia that had a profound influence on the course of history of those regions.[61] The most prominent of those dynasties were the Ghaznavids, Seljuks, Ottomans, Safavids, Afsharids and Qajars. Representatives of the Turkmen tribes of Ive and Bayandur were also the founders of the short-lived, but formidable states of Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkmens respectively.[62][63]

Turkmens that stayed in Central Asia largely survived unaffected by the Mongol period due to their semi-nomadic lifestyle and became traders along the Caspian, which led to contacts with Eastern Europe. Following the decline of the Mongols, Tamerlane conquered the area and his Timurid Empire would rule, until it too fractured, as the Safavids, Khanate of Bukhara, and Khanate of Khiva all contested the area. The expanding Russian Empire took notice of Turkmenistan's extensive cotton industry, during the reign of Peter the Great, and invaded the area. Following the decisive Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881, the bulk of Turkmen tribes found themselves under the rule of the Russian Emperor, which was formalized in the Akhal Treaty between Russia and Persia. After the Russian Revolution, Soviet control was established by 1921, and in 1924 Turkmenistan became the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic. Turkmenistan gained independence in 1991.

Culture and society

Religion

The Turkmen of Turkmenistan, like their kin in Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, and Iran are predominantly Muslims. According the U.S. Department of State's International Religious Freedom Report for 2019,

According to U.S. government estimates, the country is 89 percent Muslim (mostly Sunni), 9 percent Eastern Orthodox, and 2 percent other. There are small communities of Jehovah’s Witnesses, Shia Muslims, Baha’is, Roman Catholics, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, and evangelical Christians, including Baptists and Pentecostals. Most ethnic Russians and Armenians identify as Orthodox Christian and generally are members of the Russian Orthodox Church or Armenian Apostolic Church. Some ethnic Russians and Armenians are also members of smaller Protestant groups. There are small pockets of Shia Muslims, consisting largely of ethnic Iranians, Azeris, and Kurds, some located in Ashgabat, with others along the border with Iran and in the western city of Turkmenbashy.[64]

The Turkmen adopted Islam between the 12th and 14th centuries. Sufi orders like the Yasawiya and Kubrawiya greatly contributed to the conversion of the Turkmens to Islam.[65]

The great majority of Turkmen readily identify themselves as Muslims and acknowledge Islam as an integral part of their cultural heritage.[66] The country of Turkmenistan encourages the conceptualization of "Turkmen Islam", or worship that is often mixed with veneration of elders and saints, life-cycle rituals, and Sufi practices.[66]

Since Turkmenistan's independence saw an increase in religious practices and the development of institutions like the Muftiate and the building of mosques, today it is often regulated.[66]

The government leadership of Turkmenistan often uses Islam to legitimize its role in society by sponsoring holiday celebrations such as iftar dinners during Ramadan and presidential pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia. This sponsorship has validated the country's two presidents (Nyýazow and Berdimuhamedow) as pious Turkmen, giving them an aura of cultural authority.[66]

The Russian Academy of Sciences has identified many instances of syncretic influence of pre-Islamic Turkic belief systems on practice of Islam among Turkmen, including placing offerings before trees.[67] The Turkmen word taňry, meaning "God", derives from the Turkic Tengri, the name of the supreme god in the pre-Islamic Turkic pantheon.[68] The Turkmen language features a multitude of euphemisms for "wolf", because of a belief that speaking the actual word while tending a flock of sheep will invoke a wolf's appearance.[69] In other examples of syncretism, some infertile Turkmen women, rather than praying, step or jump over a live wolf in order to assist them in getting pregnant, and children born subsequently are typically given names associated with wolves; alternatively the mother may visit shrines of Muslim saints.[70] The future is divined by reading of dried camel dung by special fortune tellers.[71]

Language

 
Turkmen child's tunic, early to mid 20th century, Textile Museum of Canada

Turkmen (Turkmen: Türkmençe , Түркменче) is a Turkic language spoken by the Turkmens of Central Asia, mainly of Turkmenistan, Iran and Afghanistan. It has an estimated five million native speakers in Turkmenistan, a further 719,000 speakers in Northeastern Iran[72] and 1.5 million people in Northwestern Afghanistan.[73]

The Turkmen language is closely related to Azerbaijani, Turkish, Gagauz, Qashqai and Crimean Tatar, sharing common linguistic features with each of those languages. There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility between these languages.[74][75] However, the closest language of Turkmen is considered Khorasani Turkic, spoken in northeastern regions of Iran and with which it shares the eastern subbranch of Oghuz languages, as well as Khorezm, the Oghuz dialect of Uzbek language spoken mainly along the Turkmenistan border.[76]

The standardized form of Turkmen (spoken in Turkmenistan) is based on the Teke dialect, while Iranian Turkmen uses mostly the Yomud dialect, and Afghan Turkmen uses Ersary variety.[12]

In Iran, the Turkmen language comes second after the Azerbaijani language in terms of the number of speakers of Turkic languages of Iran.[77]

Literature

Turkmen literature comprises oral compositions and written texts in old Oghuz Turkic and Turkmen languages. Turkmens have joint claims to a great number of literary works written in Old Oghuz Turkic and Persian (by Seljuks in 11-12th centuries) languages with other people of the Oghuz Turkic origin, mainly of Azerbaijan and Turkey. This works include, but are not limited to the Book of Dede Korkut, Gorogly and others.[78] The medieval Turkmen literature was heavily influenced by Arabic and Persian, and used mostly Arabic alphabet.[79]

There is general consensus, however, that distinctively Turkmen literature originated in 18th century with the poetry of Magtymguly Pyragy, who is considered the father of the Turkmen literature.[80][81] Other prominent Turkmen poets of that era are Döwletmämmet Azady (Magtymguly's father), Nurmuhammet Andalyp, Abdylla Şabende, Şeýdaýy, Mahmyt Gaýyby and Gurbanally Magrupy.[82]

In the 20th century, Turkmenistan's most prominent Turkmen-language writer was Berdi Kerbabayev, whose novel Decisive Step, later made into a motion picture directed by Alty Garlyyev, is considered the apotheosis of modern Turkmen fiction. It earned him the USSR State Prize for Literature in 1948.[83]

Music

 
Turkmen bakshy

The musical art of the Turkmens is an integral part of the musical art of the Turkic peoples. The music of the Turkmen people is closely related to the Kyrgyz and Kazakh folk forms. Important musical traditions include traveling singers called bakshy, who sing with instruments such as the two-stringed lute called dutar.

Other important musical instruments are gopuz, tüydük, dombura, and gyjak. The most famous Turkmen bakshys are those who lived in the 19th century: Amangeldi Gönübek, Gulgeldi ussa, Garadali Gokleng, Yegen Oraz bakshy, Hajygolak, Nobatnyyaz bakshy, Oglan bakshy, Durdy bakshy, Shukur bakshy, Chowdur bakshy and others. Usually they narrated the woeful and gloomy events of the Turkmen history through their music. The names and music of these bakshys have become legendary among the Turkmen people, and passed orally from generation to generation.[84]

The Central Asian classical music tradition muqam is also present in Turkmenistan.[85] In the 20th century, Danatar Ovezov began composing classical music using Turkmen themes, and that classical expression of Turkmen motifs and melodies reached its apotheosis in the compositions of Nury Halmammedov.

Folk crafts

Embroidery

 
Traditional Turkmen embroidery for women's dress
 
Turkmen woman in traditional bride's dress. Bride's face is covered during a certain ceremony

Turkmen pictorial embroidery became widespread in the Scythian period and reached great perfection in other periods. It is known that for a long time the Turkmens were engaged in the production of silk as the main material for embroidery, and Turkmen women and girls embroidered their dresses with colored silks. All these deeds are clearly expressed in the songs of Turkmen women and in the oral Turkmen literature.

The main materials for Turkmen embroidery are thread and fabric. There are several types of threads: natural threads such as silk and cotton threads; synthetic and acrylic threads. As for the types of fabrics, silk and woolen fabrics are usually used for embroidery.

It is customary for the Turkmens to embroider with colored silks girls' and men's skullcaps (tahya), collars and sleeves of women's dresses (and in more distant times, men's shirts), the lower part of pants protruding from under the dress, various small bags for storing small things.[86]

Weaving

Weaving is one of the types of home craft that has its roots in the deep past. During excavations of many ancient and early medieval settlements on the territory of Turkmenistan, archaeologists discovered fragments of cotton and woolen fabrics, the analysis of which does not exclude local production: the warp and wefts (transverse threads) have the same thickness, the yarn is single, the weave is simple.

The techniques of weaving craft of Turkmen women are similar to homespun production of other peoples. First, there were three stages of preparation of different types of threads. To obtain cotton thread: 1) cleaning cotton from seeds using a small machine, loosening the resulting fiber with rods, rolling into small bunches; 2) spinning the fiber with a spinning wheel, twisting it into a thread and winding the threads into skeins; 3) winding the threads on the hook and bobbin. For woolen thread: 1) washing and drying wool, scuttling with twigs until a fluffy mass is obtained; 2) combing, loosening, yarn and twisting into a thread with a spindle, winding into skeins; 3) dyeing skeins. For silk thread: 1) cleaning and unwinding (sarmak) cocoons (goza) with a spinning wheel (parh), steaming in a boiler with boiling water; 2) fixing the threads on the spindle using a rotating spinning wheel, twisting the threads into one thread, rewinding them from the spindle into a ball, then into skeins; 3) dyeing skeins, drying in the sun.

Home weaving was extremely widespread throughout the territory of Turkmenistan. In almost every family, weaving skills were instilled in girls from an early age. They began to learn the art of making yarn, weaving and sewing from the age of 8–10. Fabrics, depending on the purpose, were divided into various types: for sewing women's and men's clothing, thin fabric for camel wool dressing gowns, for cotton tablecloths was highly valued. Bags for storing grain and flour were made of fabric of thick twisted yarn, narrow strong strips of fabric (5–12 cm) were used to fasten the poles to the yurt lattice. Using a simple technique of weaving, the craftswomen achieved a great effect in the manufacture of peculiar national fabrics, which cannot be reproduced in mechanical production: a loom consisting of 3-4 columns dug into the ground, a transverse roller, a heald. Tools made of wood in the form of a saber were used to seal the weft threads.[86]

Cuisine

 
Baking çörek and somsa in the Turkmen tamdyr

Characteristics of traditional Turkmen cuisine are rooted in the largely nomadic nature of day-to-day life prior to the Soviet period coupled with a long local tradition, dating back millennia before the arrival of the Turkmen in the region, of white wheat production. Baked goods, especially flat bread (Turkmen: çörek) typically baked in a tandoor, make up a large proportion of the daily diet, along with cracked wheat porridge (Turkmen: ýarma), wheat puffs (Turkmen: pişme), and dumplings (Turkmen: börek). Since sheep-, goat-, and camel husbandry are traditional mainstays of nomadic Turkmen, mutton, goat meat, and camel meat were most commonly eaten, variously ground and stuffed in dumplings, boiled in soup, or grilled on spits in chunks (Turkmen: şaşlyk) or as fingers of ground, spiced meat (Turkmen: kebap). Rice for plov was reserved for festive occasions. Due to lack of refrigeration in nomad camps, dairy products from sheep-, goat-, and camel milk were fermented to keep them from spoiling quickly. Fish consumption was largely limited to tribes inhabiting the Caspian Sea shoreline. Fruits and vegetables were scarce, and in nomad camps limited mainly to carrots, squash, pumpkin, and onions. Inhabitants of oases enjoyed more varied diets, with access to pomegranate-, fig-, and stone fruit orchards; vineyards; and of course melons. Areas with cotton production could use cottonseed oil and sheep herders used fat from the fat-tailed sheep. The major traditional imported product was tea.[87][88][89]

The Royal Geographic Society reported in 1882,

The food of the Tekkes [sic] consists of well-prepared pillaus and of game; also of fermented camels' milk, melons, and water-melons. They use their fingers in conveying food to their mouths, but guests are provided with spoons.[90]

In sharp contrast to other Central Asian and Turkic ethnic groups, Turkmen do not eat horse meat, and in fact eating of horse meat is prohibited by law in Turkmenistan.[91][92]

Conquest by the Russian Empire in the 1880s introduced new foods, including such meats as beef, pork, and chicken, as well as potatoes, tomatoes, cabbage, and cucumbers, though they did not find widespread use in most Turkmen households until the Soviet period. While now consumed widely, they are, strictly speaking, not considered "traditional".[88][93]

Nomadic heritage

 
Turkmens in Merv in 1890.
 
A Turkmen man of Central Asia in traditional clothes. Photo by Prokudin-Gorsky between 1905 and 1915.
 
Turkmen carpets at the local bazaar, Ashgabat.

Before the establishment of Soviet power in Central Asia, it was difficult to identify distinct ethnic groups in the region. Sub-ethnic and supra-ethnic loyalties were more important to people than ethnicity. When asked to identify themselves, most Central Asians would name their kin group, neighborhood, village, religion or the state in which they lived; the idea that a state should exist to serve an ethnic group was unknown. That said, most Turkmen could identify the tribe to which they belonged, though they might not identify themselves as Turkmen.[94]

Most Turkmen were nomads until the 19th century when they began to settle the area south of the Amu Darya. Many Turkmen became semi-nomadic, herding sheep and camels during spring, summer, and fall, but planting crops, wintering in oasis camps, and harvesting the crops in the summer and autumn. As a rule they did not settle in cities and towns until the advent of the Soviet government. This mobile lifestyle precluded identification with anyone outside one's kin group and led to frequent conflicts between different Turkmen tribes, particularly regarding access to water.

In collaboration with the local nationalists, the Soviet government sought to transform the Turkmen and other similar ethnic groups in the USSR into modern socialist nations that based their identity on a fixed territory and a common language. Prior to the Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881 and subsequent conquest of Merv in 1884, the Turkmen "retained the condition of predatory, horse-riding nomads, who were greatly feared by their neighbours as 'man-stealing Turks.' Until subjugated by the Russians, the Turkmens were a warlike people, who conquered their neighbours and regularly captured ethnic Persians for sale as slaves in Khiva. It was their boast that not one Persian had crossed their frontier except with a rope round his neck."[95]

The Soviet-led standardization of the Turkmen language, education, and projects to promote ethnic Turkmen in industry, government and higher education led growing numbers of Turkmen to identify with a larger national Turkmen culture rather than with sub-national, pre-modern forms of identity.[96] After gaining independence from the Soviet Union, Turkmen historians went to great lengths to prove that the Turkmen had inhabited their current territory since time immemorial; some historians even tried to deny the nomadic heritage of the Turkmen.[97]

Turkmen lifestyle was heavily invested in horsemanship and as a prominent horse culture, Turkmen horse-breeding was an ages old tradition. Before the Soviet era, a proverb stated that the Turkmen's home was where his horse happened to stand. In spite of changes prompted during the Soviet period, the Ahal Teke tribe in southern Turkmenistan has remained very well known for its horses, the Akhal-Teke desert horse – and the horse breeding tradition has returned to its previous prominence in recent years.[98]

Many tribal customs still survive among modern Turkmen. Unique to Turkmen culture is kalim which is a groom's "dowry", that can be quite expensive and often results in the widely practiced[citation needed] tradition of bridal kidnapping.[99] In something of a modern parallel, in 2001, President Saparmurat Niyazov had introduced a state enforced "kalim", which required all foreigners who wanted to marry a Turkmen woman to pay a sum of no less than $50,000.[100] The law was repealed in March 2005.[101]

Other customs include the consultation of tribal elders, whose advice is often eagerly sought and respected. Many Turkmen still live in extended families where various generations can be found under the same roof, especially in rural areas.[99]

The music of the nomadic and rural Turkmen people reflects rich oral traditions, where epics such as Koroglu are usually sung by itinerant bards. These itinerant singers are called bakshy and sing either a cappella or with instruments such as the dutar, a two-stringed lute.

Society today

Since Turkmenistan's independence in 1991, a cultural revival has taken place with the return of a moderate form of Islam and celebration of Novruz, the Persian New Year marking the onset of spring.

Turkmen can be divided into various social classes including the urban intelligentsia and workers whose role in society is different from that of the rural peasantry. Secularism and atheism remain prominent for many Turkmen intellectuals who favor moderate social changes and often view extreme religiosity and cultural revival with some measure of distrust.[102]

The five traditional carpet rosettes, or gul, called göl in Turkmen, that form motifs in the country's state emblem and flag, represent the five major Turkmen tribes.

Sport

 
Sardar Azmoun, Iranian football player of Turkmen origin,[103][104] who plays for the German club Bayer Leverkusen[105] and Iranian national team.

Sports have historically been an important part of Turkmen life. Such sports as horseback riding and Goresh have been praised in Turkmen literature. During the Soviet era, Turkmen athletes competed in numerous competitions, including Olympic games as part of the Soviet Union team and, in 1992, as part of the Unified Team.[106] After Turkmenistan gained her independence, new ways of establishing physical and sports movements in the country began to emerge. To implement a new sports policy, new multi-purpose stadiums, physical education and health complexes, sports schools and facilities were built in all regions of the country. Turkmenistan also has a modern Olympic village which hosted 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, and is unparalleled in Central Asia.

Turkmenistan supports the country's sports movements and encourages sports on a state level. While football remains the most popular sport, such sports as Turkmen goresh, horseback riding and lately ice hockey are also very popular among Turkmens.[107]

Demographics and population distribution

 
Turkmen Akhal-Teke horse at the Victory Day parade, Moscow, Russia.

In 1911, the population of Turkmens in the Russian Empire was estimated to be 290,170, and it was "conjectured that their total number [in all countries] does not exceed 350,000".[95] In 1995, Turkmen academics estimated

...there are 125,000 Turkmen living in Uzbekistan, 40,000 in Russia and 22,000 in Tajikistan. The largest group of Turkmens is in Iran (850,000), Afghanistan (700,000), Iraq (235,000), Turkey (150,000), Syria (60,000), and China (85,000). In total, the number of Turkmens living abroad is about 2.2 million.[108]

Today the Turkmen people of Central Asia and near neighbors live in:

  • Turkmenistan, where some 85% of the population of 5,042,920 people (July 2006 est.) are ethnic Turkmen. In addition, an estimated 1,200 Turkmen refugees from northern Afghanistan currently reside in Turkmenistan due to the ravages of the Soviet–Afghan War and factional fighting in Afghanistan which saw the rise and fall of the Taliban.[109]
  • Afghanistan, where as of 2006, 200,000 ethnic Turkmen are concentrated primarily along the Turkmen-Afghan border in the provinces of Faryab, Jowzjan, Samangan and Baghlan. There are also communities in Balkh and Kunduz Provinces.
  • Iran, where about 719,000 Turkmen are primarily concentrated in the provinces of Golestān and North Khorasan.[2]
  • Pakistan, to which somewhat fewer than 5,000 Turkmen fled from Afghanistan during the Soviet-Afghan War. Today a small population of Turkmen resides in Peshawar, where they are mainly involved in the carpet business.

Turkmens in Iran

 
Iranian Turkmen in Bandar Torkman

Iranian Turkmens are a branch of Turkmen people who live mainly in northern and northeastern regions of Iran. Their region is called Turkmen Sahra and includes substantial parts of Golestan province. Representatives of such contemporary Turkmen tribes as Yomut, Goklen, Īgdīr, Saryk, Salar and Teke have lived in Iran since the 16th century,[110] though ethnic history of Turkmens in Iran starts with the Seljuk conquest of the region in the 11th century.[111]

Turkmens in Afghanistan

 
A Turkmen girl and baby from Afghanistan

The Afghan Turkmen population in the 1990s was estimated at 200,000. The original Turkmen groups came from east of the Caspian Sea into northwestern Afghanistan at various periods, particularly after the end of the 19th century when the Russians moved into their territory. They established settlements from Balkh Province to Herat Province, where they are now concentrated; smaller groups settled in Kunduz Province. Others came in considerable numbers as a result of the failure of the Basmachi revolts against the Bolsheviks in the 1920s.[112] Turkmen tribes, of which there are twelve major groups in Afghanistan, base their structure on genealogies traced through the male line. Senior members wield considerable authority. Formerly a nomadic and warlike people feared for their lightning raids on caravans, Turkmen in Afghanistan are farmer-herdsmen and important contributors to the economy. They brought karakul sheep to Afghanistan and are also renowned makers of carpets, which, with karakul pelts, are major hard currency export commodities. Turkmen jewelry is also highly prized.[112]

Turkmens of Stavropol krai' of Russia

 
A Turkmen elder or aksakgal

A long established Turkmen colony resides in Stavropol Krai of southern Russia. The local ethnic Russian population often refers to them as Trukhmen, and these Turkmen sometimes use the self-designation Turkpen.[113] According to the 2010 Census of Russia, they numbered 15,048, and accounted for 0.5% of the total population of Stavropol Krai.

The Turkmens are said to have migrated into the Caucasus in the 17th century, in particular in the Mangyshlak region. These migrants belonged mainly to the Chowdur (Russian variants Chaudorov, Chavodur), Sonchadj and Ikdir tribes. The early settlers were nomadic but over time became sedentary. In their cultural life the Trukhmens of today differ very little from their neighbours and are now settled farmers and stockbreeders.[113]

Although the Turkmen language belongs to the Oghuz group of Turkic languages, in Stavropol it has been strongly influenced by the Nogai language, which belongs to the Kipchak group. The phonetic system, grammatical structure and to some extent also the vocabulary have been somewhat influenced.[114]

Notable People of Turkmen Descent

Cinema

Literature

Military Figures

Music

Politicians

Science

Sports

See also

References

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  13. ^ a b Barthold (1962)""The book of my grandfather Korkut" ("Kitab-i dedem Korkut") is an outstanding monument of the medieval Oghuz heroic epic. Three modern Turkic-speaking peoples - Turkmens, Azerbaijanis and Turks - are ethnically and linguistically related to the medieval Oghuzes. For all these peoples, the epic legends deposited in the "Book of Korkut" represent an artistic reflection of their historical past."
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  • Lee, Joo-Yup; Kuang, Shuntu (18 October 2017). "A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y-DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples". Inner Asia. Brill. 19 (2): 197–239. doi:10.1163/22105018-12340089. ISSN 2210-5018. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  • Li, Tao; et al. (June 2020). "Millet agriculture dispersed from Northeast China to the Russian Far East: Integrating archaeology, genetics, and linguistics". Archaeological Research in Asia. Elsevier. 22 (100177): 100177. doi:10.1016/j.ara.2020.100177.
  • Nelson, Sarah; et al. (14 February 2020). "Tracing population movements in ancient East Asia through the linguistics and archaeology of textile production". Evolutionary Human Sciences. Cambridge University Press. 2 (e5). doi:10.1017/ehs.2020.4.
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  • Did the engsi hang inside or outside the yurt?

Further reading

  • Blackwell, Carole (2001). Tradition and Society in Turkmenistan: Gender, Oral Culture and Song. Curzon. ISBN 0-7007-1354-9.
  • Clement, Victoria (2018). Learning to Become Turkmen. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0822964636.
  • Edgar, Adrienne Lynn (2004). Tribal Nation: The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-12799-6.

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turkmens, this, article, about, central, asian, ethnic, group, confused, with, iraqi, turkmen, lebanese, turkmen, syrian, turkmen, other, groups, bearing, name, turkmen, türkmenler, Түркменлер, توركمنلر, tʏɾkmønˈløɾ, historically, turkmen, sometimes, referred,. This article is about the Central Asian ethnic group It is not to be confused with Iraqi Turkmen Lebanese Turkmen Syrian Turkmen or other groups bearing the name Turkmens Turkmen Turkmenler Tүrkmenler توركمنلر tʏɾkmonˈloɾ 15 historically the Turkmen sometimes referred to as Turkmen Turks Turkmen Turkmen turkleri توركمن تورکلری 16 17 are a Turkic ethnic group native to Central Asia living mainly in Turkmenistan northern and northeastern regions of Iran and north western Afghanistan Sizeable groups of Turkmens are found also in Uzbekistan Kazakhstan and the North Caucasus Stavropol Krai They speak the Turkmen language 12 which is classified as a part of the Eastern Oghuz branch of the Turkic languages Examples of other Oghuz languages are Turkish Azerbaijani Qashqai Gagauz Khorasani and Salar 18 TurkmensTurkmenler Tүrkmenler توركمنلرTurkmens in folk costume at the 20th Independence Day parade 2011Total populationc 7 8 million a Regions with significant populationsTurkmenistan4 7 million 1 Iran1 7 million 2 Afghanistan1 2 million 3 4 Turkey230 000 1 million 5 6 Uzbekistan152 000 7 Russia46 885 8 Tajikistan15 171 9 Ukraine7 709 10 Pakistan6 000 11 LanguagesTurkmenReligionPredominantly Sunni Islam 12 Related ethnic groupsOther Turkic peoples especially Azerbaijanis 13 14 and Turks 13 a The total figure is merely an estimation a sum of all the referenced populations In the early Middle ages Turkmens called themselves Oghuz and in the Middle Ages they took the ethnonym Turkmen 19 These early Oghuz Turkmens moved westward from the Altai Mountains through the Siberian steppes and settled in the region now known as Turkmenistan Further westward migration of the Turkmen tribes from the territory of modern Turkmenistan and the rest of Central Asia started from the 11th century and continued until the 18th century These Turkmen tribes played a significant role in the ethnic formation of such peoples as Anatolian Turks Turkmens of Iraq and Syria as well as the Turkic population of Iran and Azerbaijan 20 21 22 To preserve their independence those tribes that remained in Turkmenistan were united in military alliances although remnants of tribal relations remained until the 20th century Their traditional occupations were farming cattle breeding and various crafts Ancient samples of applied art primarily carpets and jewelry indicate a high level of folk art culture The Seljuks Khwarazmians Qara Qoyunlu Aq Qoyunlu Ottomans and Afsharids are also believed to descend from the Turkmen tribes of Qiniq Begdili Yiwa Bayandur Kayi and Afshar respectively 23 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 3 Genetics 4 History 5 Culture and society 5 1 Religion 5 2 Language 5 3 Literature 5 4 Music 5 5 Folk crafts 5 6 Cuisine 5 7 Nomadic heritage 5 8 Society today 5 9 Sport 6 Demographics and population distribution 6 1 Turkmens in Iran 6 2 Turkmens in Afghanistan 6 3 Turkmens of Stavropol krai of Russia 7 Notable People of Turkmen Descent 7 1 Cinema 7 2 Literature 7 3 Military Figures 7 4 Music 7 5 Politicians 7 6 Science 7 7 Sports 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology Edit Helmet of Ya qub Beg ruler of the Turkoman Aq Qoyunlu state 15th century The term Turkmen is generally applied to the Turkic tribes that have been distributed across the Near and Middle East as well as Central Asia from the 11th century to modern times 24 Originally all Turkic tribes who belonged to the Turkic dynastic mythological system and or converted to Islam e g Karluks Oghuz Turks Khalajes Kanglys Kipchaks etc were designated Turkmens 25 26 Only later did this word come to refer to a specific ethnonym The current majority view for the etymology of the name is that it comes from Turk and the Turkic emphasizing suffix men meaning most Turkish of the Turks or pure blooded Turks 27 A folk etymology dating back to the Middle Ages and found in al Biruni and Mahmud al Kashgari instead derives the suffix men from the Persian suffix manind with the resulting word meaning like a Turk While formerly the dominant etymology in modern scholarship this mixed Turkic Persian derivation is now viewed as incorrect 28 Today the terms are usually restricted to two Turkic groups the Turkmen people of Turkmenistan and adjacent parts of Central Asia and Iran and the Turkomans of Iraq and Syria Origins EditMain articles Oghuz Turks and Turkoman ethnonym Turkmen women s headwear and jewelry Turkmens were mentioned near the end of the 10th century A D in Islamic literature by the Arab geographer al Muqaddasi in Ahsan Al Taqasim Fi Ma rifat Al Aqalim 29 In his work which was completed in 987 A D al Muqaddasi writes about Turkmens twice while depicting the region as the frontier of the Muslim possessions in Central Asia 30 Earlier references to Turkmen might be trwkkmˀn if not trkwmˀn translator mentioned in an 8th century Sogdian letter and 特拘夢 Tejumeng lt MC ZS dek kɨo mɨuŋH another name of Sogdia besides Suyi 粟弋 and Sute 粟特 according to the Chinese encyclopedia Tongdian 31 32 However even if 特拘夢 might have transcribed Turkmen these Turkmens might be Karluks instead of modern Turkmens Oghuz speaking ancestors 33 as Turkmen might be the Karluks equivalent of the Gokturks political term Kok Turk 34 Zuev 1960 links the tribal name 餘沒渾 Yumeihun lt MC iʷo muet huen in Tang Huiyao to the name Yomut of a modern Turkmen clan 35 36 Towards the end of the 11th century in Divanu Lugat it Turk Compendium of the Turkic Dialects Mahmud Kashgari uses Turkmen synonymously with Oguz 37 He describes Oghuz as a Turkic tribe and says that Oghuz and Karluks were both known as Turkmens 38 39 The origins of the Turkic peoples has been a topic of much discussion but evidence point either to a homeland in South Central Siberia close to the Altai Mountains and Lake Baikal or further East in Mongolia Archaeogenetic historical and linguistic evidence suggests that the earliest Turkic peoples were within or close to the Northeast Asian genepool but made up of multiple heterogeneous groups with their exact location of their homeland remains disputed 40 41 The genetic and historical evidence suggests that the early Turkic peoples including the ancestors of the Turkmen people Oghuz Turks 42 43 harbored both West Eurasian and Northeast Asian ancestry and were located in and around the Altai region and western Mongolia Later medieval Turkic groups exhibited a wide range of both West Eurasian and East Asian physical appearances and genetic origins in part through long term contact with neighboring Iranian and Mongolic peoples 44 45 46 Before the formation of the Turkmen ethnicity the Oghuz Turks inhabited parts of Transoxiana the western portion of Turkestan a region that largely corresponds to much of Central Asia as far east as Xinjiang Famous historian and ruler of Khwarazm of the XVII century Abu al Ghazi Bahadur links the origin of all Turkmens to 24 Oghuz tribes in his literary work Genealogy of the Turkmens 47 In Byzantine then in the European sources and later in the American tradition Turkmens were called Turkomans 48 49 50 51 in the countries of the Near and Middle East Turkmens as well as Torkaman Terekeme in Kievan Rus Torkmens 52 in the Duchy of Moscow Taurmen 53 and in the Tsarist Russia Turkoman and Trukhmen 54 In the 7th century AD Oghuz tribes had moved westward from the Altai Mountains through the Siberian steppes and settled in this region They also penetrated as far west as the Volga basin and the Balkans These early Turkmens are believed to have mixed with native Sogdian peoples and lived as pastoral nomads until being conquered by the Russians in the 19th century 55 Two Turkmen men standing on a carpet in front of a yurt Photo by Prokudin Gorsky between 1905 and 1915 Migration of the Turkmen tribes from the territory of Turkmenistan and the rest of Central Asia in the south west direction began mainly from the 11th century and continued until the 18th century These Turkmen tribes played a significant role in the ethnic formation of such peoples as Anatolian Turks Turkmens of Iraq and Syria as well as the Turkic population of Iran and Azerbaijan 20 21 22 To preserve their independence those tribes that remained in Turkmenistan were united in military alliances although remnants of tribal relations remained until the 20th century Their traditional occupations were farming cattle breeding and various crafts Ancient samples of applied art primarily carpets and jewelry indicate a high level of folk art culture Genetics Edit Teke Turkmen Family in traditional clothing near Bairam Ali Photo taken by Sergey Prokudin Gorsky between 1903 and 1916 Haplogroup Q M242 is commonly found in Siberia Southeast Asia Central Asia This haplogroup forms a large percentage of the paternal lineages of Turkmens Grugni et al 2012 found Q M242 in 42 6 29 68 of a sample of Turkmens from Golestan Iran 56 Di Cristofaro et al 2013 found Q M25 in 31 1 23 74 and Q M346 in 2 7 2 74 for a total of 33 8 25 74 Q M242 in a sample of Turkmens from Jawzjan 57 Karafet et al 2018 found Q M25 in 50 0 22 44 of another sample of Turkmens from Turkmenistan 58 Haplogroup Q have seen its highest frequencies in the Turkmens from Karakalpakstan mainly Yomut at 73 59 A genetic study on maternal mitochondrial DNA mtDNA haplogroups of a Turkmen sample describes a mixture of mostly West Eurasian lineages maternal lineages and minority of East Eurasian lineages Turkmens also have two unusual mtDNA markers with polymorphic characteristics only found in Turkmens and southern Siberians 60 History EditMain article History of Turkmenistan Turkmens belong to the Oghuz tribes who originated on the periphery of Central Asia and founded gigantic empires beginning from the 3rd millennium BC Subsequently Turkmen tribes founded lasting dynasties in Central Asia Middle East Persia and Anatolia that had a profound influence on the course of history of those regions 61 The most prominent of those dynasties were the Ghaznavids Seljuks Ottomans Safavids Afsharids and Qajars Representatives of the Turkmen tribes of Ive and Bayandur were also the founders of the short lived but formidable states of Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkmens respectively 62 63 Turkmens that stayed in Central Asia largely survived unaffected by the Mongol period due to their semi nomadic lifestyle and became traders along the Caspian which led to contacts with Eastern Europe Following the decline of the Mongols Tamerlane conquered the area and his Timurid Empire would rule until it too fractured as the Safavids Khanate of Bukhara and Khanate of Khiva all contested the area The expanding Russian Empire took notice of Turkmenistan s extensive cotton industry during the reign of Peter the Great and invaded the area Following the decisive Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881 the bulk of Turkmen tribes found themselves under the rule of the Russian Emperor which was formalized in the Akhal Treaty between Russia and Persia After the Russian Revolution Soviet control was established by 1921 and in 1924 Turkmenistan became the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic Turkmenistan gained independence in 1991 Culture and society EditReligion Edit Main articles Religion in Turkmenistan and Islam in TurkmenistanThe Turkmen of Turkmenistan like their kin in Uzbekistan Afghanistan and Iran are predominantly Muslims According the U S Department of State s International Religious Freedom Report for 2019 According to U S government estimates the country is 89 percent Muslim mostly Sunni 9 percent Eastern Orthodox and 2 percent other There are small communities of Jehovah s Witnesses Shia Muslims Baha is Roman Catholics the International Society for Krishna Consciousness and evangelical Christians including Baptists and Pentecostals Most ethnic Russians and Armenians identify as Orthodox Christian and generally are members of the Russian Orthodox Church or Armenian Apostolic Church Some ethnic Russians and Armenians are also members of smaller Protestant groups There are small pockets of Shia Muslims consisting largely of ethnic Iranians Azeris and Kurds some located in Ashgabat with others along the border with Iran and in the western city of Turkmenbashy 64 The Turkmen adopted Islam between the 12th and 14th centuries Sufi orders like the Yasawiya and Kubrawiya greatly contributed to the conversion of the Turkmens to Islam 65 The great majority of Turkmen readily identify themselves as Muslims and acknowledge Islam as an integral part of their cultural heritage 66 The country of Turkmenistan encourages the conceptualization of Turkmen Islam or worship that is often mixed with veneration of elders and saints life cycle rituals and Sufi practices 66 Since Turkmenistan s independence saw an increase in religious practices and the development of institutions like the Muftiate and the building of mosques today it is often regulated 66 The government leadership of Turkmenistan often uses Islam to legitimize its role in society by sponsoring holiday celebrations such as iftar dinners during Ramadan and presidential pilgrimage to Mecca Saudi Arabia This sponsorship has validated the country s two presidents Nyyazow and Berdimuhamedow as pious Turkmen giving them an aura of cultural authority 66 The Russian Academy of Sciences has identified many instances of syncretic influence of pre Islamic Turkic belief systems on practice of Islam among Turkmen including placing offerings before trees 67 The Turkmen word tanry meaning God derives from the Turkic Tengri the name of the supreme god in the pre Islamic Turkic pantheon 68 The Turkmen language features a multitude of euphemisms for wolf because of a belief that speaking the actual word while tending a flock of sheep will invoke a wolf s appearance 69 In other examples of syncretism some infertile Turkmen women rather than praying step or jump over a live wolf in order to assist them in getting pregnant and children born subsequently are typically given names associated with wolves alternatively the mother may visit shrines of Muslim saints 70 The future is divined by reading of dried camel dung by special fortune tellers 71 Language Edit Turkmen child s tunic early to mid 20th century Textile Museum of Canada Main article Turkmen language Turkmen Turkmen Turkmence Tүrkmenche is a Turkic language spoken by the Turkmens of Central Asia mainly of Turkmenistan Iran and Afghanistan It has an estimated five million native speakers in Turkmenistan a further 719 000 speakers in Northeastern Iran 72 and 1 5 million people in Northwestern Afghanistan 73 The Turkmen language is closely related to Azerbaijani Turkish Gagauz Qashqai and Crimean Tatar sharing common linguistic features with each of those languages There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility between these languages 74 75 However the closest language of Turkmen is considered Khorasani Turkic spoken in northeastern regions of Iran and with which it shares the eastern subbranch of Oghuz languages as well as Khorezm the Oghuz dialect of Uzbek language spoken mainly along the Turkmenistan border 76 The standardized form of Turkmen spoken in Turkmenistan is based on the Teke dialect while Iranian Turkmen uses mostly the Yomud dialect and Afghan Turkmen uses Ersary variety 12 In Iran the Turkmen language comes second after the Azerbaijani language in terms of the number of speakers of Turkic languages of Iran 77 Literature Edit Main article Turkmen literature Magtymguly Pyragy on a Soviet rouble 1991 Turkmen literature comprises oral compositions and written texts in old Oghuz Turkic and Turkmen languages Turkmens have joint claims to a great number of literary works written in Old Oghuz Turkic and Persian by Seljuks in 11 12th centuries languages with other people of the Oghuz Turkic origin mainly of Azerbaijan and Turkey This works include but are not limited to the Book of Dede Korkut Gorogly and others 78 The medieval Turkmen literature was heavily influenced by Arabic and Persian and used mostly Arabic alphabet 79 There is general consensus however that distinctively Turkmen literature originated in 18th century with the poetry of Magtymguly Pyragy who is considered the father of the Turkmen literature 80 81 Other prominent Turkmen poets of that era are Dowletmammet Azady Magtymguly s father Nurmuhammet Andalyp Abdylla Sabende Seydayy Mahmyt Gayyby and Gurbanally Magrupy 82 In the 20th century Turkmenistan s most prominent Turkmen language writer was Berdi Kerbabayev whose novel Decisive Step later made into a motion picture directed by Alty Garlyyev is considered the apotheosis of modern Turkmen fiction It earned him the USSR State Prize for Literature in 1948 83 Music Edit Main article Music of Turkmenistan Turkmen bakshy The musical art of the Turkmens is an integral part of the musical art of the Turkic peoples The music of the Turkmen people is closely related to the Kyrgyz and Kazakh folk forms Important musical traditions include traveling singers called bakshy who sing with instruments such as the two stringed lute called dutar Other important musical instruments are gopuz tuyduk dombura and gyjak The most famous Turkmen bakshys are those who lived in the 19th century Amangeldi Gonubek Gulgeldi ussa Garadali Gokleng Yegen Oraz bakshy Hajygolak Nobatnyyaz bakshy Oglan bakshy Durdy bakshy Shukur bakshy Chowdur bakshy and others Usually they narrated the woeful and gloomy events of the Turkmen history through their music The names and music of these bakshys have become legendary among the Turkmen people and passed orally from generation to generation 84 The Central Asian classical music tradition muqam is also present in Turkmenistan 85 In the 20th century Danatar Ovezov began composing classical music using Turkmen themes and that classical expression of Turkmen motifs and melodies reached its apotheosis in the compositions of Nury Halmammedov Folk crafts Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Turkmens news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Embroidery Traditional Turkmen embroidery for women s dress Turkmen woman in traditional bride s dress Bride s face is covered during a certain ceremony Turkmen pictorial embroidery became widespread in the Scythian period and reached great perfection in other periods It is known that for a long time the Turkmens were engaged in the production of silk as the main material for embroidery and Turkmen women and girls embroidered their dresses with colored silks All these deeds are clearly expressed in the songs of Turkmen women and in the oral Turkmen literature The main materials for Turkmen embroidery are thread and fabric There are several types of threads natural threads such as silk and cotton threads synthetic and acrylic threads As for the types of fabrics silk and woolen fabrics are usually used for embroidery It is customary for the Turkmens to embroider with colored silks girls and men s skullcaps tahya collars and sleeves of women s dresses and in more distant times men s shirts the lower part of pants protruding from under the dress various small bags for storing small things 86 WeavingWeaving is one of the types of home craft that has its roots in the deep past During excavations of many ancient and early medieval settlements on the territory of Turkmenistan archaeologists discovered fragments of cotton and woolen fabrics the analysis of which does not exclude local production the warp and wefts transverse threads have the same thickness the yarn is single the weave is simple The techniques of weaving craft of Turkmen women are similar to homespun production of other peoples First there were three stages of preparation of different types of threads To obtain cotton thread 1 cleaning cotton from seeds using a small machine loosening the resulting fiber with rods rolling into small bunches 2 spinning the fiber with a spinning wheel twisting it into a thread and winding the threads into skeins 3 winding the threads on the hook and bobbin For woolen thread 1 washing and drying wool scuttling with twigs until a fluffy mass is obtained 2 combing loosening yarn and twisting into a thread with a spindle winding into skeins 3 dyeing skeins For silk thread 1 cleaning and unwinding sarmak cocoons goza with a spinning wheel parh steaming in a boiler with boiling water 2 fixing the threads on the spindle using a rotating spinning wheel twisting the threads into one thread rewinding them from the spindle into a ball then into skeins 3 dyeing skeins drying in the sun Home weaving was extremely widespread throughout the territory of Turkmenistan In almost every family weaving skills were instilled in girls from an early age They began to learn the art of making yarn weaving and sewing from the age of 8 10 Fabrics depending on the purpose were divided into various types for sewing women s and men s clothing thin fabric for camel wool dressing gowns for cotton tablecloths was highly valued Bags for storing grain and flour were made of fabric of thick twisted yarn narrow strong strips of fabric 5 12 cm were used to fasten the poles to the yurt lattice Using a simple technique of weaving the craftswomen achieved a great effect in the manufacture of peculiar national fabrics which cannot be reproduced in mechanical production a loom consisting of 3 4 columns dug into the ground a transverse roller a heald Tools made of wood in the form of a saber were used to seal the weft threads 86 Cuisine Edit Main article Turkmen cuisine Turkmen cuisine Baking corek and somsa in the Turkmen tamdyr Characteristics of traditional Turkmen cuisine are rooted in the largely nomadic nature of day to day life prior to the Soviet period coupled with a long local tradition dating back millennia before the arrival of the Turkmen in the region of white wheat production Baked goods especially flat bread Turkmen corek typically baked in a tandoor make up a large proportion of the daily diet along with cracked wheat porridge Turkmen yarma wheat puffs Turkmen pisme and dumplings Turkmen borek Since sheep goat and camel husbandry are traditional mainstays of nomadic Turkmen mutton goat meat and camel meat were most commonly eaten variously ground and stuffed in dumplings boiled in soup or grilled on spits in chunks Turkmen saslyk or as fingers of ground spiced meat Turkmen kebap Rice for plov was reserved for festive occasions Due to lack of refrigeration in nomad camps dairy products from sheep goat and camel milk were fermented to keep them from spoiling quickly Fish consumption was largely limited to tribes inhabiting the Caspian Sea shoreline Fruits and vegetables were scarce and in nomad camps limited mainly to carrots squash pumpkin and onions Inhabitants of oases enjoyed more varied diets with access to pomegranate fig and stone fruit orchards vineyards and of course melons Areas with cotton production could use cottonseed oil and sheep herders used fat from the fat tailed sheep The major traditional imported product was tea 87 88 89 The Royal Geographic Society reported in 1882 The food of the Tekkes sic consists of well prepared pillaus and of game also of fermented camels milk melons and water melons They use their fingers in conveying food to their mouths but guests are provided with spoons 90 In sharp contrast to other Central Asian and Turkic ethnic groups Turkmen do not eat horse meat and in fact eating of horse meat is prohibited by law in Turkmenistan 91 92 Conquest by the Russian Empire in the 1880s introduced new foods including such meats as beef pork and chicken as well as potatoes tomatoes cabbage and cucumbers though they did not find widespread use in most Turkmen households until the Soviet period While now consumed widely they are strictly speaking not considered traditional 88 93 Nomadic heritage Edit See also Turkmen tribes Turkmens in Merv in 1890 A Turkmen man of Central Asia in traditional clothes Photo by Prokudin Gorsky between 1905 and 1915 Turkmen carpets at the local bazaar Ashgabat Before the establishment of Soviet power in Central Asia it was difficult to identify distinct ethnic groups in the region Sub ethnic and supra ethnic loyalties were more important to people than ethnicity When asked to identify themselves most Central Asians would name their kin group neighborhood village religion or the state in which they lived the idea that a state should exist to serve an ethnic group was unknown That said most Turkmen could identify the tribe to which they belonged though they might not identify themselves as Turkmen 94 Most Turkmen were nomads until the 19th century when they began to settle the area south of the Amu Darya Many Turkmen became semi nomadic herding sheep and camels during spring summer and fall but planting crops wintering in oasis camps and harvesting the crops in the summer and autumn As a rule they did not settle in cities and towns until the advent of the Soviet government This mobile lifestyle precluded identification with anyone outside one s kin group and led to frequent conflicts between different Turkmen tribes particularly regarding access to water In collaboration with the local nationalists the Soviet government sought to transform the Turkmen and other similar ethnic groups in the USSR into modern socialist nations that based their identity on a fixed territory and a common language Prior to the Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881 and subsequent conquest of Merv in 1884 the Turkmen retained the condition of predatory horse riding nomads who were greatly feared by their neighbours as man stealing Turks Until subjugated by the Russians the Turkmens were a warlike people who conquered their neighbours and regularly captured ethnic Persians for sale as slaves in Khiva It was their boast that not one Persian had crossed their frontier except with a rope round his neck 95 The Soviet led standardization of the Turkmen language education and projects to promote ethnic Turkmen in industry government and higher education led growing numbers of Turkmen to identify with a larger national Turkmen culture rather than with sub national pre modern forms of identity 96 After gaining independence from the Soviet Union Turkmen historians went to great lengths to prove that the Turkmen had inhabited their current territory since time immemorial some historians even tried to deny the nomadic heritage of the Turkmen 97 Turkmen lifestyle was heavily invested in horsemanship and as a prominent horse culture Turkmen horse breeding was an ages old tradition Before the Soviet era a proverb stated that the Turkmen s home was where his horse happened to stand In spite of changes prompted during the Soviet period the Ahal Teke tribe in southern Turkmenistan has remained very well known for its horses the Akhal Teke desert horse and the horse breeding tradition has returned to its previous prominence in recent years 98 Many tribal customs still survive among modern Turkmen Unique to Turkmen culture is kalim which is a groom s dowry that can be quite expensive and often results in the widely practiced citation needed tradition of bridal kidnapping 99 In something of a modern parallel in 2001 President Saparmurat Niyazov had introduced a state enforced kalim which required all foreigners who wanted to marry a Turkmen woman to pay a sum of no less than 50 000 100 The law was repealed in March 2005 101 Other customs include the consultation of tribal elders whose advice is often eagerly sought and respected Many Turkmen still live in extended families where various generations can be found under the same roof especially in rural areas 99 The music of the nomadic and rural Turkmen people reflects rich oral traditions where epics such as Koroglu are usually sung by itinerant bards These itinerant singers are called bakshy and sing either a cappella or with instruments such as the dutar a two stringed lute Society today Edit Since Turkmenistan s independence in 1991 a cultural revival has taken place with the return of a moderate form of Islam and celebration of Novruz the Persian New Year marking the onset of spring Turkmen can be divided into various social classes including the urban intelligentsia and workers whose role in society is different from that of the rural peasantry Secularism and atheism remain prominent for many Turkmen intellectuals who favor moderate social changes and often view extreme religiosity and cultural revival with some measure of distrust 102 The five traditional carpet rosettes or gul called gol in Turkmen that form motifs in the country s state emblem and flag represent the five major Turkmen tribes Sport Edit Sardar Azmoun Iranian football player of Turkmen origin 103 104 who plays for the German club Bayer Leverkusen 105 and Iranian national team Sports have historically been an important part of Turkmen life Such sports as horseback riding and Goresh have been praised in Turkmen literature During the Soviet era Turkmen athletes competed in numerous competitions including Olympic games as part of the Soviet Union team and in 1992 as part of the Unified Team 106 After Turkmenistan gained her independence new ways of establishing physical and sports movements in the country began to emerge To implement a new sports policy new multi purpose stadiums physical education and health complexes sports schools and facilities were built in all regions of the country Turkmenistan also has a modern Olympic village which hosted 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games and is unparalleled in Central Asia Turkmenistan supports the country s sports movements and encourages sports on a state level While football remains the most popular sport such sports as Turkmen goresh horseback riding and lately ice hockey are also very popular among Turkmens 107 Demographics and population distribution Edit Turkmen Akhal Teke horse at the Victory Day parade Moscow Russia In 1911 the population of Turkmens in the Russian Empire was estimated to be 290 170 and it was conjectured that their total number in all countries does not exceed 350 000 95 In 1995 Turkmen academics estimated there are 125 000 Turkmen living in Uzbekistan 40 000 in Russia and 22 000 in Tajikistan The largest group of Turkmens is in Iran 850 000 Afghanistan 700 000 Iraq 235 000 Turkey 150 000 Syria 60 000 and China 85 000 In total the number of Turkmens living abroad is about 2 2 million 108 Today the Turkmen people of Central Asia and near neighbors live in Turkmenistan where some 85 of the population of 5 042 920 people July 2006 est are ethnic Turkmen In addition an estimated 1 200 Turkmen refugees from northern Afghanistan currently reside in Turkmenistan due to the ravages of the Soviet Afghan War and factional fighting in Afghanistan which saw the rise and fall of the Taliban 109 Afghanistan where as of 2006 200 000 ethnic Turkmen are concentrated primarily along the Turkmen Afghan border in the provinces of Faryab Jowzjan Samangan and Baghlan There are also communities in Balkh and Kunduz Provinces Iran where about 719 000 Turkmen are primarily concentrated in the provinces of Golestan and North Khorasan 2 Pakistan to which somewhat fewer than 5 000 Turkmen fled from Afghanistan during the Soviet Afghan War Today a small population of Turkmen resides in Peshawar where they are mainly involved in the carpet business Turkmens in Iran Edit See also Iranian Turkmen Iranian Turkmen in Bandar Torkman Iranian Turkmens are a branch of Turkmen people who live mainly in northern and northeastern regions of Iran Their region is called Turkmen Sahra and includes substantial parts of Golestan province Representatives of such contemporary Turkmen tribes as Yomut Goklen igdir Saryk Salar and Teke have lived in Iran since the 16th century 110 though ethnic history of Turkmens in Iran starts with the Seljuk conquest of the region in the 11th century 111 Turkmens in Afghanistan Edit A Turkmen girl and baby from Afghanistan Main article Afghan Turkmens The Afghan Turkmen population in the 1990s was estimated at 200 000 The original Turkmen groups came from east of the Caspian Sea into northwestern Afghanistan at various periods particularly after the end of the 19th century when the Russians moved into their territory They established settlements from Balkh Province to Herat Province where they are now concentrated smaller groups settled in Kunduz Province Others came in considerable numbers as a result of the failure of the Basmachi revolts against the Bolsheviks in the 1920s 112 Turkmen tribes of which there are twelve major groups in Afghanistan base their structure on genealogies traced through the male line Senior members wield considerable authority Formerly a nomadic and warlike people feared for their lightning raids on caravans Turkmen in Afghanistan are farmer herdsmen and important contributors to the economy They brought karakul sheep to Afghanistan and are also renowned makers of carpets which with karakul pelts are major hard currency export commodities Turkmen jewelry is also highly prized 112 Turkmens of Stavropol krai of Russia Edit A Turkmen elder or aksakgal A long established Turkmen colony resides in Stavropol Krai of southern Russia The local ethnic Russian population often refers to them as Trukhmen and these Turkmen sometimes use the self designation Turkpen 113 According to the 2010 Census of Russia they numbered 15 048 and accounted for 0 5 of the total population of Stavropol Krai The Turkmens are said to have migrated into the Caucasus in the 17th century in particular in the Mangyshlak region These migrants belonged mainly to the Chowdur Russian variants Chaudorov Chavodur Sonchadj and Ikdir tribes The early settlers were nomadic but over time became sedentary In their cultural life the Trukhmens of today differ very little from their neighbours and are now settled farmers and stockbreeders 113 Although the Turkmen language belongs to the Oghuz group of Turkic languages in Stavropol it has been strongly influenced by the Nogai language which belongs to the Kipchak group The phonetic system grammatical structure and to some extent also the vocabulary have been somewhat influenced 114 Notable People of Turkmen Descent EditCinema Edit Alty Karliev Jackie Shroff Tiger ShroffLiterature Edit Berdi Kerbabayev Dowletmammet Azady Magtymguly Pyragy Mammetweli KemineMilitary Figures Edit Ahmad Sanjar Begench Gundogdyev Tughril Yaylym BerdiyevMusic Edit Annagul Annakuliyeva Eypio Mahri Pirgulyyewa Maya Kuliyeva Medeniyet Shahberdiyeva Nury HalmammedovPoliticians Edit Akja Nurberdiyewa Akmyrat Rejepow Carymyrat Amanow Guycmyrat Annagulyyew Gulsat Mammedowa Gurbangeldi Batyrow Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow Han Ahmedow Kaikhaziz Atabayev Muhammetnazar Gapurov Owezgeldi Atayew Ramin Nourqolipour Rasit Meredow Rejepbay Arazov Saparmurat Niyazov Serdar Berdimuhamedow Zafar BabajanowScience Edit Omid KokabeeSports Edit Ahmet Atayew Altymyrat Annadurdyyew Amangylyc Kocumow Arslanmyrat Amanow Bahtiyar Hojaahmedow Batyr Babayew Bayram Durdyyew Begencmuhammet Kulyyew Begencmyrat Myradow Berdi Samyradow Berdimyrat Nurmyradow Caryyar Muhadow Didargylyc Urazow Ezzatollah Pourghaz Farhad Ghaemi Furkat Tursunow Gurbangeldi Durdyyew Guwancmuhammet Owekow Kamil Mingazow Kurban Berdyev Mayya Gurbanberdieva Mammedaly Garadanow Mekan Saparow Myrat Annayew Omar Berdiyew Rahman Myratberdiyew Rahym Kurbanmammedow Rasul Caryyew Rejepmyrat Agabayew Rowsen Muhadow Ruslan Mingazow Saber Kazemi Said Seyidow Sardar Azmoun Serdar Annaorazow Sohrat Soyunow Tacmyrat Agamyradow Yazguly HojageldyyewSee also EditOghuz Turks Turkomans Iranian Turkmens Afghan Turkmens Turkmens in Pakistan Turkmen SahraReferences Edit The World Factbook Retrieved 18 March 2015 a b Ethnologue Retrieved 8 August 2018 Ethnic Groups Library of Congress Country Studies 1997 Retrieved 2010 10 08 Jump up to a b The Ethnic Groups of Afghanistan 10 September 2019 Najibullah Farangis 4 December 2022 Turkey Still Attractive For Central Asian Women Migrants Despite Economic Woes Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 8 March 2023 Some 30 000 migrants from Kyrgyzstan work in Turkey and with an estimated force of some 230 000 Turkmen make up the largest Central Asian community in Turkey Pressure on Turkmen Nationals in Turkey Must Be Stopped Human Rights Watch 2 November 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2023 According to some sources over a million Turkmen nationals reside in Turkey including migrant workers students and their family members Alisher Ilhamov 2002 Ethnic Atlas of Uzbekistan Open Society Institute Tashkent 2002 Russian census 2002 Tajikistani census 2010 About number and composition population of Ukraine by data All Ukrainian census of the population 2001 Ukraine Census 2001 State Statistics Committee of Ukraine Retrieved 17 January 2012 PDF https web archive org web 20060321181818 http www unhcr org cgi bin texis vtx home opendoc pdf tbl SUBSITES amp page SUBSITES amp id 434fdc702 Archived from the original PDF on 21 March 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b c Who are the Turkmen and where do they live Center for Languages of the Central Asian Region Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Bloomington 2021 2020 Archived from the original on 3 June 2020 Retrieved 24 August 2021 a b Barthold 1962 harvp error no target CITEREFBarthold1962 help The book of my grandfather Korkut Kitab i dedem Korkut is an outstanding monument of the medieval Oghuz heroic epic Three modern Turkic speaking peoples Turkmens Azerbaijanis and Turks are ethnically and linguistically related to the medieval Oghuzes For all these peoples the epic legends deposited in the Book of Korkut represent an artistic reflection of their historical past Ismail Zardabli Ethnic and political history of Azerbaijan Rossendale Books 2018 p 35 the ancestors of Azerbaijanis and Turkmens are the tribes that lived in these territories Clark Larry 1998 Turkmen Reference Grammar Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag p 102 Mehmet Kara Turkmen Turkleri Edebiyati The Literature of the Turkmen Turks Turk Dunyasi El Kitabi Turk Kulturunu Arastirma Enstitusu Yayinlari Ankara 1998 pp 5 17 Gokcur Engin 2015 Upon Common Word Existence of Turkmen Turkish and Turkey s Turkish Dialects The Journal of International Social Research 8 36 135 doi 10 17719 jisr 2015369495 UCLA Language Materials Project Main Archived from the original on 20 July 2006 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Hamadani Rashid al Din 1939 1858 Legends of Oghuz Khan Tribal division of the Turkmens Extracts from Jami al Tawarikh USSR Academy of Sciences These tribes in the course of time divided into many branches at each time other branches appeared from each branch each got a name and nickname for some reason or on some occasion the Oghuzes who are now all called Turkmens and who branched out into Kipchaks Kalachs Khalajs Kangly Karluks and other branches belonging to them a b Turks in Russian Big Soviet Encyclopedia Ethnically T consisted of two main components the Turkic nomadic tribes mainly Oghuzes and Turkmens who migrated to Asia Minor from Central Asia and Iran in the 11 13 centuries during the Mongol and Seljuk conquests see Seljuks and local population of Asia Minor a b Armin Vambery 2003 Traveling to Central Asia Eastern Literature Turkmens greatly contributed to the Turkification of the northern regions of Persia especially during the Atabeg rule in Iran Most of the Turkic population of Transcaucasia Azerbaijan Mazenderan and Shiraz are undoubtedly of Turkmen origin a b Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary 1907 1909 Azerbaijan or Azerbeijan ancient Atropatena north west province of Persia on the Russian border on the Armenian mountain elevation 104 t km about 1 mill p Armenians Turkmens Kurds Main products cotton dried fruits salt Chief city Tabriz Abu l Ghazi Bahadur The Genealogy of the Turkmens in Russian Russian State Library Parovaya tip K M Fedorova 1897 Barbara Kellner Heinkele Turkmen The Encyclopaedia of Islam eds P J Bearman T H Bianquis C E Bosworth E Van Donzel and W P Heinrichs vol X Leiden E J Brill 2000 pp 682 685 Hamadani Rashid al Din 1952 Dzhami at Tavarih Jami al tawarikh USSR Academy of Sciences Golden Peter 1992 An introduction to the history of the Turkic peoples ethnogenesis and state formation in the medieval and early modern Eurasia and the Middle East Harrassowitz pp 211 213 Clark Larry 1996 Turkmen Reference Grammar Harrassowitz p 4 ISBN 9783447040198 Annanepesov M 1999 The Turkmens In Dani Ahmad Hasan ed History of civilizations of Central Asia Motilal Banarsidass p 127 ISBN 9789231038761 Golden Peter 1992 An introduction to the history of the Turkic peoples ethnogenesis and state formation in the medieval and early modern Eurasia and the Middle East Harrassowitz pp 213 214 Clark Larry 1996 Turkmen Reference Grammar Harrassowitz p 4 ISBN 9783447040198 Annanepesov M 1999 The Turkmens In Dani Ahmad Hasan ed History of civilizations of Central Asia Motilal Banarsidass p 127 ISBN 9789231038761 Golden Peter 1992 An introduction to the history of the Turkic peoples ethnogenesis and state formation in the medieval and early modern Eurasia and the Middle East Harrassowitz pp 213 214 Al Marwazi Sharaf Al Zaman Tahir Marvazi on China the Turks and India Arabic text circa A D 1120 English translation and commentary by V Minorsky London The Royal Asiatic Society 1942 p 94 V Minorsky Commentary in Sharaf Al Zaman Tahir Marvazi on China the Turks and India Arabic text circa A D 1120 English translation and commentary by V Minorsky London The Royal Asiatic Society 1942 p 94 Golden Peter B 1992 An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples p 212 3 Du You Tongdian vol 193 粟弋 後魏通焉 在蔥嶺西 大國 一名粟特 一名特拘夢 Tr Suyi communicated with Latter Wei It is a large country to the west of Onion Ridges Another name is Sute another name is Tejumeng Kafesoglu Ibrahim 1958 Turkmen Adi Manasi ve Mahiyeti in Jean Deny Armagani Melanges Jean Deny eds Janos Eckmann Agah Sirri Levend and Mecdut Mansuroglu Ankara Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi p 131 Kafesoglu Ibrahim 1958 Turkmen Adi Manasi ve Mahiyeti in Jean Deny Armagani in Eckmann et al eds p 121 133 cited in Golden Peter B 1992 An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples p 347 348 Tang Huiyao vol 72 txt 餘沒渾馬 與迴紇相類 印州 赤馬 與迴紇苾餘沒渾同類 印行 tr Horses of the Yumeihun and horses of the Uyghurs are of similar stock tamga 州 Horses of the Chiks and of the Uyghurs of the Qi bis and of the Yumeihun are of the same stock tamga 行 Zuev Yu A 1960 Tamgas Horses from the Vassal Princedoms in Works of History Archeology and Ethnography Institute 8 p 112 113 128 Kasgarli Mahmud Divanu Lugat it Turk vol I p 55 Kasgarli Mahmud Divanu Lugat it Turk vol I pp 55 58 A Zeki Velidi Togan Oguz Destani Resideddin Oguznamesi Tercume ve Tahlili Istanbul Enderun Kitabevi 1982 pp 50 52 Uchiyama Junzo Gillam J Christopher Savelyev Alexander Ning Chao 2020 Populations dynamics in Northern Eurasian forests a long term perspective from Northeast Asia Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 e16 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 11 ISSN 2513 843X Golden Peter B 25 July 2018 The Ethnogonic Tales of the Turks The Medieval History Journal 21 2 291 327 doi 10 1177 0971945818775373 ISSN 0971 9458 S2CID 166026934 Irons William 1975 The Yomut Turkmen A Study of Social Organization among a Central Asian Turkic Speaking Population University of Michigan Press p 5 West Barbara 2010 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania Facts on File Library of World History Infobase Publishing p 839 ISBN 978 1 438 11913 7 first undisputed inhabitants of Turkmenistan were Persian horse breeders and nomads although the desert areas remained more or less uninhabited until the arrival of the Oghuz the ancestors of the Turkmen Golden Peter 2018 The Ethnogonic Tales of the Turks SAGE 21 2 314 doi 10 1177 0971945818775373 S2CID 166026934 Lee amp Kuang 2017 Jeong Choongwon Wang Ke Wilkin Shevan Taylor William Timothy Treal Miller Bryan K Bemmann Jan H Stahl Raphaela Chiovelli Chelsea Knolle Florian Ulziibayar Sodnom Khatanbaatar Dorjpurev Erdenebaatar Diimaajav Erdenebat Ulambayar Ochir Ayudai Ankhsanaa Ganbold 12 November 2020 A Dynamic 6 000 Year Genetic History of Eurasia s Eastern Steppe Cell 183 4 890 904 e29 doi 10 1016 j cell 2020 10 015 ISSN 0092 8674 PMC 7664836 PMID 33157037 Kononov A N 1958 Genealogy of the Turkmens Introduction in Russian M AS USSR D Yeremeyev Ethnogenesis of the Turks M Nauka Science 1971 At the end of the XI century for the first time in the Byzantine chronicles Turkmens that penetrated Asia Minor are mentioned Anna Komnene calls them Turkomans Peter Hopkirk 1994 The Great Game The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia ISBN 9781568360225 Arminius Vambery The Turcomans Between the Caspian and Merv The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland Vol 9 1880 Merriam Webster Turkoman Turkoman a member of a Turkic speaking traditionally nomadic people living chiefly in Turkmenistan Afghanistan and Iran Nestor letopisec Nestor the Chronicler Povest vremennyh let Primary Chronicle Vyshli oni iz pustyni Etrivskoj mezhdu vostokom i severom vyshlo zhe ih 4 kolena torkmeny i pechenegi torki polovcy They came out of the Etriva desert between east and north but their 4 tribes came out Torkmens and Pechenegs Torks Polovtsians Letopisnye povesti o mongolo tatarskom nashestvii Chronicles about Mongol Tatar Invasion in Russian In the same year nations came about which no one knows exactly who they are and where they came from and what their language is and what kind of tribe they are and what faith And they call them Tatars and some say Taurmen and others Pechenegs O torgah na Kaspijskom more drevnih srednih i novejshih vremen On Trade in the Caspian Sea in Ancient Middle and Modern Times in Russian Moscow Moscow Soymonov Journal 1785 Since ancient times Russians and Tatars used to travel from Astrakhan in companies on small ships and there they had trade with the Trukhmens or Turkomans Bacon Elizabeth Emaline 1966 Amazon com Central Asians under Russian Rule A Study in Culture Change Cornell Paperbacks Elizabeth E Bacon Michael M J Fischer Books ISBN 9780801492112 Grugni Viola et al 2012 Ancient Migratory Events in the Middle East New Clues from the Y Chromosome Variation of Modern Iranians PLOS ONE 7 7 e41252 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 741252G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0041252 PMC 3399854 PMID 22815981 Di Cristofaro J Pennarun E Mazieres S Myres NM Lin AA et al 2013 Afghan Hindu Kush Where Eurasian Sub Continent Gene Flows Converge PLOS ONE 8 10 e76748 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 876748D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0076748 PMC 3799995 PMID 24204668 Tatiana M Karafet Ludmila P Osipova Olga V Savina et al 2018 Siberian genetic diversity reveals complex origins of the Samoyedic speaking populations Am J Hum Biol 2018 e23194 https doi org 10 1002 ajhb 23194 DOI 10 1002 ajhb 23194 Skhalyakho Rosa Zhabagin Maxat M Yusupov Yu Agdzhoyan Anastasiya 2016 Gene pool of Turkmens from Karakalpakstan in their Central Asian context Y chromosome polymorphism a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Malyarchuk B A Derenko M V Denisova G A Nassiri M R Rogaev E I 1 April 2002 Mitochondrial DNA Polymorphism in Populations of the Caspian Region and Southeastern Europe Russian Journal of Genetics 38 4 434 438 doi 10 1023 A 1015262522048 S2CID 19409969 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Stefano Carboni Jean Francois de Laperouse Historical overview Turkmen Jewelry Silver Ornaments from the Marshall and Marilyn R Wolf Collection published by Metropolitan Museum of Art 2011 Safa Z 1986 PERSIAN LITERATURE IN THE TIMURID AND TURKMEN PERIODS 782 907 1380 1501 In P Jackson amp L Lockhart Eds The Cambridge History of Iran The Cambridge History of Iran pp 913 928 Cambridge Cambridge University Press The Timurid and Turkmen Dynasties of Iran Afghanistan and Central Asia in David J Roxburgh ed The Turks A Journey of Thousand Years 600 1600 London Royal Academy of Arts 2005 pp 192 200 TURKMENISTAN 2019 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT PDF United States Department of State 2019 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Bennigsen Alexandre Wimbush S Enders 1986 Muslims of the Soviet Empire A Guide Indiana University Press pp 100 101 ISBN 978 0 253 33958 4 a b c d Religion and the Secular State in Turkmenistan Silk Road Paper Institute for Security and Development Policy Retrieved 5 April 2021 Demidov Sergey Mikhaylovich 2020 Rasteniya i Zhivotnye v Legendah i Verovaniyah Turkmen PDF Moscow Staryy sad pp 22 23 Demidov Sergey Mikhaylovich 2020 Rasteniya i Zhivotnye v Legendah i Verovaniyah Turkmen PDF Moscow Staryy sad pp 143 144 Demidov Sergey Mikhaylovich 2020 Rasteniya i Zhivotnye v Legendah i Verovaniyah Turkmen PDF Moscow Staryy sad pp 151 152 Demidov cites the Turkmen proverb Gurt agzasan gurt geler Mention the wolf the wolf comes in explaining why the original Turkic word for wolf bori is virtually never used Demidov Sergey Mikhaylovich 2020 Rasteniya i Zhivotnye v Legendah i Verovaniyah Turkmen PDF Moscow Staryy sad pp 155 156 Demidov Sergey Mikhaylovich 2020 Rasteniya i Zhivotnye v Legendah i Verovaniyah Turkmen PDF Moscow Staryy sad p 356 Iran Ethnologue Turkmens at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required Aspects of Altaic Civilization III Proceedings of the Thirtieth Meeting of the Permanent International Altaistic Conference Indiana University Bloomington Indiana June 19 25 1987 Psychology Press 13 December 1996 ISBN 9780700703807 Language Materials Project Turkish UCLA International Institute Center for World Languages February 2007 Brown Keith 2010 Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Elsevier p 1117 ISBN 978 0 080 87775 4 TURKMENS OF PERSIA ii LANGUAGE Encyclopedia Iranica Akatov Bayram 2010 Ancient Turkmen Literature the Middle Ages X XVII centuries in Turkmen Turkmenabat Turkmen State Pedagogical Institute Ministry of Education of Turkmenistan pp 29 39 198 231 Babyr 2004 Diwan Ashgabat Miras p 7 Turkmenistan Culture Asian recipe 17 September 2012 Levin Theodore Daukeyeva Saida Kochumkulova Elmira 2016 Music of Central Asia Indiana University press p 128 ISBN 978 0 253 01751 2 Nurmuhammet Andalyp Dunya Turkmenleri Karryev Klych Murad 1966 KERBABA EV Berdy In Surkov Aleksej ed Kratkaya literaturnaya enciklopediya Vol 3 Moscow Sovetskaya enciklopediya Archived from the original on 8 January 2015 Weyisova Ayjemal Sungatyn sarpasy Respect to the Art Zaman Turkmenistan Almaty or Bust www hauntedink com Archived from the original on 13 April 2005 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a b Gundogdyev Ovez ed 2000 Istoriko kulturnoe nasledie Turkmenistana enciklopedicheskij slovar History and Cultural Heritage of Turkmenistan Encyclopedic Dictionary Istanbul UNDP ISBN 9789759725600 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link Bagdasarov A Vanukevich A Hudajshukurov T 1981 Turkmenskaya kulinariya in Russian Ashhabad Izdatelstvo Turkmenistan a b Turkmen dastarkhan Vol 1 Ashgabat Turkmen State Publishing Service 2014 Turkmen dastarkhan Vol 2 Ashgabat Turkmen State Publishing Service 2014 Cumming Sir Duncan ed 1977 Chapter 13 The new Russian Persian Frontier East of the Caspian Sea Country of the Turkomans London Oguz Press and the Royal Geographic Society p 184 Patten Fred 19 April 2013 Profile Turkmenistan The Land of Horse Heaven Kjuka Deana 11 April 2013 Turkmenistan A Land Of Health And Happiness And Horses Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Goldstein Darra 2006 Turkmenistan on a Plate 57 1 Saudi Aramco World a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Adrienne Lynn Edgar 2007 Tribal Nation The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan Princeton University Press p 18 ISBN 9781400844296 a b Turanians and Pan Turanianism London Naval Staff Intelligence Department November 1918 Edgar Adrienne Lynn 2007 Tribal Nation The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan Princeton University Press p 261 ISBN 9781400844296 Edgar Adrienne Lynn 2007 Tribal Nation The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan Princeton University Press p 264 ISBN 9781400844296 Turkmenistan Embassy Washington www turkmenistanembassy org Archived from the original on 15 November 2010 Retrieved 17 May 2006 a b Turkmen Society Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 Sherwell Philip 22 July 2001 Price of loving a Turkmen girl is now 50 000 Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Saidazimova Gulnoza 10 June 2005 Turkmenistan Marriage Gets Cheaper As Turkmenbashi Drops 50 000 Dollar Foreigners Fee Radio Free Europe US Library of Congress Country Studies Turkmenistan Social Structure Retrieved 18 March 2015 Official website of Rubin Kazan Football Club in Russian Retrieved 6 June 2016 Airat Nigmatullin Dzhaudat Abdulin Rashid Galiamov 17 December 2012 Kurban Berdiyev s interview Part 2 in Russian BIZNES Online Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2013 VON ZENIT ZU BAYER 04 WERKSKLUB VERPFLICHTET TOPSCORER AZMOUN Bayer 04 Leverkusen 22 January 2022 Turkmenistan International Olympic Committee 28 April 2021 The national ice hockey team of Turkmenistan finished the 2019 World Cup in Sofia in third place Turkmenportal Caryyew B Ilamanow Ya 2010 Turkmenistanyn Geografiyasy in Turkmen Ashgabat Bilim Ministrligi UNHCR Begins Compiling Database of Refugees in Turkmenistan Archived from the original on 8 December 2005 Logashova B R Turkmens of Iran historical and ethnographic study published by Nauka Science 1976 p 14 P Golden The Turkic peoples and Caucasia Transcaucasia Nationalism and Social Change Essays in the History of Armenia Azerbaijan and Georgia ed by Ronald G Suny Michigan 1996 pp 45 67 a b US Library of Congress Country Studies Afghanistan Turkmen a b The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire Eki ee Retrieved on 2013 07 12 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 12 July 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sources EditDamgaard P B et al 9 May 2018 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes Nature Nature Research 557 7705 369 373 Bibcode 2018Natur 557 369D doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0094 2 hdl 1887 3202709 PMID 29743675 S2CID 13670282 Retrieved 11 April 2020 Lee Joo Yup Kuang Shuntu 18 October 2017 A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples Inner Asia Brill 19 2 197 239 doi 10 1163 22105018 12340089 ISSN 2210 5018 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Li Tao et al June 2020 Millet agriculture dispersed from Northeast China to the Russian Far East Integrating archaeology genetics and linguistics Archaeological Research in Asia Elsevier 22 100177 100177 doi 10 1016 j ara 2020 100177 Nelson Sarah et al 14 February 2020 Tracing population movements in ancient East Asia through the linguistics and archaeology of textile production Evolutionary Human Sciences Cambridge University Press 2 e5 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 4 Robbeets Martine 1 January 2017 Austronesian influence and Transeurasian ancestry in Japanese Language Dynamics and Change Brill 8 2 210 251 doi 10 1163 22105832 00702005 ISSN 2210 5832 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Robbeets Martine 2020 The Transeurasian homeland where what and when In Robbeets Martine Savelyev Alexander eds The Oxford Guide to the Transeurasian Languages Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 880462 8 Uchiyama Junzo et al 21 May 2020 Populations dynamics in Northern Eurasian forests a long term perspective from Northeast Asia Evolutionary Human Sciences Cambridge University Press 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 11 Text was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Bacon Elizabeth E Central Asians Under Russian Rule A Study in Culture Change Cornell University Press 1980 ISBN 0 8014 9211 4 Turkmenistan Pages by Ekahau Did the engsi hang inside or outside the yurt Further reading EditBlackwell Carole 2001 Tradition and Society in Turkmenistan Gender Oral Culture and Song Curzon ISBN 0 7007 1354 9 Clement Victoria 2018 Learning to Become Turkmen University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0822964636 Edgar Adrienne Lynn 2004 Tribal Nation The Making of Soviet Turkmenistan Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12799 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Turkmens Turkoman Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed 1911 p 468 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turkmens amp oldid 1143628860, 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