Cossacks in Turkey














































Part of a series on
Cossacks
"Zaporozhian Cossacks write to the Sultan of Turkey" by Ilya Repin (1844–1930)
Cossack hosts


  • Amur

  • Astrakhan

  • Azov

  • Baikal


  • Bashkir (ru)

  • Black Sea

  • Buh

  • Caucasus

  • Danube

  • Don

  • Free

  • Greben

  • Kuban

  • Orenburg

  • Red

  • Nazi Cossacks SS

  • Semirechye

  • Siberian

  • Terek

  • Ural

  • Ussuri

  • Volga

  • Zaporozhian


Other groups


  • Albazinan

  • Turkish

  • Danube

  • Jewish

  • Tatar

  • Nekrasov

  • Persian


History


  • Registered Cossacks

  • Kosiński Uprising

  • Nalyvaiko Uprising

  • Khmelnytsky Uprising

  • Hadiach Treaty

  • Hetmanate

  • Colonisation of Siberia

  • Bulavin Rebellion

  • Pugachev's Rebellion

  • Communism

  • Decossackization


Cossacks


  • Petro Doroshenko

  • Bohdan Khmelnytsky

  • Petro Sahaidachny

  • Ivan Mazepa

  • Yemelyan Pugachev

  • Stepan Razin

  • Ivan Sirko

  • Andrei Shkuro

  • Pavlo Skoropadskyi

  • Yermak Timofeyevich

  • Ivan Vyhovsky

  • Vitaly Primakov


Cossack terms


  • Ataman

  • Chupryna

  • Hetman

  • Kontusz

  • Papakhi

  • Plastun

  • Yesaul

  • Stanitsa

  • Shashka

  • Szabla





Cossacks in Turkey refers to descendants of a group of Don Cossacks who had lived in the territory of the Republic of Turkey until they migrated in 1962.





Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Footnotes


  • 3 References


  • 4 See also





History


A group of Don Cossacks took part in the Bulavin Rebellion in opposition to reforms of Peter the Great. After their defeat, starting from 1737, they began to take refuge in the Ottoman Empire and moved from the Kuban region where some of them, known as Nekrasov Cossacks, had settled earlier. A group settled around Constanţa on the Black Sea coast, while another group settled on the shores of Lake Manyas in northwestern Anatolia in 1740. In 1883, the group in Romania moved to Anatolia, first to settle on Mada Island on Lake Beyşehir, then to the shores of Lake Akşehir in Central Anatolia.


In a separate event after the dissolution of the Zaporozhian Host and the destruction of the Zaporozhian Sich, up to 5000 Cossacks fled to the Turkish-controlled Danube delta where the Sultan allowed them to form the Danubian Sich. After several bloody clashes with Nekrasovites, resulting in most of them to either return to Russia or re-located to Manyas, and their support for Turkey against the Greeks during the Greek War of Independence, the Danubian Sich ended in 1828. Some returned to Russia, whilst others were moved to central Turkey and worked in forced labour.


As of 1927, there were three Cossack villages in Turkey: Eski Kazaklar (later officially renamed as Kocagöl, the earlier settlement on the southwestern tip of Lake Manyas) and Yeni Kazaklar (founded by a community that left Eski Kazaklar and located on the northern shore of Lake Manyas) in Manyas district of Balıkesir Province, and Kazak (on the eastern shore of Lake Akşehir) in Akşehir district of Konya Province. Their main economic activity was fishery.


In 1927, residents of Yeni Kazaklar left Turkey. Cossacks of Eski Kazaklar and Kazak decided to migrate in 1962, most Eski Kazaklar villagers repatriating to Russia, while most residents of Kazak chose to settle in the U.S.



Footnotes








References



  • Servet Somuncuoğlu, Don Kazakları, TİMAŞ Yayınları, Istanbul 2004. (ISBN 975-362-985-0)

  • Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden 1989. (ISBN 3-89500-297-6)



See also



  • Nekrasov Cossacks

  • Danubian Sich

  • Hamidiye



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