User:Paramandyr/Turkic history
Turkic history is the common history between today's Turkic peoples. While the Göktürks were the first state established under the name of Turk, there were many Turkic tribes and states before the Göktürks.
Most of the Göktürk Tribes were descendants ???[1] a tribal confederation of nomadic peoples located at Inner Asia.
Turks also played an important role in bringing Eastern cultures to the West and Western cultures to the East. Their own religion became the pioneer and defender of the foreign religions they adopted after Tengrism, and they helped their spread and development (Mani religion, Judaism, Buddhism, Orthodox, Nestorian Christianity and Islam).
The beginning of Turkic history
[edit]The ???nationalization??? process of human communities living on earth begins with their transition from hunter-gatherer to farmer-herder. It is thought that the human communities that formed the Turks started sheep breeding in 6000 BC. This date can be accepted as the beginning of the nomadic Turkic culture.
- 388-392: Zhai Wei kingdom in northern China
- 395: Migration Period, Bulgars
- 480: Pre-Bulgarians between the Caspian Sea and the Danube
Middle Ages/Turks
[edit]- 540: The re-emergence of the lost Central Asian Turks mentioned in the Ergenekon epic[2]
- 552: Göktürks revolt against Rouran domination. Establishment of the First Turkic Khanate.
- 565: Defeat of the Hephthalites on their war with Göktürks.
- 582: Separation of the First Turkic Khaganate.
- 630: Eastern Turkic Khanate came under Chinese domination, Western Turkic Khanate came under Chinese influence.
- 639: Turkic prince Kürşat's attempt on a Turkic revolt in the Chinese emperor's palace.
- 659: Western Turkic Khaganate came under Chinese rule.
- 674: The appearance of Turkic mercenaries (Mamluks) in Arab armies.
- 681: Second Turkic Khaganate established.
- 699: The establishment of the Turgesh Khanate (in present-day Kyrgyzstan)
- 626-627: Eastern Roman Emperor Heraclius' request for help from the Khazars, the Khazars' invasion of the Caucasus by defeating the Sassanids
- 630: Khazars' settlement in the Don-Volga basin, which was affiliated to the Western Turkic Khaganate, and the establishment of the Great Bulgarian Khanate in the north of the Black Sea.
- 651-652: War of the Arab Empire and the Khazars, who overthrew the Sassanids and captured all of Iran
- 678: The division of the Great Bulgarian Khanate by the westward pressure of the Khazars
- 680: The establishment of the First Bulgarian Empire by the Bulgarians
- 720-735: Orkhon Monuments in Ötüken
- 721-737: Turgesh attack against Arabs
- 744: The destruction of the Second Turkic Khanate by the rebellious Uyghurs, Karluks and Basmyls
- 745: Establishment of the Uyghur Khaganate, independent khanate of Kimeks in what is today Kazakhstan
- 750: The strengthening of Arab-Turkic relations after the Abbasids came to the head of the Arab Empire
- 751: The entry of the Chinese into Central Asia, the defeat of the Chinese by the Arabs with the help of the Karluks in the Battle of Talas, the conversion of the Karluks to Islam
- 762: Uyghur Khaganate aided Tang dynasty in China in suppressing the An-Lu-Shan uprising
- 765: Adoption of the Mani religion by the Uyghur Khan Bögü
- 766: The dissolution of the Türgesh Khanate by the Karluks of the Uyghur Khanate, the establishment of the autonomous Karluk Khanate, the laying of the foundations of the Oghuz Yabgu State by the Oghuzes who escaped from the Karluks and migrated to the vicinity of the Caspian and Aral lakes.
- 789-795: Fight for the throne and decline in the Uyghur Khaganate
- 713-737: Khazar-Arab War, Khazar loss of Caucasus
- 740: Adoption of Judaism as the official religion of the Khazars
- 764: Invasion of the Caucasus and western Iran by the Khazars, defeating the Abbasids
- 780: Founding of Volga Bulgaria
- 792: After the Battle of Markeli, Byzantium began to pay taxes to the Bulgarians again.
- 821: Uighurs repulse Tibetans
- 832: The Uighur Khaganate plunged into turmoil
- 840: The collapse of the Uyghur Khanate as a result of the attack of the Kyrgyz people, the establishment of the Kyrgyz Khanate, the escape of the Uyghurs to the southwest, the Karluks, who did not recognize the Kyrgyz sovereignty, declared their independence and laid the foundation of the Karakhanid State.
- 848: The establishment of the Kansu Uyghur Kingdom of the Uyghurs who migrated to the South West
- 856: The establishment of the Karahoca Uyghur Kingdom by another Uyghur branch that migrated to the southwest.
- 860: The Russians, who expanded to the south, reached Kiev in the Khazar Khaganate.
- 861: Migration of Pechenegs around Sri Darya to the north of the Black Sea under the pressure of Oghuzes, Kimeks and Karluks
- 889: The advance of the Pechenegs in the north of the Black Sea to the west under the pressure of the Khazars and Kipchaks
- 892: The Pechenegs advancing to the west forced the Hungarians from the Dnieper to migrate beyond the Carpathians, forming an agreement with the Byzantine Empire.
- 833-842: The increasing influence of Turkish slave soldiers in the Abbasid palace during Caliph Mutasim's reign
- 836: The relocation of the Abbasid capital from Baghdad to Samerra, where the Turkish slave garrison was located
- 868: Tulunid sovereignty over Egypt, Syria, Palestine and the north of Iraq but still remain within the Abbasid caliphate
- 923: The establishment of the Later Tang dynasty by the Shatuo Turks, descended from the Göktürks, in the north of China
- 924: The destruction of the Kyrgyz State by the Mongol Khtai, the end of the Turkic rule in Ötüken, the migration of the Kyrgyz to their present homeland.
- 934: With Satuk Buğra Khan's acceptance of Islam, the Karakhanid State adopt the religion of Islam
- 979: The Shatuo Turks came under the domination of the Northern Song Dynasty, the Turkic presence in the north of China melted.
- 990-999: The Karakhanid State destroyed the Samanid Empire, Transoxiana came under Turkic rule after 300 years.
- 920: Russo-Pecheneg War
- 922: Visit of Ibn Fadlan as ambassador to the Bulgarian Khanate of İdil, which converted to Islam
- 940: Russian-Byzantine alliance against Khazars, Khazars lose Crimea
- 943: Pechenegs allied with the Russians against the Byzantine Empire
- 965: Oghuz Yabgu State's alliance with the Russians against the Khazars
- 968-972: Pechenegs' attacks on the Russians
- 969: The capture of the Khazar capital by the Russian king Svyatoslav I, the withdrawal of the Khazars to the north of the Caucasus
- 985: Oghuz Yabgu State's alliance with the Russians against the Volga Bulgarian State
- 986: Settlements of the Seljuks in the south of Kazakhstan by breaking away from the Oghuz Yabgu State
- 905: The end of the Tulunid dynasty in Egypt by the Abbasids
- 935: Another Turkic dynasty, the Akshites, seized power in Egypt and dominated Syria, Palestine, Hejaz and northern Sudan.
- 963: Establishment of Ghaznavid Empire, expansion of Turkic sovereignty to Afghanistan and Pakistan
- 969: Termination of the rule of the Akshites by the Fatimid State
- 1030: Ghaznavid Empire reaches to its greatest extent under Mahmud of Ghazni.
- 1036: The Kansu Uyghur Kingdom came under the rule of the Mongolian Tankut Kingdom.
- 1042: The division of the Karakhanid State into East and West
- 1050: The destruction of the Kimek Khanate by the invasion of the Kipchaks
- 1089: Samarkand-centered Western Karakhanid State entered the Seljuk nationality
- 1091: The Eastern Karakhanid State, based in Kashgar, became subject to the Seljuks.
- 1092: As a result of the Great Seljuk State being dragged into internal turmoil, the two Karakhanid states became independent again.
- 1016: The destruction of the Khazar Khaganate by the Russians and the Byzantine Empire
- 1037: Settlement of Pechenegs defeated by the Russians in Romania
- 1061-1068: The Kipchaks, who defeated the Russians, captured the north of the Black Sea and Ukraine
- 1091: After the Battle of Manzikert, the Pechenegs, who attacked the Byzantine Empire, which was in turmoil, were destroyed by the Byzantine-Kipchak alliance around Enez.
- 1093: Kipchaks' decisive defeat of the Russians
- 1038: Establishment of the Seljuk State in Khorasan.
- 1040: In the Battle of Dandanaqan, the Seljuks defeated the Ghaznavids and spread towards Iran.
- 1048: The Seljuks, who defeated the Byzantine-Georgian alliance at the Battle of Kapetron, entered Eastern Anatolia.
- 1055: Seljuks conquer Baghdad and seize the Abbasid Caliphate.
- 1064: Seljuks conquer Ani Castle and break the Armenian-Georgian resistance
- 1071: The Oghuz Turcomans who have defeated the Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Manzikert, started settlements at Anatolia.
- 1072: Establishment of Danishmend Principality in Sivas as subordinate to Great Seljuks
- 1077: Establishment of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm whose capital is Iznik as subordinate to the Great Seljuks.
- 1081: The construction of the navy on the Aegean coast of the Çaka Principality and the establishment of the Turkish Naval Forces
- 1085: Establishment of the Syrian Seljuk State.
- 1092: As a result of the murder of Sultan Melikşah by the Order of Assassins, the Great Seljuk State was dragged into internal turmoil
- 1096: The destruction of the pioneers of the First Crusade by the Anatolian Seljuk State in Iznik
- 1096-1099: As a result of the First Crusade, Iznik and Western Anatolia were taken back by Byzantium, and Crusader statelets were formed on the Syrian and Palestinian coasts.
- 1001-1027: The expeditions of Mahmud of Ghazni, the Khan of the Ghazni State, to India, resulted in the spread of Turkish sovereignty and Islam to the north of India and Bangladesh
- 1037-1059: The struggle of the Ghazni State with the Great Seljuk State, Khorasan and Iran being dominated by the Seljuks
- 1059: Peace treaty between Ghaznavids and Great Seljuks
- 1079-1080: Ghazni State's defeat of the Ghurid dynasty, who gained power in Afghanistan
- 1100: The Danishmends defeated the Principality of Antakya in Malatya and definitively stopped the Crusaders' advance to Southeastern Anatolia.
- 1101: The defeat of the Anatolian Seljuk State and the Danishmends by the Crusaders in Kastamonu and Merzifon
- 1104: The Great Seljuk State defeated the Crusaders in Harran and blocked their advance to the Euphrates.
- 1104: Establishment of Börüoğulları Atabey in Damascus
- 1105-1128: Seljuks struggle against the Crusaders in Syria, the resistance of Damascus and Aleppo to the Crusader sieges
- 1127: Establishment of Zengi Atabeylik in Mosul
- 1127-1174: The struggle of the Zengid's with the Crusaders
- 1144: The conquest of Urfa by the Zengid's
- 1144: Establishment of Beytegin Atabeylik in Erbil
- 1147-1149: Organized after the fall of Urfa, in the Second Crusade, the Anatolian Seljuk State defeated the Crusaders' German army in Eskişehir and Ladik, the Zengid's repelled the Crusaders' Siege of Damascus
- 1150: The elimination of the Urfa County, one of the four Crusader states, by the Zengids
- 1154: Elimination of the Börioğulları Atabey by the Zengids
- 1173-1178: The Anatolian Seljuk State became the only power in Anatolia by capturing all the lands of the Danishmends.
- 1174-1183: Salahaddin Ayyubi's Ending Zengid sovereignty in Syria
- 1176: The defeat of the Byzantines by the Anatolian Seljuk State in the Battle of Myriokephalon, the finalization of the Seljuk sovereignty in Anatolia
- 1190: The invasion of Konya by the German arm of the Crusaders in the Third Crusade, the disintegration of the German army after the drowning of the German Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in Silifke
Iran and Central Asia
[edit]- 1092-1118: Internal turmoil and emergence of semi-independent atabeyliks within the Great Seljuk State
- 1132: The Mongolian Karahitays started to move towards Turkic lands by eliminating the Qocho.
- 1134: Karahitays overthrow the Eastern Karakhanids
- 1137: Karahitays overthrow the Western Karakhanids and demolish their dominance in Central Asia
- 1141: The collapse of the Great Seljuk State, which was defeated by the Karahitays in the Battle of Qatwan
- 1154-1157: Dissolution of the Great Seljuk State after the rebellion of the Oghuzs, the independence of the Khorezmshahs State
- 1182-1194: The Khwarazmshahs conquered Transoxiana by defeating Iran, Khorasan and Karahitays
- 1188: The elimination of the Kerman Seljuk State, one of the successors of the Great Seljuk State, by the Oghuzes
- 1194: The abolition of the Iraqi Seljuk State, one of the successors of the Great Seljuk State, by the Khwarazmshahs State.
- 1117: The entry of the Great Seljuk army into Ghazni and the taxation of the Ghazni State
- 1119: Consolidation of the Ghazni State's dominance in northern India
- 1135: The Great Seljuk army re-entering Ghazni and taxing the Ghazni State again
- 1148-1151: Great destruction caused by the Ghurids after capturing Ghazni
- 1152: Great Seljuks liberation of Ghazni from Ghurids
- 1157-1163: With the disintegration of the Great Seljuk State, Ghazni and Afghanistan fell back into the hands of the Ghurids.
- 1186: The collapse of the Ghaznavid State, which continued to dominate Punjab, with Lahore as its capital, caused by the Ghurids.
- 1111-1116: Kipchak tribes defeated by the Russians
- 1123: Georgians supported by Kipchaks expel Great Seljuks from Tbilisi
- 1150: The Kipchaks regain their strength in the Dnieper.
- 1154: The Kipchaks, who repulsed the Russians, re-established their dominance around Kharkiv.
- 1157-1174: Conflicts between Volga Bulgarian and Russians
- 1174-1185: Military successes of the Kipchaks against the Russians
Asia and the Middle East
[edit]- 1202: The expansion of the Anatolian Seljuk State to Eastern Anatolia by eliminating the Saltuklu Principality
- 1207: The opening of the Anatolian Seljuk State to the Mediterranean with the conquest of Antalya
- 1214: The opening of the Anatolian Seljuk State to the Black Sea with the conquest of Sinop
- 1228: Elimination of the Mengüçlü Principality by the Anatolian Seljuk State
- 1230: The Khorezmshahs, who escaped from the Mongol invasion and advanced to Anatolia, were stopped by the Anatolian Seljuk State in the Battle of Yassıçemen
- 1239: The revolt of Baba İshak weakened the Anatolian Seljuk State.
- 1243: The defeat of the Anatolian Seljuk State by the Mongols in the Battle of Kösedağ
- 1250: The seizure of power by the Turkish-origin Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt, putting an end to the Ayyubids
- Nureddin Bey laid the foundations of the principality in Karaman
- 1299: Founding of the Ottoman State
- 1212: The elimination of the Karakhanids, who ruled in Fergana, by the Khwarazmshahs State.
- 1206: Establishment of Delhi Sultanate by Turkish-origin slave commanders
- 1236: Delhi Sultanate's domination of all of northern India, Kashmir and Bangladesh
- 1290: Turkish-origin Halacians seized power in the Delhi Sultanate
The Chagatai Khanate has been completely Turkified since 1350.
- 1320-1424: Tughluk Dynasty in Delhi established and ruled most of the India.
- 1346: The Ottomans entered Europe.
- 1361: Conquest of Edirne by the Ottomans occurred.
- 1370: Timur's seizure of power, establishment of Timurid Empire.
- 1382: Tokhtamysh leads the Golden Horde's Army and sets Moscow on fire.
- 1389: Battle of Kosovo: Ottoman domination in the Balkans
- 1389-1403: Reign of Bayezid
- 1398: Timur's military expedition to India
- 1402: Battle of Ankara between Timur and Bayezid I
- 1406: Re-emergence of Akkoyunlu and Karakoyunlu people on the stage of history
- 1453: Conquest of Istanbul by Mehmed the Conqueror
- 1453-1504: The golden age of the Akkoyunlu state.
- 1405: Timur's death
- 1405-1447: Arrival of Shahruh in Herat
- 1447-1449: Ulugh Beg
- 1456: Establishment of the Kazakh Khanate
- 1414-1517: Delhi Sultanate's Turkic dynasty Iranianized
- 1430: Crimean Khanate formed
- 1445: Establishment of the Khanate of Kazan
- 1462-1505: Astrakhan Khanate created
- 1473: Sultan Husayn Bayqara: Timurid Renaissance
New Age
[edit]- 1502: The Crimean Khanate's destruction of the Golden Horde State
- 1552: Russia's annexation of the Kazan Khanate
- 1556: The annexation of the Astrakhan Khanate by Russia
- 1557: Russia's annexation of the Nogai Khanate
- 1571: Crimean Khanate burns Moscow
- 1580-1598: Russia's elimination of the Siberian Khanate
- 1500: Muhammed Shaybani and Uzbeks in Transoxiana
- 1510: The defeat of Muhammed Shaybani by Shah Ismail
- 1502: Ismail's establishment of the Safavid Dynasty in Iran
- 1514: The Battle of Çaldıran, the settlement of the Ottomans in Eastern Anatolia
- 1516: Battle of Ridaniye, Ottomans taking Syria and Palestine from the Mamluk State
- 1517: Ottoman domination in Hijaz
- 1534: Ottomans taking Iraq from Safavids
- 1538: Ottoman domination in Yemen
- 1551: Ottoman rule reaching Qatar and Oman
- 1578: Ottomans reaching the Caspian Sea
- 1590: Ottoman conquest of the entire Caucasus and Western Iran
- 1526: Establishment of the Mughal Empire
- 1516: Establishment of Ottoman administration in Algeria
- 1516-1517: The Ottomans' destruction of the Mamluk State, Ottoman domination in Egypt
- 1551: Beginning of Ottoman rule in Libya
- 1557: Establishment of the Abyssinian Province by the Ottomans
- 1574: Beginning of Ottoman rule in Tunisia
- 1577: The spread of Ottoman rule in Fezzan
- 1576-1580: Ottoman influence in Morocco
- 1600: The defeat of the Siberian Khanate.
- 1606: The Treaty of Zitvatorok, which symbolized the Ottoman Empire's peak
- 1683: Siege of Vienna by the Ottomans.
- 1699: Treaty of Karlowitz. The decline of the Ottomans.
- 1605: Russian invasion of Yenisey
- 1615-1650: The struggle of the Yenisei Kyrgyz people against the Russians
- 1620: Russia's annexation of Yakut lands
- 1628: Dolgan's domination by Russia
- 1628-1630: Another Mongolian tribe, the Kalmyks, who were defeated by the Eastern Mongols, trampled on Kazakhstan and settled in the Volga region.
- 1634-1642: Russia's suppression of the Yakut revolts
- 1639: Russia's Reaching the Pacific Ocean
- 1680: Mongol capture East Turkestan, end of Chagatai Khanate
- 1742-1775: Pugachev War in Russia (Tatar uprising)
- 1783: Annexation of Crimea by the Russians.
- 1717-1730: Tulip Era of the Ottomans.
- 1736-1747: Nader Shah of Turkoman origin established Afsharid Empire, owning the identity of Turkic Afshar tribes.
- 1794: Qajar Dynasty founded in Iran by a Turk.
- 1709: Establishment of Kokand Khanate
- 1709-1718: The Dzungarian-Kazakh Khanate Conflict
- 1718: The division of the Kazakh Khanate into three kingdoms.
- 1721: Russia's annexation of Khakassia
- 1731: The minor part of the Kazakh Khanate came under Russian protection.
- 1740-1747: Iranian domination in the Khiva Khanate
- 1755-1759: The Manchu Dynasty, which took over the administration in China, seized East Turkestan which was in the hands of the Dzungarians
- 1755: Tuva under the rule of the Manchu Dynasty, which seized power in China
- 1756: Russia's capture of the Altai region
- 1785: Manghud's takeover of the Bukhara Khanate
- 1705: The Huseyni Dynasty appointed in Tunisia, which was a part of the Ottoman Empire
- 1798-1799: Egypt expedition of Napoleon Bonaparte. Turkish-French conflicts.
- 1829: Greece's independence
- 1878: Treaty of Berlin, Serbia, Montenegro, Romania gaining their independence, Bulgaria gaining autonomy
- 1881: Greek annexation of Thessaly
- 1881: Atatürk's birth
- 1885: Bulgaria's annexation of Eastern Rumelia
- 1813: Russia's annexation of Dagestan and Azerbaijan
- 1827: Russian domination of the Balkars
- 1828: Karachays' entry into Russian domination
- 1828: Russia's annexation of Yerevan and Nakhchivan
- 1829: Russia's annexation of Akhaltsikhe
- 1839: Tanzimat Edict in the Ottoman Empire
- 1876: The first constitution of the Ottoman Empire legislated.
- 1820: The Great Juz of the Kazakh Khanate came under the rule of the Kokand Khanate
- 1847: The lands of the Kazakh Khanate completely passed into the hands of Russia
- 1851-1854: The defeat of the Khiva Khanate to the Russians
- 1864: The start of Russian expeditions to West Turkestan
- 1865: Establishment of Kashgar Khanate in East Turkestan
- 1866: The Emirate of Bukhara came under Russian rule
- 1868: The Kokand Khanate came under Russian rule
- 1871: Russian occupation of Lake Balkhash
- 1873: The Khiva Khanate came under Russian rule
- 1876: Russia's annexation of the Khanate of Kokand
- 1877-1878: China's elimination of the Khanate of Kashgar
- 1881-1884: Russia's annexation of Turkmenistan
- 1805: The Mughal State came under the auspices of the British who defeated the Maratha Confederation
- 1857: The British overthrow the Mughal State, the end of nine centuries of Turkish rule/existence in India
- 1807: British abolish slave trade, Royal Navy patrol around Africa to intercept slave ships
- 1822: Sudan's entry into Ottoman rule
- 1830-1842: French invasion of Algeria
- 1831-1840: Ottoman-Egyptian struggle, Egypt gaining autonomy
- 1869: Opening of the Suez Canal
- 1881: Second French invasion of Algeria
- 1882: British invasion of Egypt
- 1885: Italian invasion of Habesh
- 1885: End of Turkish rule in Sudan
- 1888: British invasion of Somalia, end of Turkish presence in Horn of Africa
- 1905: Beginning of Jadidism movements.
- 1910-1920: Alash Horda Government of Kazakhs and Kyrgyz
- 1911-1912: Invasion of Tripoli by Italy
- 1912: Balkan wars
- 1915-1916: Gallipoli Campaign
- 1917: Turkistan's declaration of autonomy
- 1918: The Armistice of Mudros was signed between Turkey and the Allied Powers.
- 1919-1922: The Turkish War of Independence took place.
- 1919-1928: Basmachi Uprising against the Soviet Union
- 1921-1944: Tuvan People's Republic
- 1922: Turkish victory over Greeks
- 1923: Turkey proclaimed to be a Republic
- 1932-1934: East Turkestan Islamic Republic of Uyghurs in China
- 1938: Ataturk's death
- 1944: Short-lived East Turkestan Republic established with the help of the Russian army
- 1955: Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region: Declaring Xinjiang (East Turkistan) an autonomous region
- 1971: European withdrawal from Central Asia
- 1974: Turkish invasion of Cyprus
- 1983: The declaration of independence of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
- 1988: The beginning of the Azeri-Armenian conflict
- 1990: Soviet invasion of Baku
- 1991: The collapse of the USSR and the emergence of the Commonwealth of Independent States
- 1992: Admission of the CIS Turkic republics to the UN:
- 1992: The first Turkic Speaking Countries Summit was held in Ankara on 30 October 1992.
- 1993: The occupation of a region of Azerbaijan by the Armenians.
- 1993: In 1993, the Turkish Culture and Arts Joint Administration was established in Almaty, which provides cooperation in the fields of culture and arts of Turkic Speaking Countries.
- 1993: The first Turkic Congress, which was a cultural, economic and political forum and was attended by all Turkic states and communities and related communities.
- 2005: Tulip revolution in Kyrgyzstan.
- 2005: Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev's proposal to establish a common market in Central Asia in his address to the nation.
- 2005: Andijan massacre in Uzbekistan
- 2006: Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline put into service.
- 2007: The first meeting of riparian countries to determine the status of the Caspian Sea.
- 2008: Establishment of the Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic Speaking Countries between Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan on 21 November 2008.
- 2009: Establishment of Organization of Turkic states.
- 2013: Gezi Park Protests
- 2016: Turkish coup attempt by Fethullah Gülen
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Lee, Joo-Yup (2016). "The Historical Meaning of the Term Turk and the Nature of the Turkic Identity of the Chinggisid and Timurid Elites in Post-Mongol Central Asia". Central Asiatic Journal. 59 (1–2): 101–132. doi:10.13173/centasiaj.59.1-2.0101. ISSN 0008-9192.
- ^ "Geçmişten Günümüze Türk Tarihi". Story And History (in Turkish). 18 December 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
Sources
[edit]- Adas, Michael (2001). Agricultural and Pastoral Societies in Ancient and Classical History. American Historical Association/Temple University Press.
- Bailey, Harold W. (1985). Indo-Scythian Studies: being Khotanese Texts, VII. Cambridge University Press. JSTOR 312539. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
- Beckwith, Christopher I. (16 March 2009). Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-13589-2. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
- Di Cosmo, Nicola (2004). Ancient China and its Enemies: The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History. Cambridge University Press. (First paperback edition)
- Geng, Shimin [耿世民] (2005). 阿尔泰共同语、匈奴语探讨 [On Altaic Common Language and Xiongnu Language]. Yu Yan Yu Fan Yi 语言与翻译(汉文版) [Language and Translation] (2). ISSN 1001-0823. OCLC 123501525. Archived from the original on 25 February 2012.
- Harmatta, János (1 January 1994). "Conclusion". In Harmatta, János (ed.). History of Civilizations of Central Asia: The Development of Sedentary and Nomadic Civilizations, 700 B. C. to A. D. 250. UNESCO. pp. 485–492. ISBN 978-9231028465. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
- Hucker, Charles O. (1975). China's Imperial Past: An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2353-2.
The proto-Turkic Hsiung-nu were now challenged by other alien groups — proto-Tibetans, proto-Mongol tribes called the Hsien-pi, and separate proto-Turks called To-pa (Toba).
- Jankowski, Henryk [in Polish] (2006). Historical-Etymological Dictionary of Pre-Russian Habitation Names of the Crimea. Handbuch der Orientalistik [HdO], 8: Central Asia; 15. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15433-9.