The Turkish Colonisation of Anatolia PDF
The Turkish Colonisation of Anatolia PDF
The Turkish Colonisation of Anatolia PDF
BY W. C. BRICE, M.A.
LECTURER IN GEOGRAPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
Introductory
1 loannes Cinnamus (Historia, vii, § 2, op. cit. p. 295), describes the desertion
of Dorylaeum: dAAa Uepaai . . . -rqv re -rroXtv els e8a<f>os /Je/JA^/zewjv
dvOpatiraiv eprjuov TTavraTTaaiv cireTTonjvro /cat rd rfj^e irdvra fte^pt Krai eiri
XCTTTOV rrjs TrdXai tre/avoT^TO? rj<f>dvicrav i^vos. Bertrandon de la Brocquiere
(Travels, op. cit. p. 313), in 1432, found no more than three hundred houses
occupied in Antioch, and they almost all by Turcoman and Arab keepers of herds ;
but this city had probably been devastated as much by the Crusaders as by the
Turks. J. Laurent (see p. 20, footnote 4) contends that for some years
Turcomans were encamped beneath the walls of the cities of Bithynia, but were
allowed to occupy them in 1080.
40 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
These shifts of site were away from the old highways of
commerce, to which water had to be brought, and into the
foothills, as at Denizli and Maras, where spring water was readily
available and cool breezes tempered the heat of summer. These
new foundations were provincial capitals rather then centres of
commerce, and much more intimately linked with their sur-
rounding countryside than the earlier cities had been. When
the Seljuks re-established trade through Anatolia, the links on
their highways were not the provincial cities, which usually lay
aside from the main roads, but the hans placed at regular intervals
of 20-25 miles.1 These establishments are not so much an
indication of the troubled state of the country 2 as proof of the
changed system of commerce and communication. Rapid travel
along well-kept and garrisoned highways which ran directly
between municipalities was succeeded by journeying by daily
stages along a few recognized caravan routes which connected
distant parts of the Seljuk dominions.3
Islam in Anatolia
A study of the religious beliefs and customs of the present
population might be expected to shed light on the character of
the Turkish colonization by showing where pre-Islamic ideas
have survived most tenaciously, and how far Turkish Islam has
been coloured by earlier Anatolian religions.4
Unfortunately the question is complicated by the very
indeterminate state of the beliefs of the Turkish tribes when they
left their homes in Central Asia. They had only recently been
converted to Islam, and retained many of their earlier shamanistic
beliefs, while some had also come under Manichaean, Christian,
and Buddhist influences. Moreover, the religious state of
Anatolia in the early eleventh century was by no means uniform,
1 0. Turan, " Selcuk Kervansaraylan ", Turfy Tarih Kurumu Belleten, x, 39
(1946), PP. 471-96.
2 As W. M. Ramsay suggested in " The Peasant God ", chap. V of Luke the
Physician and other Studies in the History of Religion (London, 1908), pp. 185-7.
3 A system common in many parts of Asia in the Middle Ages. Cf. W. C.
Brice, " Caravan Traffic across Asia ", Antiquity, xxviii (1954), 78-84.
4 J. H. Kramers, " Islam in Asia Minor ", Analecta Orientalia, i (Leiden,
1954), 22-32.
TURKISH COLONIZATION OF ANATOLIA 41
for while orthodox Christianity prevailed in the cities, heresies of
various kinds were constantly arising in the countryside.
Further, Shi'ah influences were felt in Anatolia, through the
contacts which the migrating Turks naturally made with the
Persian population in their passage across Khorasan, and through
the preaching of wandering Sufis, and the propaganda of the
envoys of Shah Ismail in the sixteenth century.
Despite these complications, it is possible to distinguish
between the beliefs of two groups of heterodox people in Anatolia,
who have already been classified separately on economic and
anthropological grounds. On the one hand, the pastoral Yiiriiks
retain many of the simple shamanistic beliefs of their Central
Asian ancestors ; on the other, the village-dwelling Tahtajis and
Kizilbash hold very dogmatic and eclectic views, which appear
to be strongly influenced by Shi'ah beliefs.
The shamanistic customs of the nomadic tribes, which Bent*
noticed as far apart as the Taurus mountains and Lake Urmia,
include the common practice of divination, the placation of the
spirits of trees, and the reverence for the tombs of tribal ancestors,
usually placed on the summer grazing-grounds.
By contrast, Bent 2 saw in the beliefs of a series of separate
refugee communities in the mountains of Western Asia evidence
of the survival of a formerly more extensive pagan religion.
Thus the Tahtajis of Lycia, the KJzilbash of Cappadocia, the
Ansairee of Cilicia, and the Ali-Ullah-hi of Lake Urmia share
beliefs in Baba Nazere as the founder of their religion, in the
god-head of Ali, and in the Trinity of Ali, Mohammed and
Salman-el-Farsi. All drink wine at a kind of communion
service, as " the image of Ali ". These similarities may be
reasonably taken as evidence of contact in each case with Shi'ah
ideas; though some more specific instances, like the reverence
of both the Tahtajis of Lycia and the Yezidis of Iraq for the
1 J. T. Bent, " The Yourouks of Asia Minor ", Joum. Anthrop. Inst., xx
(1891), 269-76; J. T. Bent, "Report to the Committee on Nomad Tribes
of Asia Minor ", Brit. Assoc. for Adv. of Sd., Report, 1889 (Newcastle),
p. 176.
2 J. T. Bent, " Report to the Committee for investigating Nomad Tribes of
Asia Minor and North Persia", ibid. 1890 (Leeds), p. 535; J. T. Bent,
" The Ansairee of Asia Minor ", Journ. Anthrop. Inst., xx (1891), pp. 225-6.
42 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
peacock as the embodiment of evil,1 would seem to require a
definite historical explanation.
More convincing evidence of the antiquity of the beliefs of
the Kizilbash-Tahtaji peoples in Anatolia is the power among
them of the Bektashi sect,2 which has its two chief centres
at Kir§ehir in Cappadocia and at Elmali in Lycia, in areas where
the Kizilbash and Tahtajis are most numerous. Though many
of the tarikas or religious orders of Anatolian Islam were inspired
by Persian contacts, others, and in particular the Bektashi, may
be of indigenous origin. Certainly, semi-religious trade-guilds,
of the sort which are closely associated with the tarikas, were
already present in pre-Turkish Anatolia, and remained open for
Christian as well as Moslem membership in Ottoman times.3
The Anatolian dervish orders had much in common with the
Corybantes or priests of Cybele; both danced to the music of
flutes and cymbals, and practised self-mutilation. Some of the
heretic Christian communities of Anatolia who inclined to
ecstatic rituals may have been the link between them.
Hasluck's 4 observation has proved the wide survival of
Christian elements in Anatolian Islam, and the persistence of the
sanctity of certain places into Islamic from Christian and even
earlier times. The common custom of respecting a saint's tomb in
Turkish villages is not, however, so easily explained as a pre-
Islamic survival. In some cases, as near Siiveydiye at the
Orontes mouth, where the saint is called Khidr-el-Hay, he may
well have a pagan ancestry. But where, as often, he carries the
name of his village, he could be the eponymous ancestor of a
nomadic tribe whose tomb was transferred from the summer
pastures to the new village, where he is regarded as its founder.
This may have happened at the village of Hassan-dede,6 at the
1 J. T. Bent, " The Yourouks of Asia Minor ", op. cit. p. 270; J. W. Crow-
foot, " A Yezidi Rite ", Man, vol. i (1901), article no. 122.
2 J. K. Birge, The Bektashi Order of Dervishes (London, 1937).
3 H. A. R. Gibb and H. Bowen, Islamic Society and the West (London, 1950),
p. 283.
4 F. W. Hasluck (ed. M. M. Hasluck), Christianity and Islam wider the Sultans
(Oxford, 1929).
5 J. W. Crowfoot, " Survivals among the Kappadokian Kizilbash (Bektash) ",
Journ. Anthrop. Inst, XXX (1900), 309. Crowfoot would recognize here veatiges
TURKISH COLONIZATION OF ANATOLIA 43
crossing of the Halys river near Ankara. Seidi Ghazi is a more
definite historical hero, and the village in Phrygia was probably
built round his tomb and named after him. A puzzling
instance occurs at Harran, where the local saint, Sheikh Hayat-
el-Harrani, who is clearly the eponymous founder of the place,
bears like the village a name of very ancient origin. He was
possibly adopted by the present inhabitants, who are mostly
Arabs, from their pagan predecessors on the site.
Conclusions
Present place-names may give a clue to the character of the
Turkish colonization in particular cases. It seems generally to
have happened that a Turkish town which continued on the site
of its predecessor retained the old name, as at Konya, Tarsus,
and Kayseri; while if, as frequently, it was refounded a short
distance from the ruined place, it was re-named, for instance at
Aydin (the former Tralles), Dinar (Apameia), and Mara§
(Germaniceia). Villages rarely kept their old name; generally
they received a purely descriptive title, such as Akpinar or
Qaylarbasi, or else they were called after the tribe which settled
there, Karakeci, for example, or Ahmetli. It was probably only
in a few special cases, where the village remained largely Greek-
speaking, that old names survived in a mispronounced form, like
Efsus (Ephesus), Tefenni (Stephanos) and Ayasoluk 1 (Hagios
Theologos).
The nineteenth-century traveller W. M. Leake 2 remarked on
passing a Turkish mollah who was journeying in excessive
comfort " Graecia capta ferum victorem cepit ". But the taste
for Byzantine luxuries only affected a very small proportion
of the Turkish conquerors. The immediate result of their
arrival was the final collapse of the Graeco-Roman municipal
foundations on whose lavish expenditure of the resources of the
country the wealth of Constantinople had long depended. The
of hero cults of the ancient Aegean world, and, more specifically, ethnic survivals
of the Magousaioi (see p. 20 and footnote 2).
1 Occasionally the old pre-Greek name, which must have always continued
in popular use, was revived in Turkish times, as at Edessa, the pre-Hellenistic
Orhai and Turkish Urfa.
2 W. M. Leake, Journal of a Tour in Asia Minor (London, 1824), pp. 3-4.
44 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
Turks preferred village to city life, and even when they
refounded the cities, on a smaller scale and on a quite different
plan, most of the traders or craftsmen belonged to the millets or
minorities. Village life was enriched by the Turkish arts of
animal husbandry, especially those concerned with seasonal
migration ; and although many of the skills which had kept the
balance of rural economy in pre-Hellenistic times were never
recovered, the decline in the fertility of the countryside was
generally arrested after the municipalities collapsed.