16 Great Turkic Empires Explained

The 16 Great Turkic Empires (tr|{{italics correction|16 Büyük Türk Devleti,) is a concept in Turkish ethnic nationalism, introduced in 1969 by Akib Özbek, map officer[1] and widely invoked by Turkish authorities during the 1980s, under the government of Kenan Evren.[2]

The list

The "16 Great Turkic Empires" are the following (according to the Turkish Presidency):[3]

Flag
(attributed by Özbek)
NameTurkish nameFounderDates (Gregorian)
"Great Hunnic Empire"Turkish: Büyük Hun İmparatorluğuModu Chanyu220 BCE–216 CE
"Western Hunnic Empire"Turkish: Batı Hun İmparatorluğuPanu48–216
"Europe Hunnic Empire"Turkish: Avrupa Hun İmparatorluğuAttila375–469
"White Hunnic Empire"Turkish: Ak Hun İmparatorluğuAksunvar420–552
"Göktürk Empire"Turkish: Göktürk İmparatorluğuBumin Qaghan552–745
"Avar Empire"Turkish: Avar İmparatorluğuBayan Qaghan565–835
"Khazar Empire"Turkish: Hazar İmparatorluğuTong Yabghu Qaghan651–983
"Uyghur State"Turkish: Uygur DevletiKutlug I Bilge Kagan745–1368
KarakhanidsTurkish: KarahanlılarBilge Kul Qadir Khan840–1212
"Ghaznavids"Turkish: GaznelilerSabuktigin962–1183
"Great Seljuq Empire"Turkish: Büyük Selçuklu İmparatorluğuChagri Bey1040–1157
"Khwarezmshahs"Turkish: HarzemşahlarMuhammad II of Khwarezm1097–1231
"Golden Horde State"Turkish: Altınordu DevletiBatu Khan1236–1502
"Great Timurid Empire"Turkish: Büyük Timur İmparatorluğuTimur1368–1501
"Baburid Empire"Turkish: Babür İmparatorluğuBabur1526–1858
"Ottoman Empire"Turkish: Osmanlı İmparatorluğuOsman I1299–1922

Reception

Turkish nationalist writer, novelist, poet and philosopher, Hüseyin Nihâl Atsız, supporter of the pan-Turkist or Turanism ideology, had noted that while some states with questionable Turkic identity were included in the list (like the Hephthalite Empire), some ostensibly Turkic states (such as Aq Qoyunlu) were left out, and labeled the list a "fabrication."[4]

In spite of Atsız' criticism, the concept was made a mainstream topos in Turkish national symbolism in the wake of the 1980 Turkish coup d'état, under the presidency of Kenan Evren. The Turkish Postal administration issued a series of stamps dedicated to the 16 Empires in 1984, showing portraits of their respective founders as well as attributed flags.[5] In 1985, Özbek's 16 Empires were invoked as a retrospective explanation of the 16 stars in the presidential seal of Turkey (introduced in 1936).[6]

Several municipal buildings and public parks in Turkey have collections of busts or statues of the founders of the "16 Empires" alongside a statue of Kemal Atatürk, including the municipal buildings of Keçiören (Ankara), Mamak, Ankara, Etimesgut, Niğde, Nevşehir, Pınarbaşı, Kayseri, etc.[7]

In 2000, Türk Telekom produced a series of smart cards dedicated to the topic.[8]

In January 2015, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan received Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in the Turkish Presidential Palace with a guard of 16 "warriors", actors wearing loosely historical armour and costume, intended to symbolise the 16 empires.[9] The costumes were ridiculed in Turkish media outlets, and one of the costumes in particular was mocked as a "bathrobe", becoming a trend on social media under the name of Duşakabinoğulları (lit. "sons of the shower cabin", more idiomatically "Showercabinids").Dedicated to the principalities ending with the suffix -oğlu (English suffix -ids) in the Anatolian principalities[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. H. Feridun Demokan, Contemporary Turkey: Geography, History, Economy, Art, Tourism, Demokan, 1978, p. 4. Necdet Evliyagil, Sami Güner, Basın-Yayın Genel Müdürlüğü, Ajans-Türk, Türkiye: Cumhuriyetin 50. Yıl Kitabı, Ajans-Türk Matbaacılık Sanayii, 1973.
  2. X. Türk Tarih Kongresi, Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1994, p. 2947.)
  3. Web site: Fors. T.C. Cumhurbaşkanlığı. tr.
  4. http://tarihgazetesi.net/index.php/yazilar/makaleler/1592-16-tuerk-devleti-ve-nihal-ats-z On line history newspaper
  5. Ivan Sache, Presentation of the Sixteen Great Turkish Empires and their alleged flags, Flags of the World, 4 July 2004; c.f. jpeg of the 1984 stamp series. The flags were designed by Özbek in 1969. They are mostly imaginary, with the exception of the 1844 Ottoman flag, and arguably the wolf's head and the bow-and-arrow used as emblems for the Göktürk and the Seljuk states, respectively. Ekrem Buğra Ekinci, 16 TÜRK DEVLETİ Cumhurbaşkanlığı forsundaki 16 yıldız neyi ifade ediyor?, 2 February 2015.
  6. Central Eurasian Studies Review, Vol. 3, Central Eurasian Studies Society, 2004, p. 23
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20160814032941/http://www.fotokritik.com/arama/ankara%20ke%C3%A7i%C3%B6ren/2 Keçiören
  8. http://www.turkcards.com/c/chip2001.html Büyük Türk Devletleri
  9. Web site: Spear-carriers and chainmail warriors: Erdogan's palace welcome. Yahoo! News. 14 January 2015.
  10. Web site: 'Duşakabinoğulları' istifa getirdi: O kıyafete 'bornoz' diyen dekan görevinden ayrıldı. 17 January 2015 . Diken. tr. 29 May 2016. Web site: Duşakabinoğulları 3 ay sürmüş!. 16 January 2015 . Sözcü. tr. 29 May 2016. Web site: Duşakabinoğullarını Dolmabahçe Sarayı'na getirdi. Birgün. tr. 29 May 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160527032843/http://www.birgun.net/haber-detay/dusakabinogullarini-dolmabahce-sarayi-na-getirdi-113348.html. 2016-05-27. dead. The Takvim daily newspaper omitted a label for this particular costume (Western Hunnic Empire) by mistake; diken.com.tr.