
Syrian Turkmen (Arabic: تركمان سوريا, romanized: Turkumān Sūriyā; Turkish: Suriye Türkmenleri) are Syrian citizens of Turkish origin who mainly trace their roots to Anatolia (i.e. modern Turkey). Turkish-speaking Syrian Turkmen make up the third largest ethnic group in the country, after the Arabs and Kurds respectively.
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Regions with significant populations | |
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See areas of settlement | |
Languages | |
Turkish · Arabic | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Sunni Islam, minority Alevism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Turkish people · Iraqi Turkmen · Palestinian Turkmen · Turks in Egypt · Lebanese Turkmen · Israeli Turkmen · Azerbaijanis |
The majority of Syrian Turkmen are the descendants of migrants who arrived in Syria during Ottoman rule (1516–1918); however, there are also many Syrian Turkmen who are the descendants of earlier Turkish settlers that arrived during the Seljuk (1037–1194) and Mamluk (1250–1517) periods. Some estimates indicate that if Arabized Turkmen (those who no longer speak Turkish as their main language) are taken into account, they form the second-largest group in the country. The majority of Syrian Turkmen are Sunni Muslims.
Syrian Turkmen share common genealogical and linguistic ties with the Turkish people in Turkey and Iraqi Turkmen, but do not identify themselves with the Turkmen of Turkmenistan and Central Asia. Most live near the Syrian-Turkish border, in an area that runs from the northwestern governorates of Idlib and Aleppo to the Raqqa Governorate. Others reside in the Turkmen Mountain near Latakia, the city of Homs and its vicinity until Hama, Damascus, and the southwestern governorates of Daraa (bordering Jordan) and Quneitra (bordering Israel).
During the ongoing Syrian Civil War, many Syrian Turkmen were involved in military action against the Assad regime until its fall in December 2024. Additionally, they have been fighting against the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), and have looked to the Turkish Armed Forces for support and protection. Many united under an official governing body, the Syrian Turkmen Assembly, and established the military wing of the assembly, the Syrian Turkmen Brigades. However, not all Turkmen support the Turkish occupation of northern Syria, and some have sided with the SDF, forming the Seljuk Brigade.
History

Turkic migration to Syria began in the 11th century during the rule of the Seljuk Empire. However, most Turkmen settled in the region after the Ottoman sultan Selim I conquered Syria in 1516. The Ottoman administration encouraged Turcoman families from Anatolia to establish villages throughout the rural hinterlands of several cities in Ottoman Syria (and later the Syria Vilayet). Migration from Anatolia to Syria was continuous for over 400 years of Ottoman rule, until the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in 1918; nonetheless, Syrian Turkmen community continued to reside in the region during the French Mandate and the formation of Syrian Republics.
Seljuk era
Syrian Turkmen have had a presence in Syria since the 11th century. The first recorded entry of free Turkmen troops into Syria was in 1064 when the Turkmen prince Ibn Khan and 1,000 of his archers entered Aleppo. He came at the request of the Arab Mirdasid emir Atiyya ibn Salih to assist him against his own Banu Kilab tribesmen who backed a rival Mirdasid emir, Mahmud ibn Nasr. Turkmen rule in the region began with the Seljuk conquests in the Middle East. The Seljuk Turks opened the way for mass migration of Turkish nomads once they entered northern Syria in 1071, and took Damascus in 1078 and Aleppo in 1086. By the 12tn century the Turkic Zengid dynasty (a vassal of the Seljuk Empire) continued to settle Turkmen in the wilayah of Aleppo to confront attacks from the Crusaders. In return for their military service, the Turkic rulers distributed fiefs in the area to the Turkmen.
Mamluk era

In 1260, the Mamluk Sultanate – ruled by a line of Turkish and Circassian sultans – entered Syria in response to the Mongol invasions. Whilst Cairo remained the seat of the Mamluk Sultanate, Damascus became their second capital. Hence, by the thirteenth century, the Turkmen formed a part of the armies of Damascus and Aleppo, and permanently settled in these regions. After the Bahri sultan of the Mamluks, Baibars, destroyed Qara he settled Turkmen in the town in 1265. Two years later, he settled more Turkmen in the Syrian coast to protect the region. The Turkmen were called on to assist in the capture of Margat by the Muslim commander of the Krak des Chevaliers in 1280. The late Mamluk-era writer Ahmad al-Qalqashandi noted that Turkmen formed contingents in the regular armies of greater Syria. By the 15th century, the Muslim writer Khalil az-Zahiri recorded 180,000 Turkmen soldiers and 20,000 Kurdish soldiers in Syria. The Turkmen mainly lived in the provinces of Aleppo and were settled in suburbs such as al-Hadir al-Sulaymani; they also live near the coast and the Jawlan (i.e. Golan Heights).
Ottoman era

Mamluk rule of Syria ended once the Ottoman Sultan Selim I conquered the region in 1516–17. Thereafter, the Ottoman administration encouraged Turkish nomads from Anatolia to settle in strategic areas of the region. By the sixteenth century the Ottomans continued to settle Turkmen in the rural areas around Homs and Hama to keep the Bedouin in check and serve as mütesellim.

Turkish migration from Anatolia to Ottoman Syria was continuous for almost 400 years, until Ottoman rule ended in 1918. The Turkish settlement throughout the rural hinterlands of several Syrian cities was a state-organized population transfer which was used to counter the demographic weight and influence of other ethnic groups in the region. Furthermore, the Turkmen served as the local gendarmes to help assert Ottoman authority.
By the late nineteenth century, many Turkish refugees who lost their lands to Russia in the European regions of the Ottoman Empire (particularly in the Balkans) settled in Ottoman Syria between 1878 and 1906 and were provided with new lands by the Ottoman state. According to Dawn Chatty, these Turkmen settlers (alongside Circassian and Chechen refugees) became loyal subjects to the sultan and were "driven to succeed in agriculture and ready to defend themselves against any Bedouin claims to the land on which they had built their villages".
Vilayet of Aleppo
According to the French geographer Vital Cuinet (1833–96), the Ottoman Turks (excluding Turkmen nomads) formed the second largest ethnic group, after the Syrian Arabs, in the Aleppo Sanjak. In his best known work La Turquie d'Asie, géographie administrative: statistique, descriptive et raisonnée de chaque province de l'Asie Mineure he stated that the demographic structure of the Sanjak was as follows:
Ethnic and religious groups | Estimated population in the Aleppo Sanjak (ca.1890-95)[page needed] | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Syrian Arab | 300,541 | 38.41% |
Ottoman Turk | 159,787 | 20.43% |
Kurdish and Turkmen nomads | 103,744 | 13.26% |
Greek Catholic | 23,315 | 2.98% |
Syrian Catholic | 20,913 | 2.67% |
Syrian Jacobite | 20,594 | 2.63% |
Jew | 19,633 | 2.51% |
Greek Orthodox | 18,665 | 2.39% |
Armenian Apostolic | 17,999 | 2.30% |
Chaldean Catholic | 17,027 | 2.18% |
Armenian Catholic | 15,563 | 1.96% |
Chaldean non-Uniate | 15,300 | 1.96% |
Protestant | 9,033 | 1.15% |
Circassian | 9,000 | 1.15% |
Other Muslims (Fellah, Ansarieh, Tahtaji, Nusairi) | 26,713 | 3.41% |
Other Catholic (Latin and Maronite) | 4,447 | 0.57% |
Total | 782,274 | 100% |
French Mandate
The Alexandretta/Hatay Question



In 1921, the Treaty of Ankara established Alexandretta (present-day Hatay) under an autonomous regime under French Mandate of Syria. The Turks were initially satisfied with this agreement, because Article 7 declared that "The Turkish inhabitants of this district shall enjoy every facility for their cultural development. The Turkish language shall have official recognition." Moreover, Article 9 stated that the tomb of Suleyman Shah, grandfather of the first Ottoman ruler Osman I, "shall remain, with its appurtenances, the property of Turkey."
Population of Hatay State in 1936 according to the French census | ||||||
Ethnic group | Inhabitants | % | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turks | 85,800 | 39% | ||||
Alawites | 61,600 | 28% | ||||
Armenians | 24,200 | 11% | ||||
Sunni Arabs | 22,000 | 10% | ||||
other Christians | 17,600 | 8% | ||||
Circassians, Jews, Kurds | 8,800 | 4% | ||||
Total | 220,000 | 100% |
In September 1936, France announced that it would grant full independence to Syria, which would also include Alexandretta. The President of the Republic of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, responded with a demand that Alexandretta be given its own independence. The issue was brought before the League of Nations, which sent a mission to the district in January 1937. The mission concluded that the Turks constituted a majority and by July 1938 elections were held in the province; the Turks formed a majority of 22 seats in a 40-seat parliament of the newly established Hatay State, which remained a joint Franco-Turkish protectorate. The Hatay State began using Turkish flags, and petitioned Ankara to unify Hatay to the Republic of Turkey. France finally agreed to the Turkish annexation on 23 July 1939. Today, the Bayırbucak region, the coastal and rural section covering the northern Latakia area, has a considerable Turkmen presence and is considered by some Turks as a "stretch of the modern Turkish Hatay Province".
Syrian Republican era



After the Sanjak of Alexandretta became the province of Hatay in the Republic of Turkey, in 1939, some Turkish families immigrated into the new borders of Syria, settling in the provinces of Aleppo and Damascus. Hence, new "Turkish streets" began to emerge, such as in the al-Salihia district in Damascus. Family unifications of Turkmen families living on both sides of the Syrian-Turkish border continued for more than 70 years until the outbreak of the Syrian revolution.
By 1950, Latakia showed great economic potential as the largest port city in Syria, and many Syrian Turkmen living in rural villages joined the Turkmen community already established there. Consequently, there is now a total of 265 Turkish villages in and around Latakia center.
In addition to urban migrations, under the name of "land reform", lands owned by the Turkmen were nationalized and Arabs were resettled in areas near the Turkish border. Arabization policies also saw the names of Turkish villages renamed with Arabic names. Thus, a mass exodus of Syrian Turkmen migration to Turkey took place between 1945 and 1953, many of which settled in Kirikhan, Alexandretta and Adana, in southern Turkey.
The cultural and political rights of the Turkish-speaking minority remaining in Syrian territories was not guaranteed under any legal constitution. Those living in large groups managed to protect their cultural identity, however, Turkmen living in smaller groups were significantly Arabized. In any case, the minority had no rights to open Turkish schools or associations.
By the late 20th century, Dr. Larry Clark stated there was "more than 200,000" Turkmen in Syria whilst the Turkish-speaking Sunni Muslim population (i.e. not including Arabized or Alevi/Shia Turkmen) at approximately 3% of Syria's population, including Professor Daniel Pipes Professor Itamar Rabinovich, Professor Moshe Ma'oz, Dr. Nikolaos van Dam, Dr Henry Munson, Professor Alasdair Drysdale and Professor Raymond Hinnebusch.
stated that estimates ranged between 800,000 and 1 million. Numerous academics placed theSyrian Civil War (2011–present)
Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, large numbers of Syrian Turkmen have been displaced from their homes and many have been killed due to attacks by President Bashar al-Assad's government, as well as the terrorist attacks carried out by "Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant" (ISIL). Whilst Turkmen villages in Hama, Homs, and Latakia have been destroyed by the Syrian government, Turkmen villages in Aleppo were occupied by ISIL.


Syrian Turkmen, with the support of the Republic of Turkey, have taken up arms against the Syrian government. Several Syrian Turkmen parties united under the Syrian Turkmen Assembly, which is affiliated with the National Coalition opposition group. A Second Coastal Division was formed in 2015 and along with another extensive Turkmen militia group Sultan Murad Division, the Turkmen brigades are closely affiliated with the Free Syrian Army (FSA). Another Syrian Turkmen unit – the Seljuk Brigade and the Manbij Turkmen Brigade – have sided with the Kurdish-led People's Protection Units (YPG) and joined the US-backed Kurdish-led opposition coalition called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
Displacement
Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war many Syrian refugees (including Syrian Turkmen) have sought asylum in Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and northern Iraq, as well as several Western European countries and Australia. Moreover, many Syrian Turkmen have also been internally displaced from their homes, forcing them to settle in other parts of Syria.[citation needed]

In 2012 the UN Refugee Agency had stated that Syrian Turkmen formed a significant number of the first wave of refugees who entered Turkey.
An article published by Reuters in 2015, reporting the Russian raids hitting Syrian Turkmen areas (after a Russian plane was shot down on the Turkey-Syria border), said that "Officials estimate 300,000 Turkmen used to live in northern Latakia" before the Russians "heavily targeted ethnic Turkmen areas."Al Jazeera English has also reported that the "Russian escalation of attacks on Turkmen areas" displaced "300,000 Turkmen from northern Latakia alone."
By the Syrian Government
The Syrian Government of president Bashar al-Assad, backed by Russia since 2015, have targeted several areas populated by Syrian Turkmen, as they were largely involved in anti-government attacks. On 2 February 2016, at least seven women and children were killed by Russian air strikes in a Syrian Turkmen village in the northern countryside of Homs. In the same month Russian warplanes had staged 600 strikes on Syrian Turkmen villages, displacing approximately 10,000 people.
By the YPG
There were also reports of forced displacement of Arabs, Syrian Turkmen and Kurdish civilians at the hands of the YPG from their homes in areas in the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria. In June 2015 there was concern expressed by the UN Human Rights Council regarding displacement of Syrian Turkmen from their homes in villages south of Hasakah and Tal Abyad during fighting with ISIL. Approximately 200 Syrian Turkmen refugees fled to Urfa, in southern Turkey, while 700 more fled to the eastern areas of Tal Abyad, once the YPG seized the town of Tell Hammam al-Turkman from ISIL, and there were claims that the YPG had accused the locals of collaborating with ISIL.
Current population
There are no reliable estimates on the total number of ethnic minorities living in Syria because official censuses conducted under the Assad regime had only asked citizens about their religion. Therefore, Syrian citizens were not allowed to declare their ethnic origin nor their mother tongue. Dr. Abdelwahed Mekki-Berrada, in a report published by the UNHCR, points out that the majority of Syrians are considered Arab, however, this is a term based on their spoken language, and not their ethnic affiliation. Consequently, this has created difficulties in estimating the total Syrian Turkmen population, which includes both Turkish-speaking as well as Arabized Turkmen.
According to Professor Taef El-Azhari, the Syrian Turkmen “have always been the forgotten minority in the area, despite their large population.” Various professors, such as Dr. Abdelwahed Mekki-Berrada and Pierre Beckouche, have all placed the Turkish-speaking Syrian Turkmen as the third largest ethnic group in the country, after Arabs and Kurds respectively. Yet, a report published by the Arab Reform Initiative suggests that they may form the second largest ethnic group if Arabized Turkmen are also taken into account:
"Turkmen are the third largest ethnic group in Syria, making up around 4-5% of the population. Some estimations indicate that they are the second biggest group, outnumbering Kurds, drawing on the fact that Turkmen are divided into two groups: the rural Turkmen who make up 30% of the Turkmen in Syria and who have kept their mother tongue, and the urban Turkmen who have become Arabised and no longer speak their mother language. Turkmen are mostly found in the urban centres and countryside of six governorates of Syria: Aleppo, Damascus, Homs, Hama, Latakia and Quneitra." – Mustafa Khalifa (2013, published by the Arab Reform Initiative)
Estimates since the Syrian Civil War
Assistant Professor Sebastian Maisel, focusing on the Yezidis, claimed that Syrian Turkmen numbered 250,000, which constitutes approximately 1% of the population. However, Professor Pierre Beckouche stated that Sunni Muslim Turkmen alone formed 4% of the country's population before 2011, with their population estimated at approximately 1 million. Professor John Shoup has said that in 2018, the Turkish-speaking Syrian Turkmen formed around 4-5% of the population. Dr. Jonathan Spyer, as well as a report published in cooperation between the Norwegian Church Aid and the World Council of Churches, stated that the Syrian Turkmen number anywhere from 500,000 to 3 million. Professor Pierre Piccinin claims that whilst 1.5 million Syrian Turkmen are Turkish-speaking, their total population is between 3.5 and 6 million (15% to 20% of the population), including those who have adopted Arabic as their mother tongue.
Diaspora


Middle East
Turkey
In December 2016, the Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Ümit Yalçın stated that Turkey had opened its borders to around 500,000 Syrian Turkmen. Most Syrian Turkmen settled in Istanbul, Gaziantep, Osmaniye, Hatay, Izmir, Malatya, and Konya.
In 2020, the Voice of America reported that 1,000,000 Syrian Turkmen, including their descendants, who are living in Turkey have requested to become Turkish citizens.
Lebanon
In October 2015, the Syrian independent newspaper Zaman Al Wasl reported that around 120,000 to 150,000 Syrian Turkmen were refugees in Lebanon, hence outnumbering the Turkish minority of Lebanon. By 2018, the number of Syrian Turkmen in Lebanon had increased to approximately 200,000.
Jordan
A substantial number of Syrian Turkmen refugees had also sought refuge in Jordan.
Europe
Outside of the Middle East, Syrian Turkmen refugees have mainly migrated to Western Europe, particularly Germany.
Germany
Established in Germany, the "Suriye Türkmen Kültür ve Yardımlaşma Derneği – Avrupa", or "STKYDA" (“Syrian Turkmen Culture and Solidarity Association – Europe”), was the first Syrian Turkmen association to be launched in Europe. It was established in order to help the growing Syrian Turkmen community, which arrived to the country as part of the European migrant crisis, which started in 2014 and saw its peak in 2015. The association includes Syrian Turkmen youth activists who originate from various Syrian cities and now reside across Western Europe.
Areas of settlement



Most Syrian Turkmen live in the area around the northern Euphrates, near the Syrian-Turkish border; however, they are also scattered throughout several governorates, stretching towards central Syria and the southern region near the Golan Heights. In particular, the Turkmen are concentrated in the urban centers and countryside of six governorates of Syria: in the Aleppo Governorate, the Damascus Governorate, the Homs Governorate, the Hama Governorate, the Latakia Governorate and the Quneitra Governorate. There are also smaller Turkmen communities living in the Daraa Governorate; as well as in Tartous, Raqqa, and Idlib governorates.
In the Aleppo governorate, the main locales in which the Turkmen live include the city of Aleppo (with Bustan al-Basha, Haydariyah, Hllok, Sheikh Hizir, Sheikh Feriz, Saladdin, Owaijah being neighborhoods with ethnic Turkmen populations) and the countryside in the northern part of the governorate. They also live in the villages next to the cities of Azaz, Al-Bab, and Jarabulus.Al-Rai is also a Turkmen-dominated town. There are 16 Turkmen-dominated villages south of Mount Simeon, 17 Turkmen villages in the district of Azaz, 29 villages to the east of that region, 3 villages connected to Aleppo, 69 villages around Al-Rai, 26 villages in the vicinity of Jarabulus, and 23 villages south of Sajur River.
In the Latakia governorate the Turkmen live mostly in the Turkmen Mountains (Jabal al-Turkman), Al-Badrusiyah, Umm al-Tuyour, and in various villages near the Syrian-Turkish border. There is also a number of Turkmen districts, including Bayırbucak and Jimmel Harresi where there are many Turkmen villages.
In the Damascus governorate the Turkmen live in the city of Damascus, and Harret Al Turkman is a Turkmen district where Turkish is predominantly spoken. In the Homs governorate the Turkmen mostly live in the city of Homs and the surrounding villages, such as Kara Avshar, Inallu, and Kapushak. They also live in Gharnatah, , Burj Qa'i, , and in villages in the Houla plain. In the Hama governorate the Turkmen live in the city of Hama and are also scattered in numerous villages around the district. For example, Baba Amir Haras is a prominent Turkmen district. There are also Turkmen living in Aqrab and Talaf. In the Quneitra governorate the Turkmen are scattered in numerous villages in the districts of Quneitra. They predominantly reside in the villages of Dababiye, Rezaniye, Sindiyane, Aynul Kara, Aynul Simsim, Ulayka, Aynul Alak, Ahmediye, Kafer Nafah, Mugir, Hafir, Hüseyniye, and Ayn Ayse.
Culture
Language


According to The Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics, the Turkish language is the third most widely used language in Syria (after Arabic and Kurdish). It is spoken by the Turkmen minority mostly in villages east of the Euphrates, north of Aleppo, and on the northern coast of the country, along the Syrian-Turkish border. In addition, there are Turkish language islands in the Qalamun area and the Homs area. Moreover, Syrian Arabic dialects have also borrowed many loanwords from Turkish. Mustafa Khalifa claims that, Turkmen are divided into two groups: Rural Turkish-speaking Turkmen, constituting 30% of Syrian Turkmen, and Urban Arabic-speaking Turkmen.
Various dialects of Turkish are spoken throughout Syria: in Aleppo they speak a Kilis and Antep dialect; in Tell Abyad and Raqqa they speak an Urfa dialect; and in Bayırbucak they speak a Hatay/Yayladağı dialect of the Turkish language. Some Syrian Turkmen living far from the Turkish border, such as in Homs, have managed to preserve their national identity but are more competent in speaking the Arabic language. In Damascus Syrian Turkmen speak the Turkish language of a Yörük dialect.
In 2018 Dr. Eldad J. Pardo and Maya Jacobi reported that they did not identify any Turkish (nor Kurdish or Aramaic) teaching, either as a first or second language, in the Syrian national curriculum.
- Bilingual sign (Arabic and Turkish) of Al-Rai Council.
- Bilingual sign (Arabic and Turkish) of Al-Bab police station.
Religion
The majority of Syrian Turkmen are Sunni Muslims, but there is also a small minority of Turkmen who are Shia Muslims (particularly Alevis and Bektashis). Ali Öztürkmen claims that the Turkmen community is 99% Sunni whilst the remainder (1%) practice Shia Islam.
- The Al-Adiliyah Mosque (Turkish: Adliye Camii) in Aleppo was built by the Ottomans in 1566.
- The Khusruwiyah Mosque (Turkish: Hüsreviye Camii) in Aleppo was built by the Ottomans in 1547.
- The Murad Pasha Mosque (Turkish: Şam Murat Paşa Camii) in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in 1568.
- The Sinan Pasha Mosque (Turkish: Sinan Paşa Camii) in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in 1590.
- The Sulaymaniyya Takiyya (known in Turkish as Şam Süleymaniye Külliyesi) in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in the sixteenth century.
There are also some Syrian "Nawar people" (a derogatory term for people who live a mobile lifestyle – often described as "gypsies") who speak Turkish, some of whom self-identify as Turkmen; those practicing Islam belong to the Sunni, Shiite, and Alevi/Bektashi religious groups. There are also some who practice Christianity.
Discrimination


From the French mandate era to the Assad regime, the Turkish culture and language have perished for a section of the Syrian Turkmen community. Many Syrian Turkmen have become Arabized and indistinguishable from the Arabs in areas where they form a minority. Consequently, Arabization is mainly an exception in areas where the Syrian Turkmen live in areas where they form a significant population, where they have continued to maintain their Turkish identity and language despite discriminative state policies.
Under the rule of Hafez al-Assad, there has been a ban on Syrian Turkmen communities from publishing works in Turkish.
Syrian Turkmen occupied a low rung on the societal ladder, as reported by Al Bawaba, it was stated that Assad always sought to benefit his politically dominant Alawite religious minority. The report quoted Bayırbucak Turkmen as highlighting, "They would take Alawites first no matter what, even if they had degrees, Turkmen couldn't find jobs".
Notable people







Several Turkish families, such as the al-Atassi (Atasi), Bey Kanj Pasha Zadeh (Genç Yussef Pasha 1807–1811), Al-Azm, Qawuqji, Quwwatli (Kuvvetli) and Shishakli (Çiçekçi), continued to rule Syria as Prime Ministers or Presidents. However, by the 1960s the pan-Arab Baathist movement of the Al-Assad family sidelined non-Arabs from politics.
- Armande Altaï, French singer
- Akshamsaddin, Ottoman religious scholar
- , Genç Pasha-Zadeh, Ottoman governor of Damascus state 1807–1811.
- Al-Azm family
- Abdullah Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Damascus
- As'ad Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Hama and Damascus
- Haqqi al-Azm, former prime minister of Syria
- (ar), poet and human rights activist
- Ismail Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Hama, Homs Tripoli and Damascus
- Khalid al-Azm, six-time former prime minister of Syria
- (ar), first president of the first parliament in Syria
- Muhammad Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Sidon and Damascus
- Rafīq Bey al-ʿAzm, intellectual, author, and politician
- Sa'deddin Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Aleppo and Egypt (among others)
- (ar), traveler and Ottoman military commander
- Sadiq Jalal al-Azm, professor emeritus of Modern European Philosophy at the University of Damascus
- Sulayman Pasha al-Azm, Ottoman governor of Tripoli, Sidon and Damascus
- , Politician
- Bashir al-Azma, Prime Minister of Syria (1962)
- , Minister of Interior in Jordan (1925)
- Yasser al-Azma, Actor
- Yusuf al-'Azma, Minister of War in Syria (1920)
- Aziz al-Azmeh
- Subhi Barakat, first President of Syria (1922–1925)
- Burhan Asaf Belge, Turkish politician
- Mardam Bey family:
- Adnan Mardam Bey, lawyer, playwright and poet
- Farouk Mardam-Bey, French librarian, historian and publisher
- , First program director on Syrian TV
- Haydar Mardam Bey, diplomat
- Jamil Mardam Bey, Prime Minister of Syria (1936–1939)
- Khaled Mardam-Bey, British software developer and creator of mIRC
- Khalil Mardam Bey, Composer of the Syrian National Anthem
- Rashid Pasha Mardam Bey, judge
- Salma Mardam Bey, Writer
- Sami Mardam-Bey, politician who was elected deputy and vice-president of the Syrian federation
- (ar), Poet
- Cemil Bilsel, Turkish politician and academic
- , Second President of the Syrian Turkmen Assembly (2016–present)
- Mehmed Fuad Carim, Turkish politician
- Thanaa Debsi, Actress
- , Actress
- , Minister of Economy and Foreign Trade
- Nadia al-Ghazzi, Lawyer, writer, TV presenter
- Said al-Ghazzi, Prime Minister of Syria (in 1954 and 1955–56)
- Sati' al-Husri, writer
- , singer (contestant on The Voice France)
- Sami Sabit Karaman, General of the Turkish army
- Khaled Khoja, President of the Syrian National Coalition (2015–2016)
- Mehmet Muhittin Kurtiş, Turkish soldier
- Sanharib Malki, football player
- Taqi ad-Din Muhammad ibn Ma'ruf, Polymath
- , artist
- Abdurrahman Mustafa, First President of the Syrian Turkmen Assembly (2012–2016)
- Huda Naamani, Feminist writer
- Mustafa Naima, Ottoman historian
- Ahmad Nami, second President of Syria (1926–1928) and Ottoman damat
- Mahmud Kâmil Pasha, General of the Ottoman army
- Zeki Pasha, Ottoman Turkish field marshal
- Abu Khalil Qabbani, playwright and composer
- Nizar Qabbani, diplomat, poet and publisher
- Sabah Qabbani, Ambassador of Syria to the United States (1974–1981)
- children:
- Rana Kabbani, Syrian cultural historian
- Shukri al-Quwatli, First president of post-independence Syria (1943–1949) and (1955–1958).
- Aliye Rona, Turkish actress
- Reşit Ronabar, Ottoman governor and Turkish politician
- Suleyman Shah
- Hala Shawkat, Actress
- Adib Shishakli, Prime Minister and President of Syria (1953–1954)
- Talal Silo, former Syrian Democratic Forces spokesperson.
- Adil Şan, Singer
- Mehmet Şandır (tr), Turkish politician
- Pakize Tarzi, Turkey's first female gynaecologist
- Mustafa Tlass, Syrian Minister of Defense in (1972–2004)
- children:
- Manaf Tlass, former Brigadier General
- Firas Tlass, business tycoon
- Hasan Turkmani, Minister of Defense (2004–2009)
- children:
- Bilal Turkmani, owner of the Syrian weekly Abyad wa Aswad
- Rim Turkmani, astrophysicist
- Refi Cevat Ulunay (tr), Turkish writer
- Suat Hayri Ürgüplü, Prime Minister of Turkey (1965)
- (tr), Turkish politician
- Husni al-Za'im, President of Syria (1949)
- Muhammed Habes, Jarabulus Civilian Council President (since August 2016)
- Ahmed Othman, Old SAA colonel, leader of Sultan Murad Division since 2013
- Nur ad-Din Zengi, a member of the Turkish Zengid dynasty which ruled the Syrian province of the Seljuk Empire.
- Imad ad-Din Zengi, a Turkish atabeg who ruled Mosul, Aleppo, Hama, and Edessa. He was the namesake of the Zengid dynasty.
- Tutush I, Seljuk Emir of Damascus.
- Aq Sunqur al-Hajib, Seljuk governor of Aleppo.
See also
- List of armed groups in the Syrian Civil War
- Syrian Democratic Turkmen Movement
- Syria Turkmen Bloc
- Syria–Turkey relations
- Hatay Province
- Tomb of Suleyman Shah
- Turkish military intervention in Syria
- Northern al-Bab offensive (2016)
- Battle of al-Rai (August 2016)
- Turkish minorities in the former Ottoman Empire
- Turks in the Arab world
- Iraqi Turkmen
- Turks in Lebanon
- Turks in Egypt
- Turks in the Arab world
- Arabs in Turkey
Notes
- Also referred to as Syrian Turkomans, Turkish Syrians, or simply Syrian Turks or Turks of Syria (Suriye Türkleri).
References
- UNHCR 2015, p. 10.
- Shoup, John A. (2018), "Syria", The History of Syria, ABC-CLIO, p. 6, ISBN 978-1-4408-5835-2,
The third largest ethnic group in Syria is the Turkish speakers...They comprise around 4-5 percent of the total population
- Piccinin, Piere (2011), Après avoir été sur le terrain, La Libre Belgique,
Les Turcomans pratiquant exclusivement leur dialecte turc sont 1 500 000. L'ensemble des Turcomans de Syrie (y compris ceux qui ont adopté l'arabe comme langue usuelle), sont estimés entre 3,5 et 6 millions, soit de 15 à 20 % de la population. C'est le troisième groupe de population en importance.
- Behnstedt 2008, p. 402.
- Khalifa 2013, pp. 3–5.
- Özkaya 2007, p. 112.
- The New York Times (2015). "Who Are the Turkmens of Syria?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 14 January 2017. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
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Syrian Turkmen Arabic تركمان سوريا romanized Turkuman Suriya Turkish Suriye Turkmenleri are Syrian citizens of Turkish origin who mainly trace their roots to Anatolia i e modern Turkey Turkish speaking Syrian Turkmen make up the third largest ethnic group in the country after the Arabs and Kurds respectively Syrian Turkmen Suriye TurkmenleriRegions with significant populationsSee areas of settlementLanguagesTurkish ArabicReligionPredominantly Sunni Islam minority AlevismRelated ethnic groupsTurkish people Iraqi Turkmen Palestinian Turkmen Turks in Egypt Lebanese Turkmen Israeli Turkmen Azerbaijanis The majority of Syrian Turkmen are the descendants of migrants who arrived in Syria during Ottoman rule 1516 1918 however there are also many Syrian Turkmen who are the descendants of earlier Turkish settlers that arrived during the Seljuk 1037 1194 and Mamluk 1250 1517 periods Some estimates indicate that if Arabized Turkmen those who no longer speak Turkish as their main language are taken into account they form the second largest group in the country The majority of Syrian Turkmen are Sunni Muslims Syrian Turkmen share common genealogical and linguistic ties with the Turkish people in Turkey and Iraqi Turkmen but do not identify themselves with the Turkmen of Turkmenistan and Central Asia Most live near the Syrian Turkish border in an area that runs from the northwestern governorates of Idlib and Aleppo to the Raqqa Governorate Others reside in the Turkmen Mountain near Latakia the city of Homs and its vicinity until Hama Damascus and the southwestern governorates of Daraa bordering Jordan and Quneitra bordering Israel During the ongoing Syrian Civil War many Syrian Turkmen were involved in military action against the Assad regime until its fall in December 2024 Additionally they have been fighting against the Syrian Democratic Forces SDF and have looked to the Turkish Armed Forces for support and protection Many united under an official governing body the Syrian Turkmen Assembly and established the military wing of the assembly the Syrian Turkmen Brigades However not all Turkmen support the Turkish occupation of northern Syria and some have sided with the SDF forming the Seljuk Brigade HistoryThe Zengid ruler Nur al Din unified Syria after he took Damascus in 1154 Turkic migration to Syria began in the 11th century during the rule of the Seljuk Empire However most Turkmen settled in the region after the Ottoman sultan Selim I conquered Syria in 1516 The Ottoman administration encouraged Turcoman families from Anatolia to establish villages throughout the rural hinterlands of several cities in Ottoman Syria and later the Syria Vilayet Migration from Anatolia to Syria was continuous for over 400 years of Ottoman rule until the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in 1918 nonetheless Syrian Turkmen community continued to reside in the region during the French Mandate and the formation of Syrian Republics Seljuk era Syrian Turkmen have had a presence in Syria since the 11th century The first recorded entry of free Turkmen troops into Syria was in 1064 when the Turkmen prince Ibn Khan and 1 000 of his archers entered Aleppo He came at the request of the Arab Mirdasid emir Atiyya ibn Salih to assist him against his own Banu Kilab tribesmen who backed a rival Mirdasid emir Mahmud ibn Nasr Turkmen rule in the region began with the Seljuk conquests in the Middle East The Seljuk Turks opened the way for mass migration of Turkish nomads once they entered northern Syria in 1071 and took Damascus in 1078 and Aleppo in 1086 By the 12tn century the Turkic Zengid dynasty a vassal of the Seljuk Empire continued to settle Turkmen in the wilayah of Aleppo to confront attacks from the Crusaders In return for their military service the Turkic rulers distributed fiefs in the area to the Turkmen Mamluk era A Mamluk from Aleppo In 1260 the Mamluk Sultanate ruled by a line of Turkish and Circassian sultans entered Syria in response to the Mongol invasions Whilst Cairo remained the seat of the Mamluk Sultanate Damascus became their second capital Hence by the thirteenth century the Turkmen formed a part of the armies of Damascus and Aleppo and permanently settled in these regions After the Bahri sultan of the Mamluks Baibars destroyed Qara he settled Turkmen in the town in 1265 Two years later he settled more Turkmen in the Syrian coast to protect the region The Turkmen were called on to assist in the capture of Margat by the Muslim commander of the Krak des Chevaliers in 1280 The late Mamluk era writer Ahmad al Qalqashandi noted that Turkmen formed contingents in the regular armies of greater Syria By the 15th century the Muslim writer Khalil az Zahiri recorded 180 000 Turkmen soldiers and 20 000 Kurdish soldiers in Syria The Turkmen mainly lived in the provinces of Aleppo and were settled in suburbs such as al Hadir al Sulaymani they also live near the coast and the Jawlan i e Golan Heights Ottoman era Syria came under Ottoman rule once Selim I conquered the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt in 1516 17 Mamluk rule of Syria ended once the Ottoman Sultan Selim I conquered the region in 1516 17 Thereafter the Ottoman administration encouraged Turkish nomads from Anatolia to settle in strategic areas of the region By the sixteenth century the Ottomans continued to settle Turkmen in the rural areas around Homs and Hama to keep the Bedouin in check and serve as mutesellim Turkmens Turcomanos shown inhabiting the western side of the Euphrates in modern day northwestern Syria in Atlas historico de Tierra Santa 1840 Turkish migration from Anatolia to Ottoman Syria was continuous for almost 400 years until Ottoman rule ended in 1918 The Turkish settlement throughout the rural hinterlands of several Syrian cities was a state organized population transfer which was used to counter the demographic weight and influence of other ethnic groups in the region Furthermore the Turkmen served as the local gendarmes to help assert Ottoman authority By the late nineteenth century many Turkish refugees who lost their lands to Russia in the European regions of the Ottoman Empire particularly in the Balkans settled in Ottoman Syria between 1878 and 1906 and were provided with new lands by the Ottoman state According to Dawn Chatty these Turkmen settlers alongside Circassian and Chechen refugees became loyal subjects to the sultan and were driven to succeed in agriculture and ready to defend themselves against any Bedouin claims to the land on which they had built their villages Vilayet of Aleppo According to the French geographer Vital Cuinet 1833 96 the Ottoman Turks excluding Turkmen nomads formed the second largest ethnic group after the Syrian Arabs in the Aleppo Sanjak In his best known work La Turquie d Asie geographie administrative statistique descriptive et raisonnee de chaque province de l Asie Mineure he stated that the demographic structure of the Sanjak was as follows Ethnic and religious groups Estimated population in the Aleppo Sanjak ca 1890 95 page needed PercentageSyrian Arab 300 541 38 41 Ottoman Turk 159 787 20 43 Kurdish and Turkmen nomads 103 744 13 26 Greek Catholic 23 315 2 98 Syrian Catholic 20 913 2 67 Syrian Jacobite 20 594 2 63 Jew 19 633 2 51 Greek Orthodox 18 665 2 39 Armenian Apostolic 17 999 2 30 Chaldean Catholic 17 027 2 18 Armenian Catholic 15 563 1 96 Chaldean non Uniate 15 300 1 96 Protestant 9 033 1 15 Circassian 9 000 1 15 Other Muslims Fellah Ansarieh Tahtaji Nusairi 26 713 3 41 Other Catholic Latin and Maronite 4 447 0 57 Total 782 274 100 French Mandate The Alexandretta Hatay Question In 1938 the Hatay State was formed in the Sanjak of Alexandretta of the French Mandate of Syria It was annexed by Turkey in 1939 and became the Hatay Province Tayfur Sokmen was the President of the Hatay State Abdurrahman Melek was the Prime Minister of the Hatay State In 1921 the Treaty of Ankara established Alexandretta present day Hatay under an autonomous regime under French Mandate of Syria The Turks were initially satisfied with this agreement because Article 7 declared that The Turkish inhabitants of this district shall enjoy every facility for their cultural development The Turkish language shall have official recognition Moreover Article 9 stated that the tomb of Suleyman Shah grandfather of the first Ottoman ruler Osman I shall remain with its appurtenances the property of Turkey Population of Hatay State in 1936 according to the French censusEthnic group Inhabitants Turks 85 800 39 Alawites 61 600 28 Armenians 24 200 11 Sunni Arabs 22 000 10 other Christians 17 600 8 Circassians Jews Kurds 8 800 4 Total 220 000 100 In September 1936 France announced that it would grant full independence to Syria which would also include Alexandretta The President of the Republic of Turkey Mustafa Kemal Ataturk responded with a demand that Alexandretta be given its own independence The issue was brought before the League of Nations which sent a mission to the district in January 1937 The mission concluded that the Turks constituted a majority and by July 1938 elections were held in the province the Turks formed a majority of 22 seats in a 40 seat parliament of the newly established Hatay State which remained a joint Franco Turkish protectorate The Hatay State began using Turkish flags and petitioned Ankara to unify Hatay to the Republic of Turkey France finally agreed to the Turkish annexation on 23 July 1939 Today the Bayirbucak region the coastal and rural section covering the northern Latakia area has a considerable Turkmen presence and is considered by some Turks as a stretch of the modern Turkish Hatay Province Syrian Republican era Subhi Barakat of Turkish origin was the first President of Syria Of Turkish origin Khalil Mardam Bey was the composer of the Syrian National Anthem Traditional flag of Syrian Turkmen After the Sanjak of Alexandretta became the province of Hatay in the Republic of Turkey in 1939 some Turkish families immigrated into the new borders of Syria settling in the provinces of Aleppo and Damascus Hence new Turkish streets began to emerge such as in the al Salihia district in Damascus Family unifications of Turkmen families living on both sides of the Syrian Turkish border continued for more than 70 years until the outbreak of the Syrian revolution By 1950 Latakia showed great economic potential as the largest port city in Syria and many Syrian Turkmen living in rural villages joined the Turkmen community already established there Consequently there is now a total of 265 Turkish villages in and around Latakia center In addition to urban migrations under the name of land reform lands owned by the Turkmen were nationalized and Arabs were resettled in areas near the Turkish border Arabization policies also saw the names of Turkish villages renamed with Arabic names Thus a mass exodus of Syrian Turkmen migration to Turkey took place between 1945 and 1953 many of which settled in Kirikhan Alexandretta and Adana in southern Turkey The cultural and political rights of the Turkish speaking minority remaining in Syrian territories was not guaranteed under any legal constitution Those living in large groups managed to protect their cultural identity however Turkmen living in smaller groups were significantly Arabized In any case the minority had no rights to open Turkish schools or associations By the late 20th century Dr Larry Clark stated there was more than 200 000 Turkmen in Syria whilst the de stated that estimates ranged between 800 000 and 1 million Numerous academics placed the Turkish speaking Sunni Muslim population i e not including Arabized or Alevi Shia Turkmen at approximately 3 of Syria s population including Professor Daniel Pipes Professor Itamar Rabinovich Professor Moshe Ma oz Dr Nikolaos van Dam Dr Henry Munson Professor Alasdair Drysdale and Professor Raymond Hinnebusch Syrian Civil War 2011 present Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011 large numbers of Syrian Turkmen have been displaced from their homes and many have been killed due to attacks by President Bashar al Assad s government as well as the terrorist attacks carried out by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL Whilst Turkmen villages in Hama Homs and Latakia have been destroyed by the Syrian government Turkmen villages in Aleppo were occupied by ISIL One of the flags used to represent the Syrian Turkmen community Flag of Syrian Turkmen adopted by the Syrian Turkmen Assembly Syrian Turkmen with the support of the Republic of Turkey have taken up arms against the Syrian government Several Syrian Turkmen parties united under the Syrian Turkmen Assembly which is affiliated with the National Coalition opposition group A Second Coastal Division was formed in 2015 and along with another extensive Turkmen militia group Sultan Murad Division the Turkmen brigades are closely affiliated with the Free Syrian Army FSA Another Syrian Turkmen unit the Seljuk Brigade and the Manbij Turkmen Brigade have sided with the Kurdish led People s Protection Units YPG and joined the US backed Kurdish led opposition coalition called the Syrian Democratic Forces SDF Displacement Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war many Syrian refugees including Syrian Turkmen have sought asylum in Turkey Jordan Lebanon and northern Iraq as well as several Western European countries and Australia Moreover many Syrian Turkmen have also been internally displaced from their homes forcing them to settle in other parts of Syria citation needed Syrian Turks waving Turkish and Syrian flags whilst shouting slogans No To Demographic Changes in Syria and No To Genocide during the December 2016 protests in London In 2012 the UN Refugee Agency had stated that Syrian Turkmen formed a significant number of the first wave of refugees who entered Turkey An article published by Reuters in 2015 reporting the Russian raids hitting Syrian Turkmen areas after a Russian plane was shot down on the Turkey Syria border said that Officials estimate 300 000 Turkmen used to live in northern Latakia before the Russians heavily targeted ethnic Turkmen areas Al Jazeera English has also reported that the Russian escalation of attacks on Turkmen areas displaced 300 000 Turkmen from northern Latakia alone By the Syrian Government The Syrian Government of president Bashar al Assad backed by Russia since 2015 have targeted several areas populated by Syrian Turkmen as they were largely involved in anti government attacks On 2 February 2016 at least seven women and children were killed by Russian air strikes in a Syrian Turkmen village in the northern countryside of Homs In the same month Russian warplanes had staged 600 strikes on Syrian Turkmen villages displacing approximately 10 000 people By the YPG There were also reports of forced displacement of Arabs Syrian Turkmen and Kurdish civilians at the hands of the YPG from their homes in areas in the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria In June 2015 there was concern expressed by the UN Human Rights Council regarding displacement of Syrian Turkmen from their homes in villages south of Hasakah and Tal Abyad during fighting with ISIL Approximately 200 Syrian Turkmen refugees fled to Urfa in southern Turkey while 700 more fled to the eastern areas of Tal Abyad once the YPG seized the town of Tell Hammam al Turkman from ISIL and there were claims that the YPG had accused the locals of collaborating with ISIL Current populationThere are no reliable estimates on the total number of ethnic minorities living in Syria because official censuses conducted under the Assad regime had only asked citizens about their religion Therefore Syrian citizens were not allowed to declare their ethnic origin nor their mother tongue Dr Abdelwahed Mekki Berrada in a report published by the UNHCR points out that the majority of Syrians are considered Arab however this is a term based on their spoken language and not their ethnic affiliation Consequently this has created difficulties in estimating the total Syrian Turkmen population which includes both Turkish speaking as well as Arabized Turkmen According to Professor Taef El Azhari the Syrian Turkmen have always been the forgotten minority in the area despite their large population Various professors such as Dr Abdelwahed Mekki Berrada and Pierre Beckouche have all placed the Turkish speaking Syrian Turkmen as the third largest ethnic group in the country after Arabs and Kurds respectively Yet a report published by the Arab Reform Initiative suggests that they may form the second largest ethnic group if Arabized Turkmen are also taken into account Turkmen are the third largest ethnic group in Syria making up around 4 5 of the population Some estimations indicate that they are the second biggest group outnumbering Kurds drawing on the fact that Turkmen are divided into two groups the rural Turkmen who make up 30 of the Turkmen in Syria and who have kept their mother tongue and the urban Turkmen who have become Arabised and no longer speak their mother language Turkmen are mostly found in the urban centres and countryside of six governorates of Syria Aleppo Damascus Homs Hama Latakia and Quneitra Mustafa Khalifa 2013 published by the Arab Reform Initiative Estimates since the Syrian Civil War Assistant Professor Sebastian Maisel focusing on the Yezidis claimed that Syrian Turkmen numbered 250 000 which constitutes approximately 1 of the population However Professor Pierre Beckouche stated that Sunni Muslim Turkmen alone formed 4 of the country s population before 2011 with their population estimated at approximately 1 million Professor John Shoup has said that in 2018 the Turkish speaking Syrian Turkmen formed around 4 5 of the population Dr Jonathan Spyer as well as a report published in cooperation between the Norwegian Church Aid and the World Council of Churches stated that the Syrian Turkmen number anywhere from 500 000 to 3 million Professor Pierre Piccinin claims that whilst 1 5 million Syrian Turkmen are Turkish speaking their total population is between 3 5 and 6 million 15 to 20 of the population including those who have adopted Arabic as their mother tongue Diaspora Pakize Tarzi who was the first female Turkish gynecologist moved to Turkey with her family after the British captured Damascus in 1918 Syrian Turkmen refugees protest in Istanbul Middle East Turkey In December 2016 the Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Umit Yalcin stated that Turkey had opened its borders to around 500 000 Syrian Turkmen Most Syrian Turkmen settled in Istanbul Gaziantep Osmaniye Hatay Izmir Malatya and Konya In 2020 the Voice of America reported that 1 000 000 Syrian Turkmen including their descendants who are living in Turkey have requested to become Turkish citizens Lebanon In October 2015 the Syrian independent newspaper Zaman Al Wasl reported that around 120 000 to 150 000 Syrian Turkmen were refugees in Lebanon hence outnumbering the Turkish minority of Lebanon By 2018 the number of Syrian Turkmen in Lebanon had increased to approximately 200 000 Jordan A substantial number of Syrian Turkmen refugees had also sought refuge in Jordan Europe Outside of the Middle East Syrian Turkmen refugees have mainly migrated to Western Europe particularly Germany Germany Established in Germany the Suriye Turkmen Kultur ve Yardimlasma Dernegi Avrupa or STKYDA Syrian Turkmen Culture and Solidarity Association Europe was the first Syrian Turkmen association to be launched in Europe It was established in order to help the growing Syrian Turkmen community which arrived to the country as part of the European migrant crisis which started in 2014 and saw its peak in 2015 The association includes Syrian Turkmen youth activists who originate from various Syrian cities and now reside across Western Europe Areas of settlementLatakia has traditionally had a strong Turkmen settlement The town of Salib al Turkman Turkish Silayip Turkmen is mostly populated by Syrian Turkmen The village of Burj Islam is mostly populated by Syrian Turkmen Most Syrian Turkmen live in the area around the northern Euphrates near the Syrian Turkish border however they are also scattered throughout several governorates stretching towards central Syria and the southern region near the Golan Heights In particular the Turkmen are concentrated in the urban centers and countryside of six governorates of Syria in the Aleppo Governorate the Damascus Governorate the Homs Governorate the Hama Governorate the Latakia Governorate and the Quneitra Governorate There are also smaller Turkmen communities living in the Daraa Governorate as well as in Tartous Raqqa and Idlib governorates In the Aleppo governorate the main locales in which the Turkmen live include the city of Aleppo with Bustan al Basha Haydariyah Hllok Sheikh Hizir Sheikh Feriz Saladdin Owaijah being neighborhoods with ethnic Turkmen populations and the countryside in the northern part of the governorate They also live in the villages next to the cities of Azaz Al Bab and Jarabulus Al Rai is also a Turkmen dominated town There are 16 Turkmen dominated villages south of Mount Simeon 17 Turkmen villages in the district of Azaz 29 villages to the east of that region 3 villages connected to Aleppo 69 villages around Al Rai 26 villages in the vicinity of Jarabulus and 23 villages south of Sajur River In the Latakia governorate the Turkmen live mostly in the Turkmen Mountains Jabal al Turkman Al Badrusiyah Umm al Tuyour and in various villages near the Syrian Turkish border There is also a number of Turkmen districts including Bayirbucak and Jimmel Harresi where there are many Turkmen villages In the Damascus governorate the Turkmen live in the city of Damascus and Harret Al Turkman is a Turkmen district where Turkish is predominantly spoken In the Homs governorate the Turkmen mostly live in the city of Homs and the surrounding villages such as Kara Avshar Inallu and Kapushak They also live in Gharnatah Burj Qa i and in villages in the Houla plain In the Hama governorate the Turkmen live in the city of Hama and are also scattered in numerous villages around the district For example Baba Amir Haras is a prominent Turkmen district There are also Turkmen living in Aqrab and Talaf In the Quneitra governorate the Turkmen are scattered in numerous villages in the districts of Quneitra They predominantly reside in the villages of Dababiye Rezaniye Sindiyane Aynul Kara Aynul Simsim Ulayka Aynul Alak Ahmediye Kafer Nafah Mugir Hafir Huseyniye and Ayn Ayse CultureLanguage Of Turkish origin the poet Nizar Qabbani wrote his works in the Arabic language Of Turkish origin Ahmad Nami was the 5th Prime Minister and 2nd President of Syria His first language was Turkish consequently he could hardly speak Arabic According to The Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics the Turkish language is the third most widely used language in Syria after Arabic and Kurdish It is spoken by the Turkmen minority mostly in villages east of the Euphrates north of Aleppo and on the northern coast of the country along the Syrian Turkish border In addition there are Turkish language islands in the Qalamun area and the Homs area Moreover Syrian Arabic dialects have also borrowed many loanwords from Turkish Mustafa Khalifa claims that Turkmen are divided into two groups Rural Turkish speaking Turkmen constituting 30 of Syrian Turkmen and Urban Arabic speaking Turkmen Various dialects of Turkish are spoken throughout Syria in Aleppo they speak a Kilis and Antep dialect in Tell Abyad and Raqqa they speak an Urfa dialect and in Bayirbucak they speak a Hatay Yayladagi dialect of the Turkish language Some Syrian Turkmen living far from the Turkish border such as in Homs have managed to preserve their national identity but are more competent in speaking the Arabic language In Damascus Syrian Turkmen speak the Turkish language of a Yoruk dialect In 2018 Dr Eldad J Pardo and Maya Jacobi reported that they did not identify any Turkish nor Kurdish or Aramaic teaching either as a first or second language in the Syrian national curriculum Bilingual sign Arabic and Turkish of Al Rai Council Bilingual sign Arabic and Turkish of Al Bab police station Religion The majority of Syrian Turkmen are Sunni Muslims but there is also a small minority of Turkmen who are Shia Muslims particularly Alevis and Bektashis Ali Ozturkmen claims that the Turkmen community is 99 Sunni whilst the remainder 1 practice Shia Islam The Al Adiliyah Mosque Turkish Adliye Camii in Aleppo was built by the Ottomans in 1566 The Khusruwiyah Mosque Turkish Husreviye Camii in Aleppo was built by the Ottomans in 1547 The Murad Pasha Mosque Turkish Sam Murat Pasa Camii in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in 1568 The Sinan Pasha Mosque Turkish Sinan Pasa Camii in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in 1590 The Sulaymaniyya Takiyya known in Turkish as Sam Suleymaniye Kulliyesi in Damascus was built by the Ottomans in the sixteenth century There are also some Syrian Nawar people a derogatory term for people who live a mobile lifestyle often described as gypsies who speak Turkish some of whom self identify as Turkmen those practicing Islam belong to the Sunni Shiite and Alevi Bektashi religious groups There are also some who practice Christianity DiscriminationOf Turkish origin Professor Sadiq Jalal al Azm was known as a human rights advocate and a champion of intellectual freedom and free speech Khaled Khoja of Turkish origin was the president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces from 2015 to 2016 From the French mandate era to the Assad regime the Turkish culture and language have perished for a section of the Syrian Turkmen community Many Syrian Turkmen have become Arabized and indistinguishable from the Arabs in areas where they form a minority Consequently Arabization is mainly an exception in areas where the Syrian Turkmen live in areas where they form a significant population where they have continued to maintain their Turkish identity and language despite discriminative state policies Under the rule of Hafez al Assad there has been a ban on Syrian Turkmen communities from publishing works in Turkish Syrian Turkmen occupied a low rung on the societal ladder as reported by Al Bawaba it was stated that Assad always sought to benefit his politically dominant Alawite religious minority The report quoted Bayirbucak Turkmen as highlighting They would take Alawites first no matter what even if they had degrees Turkmen couldn t find jobs Notable peopleBashir al Azma served as the Prime Minister of Syria His family the Al Azms were of Turkish descent From a Turkmen family Yusuf al Azma was the Minister of War and Chief of General Staff of Syria Of Turkish origin Said al Ghazzi was the Prime Minister of Syria in 1954 and then in 1955 56 Damascus born Suat Hayri Urguplu served as the 11th Prime Minister of Turkey in 1965 Of Turkish origin Sati al Husri was a Pan Arabist writer Of Turkish origin Jamil Mardam Bey was the 21st Prime Minister of Syria Sabah Qabbani of Turkish origin was the 5th Ambassador of Syria to the United States taking office in 1974 Several Turkish families such as the al Atassi Atasi Bey Kanj Pasha Zadeh Genc Yussef Pasha 1807 1811 Al Azm Qawuqji Quwwatli Kuvvetli and Shishakli Cicekci continued to rule Syria as Prime Ministers or Presidents However by the 1960s the pan Arab Baathist movement of the Al Assad family sidelined non Arabs from politics Armande Altai French singer Akshamsaddin Ottoman religious scholar Genc Pasha Zadeh Ottoman governor of Damascus state 1807 1811 Al Azm familyAbdullah Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Damascus As ad Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Hama and Damascus Haqqi al Azm former prime minister of Syria ar poet and human rights activist Ismail Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Hama Homs Tripoli and Damascus Khalid al Azm six time former prime minister of Syria ar first president of the first parliament in Syria Muhammad Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Sidon and Damascus Rafiq Bey al ʿAzm intellectual author and politician Sa deddin Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Aleppo and Egypt among others ar traveler and Ottoman military commander Sadiq Jalal al Azm professor emeritus of Modern European Philosophy at the University of Damascus Sulayman Pasha al Azm Ottoman governor of Tripoli Sidon and Damascus Politician Bashir al Azma Prime Minister of Syria 1962 Minister of Interior in Jordan 1925 Yasser al Azma Actor Yusuf al Azma Minister of War in Syria 1920 Aziz al Azmeh Subhi Barakat first President of Syria 1922 1925 Burhan Asaf Belge Turkish politician Mardam Bey family Adnan Mardam Bey lawyer playwright and poet Farouk Mardam Bey French librarian historian and publisher First program director on Syrian TV Haydar Mardam Bey diplomat Jamil Mardam Bey Prime Minister of Syria 1936 1939 Khaled Mardam Bey British software developer and creator of mIRC Khalil Mardam Bey Composer of the Syrian National Anthem Rashid Pasha Mardam Bey judge Salma Mardam Bey Writer Sami Mardam Bey politician who was elected deputy and vice president of the Syrian federation ar Poet Cemil Bilsel Turkish politician and academic Second President of the Syrian Turkmen Assembly 2016 present Mehmed Fuad Carim Turkish politician Thanaa Debsi Actress Actress Minister of Economy and Foreign Trade Nadia al Ghazzi Lawyer writer TV presenter Said al Ghazzi Prime Minister of Syria in 1954 and 1955 56 Sati al Husri writer singer contestant on The Voice France Sami Sabit Karaman General of the Turkish army Khaled Khoja President of the Syrian National Coalition 2015 2016 Mehmet Muhittin Kurtis Turkish soldier Sanharib Malki football player Taqi ad Din Muhammad ibn Ma ruf Polymath artist Abdurrahman Mustafa First President of the Syrian Turkmen Assembly 2012 2016 Huda Naamani Feminist writer Mustafa Naima Ottoman historian Ahmad Nami second President of Syria 1926 1928 and Ottoman damat Mahmud Kamil Pasha General of the Ottoman army Zeki Pasha Ottoman Turkish field marshal Abu Khalil Qabbani playwright and composer Nizar Qabbani diplomat poet and publisher Sabah Qabbani Ambassador of Syria to the United States 1974 1981 children Rana Kabbani Syrian cultural historian Shukri al Quwatli First president of post independence Syria 1943 1949 and 1955 1958 Aliye Rona Turkish actress Resit Ronabar Ottoman governor and Turkish politician Suleyman Shah Hala Shawkat Actress Adib Shishakli Prime Minister and President of Syria 1953 1954 Talal Silo former Syrian Democratic Forces spokesperson Adil San Singer Mehmet Sandir tr Turkish politician Pakize Tarzi Turkey s first female gynaecologist Mustafa Tlass Syrian Minister of Defense in 1972 2004 children Manaf Tlass former Brigadier General Firas Tlass business tycoon Hasan Turkmani Minister of Defense 2004 2009 children Bilal Turkmani owner of the Syrian weekly Abyad wa Aswad Rim Turkmani astrophysicist Refi Cevat Ulunay tr Turkish writer Suat Hayri Urguplu Prime Minister of Turkey 1965 tr Turkish politician Husni al Za im President of Syria 1949 Muhammed Habes Jarabulus Civilian Council President since August 2016 Ahmed Othman Old SAA colonel leader of Sultan Murad Division since 2013 Nur ad Din Zengi a member of the Turkish Zengid dynasty which ruled the Syrian province of the Seljuk Empire Imad ad Din Zengi a Turkish atabeg who ruled Mosul Aleppo Hama and Edessa He was the namesake of the Zengid dynasty Tutush I Seljuk Emir of Damascus Aq Sunqur al Hajib Seljuk governor of Aleppo See alsoAsia portalTurkey portalList of armed groups in the Syrian Civil War Syrian Democratic Turkmen Movement Syria Turkmen Bloc Syria Turkey relations Hatay Province Tomb of Suleyman Shah Turkish military intervention in Syria Northern al Bab offensive 2016 Battle of al Rai August 2016 Turkish minorities in the former Ottoman Empire Turks in the Arab world Iraqi Turkmen Turks in Lebanon Turks in Egypt Arabs in TurkeyNotesAlso referred to as Syrian Turkomans Turkish Syrians or simply Syrian Turks or Turks of Syria Suriye Turkleri ReferencesUNHCR 2015 p 10 Shoup John A 2018 Syria The History of Syria ABC CLIO p 6 ISBN 978 1 4408 5835 2 The third largest ethnic group in Syria is the Turkish speakers They comprise around 4 5 percent of the total population Piccinin Piere 2011 Apres avoir ete sur le terrain La Libre Belgique Les Turcomans pratiquant exclusivement leur dialecte turc sont 1 500 000 L ensemble des Turcomans de Syrie y compris ceux qui ont adopte l arabe comme langue usuelle sont estimes entre 3 5 et 6 millions soit de 15 a 20 de la population C est le troisieme groupe de population en importance Behnstedt 2008 p 402 Khalifa 2013 pp 3 5 Ozkaya 2007 p 112 The New York Times 2015 Who Are the Turkmens of Syria The New York Times Archived from the original on 14 January 2017 Retrieved 3 March 2017 In the context of Syria though the term Turkmen is used somewhat differently to refer mainly to people of Turkish heritage whose families migrated to Syria from Anatolia during the centuries of the Ottoman period and thus would be closer kin to the Turks of Turkey than to the Turkmens of Central Asia Q How many are there A No reliable figures are available and estimates on the number of Turkmens in Syria and nearby countries vary widely from the hundreds of thousands up to 3 million or more Peyrouse 2015 p 62 Heras Nicholas A 2013 Syrian Turkmen Join Opposition Forces in Pursuit of a New Syrian Identity Terrorism Monitor 11 11 Jamestown Foundation archived from the original on 12 June 2018 retrieved 4 June 2018 Syria s Turkmen communities are descendants of Oghuz Turkish tribal migrants who began moving from Central Asia into the area of modern day Syria during the 10th century when the Turkic Seljuk dynasty ruled much of the region Under the Ottomans Turkmen were encouraged to establish villages throughout the rural hinterlands of several Syrian cities in order to counter the demographic weight and influence of the settled and nomadic and semi nomadic Arab tribesmen that populated the region Syrian Turkmen were also settled to serve as local gendarmes to help assert Ottoman authority over roads and mountain passes in diverse regions such as the Alawite majority northwestern coastal governorate of Latakia After the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in 1918 communities of Turkmen continued to reside in the country Dispossessed Turkomans in Syria wait for Turkey s support Archived 25 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine BBC 2015 Profile Khaled Khoja Syria opposition chief BBC News Archived from the original on 29 November 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Ozturkmen Duman amp Orhan 2015 p 5 Ziadeh 1953 p 45 Zakkar 1971 p 206 Bianquis 1993 p 120 Commins 2004 p 231 Commins 2004 p 184 Ziadeh 1953 p 46 Commins 2004 p 185 Commins 2004 p 330 Chatty 2018 p 150 Cuinet 1890 1895 Franco Turkish Agreement signed at Angora on October 20 1921 PDF The Stationery Office 1921 pp 6 7 archived PDF from the original on 16 January 2013 retrieved 16 October 2016 Brandell Inga 2006 State Frontiers Borders and Boundaries in the Middle East I B Tauris p 144 ISBN 978 1 84511 076 5 Retrieved 30 July 2013 Shaw amp Shaw 1977 p 377 Zurcher 2007 p 203 The Turkmens of Bayirbucak Hurriyet Daily News 24 November 2015 Archived from the original on 26 December 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Bidwell Robin 1998 Barakat Subhi c 1886 Dictionary Of Modern Arab History Routledge p 68 ISBN 978 1 136 16291 6 BARAKAT Subhi c 1886 Syrian Head of State He was born into a Turkish family in Antioch and was educated in the local secondary school Al Azmenah خليل مردم بك Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 3 January 2007 ولد خليل بن أحمد مختار مردم بك في دمشق عام 1895 من أصل تركي Complex nationalities the stories of Syria s Turkmen Enab Baladi 2019 Yilmaz Meskure 2015 Suriye Turkleri 21 Yuzyil Turkiye Enstitusu Clark Larry 1998 Turkmen Reference Grammar Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 11 ISBN 978 3 447 04019 8 Deutsches Orient Institut 1996 p 33 Pipes 1992 p 151 Rabinovich 1972 p 3 Ma oz 1973 p 89 Van Dam 1979 p 1 Munson 1988 p 85 Drysdale Alasdair Hinnebusch Raymond A 1991 Syria and the Middle East Peace Process Council on Foreign Relations p 222 ISBN 978 0 87609 105 0 Mustafa 2015 p 4 Wahby et al 2014 Hatahet amp Aldassouky 2017 online Crowe David 2015 First Syrian refugees here for Christmas Tony Abbott The Australian Retrieved 15 July 2018 UN Refugee Agency 2012 Exodus continues from Syria including some 10 000 Iraqis Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Stubbs Jack Pamuk Humeyra 2015 Russian raids repeatedly hit Syrian Turkmen areas Moscow s data shows Reuters Archived from the original on 22 July 2018 Retrieved 22 July 2018 Al Jazeera English 2017 Syrian Turkmen Fighting to Survive Archived from the original on 1 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 But the result was a Russian escalation of attacks on Turkmen areas displacing 300 000 Turkmen from northern Latakia alone Since then Syrian government forces have taken control of many villages and hilltops on the Turkmen Mountain Zaman al Wasl 2016 In Homs Russian Strikes on Turkmen Village Kill Seven Women Children The Syrian Observer Archived from the original on 4 November 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Zaman al Wasl 2016 Russian Warplanes Staged 600 Strikes on Turkmen Villages in a Month FSA The Syrian Observer Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Amnesty International 2015 online Foreign and Commonwealth Office 2016 Syria in year update December 2015 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Human Rights Council 2016 Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic PDF p 14 Archived PDF from the original on 15 February 2017 Retrieved 10 October 2016 The Syrian Observer 2015 YPG Displaces Hundreds of Syrian Turkmen Near Tal Abyad Activists Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Taef 2005 p 97 Pierre 2017 pp 178 180 Maisel Sebastian 2016 Yezidis in Syria Identity Building among a Double Minority Lexington Books p 15 ISBN 978 0 7391 7775 4 Spyer Jonathan 2015 Strings pulled from Ankara Moscow tangled in a Sukhoi The Australian The Turkmens of Syria are ethnic Turks numbering anywhere from 500 000 to three million The Protection Needs of Minorities from Syria and Iraq PDF Norwegian Church Aid and the World Council of Churches 2016 p 18 archived PDF from the original on 26 November 2018 retrieved 25 July 2018 Hurriyet 2004 Ilk kadin dogumcu Dr Pakize Tarzi oldu Retrieved 29 December 2016 Unal Ali 2016 Turkey stands united with Turkmens says Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Yalcin Daily Sabah Retrieved 11 September 2018 Yalcin explained how Turkey opened its borders to 100 000 Turkmens from Iraq and 500 000 from Syria sharing their pain and trying to mend their wounds as much as they could with economic social and humanitarian aid Erkilic Orhan 2020 Turkiye deki Suriyeli Turkmenler de Vatandaslik Istiyor Amerika nin Sesi Voice of America Turkish Voice of America Retrieved 17 December 2020 1 Milyon Suriyeli Turkmen Vatandaslik Hakkindan Yararlanmak Istiyor Ahmed Yusra 2015 Syrian Turkmen refugees face double suffering in Lebanon Zaman Al Wasl archived from the original on 23 August 2017 retrieved 11 October 2016 There are about 5 000 Turkmen families in Lebanon making between 125 000 and 150 000 people Syrian Observer 2015 Syria s Turkmen Refugees Face Cruel Reality in Lebanon Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Around 5 000 Syrian Turkmen families have fled to Lebanon totaling between 125 000 and 150 000 people from all regions of Syria Suriye Turkmenlerinin sorunlarina iliskin gundem disi konusmasi Grand National Assembly of Turkey 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2020 Yaklasik olarak 200 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