OGHUZ TURKS, TURCOMAN AND TURKMEN
The Ghuzz or Turkmens also
known as Oguzes (a linguistic
term designating the Western Turkic or Oghuz languages from
the Oghur sub-division of Turkic language
family)
were a historical Turkic tribal
confederationconventionally named the Oghuz Yabgu State in
Central Asia during the early medieval period. The name Oguz is a Common Turkic word for
"tribe". The Oguz confederation migrated westward from the Jeti-su area
after a conflict with the Karluk branch of Uigurs. The founders of the Ottoman Empire were
descendants of the Oguz Yabgu State. Today the residents of Turkey, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Khorezm, Turkmens of Afghanistan, Gagauzia and Iranian Azerbaijan are
descendants of Oghuz Turks and their language belongs to the Oghuz (a.k.a.
southwestern Turkic) group of the Turkic languages family.
According to Khazar sources, Oghuzes are the seventh son
of Togarmah related
to Gog and Magog.
In the 9th century, the Oguzes from the Aral steppes
drove Bechens from
the Emba and Ural River region
toward the west. In the 10th century, they inhabited the steppe of the rivers Sari-su, Turgai, and Emba to the north ofLake Balkhash of
modern-day Kazakhstan. A
clan of this nation, the Seljuks, embraced Islam and in the 11th century entered Persia, where they founded the Great Seljuk Empire. Similarly in the 11th century, a Tengriist Oghuz clan—referred to as Uzes or
Torks in the Russian chronicles—overthrew Pecheneg supremacy in the Russian
steppe. Harried by another Turkic horde, the Kipchaks, these Oghuz penetrated as far as the lower Danube, crossed it and invaded the Balkans, where they were either crushed or struck down by an outbreak of
plague, causing the survivors either to flee or to join the Byzantine imperial
forces as mercenaries (1065).
The Oghuz seem to have been related to the
Pechenegs, some of whom were clean-shaven and others of whom had small 'goatee' beards. According to the book Attila
and the Nomad Hordes, "Like the Kimaks they set up many carved wooden
funerary statues surrounded by simple stonebalbal monoliths." The
authors of the book go on to note that "Those Uzes or Torks who settled
along the Russian frontier were gradually Slavicized, though they also played a
leading role as cavalry in 1100- and early 1200-era Russian armies, where they
were known as Black Hats....
Oghuz warriors served in almost all Islamic
armies of the Middle East from the 1000s onwards, in Byzantium from the 800's,
and even in Spain and Morocco." In later centuries, they
adapted and applied their own traditions and institutions to the ends of the
Islamic world and emerged as empire-builders with a constructive sense of
statecraft.
Linguistically, the Oghuz are listed together with the
old Kimaks of the middle Yenisei of the Ob, the old Kipchaks who later emigrated to southern Russia, and
the modern Kirghiz in one particular Turkic group, distinguished from the rest by the
mutation of the initial y sound to j (dj).
"The term 'Oghuz' was gradually supplanted among
the Turks themselves by Türkmen,
'Turcoman', from the mid 900's on, a process which was completed by the beginning
of the 1200s."
"The Ottoman dynasty, who gradually took over Anatolia after the fall of the Seljuks,
toward the end of the 13th century, led an army that was also predominantly
Oghuz."
ORIGINS
In
178-177 BC, the Xiongnu shan-yü Mao-tun subdued
a people called Hu-chieh,
west of Wu-sun located in theTarim Basin,
the Ili Valley and the Pamir Mountains. It is suggested that
the early pronunciation of this transliteration might be related to the
ancestors of Oghur/Oghuz. However,
it is known that Oghuz people historically appeared with this name in a region
extending from the east of Caspian Sea to
the east of Lake Aral, neighbouring to Karakum Desert in the south.
The
original homeland of the Oghuz, like other Turks, was the Ural-Altay region of Central Asia,
which has been the domain of Turkic peoples since antiquity. Although their
mass-migrations from Central Asia occurred from the 800's onwards, they were
present in areas west of the Caspian Sea centuries prior, although smaller in
numbers and perhaps living with other Turks. For example, the Book of Dede
Korkut, the historical epic of the
Oghuz Turks, was written from the 800's and 900's.
According to many historians, the usage of the word
"Oghuz" is dated back to the advent of the Huns (220 BC). The title of "Oghuz" (Oguz Kaan) was given to Mau-Tun,[13][14] the founder of the Xiongnu Empire, which is often considered the first Turkic political entity in Central Asia.
Also in the 2nd century BC, a Turkic tribe called O-kut or Wuqi 呼揭, 呼得, 乌揭, 乌护 who were described as a western enemy of the Huns
(referred to in Chinese sources, Shiji, 110 and Suishu, 84) were mentioned in the area of the Irtysh River, in present-day Lake Zaysan. The Greek sources used the name Oufi (or Ouvvi).
A number of tribal groupings bearing the name Oghuz,
often with a numeral representing the number of united tribes in the union, are
noted.
The mention of the "six Oghuz tribal union"
in the Turkic Orhun inscriptions (500's) pertains to the unification of the six Turkic tribes which
became known as the Oghuz. This was the first written reference to Oghuz, and
was dated to the period of the Göktürk empire. The Oghuz community gradually
grew larger, uniting more Turkic tribes prior and during the Göktürk
establishment.
Prior to the Göktürk state, there are references to
the Sekiz-Oghuz("eight-Oghuz")
and the Dokuz-Oghuz ("nine-Oghuz") union. The
Oghuz Turks under Sekiz-Oghuz and the Dokuz-Oghuz state formations ruled
different areas in the vicinity of the Altay mountains. During the
establishment of the Göktürk state, Oghuz tribes inhabited the Altay mountain
region and also lived in northeastern areas of the Altay mountains along the Tula River. They were also present as a community near the Barlik River in present-day northern Mongolia.
Their main homeland and domain in the ensuing
centuries was the area of Transoxiana, in western Turkestan.
This land became known as the "Oghuz
steppe", which is an area between the Caspian and Aral Seas. Ibn al-Athir, an Arab historian, declared that the Oghuz Turks had come to Transoxiana in the
period of the caliph Al-Mahdi in the years between 775 and 785. In the period of the Abbasid caliph Al-Ma'mun (813–833), the name Oghuz starts to appear in the works of Islamic
writers. By 780, the eastern parts of the Syr Darya were ruled by the Karluk Turks and the western region (Oghuz steppe) was ruled by the Oghuz Turks.
SOCIAL
UNIT
The militarism that the Oghuz empires were very well known for was rooted in their centuries-long nomadic lifestyle. In general they were a herding society which possessed certain military advantages that sedentary societies did not have, particularly mobility. Alliances by marriage and kinship, and systems of "social distance" based on family relationships were the connective tissues of their society.
In Oghuz traditions, "society was simply the
result of the growth of individual families". But such a society also grew
by alliances and the expansion of different groups, normally through marriages.
The shelter of the Oghuz tribes was a tent-like dwelling, erected on wooden
poles and covered with skin, felt, or hand-woven textiles, which is called a yurt.
Their cuisine included yahni (stew), kebabs, Toyga çorbası (lit. "wedding soup;" a soup made from wheat flour and
yogurt), Kımız (a traditional drink of the Turks, made from fermented horse milk), Pekmez (a syrup made of boiled grape juice) and helva made with wheat starch or
rice flour, tutmac (noodle soup), yufka (flattened bread), katmer (layered
pastry), chorek (ring-shaped buns), bread, clotted cream, cheese, milk and
ayran (diluted yogurt beverage), as well as wine.
Social order was maintained by emphasizing
"correctness in conduct as well as ritual and ceremony". Ceremonies
brought together the scattered members of the society to celebrate birth,
puberty, marriage, and death. Such ceremonies had the effect of minimizing
social dangers and also of adjusting persons to each other under controlled
emotional conditions.
Patrilineally related men and their families were regarded as a group with rights over
a particular territory and were distinguished from neighbours on a territorial
basis. Marriages were often arranged among territorial groups so that
neighbouring groups could become related, but this was the only organizing
principle that extended territorial unity. Each community of the Oghuz Turks
was thought of as part of a larger society composed of distant as well as close
relatives. This signified "tribal allegiance". Wealth and
materialistic objects were not commonly emphasized in Oghuz society and most
remained herders, and when settled they would be active in agriculture.
Status within the family was based on age, gender,
relationships by blood, or marriageability. Males as well as females were
active in society, yet men were the backbones of leadership and organization.
According to the Book of Dede Korkut, which demonstrates the culture of
the Oghuz Turks, women were "expert horse riders, archers, and
athletes". The elders were respected as repositories of both "secular
and spiritual wisdom".
HOMELAND IN TRANSOXIANA
In the 700's, the Oghuz Turks made a new home and domain for themselves
in the area between the Caspian and Aral seas, a region that is often referred
to as Transoxiana, the
western portion of Turkestan. They had moved westward from the Altay mountains
passing through the Siberian steppes
and settled in this region, and also penetrated into southern Russia and
the Volga from
their bases in west China. In the 11th century, the Oghuz Turks adopted Arabicscript, after
being initially illiterate.
In his accredited work titled Diwan Lughat al-Turk, Mahmud of Kashgar, a Turkic
scholar of the 11th century, described the Karachuk Mountains which are located just east of the Aral Sea as the original homeland of
the Oghuz Turks. The Karachuk mountains are now known as the Tengri Tagh (Tian Shan in Chinese) Mountains, and they are adjacent to Syr Darya.
The extension from the Karachuk Mountains towards the
Caspian Sea (Transoxiana) was called the "Oghuz Steppe Lands" from
where the Oghuz Turks established trading, religious and cultural contacts with
the Abbasid Arab caliphate who ruled to the south. This is around the same time
that they first converted to Islam and renounced their Tengriism belief system. The Arab historians mentioned that the Oghuz Turks in
their domain in Transoxiana were ruled by a number of kings and chieftains.
It was in this area that they later founded the Seljuk
Empire, and it was from this area that they spread west into western Asia and
eastern Europe during Turkic migrations from the 9th until the 12th century.
The founders of the Ottoman Empire were also Oghuz Turks.
OGHUZ AND ÝÖRÜKS
The Yörük, also Yürüks or Yuruks are a Turkic people ultimately of Oghuz
descent,[18][19] some of whom are still
semi-nomadic, primarily inhabiting the mountains of Anatolia and partly Balkan
peninsula. Their name derives from the Old-Turkic verb from Eastern Turkish dialect
(Çagatay dialekt)- yörü "yörümek", but Western Turkish dialect (Garbi
Türkçe) yürü- (yürümek in infinitive), which means "to walk", with
the word Yörük or Yürük designating "those who walk, walkers".
The Yörük to this day appear as a distinct segment of the population of Macedonia and Thrace where they settled as early as
the 14th century. While today the Yörük are
increasingly settled, many of them still maintain their nomadic lifestyle, breeding goats and sheep in the Taurus Mountains and further eastern parts of mediterranean
regions (in
southern Anatolia), in the Pindus (Epirus,Greece), the Šar Mountains (Republic of
Macedonia), the Pirin and Rhodope
Mountains (Bulgaria) and Dobrudja. An
earlier offshoot of the Yörüks, the Kailars or Kayılar Turks were amongst the
first Turkish colonists in Europe, (Kailar or Kayılar being
the Turkish name for the Greek town of Ptolemaida which took its current name in
1928) formerly
inhabiting parts of the Greek regions of Thessaly and Macedonia. Settled Yörüks could be found until 1923,
especially near and in the town of Kozani. The Yörüks are credited with the conversion to
Islam in the 18th century, after a period of cohabitation, of a part of the
native Meglen Vlachs of Greece who in 1923 were expelled to Turkey under the terms of the population
exchange between
the two countries.
TURCOMAN TURKMEN
The terms "Turkmen" and "Turcoman"
were often used as a designation for the Muslim-Oghuz Turks (Azerbaijanis, Turks of Turkey, Central Asian Turks) in periods of history although
other Turkic factions described as Turks (Kumans, Khazars,Uyghurs, etc.), and the ethnic name that the modern Turkmens of Central Asia
use to designate their nationality was formed later. Although a term most
commonly used for the Oghuz of Central Asia, the name "Turkmen" or
"Turcoman" once applied to Azerbaijanis and the Turks of Turkey as
well, distinguishing between other Turks and non-Muslim Turks. Some western
books which were written prior to the modern age use the terms
"Turcoman" for the descendants of the Oghuz Turks who were not from
the Turkmen nationality of Central Asia, which is one of the branches of the
Oghuz.
For example, many sources prior to the modern age
claim that the largest component of the population of Azerbaijan is composed of
"Turcoman tribes". The "Turkmen" reference in history books
which is often used for Azerbaijanis and Turks of Turkey simply means
"Muslim Turk" or "Muslim western Turk", which means Oghuz
Turk. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, the name Turkmen is a synonym of Oghuz. Turkish historian Yılmaz
Öztuna presents almost the same definition of the name "Turkmen". He
labels the Turkmen Oghuz or western Turkish populations as Ottomans,
Azerbaijan, and Turkmen (Turkmenistan). In Turkey the word "Turkmen"
refers to nomadic Turkish tribes (all Muslims), some of whom still continue
this lifestyle.
LITERATURE
Oghuz Turkish literature includes the famous Book of Dede
Korkut which was UNESCO's 2000 literary work of the year, as well as the Oguznama and Köroğlu epics which are part of the literary history of Azerbaijanis, Turks of
Turkey and Turkmens. The modern and classical literature of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Central Asia are also considered Oghuz literature, since it was
produced by their descendants.
The Book of Dede
Korkut is an invaluable collection of
epics and stories, bearing witness to the language, the way of life, religions,
traditions and social norms of the Oghuz Turks in Azerbaijan, Turkey and
Central Asia.
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