Balkan Göç Folkloru: Ankara İli Örneği
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Date
2023-07-05Author
Balat, Gülçin
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Migration; it is the movement of displacement from the source (origin) region to the target
region, individually or collectively, for various economic, political and geographical
reasons. Migration has been experienced by various communities throughout human
history. Turkish states and communities have sometimes been the subject and sometimes
the object of migration movements in various geographies. Migration has had different
goals and functions in Turkish history. The adventure of migration from the Turkestan
lands, the homeland of the Turks, to the Balkan peninsula A.D.4. It was started by the
Turkish communities in the 19th century, interrupted by the political changes of the
peninsula, but the peninsula began to be re-conquered by the Ottoman Turks in the 13th
century. The Turkish presence in the Balkan peninsula lasted for centuries, but was
influenced by the nationalist movements in world politics and began to lose its influence
in the Balkan geography.
As a result of this event, there were gradual migrations from the Balkan cities, which were
Ottoman lands, to the motherland Anatolia. During the Ottoman-Russian War (1877-
1878) and the subsequent Balkan Wars (1912-1913), which is considered to be the
beginning of the date when the worst migration events in Turkish history will be
experienced, massacres, genocides and atrocities were experienced in the migrations to
Anatolia. Turks and Ottoman subjects Muslims (Bosniaks, Albanians) who came to the
homeland as a result of these painful events were settled in various regions.
Balkan migrations started in the 19th century in the historical process and continued until
the beginning of the 21st century. In this context, many cities in the Anatolian geography
have turned into areas where Balkan Turks and Muslims are settled. The resettlement
activities were carried out under the supervision of the state, and the immigrants were
placed primarily in cities such as Istanbul, Izmir, Çanakkale and Bursa, taking into
account geographical proximity.
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In addition to these, Ankara, Çorum, Adana, Sivas, Samsun and Nevşehir became the
second settlement areas of Balkan immigrants. In this study, the Turks and Muslims who
immigrated to Ankara for various reasons from the Balkan geography (Albania, Western
Thrace, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Crimea-Romania, Kosovo, North Macedonia,
Moldova (Gagauz Place), Greece) at different times as a result of the migration event, are
discussed migration folklore. In this context, the history, folklore, language, culture and
identity-belonging patterns of each region under the main umbrella of Balkan Migration
Folklore were evaluated based on field research data;It has been determined that each
community is a part of Turkish cultural ecology.