Chechens in Turkey
Chechens in Turkey (Chechen: Туркойчура нохчий, Turkish: Türkiye Çeçenleri) are Turkish citizens of Chechen descent and Chechen refugees living in Turkey. The Chechen diaspora in Turkey dates back to the 19th century when the Russian Empire started ethnically cleansing Caucasians from their homeland, these expulsions would later become known as the Circassian Genocide.
Total population | |
---|---|
~100,000 (2009)[1] | |
Languages | |
Turkish, Chechen, Russian | |
Religion | |
Sunni Islam |
Villages
Chechen villages in Turkey:[2]
Name | Locally name | Province |
Ağaçlı | Ağaçlı | Adana |
Dikilitaş | Dikilitaş | |
Karalık | Karalık | Yozgat |
Kesikköprü | Kesikköprü | |
Aşağıborandere | Aşağıborandere / Şeşen Jambotey | Kayseri |
Aydınalan | Aydınalan | Kars |
Yenigazi | Yenigazi | |
Altınyayla | Altınyayla | Kahramanmaraş |
Çardak | Çardak | |
Sisne | Sisne | |
Gücüksu | Gücüksu / Behliöyl | |
Bağiçi | Bağiçi | Muş |
Bozkurt | Bozkurt | |
Çöğürlü | Çöğürlü | |
Kıyıbaşı | Kıyıbaşı / Arıncık | |
Serinova | Serinova | |
Tepeköy | Tepeköy | |
Ulusırt | Ulusırt | |
Alaçayır | Alaçayır | Sivas |
Canabtal | Canabdal | |
Demirköprü | Demirköprü | |
Kahvepınar | Kahvepınar | |
Kazancık | Kazancık | |
Yukarıhüyük | Yukarıhüyük | |
Çınardere | Çınardere | Çanakkale |
Notable Chechen Turks
References
Media related to Chechen people in Turkey at Wikimedia Commons
- Kristiina Markkanen: Chechen refugee came to Finland via Baku and Istanbul
- W.E.D. Allen, Paul Muratoff: Caucasian Battlefields — A History of the Wars on the Turco-Caucasian Border 1828—1921. Battery Press, Nashville 1966; S. 104. ISBN 0-89839-296-9
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