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  2. Turkish people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_people

    There are also nomadic Turkic tribes who descend directly from Central Asia, such as the Yörüks; [110] the Black Sea Turks in the north whose "speech largely lacks the vowel harmony valued elsewhere"; [110] the descendants of muhacirs (Turkish refugees) who fled persecution from former Ottoman territories in the nineteenth and early twentieth ...

  3. Ethnic groups in the Middle East - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_groups_in_the...

    Ethnolinguistic distribution in Central and Southwest Asia of the Altaic, Caucasian, Afroasiatic (Hamito-Semitic) and Indo-European families.. Ethnic groups in the Middle East are ethnolinguistic groupings in the "transcontinental" region that is commonly a geopolitical term designating the intercontinental region comprising West Asia (including Cyprus) without the South Caucasus, [1] and also ...

  4. White Turks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Turks

    In the other corner are “black Turks,” conservative Muslims who, in a mostly Muslim nation, were marginalized for decades, excluded from the Turkish elite — until, in 2003, one of their own became a populist prime minister and began what many black Turks consider a healthy rebalancing and many white Turks, the politics of resentment or ...

  5. Turkic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_peoples

    The Arab Muslim Umayyads and Abbasids fought against the pagan Turks in the Türgesh Khaganate in the Muslim conquest of Transoxiana. Turkic soldiers in the army of the Abbasid caliphs emerged as the de facto rulers of most of the Muslim Middle East (apart from Syria and Egypt ), particularly after the 10th century.

  6. Turkish population - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_population

    The Meskhetian Turk population in the USSR was published for the first in the 1970 census. However, by this point, the Turkish minority in Georgia had already diminished to several hundred due to the forced deportation of 1944. [48] There were 853 Turks in Georgia in 1970, [43] 917 in 1979, [44] and 1,375 in 1989. [45] *Post-USSR:

  7. Demographics of Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Turkey

    According to Milliyet, a 2008 report prepared for the National Security Council of Turkey by academics of three Turkish universities in eastern Anatolia suggested that there are approximately 55 million ethnic Turks, 9.6 million Kurds, 3 million Zazas, 2.5 million Circassians, 2 million Bosniaks, 500,000–1.3 million Albanians, 1,000,000 ...

  8. Turkish Cypriots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_Cypriots

    Turkish Cypriots or Cypriot Turks (Turkish: Kıbrıs Türkleri or Kıbrıslı Türkler; Greek: Τουρκοκύπριοι, romanized: Tourkokýprioi) are ethnic Turks originating from Cyprus. Turkish Cypriots are mainly Sunni Muslims .

  9. Qarai (tribe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qarai_(tribe)

    The Qara Tatars were recorded as a Mongol tribe of 30–40,000 nomad families dwelling near Amasya and Kayseri in Anatolia at the time of Timur's conquests.Upon a suggestion by the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I [3] and to refill the depopulated extremities of his empire, [4] Timur deported these tribes back to Central Asia, specifically Khwarazm and an island in Issyk-Kul that later ceased to exist ...