Turkology
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Turkology (or Turcology or Turkic studies) is a complex of humanities sciences studying languages, history, literature, folklore, culture, and ethnology of people speaking Turkic languages and the Turkic peoples in chronological and comparative context. That includes ethnic groups from the Sakha, in eastern Siberia, to the Turks in the Balkans and the Gagauz, in Moldova.
History
[edit ]Ethnological information on Turkic tribes for the first time was systemized by the 11th-century Turkic philologist Mahmud al-Kashgari in the Dīwān ul-Lughat it-Turk (Dictionary of Turkic language). Multi-lingual dictionaries were compiled from the late 13th century for the practical application of participants in international trade and political life. One notable such dictionary is the Codex Cumanicus , which contains information for Cuman, Persian, Latin, and German. There are also bilingual dictionaries for Kipchak and Armenian. as well as Kipchak and Russian [citation needed ].
In the Middle Ages, Turkology was centered on Byzantine/Greek historians, ambassadors and travelers, and geographers[citation needed ]. In the 15th to the 17th centuries the main subject of Turkology was the study of the Ottoman Empire, the Turkish language, and the Turkic languages of Eastern Europe and Western Asia. In 1533 a first hand-written primer appeared, and by 1612 a printed grammar by Jerome Megizer was published, followed by F. Mesgnien-Meninski's four-volume Thesaurus Linguarum Orientalium published in 1680.
Peter Simon Pallas initiated a more scientific approach to Turkology with his Comparative dictionaries of all languages and dialects (1787) which included lexical materials from Tatar, Mishar, Nogai, Bashkir, and other Turkic languages. In the 19th century, Turkology was further developed by M. A. Kazembek's Grammar of the Turkish-Tatar language (1839), O. N. Betlingk Grammar of the Yakut language (1851). A major achievement was the deciphering at the end of the 19th century of the Early Middle Age Orkhon inscriptions by V. Thomsen and W. W. Radloff (1895). By the late 19th century, Turkology had developed into a complex discipline that included linguistics, history, ethnology, archeology, arts and literature.
In the 20th century, the Turkology complex included physical anthropology, numismatics, genetics, ancient Turkic alphabetic scripts, typology, genesis, and etymology, onomastics and toponymy. The appearance of Türkische Bibliothek (1905–1927) inaugurated specialised periodicals, followed by Mitteilungen zur Osmanischen Geschichte (1921–1926). Scientific developments allowed calibrated dating, dendrochronology, metallurgy, chemistry, textile, and other specialized disciplines, which contributed to the development of the Turkological studies. Deeper study of the ancient sources allowed better understanding of economical, social, mythological and cultural forces of the sedentary and nomadic societies. Linguistic studies uncovered preliterate symbioses and mutual influences between different peoples.
Persecution in Soviet Russia
[edit ]On 9 August 1944, the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party, published an edict prohibiting "ancientization" of Turkic history. The edict was followed by a consecutive wave of mass arrests, imprisoning and killing of the Turkology intelligentsia, massive creation of replacement scientists, and rewriting of history pages on an industrial scale.
Many Turkology scholars in the Soviet Union were persecuted or imprisoned by Joseph Stalin's political oppression movement, the Great Purge, during the 1930s and the 1940s, on the basis of disputed Islamic writings and publications.[1] Other cultural Scholars, such as Egyptologists and Japanologists were also subject to the political repression, in Stalin's movement to cleanse Communist Russia of ethnic minorities that posed opposition to Communism.[2]
Most Oriental and other cultural scholars that had been repressed in the 1930s and 1940s, as well as their respective scientific works, were, however, officially rehabilitated in or after 1956.
On the other hand, the edict brought unintended benefits to Turkology. One was the nearly immediate linguistic development of an alternate lexicon, which replaced the nouns and adjectives containing the word Türk by a wealth of euphemisms: "nomads, Siberians, Paleosiberians, Middle Asians, Scythians, Altaians, Tuvians", etc. that filled scientific publications. The other was "writing into a drawer", when results of the years of fruitful work were written down for future publication. When the bonds relaxed, the publications exploded. Another was a flight of scientists from European Russia into remote areas, which brought first class scientists to many intellectually starved outlying areas of Central Asia. Another one was connected with the statewide efforts to re-invent the history, when a wealth of Turkological facts were found in the process of search for "correct" history. And another one was a built-up of the public interest for the forbidden subjects, that resulted that no print size could satisfy the demand. L.N.Gumilev and O.Suleimenov inflamed a surge in the new generation of Turkology scholars.
With the physical culling of the scholars from the society, an organized a total extermination of all their published and unpublished works took place concurrently. Their books were removed from the libraries and destroyed from private collections by an intimidated population, articles and publications were culled, published photographs were retouched, private photographs were destroyed, published scientific references were erased, and publications with undesired references were destroyed. Very few of the early 20th century expedition diaries, ethnographical notes, reports and drafts for publications were ever recovered.
Turkology scholars persecuted in 20th-century Soviet Union
[edit ]- Я. В. Васильков, М. Ю. Сорокина (eds.), Люди и судьбы. Биобиблиографический словарь востоковедов – жертв политического террора в советский период (1917–1991) ("People and Destiny. Bio-Bibliographic Dictionary of Orientalists – Victims of the political terror during the Soviet period (1917–1991)"), Петербургское Востоковедение (2003). online edition
- Д.Д.Тумаркин (ed.), Репрессированные Этнографы, Вып. 1, М., Вост. лит., 2002 (Tumarkin D.D., "Prosecuted Ethnographers", Issue 1, Moscow, Oriental Literature, 2002)[7]
- Tallgren A.M., 1936. Archaeological studies in Soviet Russia // Eurasia septentrionalis antiqua. X.
- А.А.Формозов, Русские археологи и политические репрессии 1920-1940-х гг. Институт археологии РАН, Москва, 1998 (Formozov A.A., "Russian archeologists and political repressions of the 1920-1940's", Russian Academy of Sciences Archeology Institute, Moscow, 1998)[8]
List of Turkologists
[edit ]- Abramzon, S. M. (1905–1977) (ethnographer)[9]
- Abu al-Ghazi Bahadur (1605–1664) (historian, Turkologist)
- Adamovic M. (Uralic languages, Turkologist)
- Akhatov G. Kh. (1927–1986) (Professor of Philology, Turkologist, Linguist, Orientalist)[10]
- Ahatanhel Krymsky (1871–1942) (Orientalist, Historian, Linguist, Philologist, Ethnographer[11]
- Ahinjanov S. M. (1939–1991) (archeologist, historian, Turkologist)
- Akishev, K. A. (1924–2003) (archeologist, historian, investigated Issyk Kurgan)
- Altheim, F. (1898–1976) (historian)
- Amanjolov, A. S. (runiform writing)
- Anokhin, A. V. (1867–1931) (Turkologist, ethnographer, ancient musical arts)
- Aristov, N. A. (1847–1903) (Orientalist)
- Artamonov, M. (1898–1972) (Archaeologist, Turkologist, historian, Khazar studies)
- Asmussen, J. P. (1928–2002), (Orientalist, Manichaeism historian)[12]
- Ayda Adile (1912–1992) (Etruscologist, Orientalist)
- Bacot, J. (1877–1965) (Orientalist)
- Baichorov S. Ya. (Turkologist, philologist, runiform writing)[13]
- Bailey, H. W. (1899–1996) (Orientalist)
- Bang W. (Bang Kaup J. W., J. Kaup) (1869–1934) (Turkologist, linguist)[14]
- Barfield T. J. (history, anthropology, and social theory)[15]
- Bartold, W. W. (1869–1930) (Orientalist)
- Baskakov, N. A. (1905–1995) (Turkologist, linguist, ethnologist)
- Batmanov I. A. (Turkologist, philologist, runiform writing)
- Bazin Louis (Sinologist, orientalist)
- Beckwith, C. (Uralic and Altaic Studies)
- Benzing J. (1913–2001) (Turkic and northern Eurasia languages)[16]
- Bichurin, N. Ya. (1777–1853) (Sinologist, orientalist)
- Bidjiev Kh. Kh.-M. (1939–1999) (archeologist, Turkologist)[17]
- Bosworth, C. E. (Orientalist, Arabist)
- Bretschneider, E. (1833–1901) (Sinologist)
- Budberg, P. A. (Boodberg) (1903–1972) (Sinologist, orientalist)
- Çağatay, Saadet [18]
- Castrén, M. A. (1813–1852)
- Chavannes, E. (1865–1918) (Sinologist)
- Chia-sheng, Feng (Jiasheng, Fen Tszia-shen, C. S. Feng)
- Csirkés, Ferenc Péter (Orientalist) [19]
- Clauson, G. (1891–1974) (Orientalist, Turkish language)
- Čaušević, Ekrem [hr] (Turkologist)[20]
- de Guignes, Joseph (1721–1800) (Orientalist)
- Dal, Vladimir (1801–1872, Russian language lexicographer)
- Dilaçar, Agop (1895–1979) (linguist)
- Doblhofer E. (Historical philology,)
- Doerfer, G. (1920–2003) (Turkologist)
- Dolgih B. O. (1904–1971) (historian, ethnographer-Sibirologist)[21]
- Donner, O. (1835–1909) (linguist)
- Drompp M. R. (Orientalist, Turkologist)[22]
- Dybo, A. V. (Philologist, Turkologist, comparative linguist)
- Eberhard Wolfram (1909–1988) (Sinologist, Philologist, Turkologist)[23]
- Erdal Marcel (linguist)
- Eren, H. (1919–2007) (linguist, Turkologist, Hungarologist )
- Fedorov-Davydov, G. A. (1931–2000) (archeologist)[24]
- Frye, R. N. (philologist, historian)
- von Gabain, A. (1901–1993) (Turkologist, Sinologist, linguist, art historian)[25]
- Gasratjan, M. A. (1924–2007) (historian, Turkologist, Kurdologist)
- Geng Shimin 耿世民 (Turkologist, Uighurologist, Manichaeanism, linguist, archeologist, historian)
- Gibbon, E. (1737–1794) (historian)
- Giraud, M. R. (1904–1968) (philologist, historian)
- Gökalp, Z. (1886–1924) (Sociologist)
- Golden, P. (historian)
- Golubovsky P. V. (1857–1907) (historian)
- de Groot, J. J. M. (1854–1921) (Sinologist)
- Grousset, R. (1885–1952)
- Gumilev, L. (Arslan) (1912–1992)
- Halasi-Kun Tibor (1914–1991) (Turkologist)[26]
- Gustav Haloun (1898–1951)
- Hamilton, J. R. (linguist, Uighur and Chigil studies)
- Harmatta, J. (1917–2004) (linguist)
- Hashimoto Mantaro (1932-1987) (linguist, philologist, Sinologist; the influence of Altaic languages on Mandarin Chinese)
- Hazai, György (Turkologist, linguist)
- Heissig, W. (1913–2005) (Mongolist)
- Henning, W. B. (1908–1967)
- von Herberstein, S. (Siegmund, Sigismund, Freiherr von Herberstein, Gerbershtein) (1486–1566) (historian, writer, diplomat)
- Hirth, F. (1845–1927) (Sinologist)
- Howorth, H. H. (1842–1923) (archeologist, historian)
- Hulsewe, A. F. P. (1910–1993) (Sinologist)
- Ismagulov, Orazak (anthropologist)
- Jalairi Kadir Galy (Djalairi, Kadyrali, Kadyr Ali, Kydyrgali) (ca 1620) (historian)
- Jankowski Henryk (turkologist)
- Jarring, G. (1907–2002) (Turkologist)
- Jdanko, T. (Zhdanko) (ethnographer)
- Johanson, L. (Turkologist)
- Kantemir, D. (Cantemir) (1673–1723) (historian, linguist, ethnographer)
- Khalikov, A. Kh. (1929–1994) (archeologist, historian, Turkologist)[27]
- Khazanov, A. (social anthropologist and ethnologist)
- Kitsikis, Dimitri (political science)
- Klaproth, J. (1783–1835), (Orientalist, Linguist, Historian, Ethnographer)
- Köprülü, M. F. (Koprulu) (1890–1966)
- Korkmaz, Zeynep (Dialectologist)
- Kormushin, I. V. (Turkologist, philologist, runiform writing)
- Kotwicz, W. (1872–1944) (Orientalist)[28]
- Kradin, N. N. (anthropologist, archaeologist)
- Küner, N. V. (1877–1955) (17-languages polyglot, Turkologist)[29] [30]
- Kurat, A. N. (historian) (1903–1971)
- Kvaerne, P. (Tibetology, Religions)[31]
- Kyzlasov, I. L. (Turkologist, runiform writing)
- Lagashov, B. R. (Caucasology, philology)
- Laude-Cirtautas, Ilse (Turkology)
- von Le Coq, A. (1860–1930) (archaeologist, explorer)
- Liu Mau-tsai (Liu Guan-ying) (Sinologist, Turkologist)
- Lubotsky, A. (philologist)
- Maenchen-Helfen, O. J. (1894–1969) (academic, sinologist, historian, author, and traveler)
- Malov, S. E. (1880–1957) (Orientalist, runiform writing)
- Marquart, J. (Markwart) (1864–1930)
- McGovern W. M. (1897–1964) (Orientalist)[32]
- Mélikoff, Irène
- Ménage, V. L. (1920–2015) (British turkologist, historian)
- Mészáros, Gyula (1883–1957) (Hungarian ethnographer, Orientalist, Turkologist)
- Minorsky, V. F. (1877–1966) (Orientalist)[33]
- Moravcsik, Gyula (1892–1972) (Byzantinology)[34]
- Mukhamadiev, A. (Numismatist, orientalist, philologist)
- Müller, G. F. (Miller) (1705–83) (father of ethnography)
- Munkacsi, B. (1860–1937) (linguist)
- Nadelyaev, V. M. (Turkologist, philologist, runiform writing)
- Nasilov, D. M. (Turkologist, philologist)
- Németh, Gyula (1890–1976) (Turkologist, linguist)
- Ogel, B. (1923–1989) (Philology)
- Pallas, P. S. (1741–1811) (naturalist, ethnographer)
- Pelliot, P. (1878–1945) (Sinologist)
- Peskov, Dmitry [35]
- Pletneva, S. A. (archeologist)
- Podolak, Barbara (Turkologist, linguist)
- Polivanov, E. D. (1891–1938) (Founder of Altaistics, theorist in linguistics, Orientalist, polyglot) Поливанов, Евгений Дмитриевич (in Russian)
- Poppe, N. N. (1897–1991) (linguist-Altaist)
- Potanin, G. N. (1835–1920) (Explorer, historian)
- Potapov, L. P. (1905–2000) (Turkologist, ethnographer, ethnologist)[36]
- Potocki, Yan (or Jan) (1761–1815) (ethnologist, linguist, historian)
- Poucha, P. (Central Asian philology)
- Puech, H.-C. (linguist)
- Radloff, W. (1837–1918)
- Ramstedt, G. H. (1873–1950) (Altaic languages)
- Räsänen, Martti (Ryasyanen, M.)
- Rasonyi, L. [hu] (1899–1984) (Turkologist)
- Rasovsky, D. A. (historian)
- Rémi-Giraud, S. (linguist)
- William of Rubruck (Dutch: Willem van Rubroeck, Latin: Gulielmus de Rubruquis) (traveller, ca. 1248–1252)
- Rochrig, F. L. O. (Roehrig) (1819–1908) (Orientalist, Turkologist, Native American linguist)
- Rossi, Ettore [it] (1884–1955) (Turkologist, Arabist, Iranist, historian and linguist)
- Samoilovich, A. N. (1880–1938, killed in Stalinist repressions) (Orientalist, Turkologist)
- Samolin, W. (1911–1972?) (Orientalist)
- Senigova, T. N. (Fine Arts, Turkologist)
- Sergi Jikia (1898–1993) (Historian and orientalist, founder of the Turkology in Georgia)
- Seydakmatov, K. (Turkologist, runiform writing)
- Shcherbak, A. M. (1926–2008) (Turkologist, runiform writing)
- Siemieniec-Gołaś, Ewa (Turkologist, linguist)
- Smirnova, O. I. (numismatist)
- Stachowski, Marek (linguist, etymologist)
- Stachowski, St. (linguist)
- Starostin, S. (1953–2005) (linguist, Altaic languages hypothesis)
- von Strahlenberg, P. J. (Philip Johan Tabbert) (1676–1747)
- Tekin, Talât (Altaic languages)
- Tenishev, E. R. (1921–2004) (linguist, Central Asian philology)
- von Tiesenhausen, W. (Russian: Tizengauzen, V.G.) (1825–1902) (Orientalist, numismatist, archeologist)[37]
- Tietze, Andreas (1914–2003; Turkologist)
- Thomsen, Vilhelm (1842–1927) (Danish linguist, decipherer of the Orkhon inscriptions)
- Togan, Zeki Velidi (1890–1970) (historian, Turkologist, leader of liberation movement)
- Sergey Tolstov (1907–1976) (archeologist)
- Tremblay, X. (philology)
- Vainberg, B. I. (archeologist, numismatist)
- Vaissière, Étienne de la (Orientalist, philologist)
- Valihanov, Chokan (Shokan, Chokan Chingisovich) (1835–1865) (Turkologist, ethnographer, historian)
- Vambery, A. (1832–1913)
- Vandewalle, Johan
- Vasiliev, D. D. (Türkic runiform script)
- Velikhanly, N. M (Velikhanova) (Orientalist)
- Velyaminov-Zernov, V. V. (1830–1904) (Turkologist)[38]
- Wang Guowei (王国维, 1877–1927) (Sinologist, historian, philologist)
- Wikander, S. (1908–1983) (Orientalist, philologist, Native American linguist) Stig Wikander (sv)
- Wittfogel, K. A. (1896–1988) (Sinologist, historian)
- Yadrintsev, N.V. (1842–1894) (archeologist, Turkologist, explorer)
- Yudin, V. P. (1928–1983) (Orientalist, historian, and philologist)[39]
- Zajączkowski, Ananiasz [pl] (1903–1970) (Turkologist)
- Zakiev, M. (Philologist)
- Zehren, E. (Orientalist, archeologist)
- Vásáry, István (Turkologist, historian)[40]
- Zhirinovsky, V. V. (Turkologist, philologist, politician)
- Zieme, P. W. H. (Turkologist, linguist)
- Zuev, Yu. (1932–2006) (Sinologist)
See also
[edit ]References
[edit ]- ^ Kemper, Michael; Conermann, Stephan (February 2011). The Heritage of Soviet Oriental Studies. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-83854-5.
- ^ "Great Purge". HISTORY. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
- ^ "VLIB.iue.it". Archived from the original on 7 December 2021. Retrieved 26 November 2008.
- ^ Ivanov, Anatol. "FASMER, RICHARD RICHARDOVICH or VASMER (1858–1938), eminent Russian numismatist.". Encyclopædia Iranica on line. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
- ^ Krymsky, Ahatanhel. Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine
- ^ Ahatanhel Krymsky: 10 interesting facts of his life (Агатангел Крымский: 10 интересных фактов из жизни). Avdet. 24 June 2015
- ^ pdf IHST.ru
- ^ IHST.ru (in Russian)
- ^ KRSU.edu.kg Archived 11 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
- ^ Professor G. Akhatov (in Russian)
- ^ Krymsky, Ahatanhel [1] (in English)
- ^ Sundermann, Werner. "ASMUSSEN, Jes Peter scholar of Iranian studies (1928–2002).". Encyclopædia Iranica online. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
- ^ Elbrusoid.org (in Russian)
- ^ Zieme, P. "BANG KAUP, JOHANN WILHELM MAX JULIUS (known as Willy), German orientalist (1869–1934). From 1893 onward Bang Kaup also devoted time to research in the promising area of the Old Turkish stone inscriptions.". Encyclopædia Iranica online. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
- ^ BU.edu
- ^ MPG.de
- ^ Elbrusoid.org (in Russian)
- ^ "Prof. Dr. Saadet Çağatay Hayatı ve Eserleri - EDEBİYAT / Öykü Tiyatro Deneme Yazarlarımız | Edebiyat ve Sanat Akademisi".
- ^ sabanciuniv.edu
- ^ FFZG.hr Archived 20 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in Croatian)
- ^ NSC.ru Archived 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
- ^ Eurasianhistory.com
- ^ "Umass.edu". Archived from the original on 7 October 2008. Retrieved 14 May 2008.
- ^ Saray-al-mahrusa.ru (in Russian)
- ^ Zieme, Peter Zieme. "GABAIN, ANNEMARIE VON (1901–1993), German scholar who worked in the field of Central Asian (primarily Turkic) studies, first as a linguist but later as an art historian.". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
- ^ NYtimes.com
- ^ RIN.ru
- ^ Archive.org
- ^ "Sektam.net". Archived from the original on 3 October 2008. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
- ^ Liveinternet.ru (in Russian)
- ^ Tibet.com
- ^ Northwestern.edu
- ^ Bosworth, C. E. "MINORSKY, Vladimir Fed'orovich (1877–1966), outstanding Russian scholar of Persian history, historical geography, literature and culture.". Encyclopædia Iranica on line. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
- ^ "Getcited.org". Archived from the original on 24 September 2005. Retrieved 4 May 2008.
- ^ "Russia's Altai should be marked as center of Turkic world on Erdogan's map — Kremlin". Tass. 21 November 2021.
- ^ Kunstkamera.ru Archived 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
- ^ Rulex.ru (in Russian)
- ^ Blogspot.com
- ^ Vostlit.info (in Russian)
- ^ elte.academia.edu
- Kononov A.N., editor, "Bibliographical dictionary of native Turkologists. Pre-USSR period", Moscow, Science, 1974 – Кононов А.Н., ред., "Биобиблиографический словарь отечественных тюркологов. Дооктябрьский период"; Москва, Наука, 1974 (In Russian). Brief biographical and bibliographical compendium of more than 300 Turkologists in Russia, who contributed to the development of Turkology and education in Türkic languages from the 18th century to 1917.
- Starostin, Sergei/Dybo, Anna/Mudrak, Oleg, "Etymological Dictionary of the Altaic Languages" ("Этимологический Словарь Алтайских языков"), 3 vols, Leiden and Boston 2003 ISBN 90-04-13153-1
External links
[edit ]- İstanbul Kültür University Archived 29 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- International Turkology and Turkish History Research Symposium Archived 29 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- SOTA Research Centre for Turkestan and Azerbaijan
- ATON at Texas Tech University
- Turkish Studies Institutes, Departments Links
- Turuz – Online Turkic Dictionaries
- Turklib – Turkistan Library