r/TurkicHistory • u/Dangerous_Drama6843 • 23h ago
r/TurkicHistory • u/MongolThrowaway • Mar 19 '15
The Ottoman History Podcast - Nearly 200 Episodes!
See here for a list of all available tracks (latest podcasts may not be listed):
https://soundcloud.com/ottoman-history-podcast
Website:
http://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/p/episode-list.html
Complete List:
Season 4 (May 2014 - present)
Family and Property in Ottoman Syria, Beshara Doumani (5/5/2015)
The Middle Class and the Modern Middle East, Keith Watenpaugh (4/30/2015)
Politics and Memory in Armenian Lullabies, Melissa Bilal (4/24/2015)
Commerce, Law, and Ottoman Maritime Space, Michael Talbot (4/20/2015)
Islamic Hospitals in Syria and the Levant, Ahmad Ragab (4/16/2015)
Central Asians and the Ottoman Empire, Lale Can (4/10/2015)
Ottoman Armenian Migration, David Gutman (4/4/2015)
Cultural Policy and Branding in Turkey, Aslı Iğsız (3/30/2015)
Illicit Sex in French Algeria, Aurelie Perrier (3/26/2015)
Alevi Kurdish Music and Migration, Ozan Aksoy (3/20/2015)
New Perspectives on Medieval Anatolia, Sara Nur Yıldız (3/13/2015)
Turks Across Empires, James Meyer (2/14/2015)
Osmanlı'da Kadın Mülkiyet Hakları, Hadi Hosainy (2/2/2015)
An Andalusi in Fatimid Egypt, Sumaiya Hamdani (1/17/2015)
Missionaries and the Making of the Muslim Brotherhood, Beth Baron (1/8/2015)
Slavery in Early Modern Galata, Nur Sobers-Khan (12/11/2014)
Law and Order in Late Ottoman Egypt, Khaled Fahmy (11/20/2014)
Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Gizli Hristiyanlar, Zeynep Türkyılmaz (11/15/2014)
Society and Politics in Ottoman Iraq, Dina Khoury (11/7/2014)
Saharan Jews and French Algeria, Sarah Stein (10/31/2014)
Osmanlı Toplumunda Çocukluk, Yahya Araz (10/26/2014)
Syrian University Students and the Impacts of War, Keith Watenpaugh (10/17/2014)
Education, Politics, and the Life of Zabel Yessayan, Jennifer Manoukian (9/23/2014)
Osmanlı’da Tütün İşçileri, Can Nacar (9/12/2014)
Migrant Workers in Ottoman Anatolia, Chris Gratien (8/31/2014)
Osmanlı'da Buz Üretimi, Burcu Kurt (8/24/2014)
Writing the History of Palestine and Palestinians, Beshara Doumani (8/15/2014)
Astronomy and Islam in Late Ottoman Egypt, Daniel Stolz (8/10/2014)
Silent Violence in the late Ottoman Period, Özge Ertem / Graham Pitts (8/1/2014)
Bir Osmanlı Mahellenin Doğumu ve Ölümü, Cem Behar (7/26/2014)
The Politics of 1948 in Israeli Archives, Shay Hazkani (7/19/2014)
New Archives in Lebanon: Kaslik (7/17/2014)
Kocaları Zehirleyen Osmanlı Kadınları, Ebru Aykut (7/13/2014)
Los Espías (en Español), Emrah Safa Gürkan (7/9/2014)
Between the Sultans and Kings, Claire Gilbert (7/5/2014)
After the Genocide, Lerna Ekmekçioğlu (6/29/2014)
Children and the First World War, (6/21/2014)
Osmanlı'da Mecnun Olmak, Fatih Artvinli (6/14/2014)
Inside Ottoman Prisons, Kent Schull (6/7/2014)
Imperial Architecture in Ottoman Aleppo, Heghnar Watenpaugh (5/31/2014)
Balkan Historiographies and the Ottoman Empire, Dimitris Stamatopoulos (5/24/2014)
Osmanlı'da İşçiler, Kadir Yıldırım (5/20/2014)
Miners and the Ottoman State, Donald Quataert & Ryan Gingeras (5/18/2014)
Figurative Littorals and Wild Fields, Arianne Urus & Michael Polczynski (5/16/2014)
Reading Clocks Alaturka, Avner Wishnitzer (5/8/2014)
Echoes of the Ottoman Past, Chris Gratien & Emily Neumeier (5/1/2014)
Season 3 (April 2013 - April 2014)
The Lives of Ottoman Children, Nazan Maksudyan (3/22/2014)
Common Ground and Imagined Communities, Daniel Pontillo (3/16/2014)
Alevis in Ottoman Anatolia, Ayfer Karakaya-Stump (3/8/2014)
Muslims in the Middle Kingdom, Kelly Hammond (3/1/2014)
Polonia Ottomanica, Michael Polczynski & Paulina Dominik (2/22/2014)
Ottoman Sea Baths, Burkay Pasin (2/15/2014)
Galata and the Capitulations, Fariba Zarinebaf (2/8/2014)
The Ottoman Scramble for Africa, Mostafa Minawi (2/1/2014)
A History of Police in Turkey, Leila Piran (1/24/2014)
Race, Slavery, and Islamic Law in the Early Modern Atlantic, Chris Gratien (1/18/2014)
Darwin in Arabic, Marwa Elshakry (1/10/2014)
History on the Internet, Chris Gratien (12/29/2013)
Wandering Physicians in Israel/Palestine, Anat Mooreville (12/28/2013)
Across Anatolia on a Bicycle, Daniel Pontillo (12/27/2013)
Arabs Through Turkish Eyes, Nicholas Danforth (12/26/2013)
Lubunca: Sociolinguistics of Istanbul Slang, Nicholas Kontovas (12/20/2013)
Water and Politics on the Tigris, Julia Harte / Anna Ozbek (12/13/2013)
Turkey and Russia After Empire, Onur İşçi (12/7/2013)
Ottoman Alchemy, Tuna Artun (12/1/2014)
The Frontiers of the First World War, various scholars (11/25/2013)
Family and Property in Ottoman Lebanon, Zoe Griffith (11/17/2013)
Osmanlı'da Mahremiyetin Sınırları, Fikret Yılmaz (11/10/2013)
Hayretle Seyret, Nezih Erdoğan (11/3/2013)
The Enlightenment and the Ottoman World, Harun Küçük (10/25/2013)
Jewish Citizens on Exhibit, Alma Heckman (10/18/2013)
Plague in the Early Modern Mediterranean, Edna Bonhomme (10/4/2013)
History of Science, Ottoman and Otherwise, Nir Shafir (9/27/2013)
Sultan ve Musahipleri, Günhan Börekçi (9/19/2013)
Hidden Histories at the French Archives, Sandrine Mansour-Mérien, (9/11/2013)
A Short History of Iraqi Refugees in Syria, Chris Gratien (9/2/2013)
Osmanlı Döneminde Bursa Otelleri, İsmail Yaşayanlar (8/30/2013)
World War I and the Ottoman Home Front, Yiğit Akın (8/23/2013)
Colonialism, Sovereignty, and Medical Practice, Philippe Bourmaud (8/16/2013)
Sufism and Society, John Curry (8/9/2013)
Kurdish Music Industry, Alev Kuruoğlu (8/2/2013)
Kadı'nın Günlüğü, Selim Karahasanoğlu (7/26/2013)
Painting the Peasant in Modern Turkey, Seçil Yılmaz (7/19/2013)
Local Autonomy and the Tanzimat, Elektra Kostopoulou (7/11/2013)
Anadolu'ya Bir Göç Öyküsü, Mehtap Çelik (7/4/2013)
The Crimean Khanate and the Ottoman World, Denise Klein (6/28/2013)
Occupy Gezi: History, Politics, Practice (6/7/2013)
Osmanlı'da Siyasal Ağlar, Güneş Işıksel (5/31/2013)
Dragomans, Emrah Safa Gürkan (5/24/2013)
Türkiye'de Tarih Öğretimi, Emrah Yıldız (5/17/2013)
Sources for Early Ottoman History, Christopher Markiewicz (5/10/2013)
Girit Müslümanlarının Ada'da Son Yılları, Melike Kara (5/3/2013)
Crypto-Christianity in the Ottoman Empire, Zeynep Türkyılmaz (4/29/2013)
Komitas: a Biographical Mixtape, Chris Gratien (4/24/2013)
Child and Nation in Early Republican Turkey, Yasemin Gencer (4/18/2013)
Hydropolitics and the Hajj, Michael Christopher Low (4/12/2013)
Season 2 (April 2012 - April 2013)
Gelenekten Gelenekçiliğe: Osmanlı ve Müzik, Cem Behar (4/5/2013)
Approaching Lebanese History, Graham Pitts (3/30/2013)
Prostitution in the Eastern Mediterranean, Gary Leiser (3/25/2013)
- yüzyıl Türk Edebiyatı'nda Müzik, Melda Üner (3/21/2013)
Transport and Public Space in Ottoman Istanbul, James Ryan (3/17/2013)
Ottoman Qur'an Printing, Brett Wilson (3/3/2013)
Salonica in the Age of Ports, Sotiris Dimitriadis (2/23/2013)
Tedirgin Anadolu, Taylan Akyıldırım (2/15/13)
Geography, Knowledge, and Mapping Ottoman History, Nicholas Danforth / Timur Hammond (2/8/13)
Translating Pamuk, Bernt Brendemoen (2/1/13)
Producing Pera, Nilay Özlü (1/25/13)
I. Selim imgesi ve 17. yüzyılda Osmanli şehirlilerinin tarih algısı, Tülün Değirmenci (1/19/13)
Malaria (3 Parts), Chris Gratien / Sam Dolbee (1/13/13)
Diplomat bir Şehzade'nin portresi: II. Selim, Güneş Işıksel (1/4/13)
Indian Soldiers and POWs in the Ottoman Empire during WWI, Vedica Kant / Robert Upton (12/28/12)
Christmas and Diplomacy in the Ottoman Empire during WWI, Chris Gratien (12/20/12)
Palestinianism and Zionism in the late-Ottoman era, Louis Fishman (12/16/12)
Hello Anatolia: A Film, Valantis Stamelos (12/9/12)
Zanzibar: Imperial Visions and Ottoman Connections, Jeffery Dyer (12/1/12)
Osman Hamdi Bey and the Journey of an Ottoman Painting, Emily Neumeier (11/24/12)
Turkey: a Bird and a Country, Chris Gratien (11/20/12)
The Spread of Turkish Language and the Black Sea Dialects, Bernt Brendemoen (11/16/12)
Agriculture and Autonomy in the Modern Middle East, Graham Pitts (11/9/12)
Did the Ottomans Consider Themselves an Empire?, Einar Wigen (11/5/12)
The Ottoman Mediterranean: Corsairs, Emrah Safa Gürkan (10/26/12 - same as #2)
"Westerners Gone Wild" in the Ottoman Empire, Chris Gratien (10/20/12)
Ottoman Classical Music, Mehmet Uğur Ekinci (10/13/12)
Hat Sanatı (Islamic Calligraphy), Irvin Cemil Schick (10/7/12)
Yeni Askeri Tarihçilik (A New Approach to Military History), Kahraman Şakul (9/30/12)
Women Literati and Ottoman Intellectual Culture, Didem Havlioğlu (9/24/12)
Ecology and Empire in Ottoman Egypt, Alan Mikhail (9/16/12)
Environmental History of the Middle East: Debates, Themes, and Trajectories, Sam Dolbee / Elizabeth Williams / Chris Gratien (9/11/12)
Ottoman Palestine: The History of a Name, Zachary J. Foster (9/6/12)
Horses and Ritual Slaughter in the Early Ottoman Empire, Oscar Aguirre-Mandujano (8/27/12)
Ottoman History, Minus the Dust, Sam Dolbee (8/18/12)
Karamanli Culture in the Ottoman Empire, Ayça Baydar (8/16/12)
Dreams in Ottoman Society, Culture, and Cosmos, Aslı Niyazioğlu (8/13/12)
Evliya Çelebi, Madeleine Elfenbein (8/7/12)
Sex, Love, and Worship in Classical Ottoman Texts, Selim Kuru (8/1/12)
Pastoral Nomads and Legal Pluralism in Ottoman Jordan, Nora Barakat (7/24/12)
Drugs in the Middle East, Zachary J. Foster (7/13/12)
Nation, Class, and Ecology in French Mandate Lebanon: AUB and 1930s Rural Development, Sam Dolbee (7/7/12)
State and Information in the Early Modern Mediterranean, Emrah Safa Gürkan (6/11/12)
Regroupment Camps and Resettlement in Rural Algeria during the War of Independence, Dorothée Kellou (5/21/12)
History and Folk Music in Turkey: An Historiographical Mixtape, Elçin Arabacı (5/15/12)
Deconstructing the Ottoman State: Political Factions in the Ottoman Empire, Emrah Safa Gürkan (5/3/12)
Ottoman Migrations from the Eastern Mediterranean, Andrew Arsan (4/25/12)
Periodizing Modern Turkish History: Ottoman and Republican Continuities, Nicholas Danforth (4/19/12)
Season 1 (April 2011 - April 2012)
Can the Ottoman Speak?: History and Furniture, Chris Gratien (4/1/12)
Ottoman Politics in the Arab Provinces and the CUP, Zachary J. Foster (3/26/12)
Ottoman Go-Betweens: An Armenian Merchant from Poland Visits Safavid Iran, Michael Polczynski (3/2/12)
Muslim Families and Households in Ottoman Syria, Chris Gratien (3/1/12)
Slavery in a Global Context: the Atlantic, the Middle East and the Black Sea, Elena Abbott / Soha El Achi / Michael Polczynski (2/16/12)
Tea in Morocco: Nationalism, Tradition and the Consumption of Hot Beverages, Graham Cornwell (2/10/12)
Napoleon in Egypt and the Description de l'Egypte, Chris Gratien (2/3/12)
Music and History in Lebanon: an Historiographical Mixtape, Chris Gratien (1/27/12)
Is History a Science? Definitions and Debates, Daniel Pontillo / Lawrence McMahon (1/19/12)
Ottoman Syria: Environment, Agriculture and Production, Chris Gratien (1/4/12)
Gaze: Eyes, Seeing, and Being Seen in History and Society, Daniel Pontillo (12/30/11)
Turkish Knockoff Toothpaste, Legal Imperialism, and Racist Product Marketing, Chris Gratien (12/26/11)
Geography and Eating in the Middle East, Nicholas Danforth (12/15/11)
Zazaki and the Zaza people in Turkey: Languages of the Ottoman Empire, Chris Gratien (11/7/11)
State and Society in Ottoman Syria: an Historiographical Overview, Chris Gratien (9/28/11)
Shared Traditions in Turkish, Armenian and Azeri Folklore: Sarı Gelin, Chris Gratien (9/22/11)
Istanbul Neighborhoods: The History and Transformation of Eyüp, Timur Hammond (8/21/11)
Earthquakes in Istanbul: Past Disasters and Anticipation of Future Risk, Elizabeth Angell (8/16/11)
Hacı Ali, an Ottoman-American Cameleer, Scott Rank (8/6/11)
American Missionaries in the Ottoman Empire, Scott Rank (7/11/11)
Yogurt in History: An Ottoman Legacy?, Chris Gratien (7/2/11)
Ottoman Sources: Archives and Collections in Israel/Palestine, Zachary J. Foster (6/18/11)
U.S.-Turkey Relations during the 1950s, Nicholas Danforth (6/6/11)
Race, Citizenship and the Nation-State: French Colonial Algeria, Lawrence McMahon (5/28/11)
The Origins of Zionist Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, Zachary J. Foster (5/25/11)
Traditional Performance and Modern Media: Gesture in Turkish Music Videos, Sylvia Önder (5/20/11)
Turkish Language and Linguistics: Evidentiality, Daniel Pontillo (5/16/11)
Jafar al-Askari: Modernization, Martial Discipline and Post-Ottoman Iraq, Matthew MacLean (5/14/11)
History and Memory in Palestine: The Legacy of Ottoman Rule, Zachary J. Foster (5/11/11)
Languages of the Ottoman Empire: Georgian, Daniel Pontillo (5/9/11)
Arab Nationalism and Palestinian Identity under the British Mandate, Zachary J. Foster (5/4/11)
Mountains, Climate and Ecology in the Mediterranean, John R. McNeill (5/1/11)
Nations, Maps, and Drawing the Boundaries of Post-Ottoman Middle East, Nicholas Danforth (4/21/11)
European Diasporas in the Ottoman Empire: Nineteenth-Century Polish Emigrés, Michael Polczynski (4/20/11)
Slavery in the Mediterranean: French Colonialism in Algeria, Soha El Achi (4/18/11)
Ottoman Spies and Espionage: Information in the Early Modern Mediterranean, Emrah Safa Gürkan (4/18/11)
World War I and the Ottoman Empire: the Arab Provinces, Zachary J. Foster (4/16/11)
Turkey and its Global Image: Neo-Ottomanism, Nicholas Danforth (4/5/11)
Oil, Grand Strategy and the Ottoman Empire, Anand Toprani (4/4/11)
Remembering the Ottoman Past: the Ottoman Empire's Legacy in Modern Turkey, Emrah Safa Gürkan / Nicholas Danforth (4/4/11)
Mediterranean Go-Betweens: Renegades, Emrah Safa Gürkan (4/4/11)
Ottoman Sources: Mühimme defters, Emrah Safa Gürkan (4/3/11)
Masculinity and Imperialism: the Mustache in the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Chris Gratien (4/3/11)
The Ottoman-Habsburg Rivalry, Emrah Safa Gürkan (4/3/11)
The Ottoman Mediterranean: Corsairs, Emrah Safa Gürkan (4/2/11)
Introducing the Ottoman History Podcast, Chris Gratien / Emrah Safa Gürkan
See more at: http://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/p/episode-list.html#sthash.gWdtUPWD.dpuf
r/TurkicHistory • u/Queasy-Yak7948 • 1d ago
Are Crimean Tatars the original inhabitants of Crimea???
It is said that kipchaks were ruling a big part of central asian all the way to crimea! Some kipchaks inter mingled with the local Crimean people and gave birth to kipchak Tatars.
But according to Russians they are the original inhabitants and Tatars came to crimea with mongol conquest
r/TurkicHistory • u/Various_Western_2282 • 1d ago
is it true that Crimean Tatars are Goths who were Turkified? They have significant Germanic, Slavic and some Greek admixture.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Dense_Bed9498 • 1d ago
Почему кыргызы и индейцы так похоже атличаются лишь в цвет и челюсть и другие черты но кроме этого очень похожи
r/TurkicHistory • u/SoloeaDomoea • 2d ago
Is there hope for Turkic football teams?
Uzbekistan made central Asian history, qualified for this world cup, becoming the first Central Asian country to do so but lost in all three games all three games (3-1 to Columbia, 5-0 to Portugal, 3-1 to Dr Congo). Turkey lost two games to Australia and Paraguay and won against United States. Turkish had a history of becoming 3rd place after that they always lost and rarely qualified for world cup.
Uzbekistan in 2025 Al Ain International Cup final Uzbekistan won the cup by beating teams like Egypt and Iran who did pretty well in this 2026 world cup. What went wrong with Uzbekistan team?
Just to be fair: Asia football can't be compared with West Europe or South America level. Historically Asian teams in World cup qualification had always been either Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Iran. Since 2000, it's always Japan having the best result of reaching last 16 rounds, with South Korea sometimes made to last 16 round. Some believe there be a rise of Asian football miracle, because of world cup results in 2018 and 2022. Argentina was beaten Saudi Arabia in 2022, While Germany, Uruguay, Portugal beaten by South Korea in 2018 and 2022, Spain and Germany beaten by Japan in 2022. but in 2026, South Korea only won against Czech Republic, Japan drew with Netherland and Sweden and won 4-0 against Tunisia but lost to Brazil who later lost to Norway. Iran and Saudi araba were able draw, Saudi lost 4-0 to Spain, but Qatar, Uzbekistan, Iraq. Jordan lost in all group stages games and by large margin of goals and the best Asia team is only stuck in 32 rounds.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Subject-Cow8025 • 4d ago
giveaways, contests, trivia night in 2 weeks in turkic server
r/TurkicHistory • u/Apart-Cranberry200 • 6d ago
Azerbaijani dna
From Sabirabad, 1/8 Chechen and 1/8 from Hamadan.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Turkish_Teacher • 6d ago
Wrestling
Is wrestling practiced in your country as a folk sport? Does it have history that goes way back?
If so, what is your country's style like? What are the rules? The winning conditions? The attire?
Mongolian wrestling seems unique, for an example. Translates well to sumo, apparently.
r/TurkicHistory • u/MareMade • 6d ago
Non-Turkish Users Using the Turkish Flag
You can’t represent me or speak on behalf of my nation if you aren’t Turkish—especially if this is how you really feel: (They edited their comment to “Tm Ermeni” immediately)
I don’t know who this person is, and I don’t trust anything they say. Whether they’re telling the truth or whether their spouse is Turkish is irrelevant. I wouldn’t use another country’s flag and speak on behalf of its people, so I don’t think they should either.
r/TurkicHistory • u/valerianxx4x • 7d ago
Turkmens from iran
In iran most Turkmens live in the north and northeast with a population of nearly 2 million.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Site-Famous • 6d ago
Homeland in Turkish and Turkic cultures/Did Nomads care about land?
Do you agree with the arguments regarding land being equally sacred in nomadic societies?
r/TurkicHistory • u/Proper-Doughnut77 • 6d ago
history of Turkish Angoras
I'm trying to find the history of these beautiful cats. Long story short, I'm writing a children's book series, and one of the three main characters is my, now crossed the rainbow bridge, beautiful black TAC. She has 9 lives, the first started with Cleopatra. Each life lasts about 135-150 years.
In my story, Mogwai (her name) was a kitten, given to Cleopatra by Mark Anthony. I've researched and Cleopatra did have a favorite cat... And I know too, Mark Anthony did go to Turkey... She was born ??? And Mark Anthony found her and gave her to the beautiful queen.
I want to have my baby girl found at say, 6 months, but I can't locate any history. Does anyone know of any myths surrounding them? What's it called? I can make it up, but my goal is to use as much real history as possible.
All I've found is the breed is very old, and they mention Anatolian mountains.
Thank you.
r/TurkicHistory • u/SoloeaDomoea • 7d ago
How different do Turkic like Kazakh and Uzbek look from local Singaporean Chinese and half Chinese/half caucasian groups?
I'm born to Hong Konger Chinese + Canarian islander mother (European/North African) and bit cuban. So I don't see things from a pure Chinese perspective. This is how I see things. Please change my opinion if you can. I think Mongolians and Kazakhs look different to Chinese yet less different to Singaporean Chinese than even Half Chinese/half Caucasians or even Malay/Indonesian and other Southeast Asians.
Picture groups:
1st group Kazakh and Chinese Singaporean
2nd group Uzbeks in Singapore (<--- the group that people mistake me for them, 5 times)
3rd group Mongolians and Chinese Singaporean
4th picture all Half Chinese/half White ( 6ft 2 Lewin Tan born to Chinese Singaporean father, white mother, leading hollywood actor of Mortal Kombat
5th picture Half Chinese us 5ft 8 John Foo born to Chinese Singaporean father and Irish mother, leading actor of Tekken movie.
6th picture is 6ft tall Joseph Schooling national sport hero of Singapore, a gold medalist swimmer who beat Micheal Phelps (greatest gold medalist/olympian of all time), his 5ft 11 tall father is 1/4 Chinese/Malay and 3/4 European, his mother is Malaysian-Chinese.
Out of all those four groups Uzbeks and Half Chinese/half White look the most different to Singaporean Chinese because of their west eurasian mixed race look and Mongolians and Kazakh also look different because of their northeast Asian looks. The Half Chinese/Half are the tallest too apart from different faces.
Singaporeans (diversity)
Apart from the majority (76% Chinese) there is (20%+) minority Malay and Indians and few percent of these White (European and Australians) Middle easterner ( Arabs, Lebanese) you can also find individual or small groups of expatriates or students Jews, Koreans, Japanese, Indonesians, Filipino, Mongolians, Kazakhs, Uzbeks. Taiwanese usually as university student, looking for work. There's also Eurasians, small number of them,
This is how I rank people who are most different racially to Chinese in Singappore
1st group of race with most different phenotype to Singaporean Chinese
- Indians ( Pakistani and other South Asians)
- Whites ( any European and Jewish descent)
- Middle easterners ( Arabs or Persians)
- North Africans ( Morrocans and others)
All of them look the most racially/distinct in phenotypes and physical. Nothing to do if they look west eurasian or not. South Indians do not look west eurasian but have 0% phenotype racial resemblance to Chinese Singaporeans. There's simply no room and no place for these people to be mistaken for Chinese
2nd group of race most different phenotype to Singaporean Chinese
- Uzbeks
- Half Asian/Half Caucasian ( Half Chinese/ half White0
Uzbeks, only found them during world cup qualification in 2019 with Singapore, also university attendees. I got mistaken for Uzbek five times in Singapore. Many look western like, but a significant number look East Asian like and mix. They have very black hair or light black hair on average, their height is roughly the same as Singaporean Chinese though, some are tall of course. Now the Half Chinese/Half white, 1/2 of them look like East Asian with some Caucasian bone structure (like tall nose, deep set eyes) other half look ambiguous or mostly white with some asian features. They are generally taller for sure, a lot of 6ft, if Chinese Singaporean average height is 5'ft 8 and 5ft 9 than these haflies are usually 5'ft 10 1/2 to 5ft 11 and 1/2. Sure you can find in even Southern Chinese Singaporean with 6ft tall but for sure is more common in these half ones. They generally have light black hair, to brown hair (especially as kids), some have hazel eyes, green like eyes, gray, or very light brown, a few are blonde too (especially the kids)
3rd group of race with most different phenotypes to Singaporean Chinese
- Malays/Indonesian (and other Southeast Asians)
- Kazakhs (including Kyrgyz I suppose)
The Malays/Indonesians and other Southeast Asian even without their muslim outfit clearly have different skin tone that is darker light to medium brown and different facial features that is clearly Southeast Asians-like unless they are Malaysian-Chinese or Southeast Asian with Chinese origin. I know they are mongoloid though despite darker skin tone and broader facial features (like wider, flatter noses and large nostrils). The Kazakhs on average look more Chinese despite being less East Eurasian, just based on skin tones and phenotypes, I say they pass for more Chinese on average than Malay/Indonesian can but the difference is there is also some number of Kazakh individuals with clearly mixed phenotypes. On average they look East Asian or East Asian with little signs of mixed traits, they also more larger percent of people with more prominent noses (some are flat looking too)
4th group of race with most different phenotypes to Singaporean Chinese
- Mongolian
- Korean
- Japanese
- North Chinese.
These ones are the most hardest to distinguish yet still distinguishable. They all tend to have a Northern look especially Mongolian, they have this very slant eye or classic Northeast Asian look. They all in general have more single eyelid and prominent noses than Singaporeans Chinese on average (although a quite number even withing Southern Chinese have these traits. Some Singaporeans are also Northern Chinese from Beijing, Tianjin (there's even Manchu descendant), you can find them Singaporean media (movies, dramas) they are treated as ethnic Chinese Singaporean, so that is why a Northern look is in some part in integrated as a Singapore facial variation, so Northern look does not necessarily look foreign, because is a common minority look. The majority have a Southern Chinese look that can be distinguished
The most similar to Singaporean Chinese
- Southern Chinese
- Hong Konger
- Taiwanese
- Malaysian-Chinese
There's really no different in looks except for their accent. The closest origin in appearance and phenotypes. Generally more double eyelid, light skinned to a bit tanned.
r/TurkicHistory • u/kebapcelebi • 8d ago
Kırım Hanlığı'nı Konu Edinen Bir Animasyon Dizisi
ÖZET YAZI
Merhaba, ben uzun süredir Kırım Hanlığı'nın son dönemini işleyen karakter temelli bir animasyon dizisi üzerinde çalışıyorum. Ancak insanlar Kırım Hanlığı ve Kırım Tatarları ile ilgili pek bilgi sahibi değil. Ben de ilk bölümü yapmadan önce insanları diziye hazırlamak için bu ön bölümü yaptım.
Düşüncelerinizi ve sorularınızı benimle paylaşırsanız mutlu olurum.
AYRINTILI YAZI
Bence Kırım Hanlığı ve Kırım Tatarları Osmanlılar ile doğrudan ilişkili bir Türk devleti olmasına rağmen Türk tarihinin en çok gölgede kalmış ve anlatılmamış kısımların bir tanesi.
Geçmişten bugüne değin çok fazla şey yaşamış olmalarına rağmen günümüzde insanlara Kırım Hanlığı denilince bize ya "Bir Osmanlı toprağı" gibi düz yanıtlar veriliyor ya da "Viyana'da bizi sattılar, başlarına ne geldiyse hak ettiler" gibi sığ ve dehşet verici bir söylemde bulunuluyor. Üstüne üstlük Youtube'da Kırım Hanlığı'nın tarihi ile ilgili de elle tutulur fazla video bulunmuyor.
Tüm bunlara karşın ben hem Kırım Tatarlarına hem de onların kültürel değerlerine olan sevgimden ötürü bu durumu değiştirmeye karar verdim ve Kırılay adlı bu çizgi diziyi yapmaya başladım. Ancak önce insanları bilgilendirme gereği duydum ve bu ön bölümü hazırladım.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Ok-Luck-3664 • 8d ago
Kazakhs Y-dna vs Kyrgyz Y-dna
The Kazakh and Kyrgyz peoples share close cultural, linguistic, and historical nomadic bonds, their paternal (Y-DNA) genetic profiles are vastly different and represent opposite dominant ancestral streams.
The primary difference lies in the inversion of their dominant haplogroups: Kazakh paternal lines are heavily dominated by East Eurasian lineages (Haplogroup C2) linked to medieval Mongolic expansions, whereas Kyrgyz paternal lines are heavily dominated by a West Eurasian lineage (Haplogroup R1a) stemming from ancient West-Steppe Indo-Iranian and early Siberian populations!
r/TurkicHistory • u/Ecstatic-Pudding-790 • 9d ago
Did western people had fun with our women because why we have a R1a?
I’ve been thinking about this and I don’t wanna feel humiliated
r/TurkicHistory • u/FinanceBasic4347 • 10d ago
Perfect Storm The rise of Mongol empire
Mongol empire rose because of internal divisions of rival empires
r/TurkicHistory • u/Greedy-Antelope-7862 • 10d ago
Which Turkish series helped you learn Turkish?🆘
Hi everyone!
I’m currently learning Turkish, and I’m looking for a Turkish TV series that can help me improve my listening and vocabulary naturally
I watch with Arabic subtitles, so I’d like something that’s easy to follow, with clear and everyday conversations. I’d also prefer a series that’s fun/lighthearted and not too long
Do you have any recommendations that helped you learn Turkish?
Thanks in advance!
r/TurkicHistory • u/SoloeaDomoea • 12d ago
Turkic people with red hair/blonde hair and blue/green eyes is it because of genetic admixture or genetic mutate?
Most Mongols and Northern Turks (Kazakh, Kyrgyz) with colored eyes/hair still have East Asian faces, sometimes mixed. Is the blonde/red hair and blue/green eyes in Mongols and Turks entirely because of result of admixtures or does it include recessive genes, pigmentation, albinism, waardenburg syndrome. I'm asking for a alternative answer from Turkic people who also have some individuals with colored eyes/hair.
Other who are not Mongols and Turkic, how do you explain this
PICTURES
1st picture: Blonde hair/blue eye Hmong/Miao people
2nd picture: Blue eyes Lao sisters (warrdern syndrome)
3rd picture: blue eye Muslim Asian girl,
4th picture: Asian Albinos with blonde/white hair and blue eyes
5th picture: Chinese red haired brother and sister
6th picture: Blonde Hmong/Miao people
7th picture: Blonde/red/brown hair Hmong/Miao people
8th picture: Red hair Hmong people
(There is also this video of Hmong, Kazakh, Mongol) with colored eyes/hair
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzEnsynTBhM
So far the only people I've seen who have these eye/hair colored traits are Mongol, Hmong, Asian Turkic, Siberians, Miao people, and Yi mountain people of China in Sichuan. Of course I've seen Han Chinese muslim with green/hazel eyes and brown hair too but that's about it. Of course there's also the albino, heteretochromia, waardrome symdrone, pigmented Asians but these exist in every ethnic group in the world.
My envy for colored hair/eyes
I have envy for Asians or mixed Asians with colored eyes/hair. Despite me being half Asian/half caucasian.... You can be born from a Hong Kong (Chinese) father and Canarian mother (European/North African) and so what?. Despite me having mostly western face/bone structure all I have is black wavy/ curly hair and dark brown eyes. Out of 6 of including my cousins, only one born with some dirty blond hair and hazel eyes, yet he looks way more East Asian than me
Ethnic Hmong and Miao people, their genetics is 100% East Asian but were recorded like this
The ethnic Miao people of China are recorded with red hair. According to F.M Savina of the Paris Foreign Missionary Society, the appearance of the Miao was "pale yellow in complexion, almost white, their hair is often light or dark brown, sometimes even red or corn-silk blond, and a few even have pale blue eyes".\33]) A phenotype study of Hmong people shows they are sometimes born with red hair.\34])
r/TurkicHistory • u/Earthkrutoi228 • 11d ago
Turkic Fantasy
Hello everyone. Do you think it would be interesting to create a Fantasy Wolrd based on different Turkic myths/history/legends? I love both fantasy and history and considering how other ancient culutres (Greek, Scandinavian, Slavic) are recieving more and more attention I thought it would be nice to create something similar to Witcher (which is based on Slavic Myths) but with Turkic ones.
r/TurkicHistory • u/creamybutterfly • 12d ago
Photos from the Aksaray Kültür Evi. Most of these are late Ottoman donations from Turkish families but we saw Kurdish and Greek donations too. Ignore the characteristic scary mannequins- they’re everywhere in these low budget culture houses.
r/TurkicHistory • u/Greedy-Antelope-7862 • 11d ago
Feeling lost with Turkish after my first week😢
Hi everyone,
I’ve been learning Turkish (A1 level) at a language center for about a week now, and honestly, I’m struggling a lot. I barely understand anything, and the language feels much harder than I expected.
The thing is, I have to learn Turkish for personal reasons, so giving up isn’t an option.
I’ve already tried watching Turkish TV shows, but they honestly haven’t helped me learn the language.
Has anyone here been in the same situation? What actually helped you improve quickly? Are there any methods, apps, YouTube channels, books, or daily habits that made Turkish easier to learn?
I’d really appreciate any advice or personal experiences. Thank you!
r/TurkicHistory • u/Then_Mood2740 • 12d ago
Oghuz Yabgu state appreciation post
The Oghuz Yabgu State was an independent state of the Oghuz Turks that existed in Central Asia from the 9th to the 11th century.
It was located in what is now western Kazakhstan, near the Aral Sea. The ruler was called a Yabgu. In earlier Turkic empires, a Yabgu was usually a prince or deputy ruler under a Khagan. In the Oghuz Yabgu State, however, there was no Khagan above him, so the Yabgu was the independent ruler of the state. You can think of it as a Turkic state somewhat similar to a principality, but it was fully independent.
The Oghuz people were mostly nomads who lived in tribes and moved with their herds. Many tribes united under the Yabgu for leadership and protection.
The Oghuz Yabgu State is important because many Oghuz Turks later migrated south. Some founded the Seljuk Empire, which later entered Anatolia. The Oghuz people eventually became the ancestors of modern Turks in Türkiye, Azerbaijanis, and Turkmens.
In simple terms, the Oghuz Yabgu State was the first major independent state of the Oghuz Turks and laid the foundation for later Oghuz Turkic states and peoples.