23,000 BC
A cave at Karain, north of Antalya,
is inhabited by humans, the oldest known evidence of habitation
in Anatolia.
People live in the cave until a few centuries ago, making
it one of the longest continuously-inhabited spots
on earth.
7500 BC
Earliest known human community at Çatal Höyük 50
km (31 miles) southeast of Konya.
5000 BC
Stone and Copper Age. People have already
been living in Anatolia
for 20,000 years. Settlement at Hacilar.
2600-1900 BC
Old Bronze Age. The Proto-Hittite
Empire flourishes in Central
Anatolia and the Southeast.
1900-1300 BC
The Hittite Empire flourishes,
battles Egypt. Patriarch Abraham, who has been dwelling
in Harran, near
Sanliurfa, leaves
for Canaan (Israel).
1250 BC
The Trojan War fought between the armies of Troy
and Achaea (Greece) for control of trade passing through
the Dardanelles
strait.
1200-600 BC
The Phrygian kingdom of
Mithridates flourishes at Gordion,
west of Ankara.
Mysians invade. The great period of Hellenic
civilisation in Greece and Aegean
Anatolia follows. King Midas reigns in splendor,
and King Croesus of Lydia invents coinage. The kingdoms
of Ionia (Izmir),
Lycia (Fethiye),
Lydia (Sardis), Caria (Marmaris)
and Pamphylia (Side)
flourish, as does the Empire of Urartu (Van).
547 BC
Cyrus of Persia invades and conquers most of Anatolia.
334 BC
Alexander the Great
of Macedon marches through Anatolia
on his way to India.
279 BC
Celts (or Gauls) invade and establish the kingdom
of Galatia near Ankara.
250 BC
Rise of the Kingdom of Pergamum (Bergama)
as an Anatolian power.
129 BC
Anatolia becomes the Roman
Province of Asia ('Asia Minor'), with its capital
at Ephesus.
47-57 AD
St Paul
travels to the Christian and Jewish
communities in Anatolia.
330 AD
Emperor Constantine the Great dedicates
Constantinople
as the 'New Rome,' which becomes the empire's center of
government.
527-565
Reign of Justinian, greatest Byzantine
emperor, builder of Hagia
Sophia, largest and most splendid church in the world.
570-622
Birth of Muhammed. Revelation of the Kur'an. Muhammed's
'flight' (hijra) from Mecca to Medina.
1037-1109
Turkish Empire of the Great Seljuks in Iran.
1071-1243
Seljuk Sultanate of Rum,
an offshoot of the Great Seljuk empire, established in Anatolia
with its capital in Konya.
Mystic poet and philosopher Jelaleddin Rumi,
called Mevlana, takes up residence in Konya, writes his
great works, and inspires the founding of the Whirling
Dervish Sufi order.
1000s-1200s
Crusader armies cross Anatolia through the lands
of the Seljuk Sultan of Rum,
with frequent battles.
1288
Foundation of the Ottoman
state by a warrier chieftain named Osman,
at Sögüt
near Bursa.
1453
Conquest of Constantinople (Istanbul)
by Sultan Mehmet II 'the Conqueror'.
1520-1566
Reign of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent, the great
age of the Ottoman
Empire. The sultan rules most of North Africa, most
of Eastern Europe and all of the Middle East. His navies
patrol the Mediterranean and Red seas and the Indian Ocean.
1699
Treaty of Karlowitz, the first time in over 400 years
that the Ottomans were decisively defeated and forced to
sign a peace treaty as the clear losers. The mighty empire
was clearly in decline.
1876-1909
Reign of Sultan Abdülhamit II, a ruthless
despot who was the last of the powerful sultans. The European
empires ask themselves the 'Eastern Question': which European
nations will grab Ottoman territory when the sultan's empire
collapses?
1914-1918
The Ottoman Empire enters
World War I in alliance with Germany. Australian, British,
French and New Zealand troops invade Gallipoli
which is successfully defended by Ottoman forces led by
Mustafa Kemal. Eventual defeat
of the Ottomans, loss of most of the empire's territory,
and occupation of parts of Anatolia by victorious foreign
troops.
1919-1923
Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk)
organizes remaining Ottoman military units into an army
of resistance, and establishes a government of resistance
at Ankara.
1922
Encouraged by Great Britain, Greece invades Anatolia
through Izmir
and presses eastward, threatening the fledgling government
in Ankara.
1923
Defeat and explusion of the invading armies. Abolishment
of the last vestiges of the Ottoman Empire and Proclamation
of the Turkish Republic
by Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk),
its founder and first president. Most ethnic Greeks in Turkey,
and ethnic Turks in Greece, migrate to the opposite country.
1923-1938
Ataturk's reforms: equal rights for women, secular
government, prohibition of the fez and the veil, substitution
of the Latin alphabet for the Arabic, Turkification of city
names, everyone adopts a surname, etc.
1938
Death of Ataturk,
continuation of one-party rule.
1939-1945
Turkey maintains a precarious neutrality during World War
II.
1946-1950
Institution of multi-party democracy.