1. Kbranur Toplar History of Turkey From 1923 - Present
2. Content The Establishment of Turkey Republic Single-party
period, 19231946 Chronology of Major Kemalist Reforms Multi-party
period, 19461961 1961-1980 1980 to the Present References
3. The Establishment of Turkey Republic The Republic of Turkey
was created after the overthrow of Sultan Mehmet VI Vahdettin by
the new Republican Parliament in 1922. The history of modern Turkey
begins with the foundation of the republic on October 29, 1923,
with Mustafa Kemal (Atatrk) as its first president.
4. Single-party period, 19231946 The government was formed from
the Ankara-based revolutionary group, led by Mustafa Kemal Atatrk
and his colleagues. The second constitution was ratified by the
Grand National Assembly on April 20, 1924.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bH FApY9PGEs
5. Chronology of Major Kemalist Reforms November 1, 1922:
Abolition of the office of the Ottoman Sultan. October 29, 1923:
Proclamation of the Republic of Turkey. March 3, 1924: Abolition of
the office of Caliphate held by the Ottoman Caliphate. November 25,
1925: Change of headgear and dress. November 30, 1925: Closure of
religious convents and dervish lodges. March 1, 1926: Introduction
of the new penal law. October 4, 1926: Introduction of the new
civil code. November 1, 1928: Adoption of the new Turkish alphabet.
June 21, 1934: Introduction of the law on family names. November
26, 1934: Abolition of titles and by-names. December 5, 1934: Full
political rights, to vote and be elected, to women. February 5,
1937: The inclusion of the principle of lacit in
6. Single-party period, 19231946 The first party to be
established in the newly formed republic was the Women's Party
(Kadnlar Halk Frkas). The actual passage to multi-party period was
first attempted with the Liberal Republican Party by Ali Fethi
Okyar. The Liberal Republican Party was dissolved on 17 November
1930 and no further attempt for a multi-party democracy was made
until 1945. Turkey was admitted to the League of Nations in July
1932.
7. Single-party period, 19231946 Atatrk's successor after his
death on November 10, 1938 was Ismet Inn. During World War II,
Turkey maintained neutrality. Ambassadors from the Axis powers and
Allies intermingled in Ankara. In February 1945, Turkey declared
war on Germany and Japan, while this was largely symbolic it
allowed Turkey to join the future United Nations. On October 24,
1945 Turkey signed the United Nations Charter as one of the
fifty-one original members. In 1946, Inn's government organized
multi-party elections, which were won by his party.
8. Multi-party period, 19461961 The real multi-party period
begins with the election of the Democratic Party. The government of
Adnan Menderes was very popular at first, relaxing the restrictions
on Islam and presiding over a booming economy. In the latter half
of the 1950s, however, the economy began to fail and the government
introduced censorship laws limiting dissent. The government became
plagued by high inflation and a massive debt.
9. 1961-1980 On May 27, 1960, General Cemal Grsel led a
military coup d'tat removing President Celal Bayar and Prime
Minister Menderes, the second of whom was executed. The army gave a
memorandum warning the civilian government in 1971, leading to
another coup which resulted in the fall of the Demirel government
and the establishment of interim governments. In 1974, under Prime
Minister Ecevit in coalition with the religious National Salvation
Party, Turkey carried out an invasion of Cyprus. The governments of
National Front, a series of coalitions between rightist parties,
followed as Ecevit was not able to remain in office despite ranking
first in the elections.
10. 1980 to the Present A military coup d'tat, headed by
General Kenan Evren, took place in 1980. Martial law was extended
from 20 to all then existing 67 provinces of Turkey. Starting in
July 1987, the South-East was submitted to state of emergency
legislation, a measure which lasted until November 2002. With the
turn of the 1990s, political instability returned. In 1997, the
military, citing his government's support for religious policies
deemed dangerous to Turkey's secular nature, sent a memorandum to
Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan requesting that he resign, which
he did.
11. 1980 to the Present A series of economic shocks led to new
elections in 2002, bringing into power the conservative Justice and
Development Party (AK Party) of former mayor of Istanbul, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan. AKP is after all the only government in Turkish
political history that has managed to win three general elections
in a row with an increasing amount of votes received in each one.
Alleged members of a clandestine group called Ergenekon were
detained in 2008 as part of a long and complex trial. On 22
February 2010 more than 40 officers arrested and formally charged
with attempting to overthrow the government with respect to so-
called "Sledgehammer" plot.
12. References Webster, The Turkey of Atatrk: social process in
the Turkish reformation Zihniolu, Yaprak. Kadnsz nklap. Metis
Yaynlar, 2003. akr, Serpil. Osmanl Kadn Hareketi. Metis Yaynlar,
1994. For example, see this 1942 Life magazine photograph Glazer,
Stevan A.. "Turkey after Atatrk". Turkey: A Country Study. Library
of Congress. Retrieved 2 March 2011. Amnesty International: Turkey
Briefing, London, November 1988, AI Index Eur/44/65/88, ISBN 0-
86210-156-5, page 1; [1] an online edition with