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{{short description|Ethnographic group of Armenians}} | |||
{{Totally-disputed|date=March 2008}} | |||
{{redirect|Armenian Muslims|Muslims in Armenia|Islam in Armenia}} | |||
{{weasel}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2022}} | |||
{{ethnic group| | |||
|group=Hemshin peoples<br>Համշե(ն)ցիներ | |||
|image=]<br>A Hemshinli woman in traditional dress. | |||
|poptime= 400,000 (est.)<ref></ref> | |||
|popplace=], ], ] (]), ], and ] | |||
|rels=] and ] | |||
|langs=] (] dialect) and ] (] dialect) | |||
|related-c=Other ] | |||
}} | |||
The Hemshin Peoples are a number of diverse groups of people who in the past history or present have been affiliated with the ] area <ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 pp.1-2,4-5</ref><ref>Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. pp.476-477,483-485,491</ref><ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 80, 146-147</ref> which is located in ] eastern ]. They are called (and call themselves) as '''Hemshinli''' (]: '''Hemşinli'''), '''Hamshenis''', '''Homshentsi''' (Armenian: Համշենի) meaning resident of Hemshin (historically Hamshen) in the relevant language. <ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 p. 1</ref> . The term "'''The Hemshin'''" is used also in some publications to refer to Hemshinli <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York. </ref><ref> M. Dubin and E. Lucas, "Trekking in Turkey", Lonely Planet, page 126</ref>. In 15th century, Hemshin was annexed by the Ottoman Empire. During the Ottoman period, two most important developments are migrations and Islamization. <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 61,83,340</ref> Most sources agree that prior to Ottoman era majority of the residents of Hemshin were Christian and members of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The details and the accompanying circumstances for the migrations and the Islamization process during the Ottoman era are not clearly known and documented. <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 20,52, 58,61-66,80</ref> | |||
{{infobox ethnic group | |||
As a result of those developments , distinctive communities with the same generic name have also appeared in the vicinity of ], ] as well as in the ]. Those three communities are almost oblivious to one another's existence.<ref>Hovann Simonian (ed.) "The Hemshin", London, 2007. p. xxi.</ref> | |||
| group = Hemshin people | |||
*The '''Hemshinli''' of Hemshin proper (also designated occasionally as '''western Hemshinli''' in publications) are ]-speaking ] who mostly live in the counties (ilçe) of Çamlihemşin and Hemşin in Turkey's ]. | |||
| native_name = {{langx|hy|Համշենցիներ}}, {{lang|hy-latn|Hamshentsiner}} | |||
*The '''Hopa Hemshinli''' (also designated occasionally as '''eastern Hemshinli''' in publications) are Sunni Muslims and mostly live in the Hopa and Borçka counties of Turkey's ]. In addition to Turkish, they speak a dialect of ] they call "''Homshetsma''" or "Hemşince" in Turkish.<ref> Ibit, Uwe Blasing, "Armenian in the vocabulary and culture of the Turkish Hemshinli".</ref> | |||
| native_name_lang = | |||
*'''Homshentsik''' (also designated occasionally as '''Northern Homshentsik''' in publications) are Christians who live in ] and in Russia's ]. They speak Homshetsma as well <ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 p. 2</ref>. There are also some Muslim Hemshinli living in ] and Krasnodar{{Fact|date=June 2008}} and some Hemshinli elements amongst the ]. <ref>Alexandre Bennigsen, "Muslims of the Soviet Empire: A Guide", 1986, p.217.</ref> | |||
| flag = | |||
| flag_caption = | |||
| image = Hemshin Women.jpg | |||
| image_caption = Hemsheni women in Rize, Turkey | |||
| population = 150,000{{sfnp|Simonian|2007|p=xx|loc=Preface}}<ref>{{cite news |url=http://asbarez.com/90870/the-hemshin-a-community-of-armenians-who-became-muslims/ |title=The Hemshin: A Community of Armenians Who Became Muslims |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=December 29, 2010 |newspaper=]}}</ref>–200,000<ref name="Brysm">{{cite journal |url=http://www.biryasam.com.tr/Detay/23 |title=Sergey Vardanyan'la söyleşi |trans-title=Interview with Sergey Vardanyan |date=2010 |journal=Biryaşam |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130927223548/http://www.biryasam.com.tr/Detay/23 |archive-date=27 September 2013 |language=Turkish}}</ref> | |||
| popplace = {{flag|Turkey}}: ] (majority: ], ]; minority: ], ])<br>] (almost half: ]; minority: ])<br>] (minority: ])<br>] (minority: ], ])<br>Diaspora communities in ] and ] | |||
{{flag|Russia}}: ] (more than half: ]) | |||
==History Until Ottoman Conquest== | |||
| regions = <!-- for e.g. a list of regions (countries), especially if regionN etc below not used --> | |||
| region1 = {{flag|Turkey}} | |||
| pop1 = 150,000 | |||
| ref1 = <ref>{{cite journal |url=https://jamestown.org/program/islamicized-armenians-turkey-bridge-threat/|title=Islamicized Armenians in Turkey: A Bridge or a Threat? |first=Paul |last=Goble |date=5 April 2017 |journal=Eurasia Daily Monitor |volume=14 |issue=46 |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
| region2 = {{flag|Russia}} | |||
| pop2 = 2,082 | |||
| ref2 = <ref>{{cite web|title=Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации|url=https://rosstat.gov.ru/storage/mediabank/tab-5_VPN-2020.xlsx|publisher=]|access-date=31 August 2024}}</ref> | |||
| region3 = | |||
| pop3 = | |||
| ref3 = | |||
| region4 = {{flag|Kyrgyzstan}} | |||
| pop4 = | |||
| ref4 = | |||
| region5 = {{flag|Armenia}} | |||
| pop5 = | |||
| ref5 = | |||
| languages = ] (])<br />] | |||
| religions = ] in Turkey <br /> ] in Georgia and Russia | |||
| related = ], ], ], ]| | |||
}} | |||
{{Armenians}} | |||
The '''Hemshin people''' ({{langx|hy|Համշենցիներ}}, {{lang|hy-latn|Hamshentsiner}}; {{langx|tr|Hemşinliler}}), also known as '''Hemshinli''' or '''Hamshenis''' or '''Homshetsi''',{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|p=1}}{{sfnp|Simonian|2007}}{{sfnp|Dubin|Lucas|1989|p=126}} are a bilingual<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kepenek |first=Evrim |date=5 October 2013 |title=Kimdir Bu Hemşinliler? |url=https://m.bianet.org/biamag/egitim/150379-kimdir-bu-hemsinliler |website=Bianet}}</ref> ] of ] who mostly practice ] after their conversion from Christianity in the beginning of the 18th century{{Sfnp|Wixman|2012}} and are affiliated with the ] and ] districts in the province of ], ].{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|pp=1-2, 4-5}}{{sfnp|Andrews|Benninghaus|1989|pp=476-477, 483-485, 491}}{{sfnp|Simonian|2007b|p=80}}{{sfnp|Hachikian|2007|pp=146-147}} | |||
They are Armenian in origin, and were originally Christians and members of the ], but evolved into a distinct community over the centuries and converted to Sunni Islam after the ] during the second half of the 15th century.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007|p=xx|loc=Preface}} In Turkey, Hemshin people do not speak the Homshetsi dialect apart from the "Eastern Hamsheni" group living in provinces of ] and ] and their mother tongue is now ].<ref>{{cite web |last=Anumyan |first=Meline |date=22 January 2014 |title=Hemşinli aydınlara göre Hemşin ve Hemşin Ermenileri |url=https://hyetert.org/2014/01/22/hemsinli-aydinlara-gore-hemsin-ve-hemsin-ermenileri/ |access-date=1 August 2024 |website=hyetert.org |publisher=hyetert.org |language=tr |quote=Türkiye’de yaşayan Hemşinlilerin Hopa, Borçka ve Adapazarı’ında yaşayanlarının dışındakiler, Ermenice’nin bir lehçesi olan Hemşin Ermenicesi’ni konuşamamaktadır.}}</ref> | |||
Robert H. Hewsen shows the region where today's Hemshin is located to be populated by a people with different designations | |||
throughout the ancient and early mediaeval history. He indicates thereby that some designations may have alternative forms and partially presents the names used with question marks. In summary from 13th century to 6th century BC Kolkhians <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 maps 10,13</ref>, 550 to 330 BC Kolkhiansa and Makrones <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 17</ref>, 180 BC to 14 AD Laz (Chanian tribes) <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 21</ref>, in the Arsacid Period (63 AD-298 AD) Heniokhians, Makhelones, Heptakometians, Mossynoikins <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 42</ref> as well as Sannians, Drilles and,Makrones <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 55</ref> are mentioned. | |||
For centuries, the ongoing migration from the geographically isolated highlands to lowlands made the Hemshin people settle in the areas near ], ] and in the Western part of the Black Sea coast.{{Sfnp|Simonian|2007|p=141}} Thus, a significant Hamsheni population formed in those areas. | |||
The Hemshin region is shown as part of Kolkhis (299 AD- 387 AD) <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 62</ref>, Tzannoi ( 387 AD – 591 AD) <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 65</ref> and Khaldiya ( 654 AD – 750 AD) <ref>Robert H. Hewsen, Armenia: A Historical Atlas, University Of Chicago Press, 2000 map 78</ref>. The specific location of Hemşin is indicated as Tambur/Hamamašen as a fort and town for the first time in the map covering the period 654-750. | |||
==History== | |||
Those two names (Tambur and Hamamašen ) are included in the History of Taron by Ps.John Mamikonian in a short passage <ref>: "As soon as read the letter, another letter arrived the same day from Vashdean's sister's son, Hamam, acquainting with the treachery before him from the troops who had come from Iran. He immediately wrote a letter to Vashdean reprimanding him for his plot. Vashdean grew angry and had Hamam's feet and hands loped off. Then, taking the Iranians, crossed the Chorox river and went to Hamam's city, named Tambur, which he attacked with fire and sword and enslaved. Now the blessed bishop of the city, Manknos, severely cursed the prince. ordered the Iranians to kill the priests in the church named Holy Zion. The bishop had silently prayed to God to ask only that the city be | |||
===Genetic Origin=== | |||
turned into a desert and a ruin and that for all eternity no one reside there. He threw himself on the altar and sacrificed him on Pentecost before mass was offered to Christ. On the next day there was a cloudburst and was consumed by fire as he sat by the city gates of Tambur. Hamam subsequently built this calling it after himself, Hamamashen. And Mangnos' prayer was realized. In one night 3,000 men died, others fled, and the city remained a ruin." | |||
The origins of the Hemshin people has remained a subject of debate among scholars. The main two purported homelands of the Hemshin have been ] and ]. A 2011 genetic survey based on the Y-chromosomal markers of the Hemshin indicated the central part of the historical ] as a plausible place of origin for the Hamsheni population.{{Sfnp|Yepiskoposyan|Hovhannisyan|Khachatryan|2016|p=113–116}} | |||
</ref> about a war between the ruler of Tambur, Hamam, and his maternal uncle the Georgian Prince, which resulted in the destruction of the town to be rebuild by Hamam and be named after him namely Hamamshen. This event is declared by Mamikonian to have taken place in early seventh century . Hamamashen became with time Hamshen. Simonian who conveys this story reports also that the date given by the author may be wrong <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 20-21</ref>. | |||
===History until the Ottoman conquest=== | |||
The region of Hemshin is located on the coast of the Black sea, in the highlands of ]. According to historical accounts, ] first settled in that region in the end of 8th century. While escaping Arab persecutions, about 12,000 Armenians led by Prince Shapuh Amatuni and his son Hamam moved to ], ruled by ].{{Sfnp|Papikyan|2016|p=1–2}} ] shows the region where today's ] is located to be populated by a people with different designations throughout the ancient and early medieval history. He indicates thereby that some designations may have alternative forms and partially presents the names used with question marks. In summary from 13th century to 6th century BC ],{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=maps 10, 13}} 550 to 330 BC Colchians and ],{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 17}} 180 BC to 14 AD ] (Chani/Tzan tribes),{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 21}} in the Arsacid Period (63–298 AD) ], ], Heptakometians, ]{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 42}} as well as ], ] and Macrones{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 55}} are mentioned. | |||
Two other Armenian chronicles Ghewond and Stephen Asoghik of Taron, report in short passages in their histories about a migration from Armenia/Oshakan led by prince Shaspuh Amatuni and his son Hamam. Ghewond conveys this immigration to be to avoid heavy taxes imposed on Armenians by the Arab rulers. The Amatuni lords are offered fertile land to settle down by the Byzantine Emperor, after they crossed the Corukh river. This migration is dated to be after 789 by Ghewond and as 750 by Stephen Asoghik of Taron <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society | |||
and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 20-21</ref><ref>: " so increased the yoke on people that they could not endure it. For even if they gave all that they possessed, it was not enough to save themselves. This same Sulaiman sent to the city of Dwin his son-in-law, a certain Ibn Ducas (Ibndoke'), an impious and malevolent man, son of one of his maid-servants, who was of Greek nationality. He imposed unendurably heavy taxes on the residents of our land. All the lords, common folk, bishops and the kat'oghikos Esayi came and pleaded with to reduce the onerous level of taxation, but it was of no avail. For the wrath of the Lord had delivered the Christians into merciless hands. sent tax collectors to the different parts of the land with the order to double the yearly collection and to take it immediately, and they implemented the command. Once this was accomplished, this son of satan devised another wicked scheme. He had lead seals put around the necks of everyone, demanding many zuzas for each .Thus did this wicked executioner reduce everyone to the worst extremes of bankruptcy through his intolerant measures. ." | |||
</ref>. | |||
The Hemşin region is shown as part of ] (299–387),{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 62}} ] (387–591){{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 65}} and ] (654–750).{{sfnp|Hewsen|2000|loc=map 78}} The specific location of Hemşin is indicated as Tambur/Hamamašen as a fort and town for the first time in the map covering the period 654–750. | |||
Benninghaus specifies “Tambur” as the destination of the migration led by Hamam and his father Shapuh Amaduni and says that they have seemingly met people there who were already christians , possibly Greeks <ref>Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. p.92</ref>. Redgate informs about possible symbolism used in the Ghewond’s history and possible garbling in Mamikonian’s history, and cautions not to take everything at face value <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 3-13</ref>. Hachikian states “There is no clue as to where Tambur, the legendary capital of Hamshen, was located. The only certain thing about it is that it clearly belonged to a much earlier time- if it existed at all” <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p. 147</ref>. He also mentions in the footnote the name similarity between Tambur and a yayla known as Tahpur or Tagpur, located in the heights of Kaptanpasa. Simonian states that Tambur is probably in the vicinity of Varoşkale (altitude 1800 m) <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p. 22</ref>. | |||
Those two names (Tambur and Hamamašen) are included in the ''History of Taron'' by ] in a short passage about a war between the ruler of Tambur, Hamam, and his maternal uncle the Georgian Prince, which resulted in the destruction of the town to be rebuilt by Hamam and be named after him, namely Hamamshen.{{blockquote|As soon as read the letter, another letter arrived the same day from Vashdean's sister's son, Hamam, acquainting with the treachery before him from the troops who had come from Iran. He immediately wrote a letter to Vashdean reprimanding him for his plot. Vashdean grew angry and had Hamam's feet and hands lopped off. Then, taking the Iranians, crossed the Chorox river and went to Hamam's city, named Tambur, which he attacked with fire and sword and enslaved. Now the blessed bishop of the city, Manknos, severely cursed the prince. ordered the Iranians to kill the priests in the church named Holy Zion. The bishop had silently prayed to God to ask only that the city be turned into a desert and a ruin and that for all eternity no one reside there. He threw himself on the altar and sacrificed him on Pentecost before mass was offered to Christ. On the next day there was a cloudburst and was consumed by fire as he sat by the city gates of Tambur. Hamam subsequently built this calling it after himself, Hamamashen. And Mangnos' prayer was realized. In one night 3,000 men died, others fled, and the city remained a ruin.<ref>{{cite book |chapter-url=http://rbedrosian.com/jm6.htm |last=Mamikonean |first=John |author-link=John Mamikonean |others=Translated by Robert Bedrosian |orig-date=681 |date=1975 |title=History of Taron |chapter=Patmut'iwn |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040623214008/http://rbedrosian.com/jm6.htm |archive-date=2004-06-23 |via=History of the Tartars}}</ref>}} | |||
Kırzıoğlu considers the migration to be by a Turkish tribe who, before migrating to Hemshin had migrated from Hemedan to Osakan <ref>Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. pp.480-481</ref>. | |||
This event is declared by ] to have taken place in early seventh century. Hamamashen became Hamshen over time. ] who conveys this story reports also that the date given by the author may be wrong.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|pp=20-21}} | |||
A description of "Haynsen" in the Kingdom of Georgia, its inhabitants and history is contained in "La Fleur des histoires de la terre d'Orient" by Hetu'm of Corycos, written around 1307, translated into English in 1520, and later reproduced in the travellers' tales of Samuel Purchas published in 1614. Purrchas uses the term "Hamsem" to designate the region and concludes that this is the place of the original Cimmerian gloom of ]'s ] <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p.4</ref> <ref></ref> | |||
The translation of He'tums related passage to modern English uses the term Hamshen <ref>http://rbedrosian.com/hetumint.htm</ref>. | |||
He'tum describes the region to be "miraculous and strange place" unbelievable unless seen by own eyes, dark and without roads. Signs of human settlement are that "...People in those parts say that one frequently hears the sounds of men bellowing, of cocks crowing, of horses neighing in the forest," | |||
Those people are described by He'tum, leaning upon Georgian and Armenian Histories, to be the descendants of the men of the "wicked" Iranian Emperor Shaworeos who had chased and harassed christian people. | |||
The referenced translation suggests this Emperor could be Shapuhr II, | |||
<ref> | |||
There is a miraculous and strange place in the realm of Georgia which--had I not seen it with by own eyes--I would neither dare to speak about it nor to believe in it. But since I was there in person and saw it, I shall discuss it. There is a district named Hamshen in that area, its circumference being a three day's journey. And despite the district's extent, the place is so foggy and dark that no one can see anything. For no road goes through it. People in those parts say that one frequently hears the sounds of men bellowing, of cocks crowing, of horses neighing in the forest, and the murmuring of a river which flows thence. These are all regarded as trustworthy signs there that a settlement of people exists in the area. | |||
This much is true: in the histories of the kingdoms of Armenia and Georgia it may be read that a certain wicked Emperor Shaworeos , an idolator and ferocious persecutor of Christians, one day ordered that all the inhabitants of Asia come and worship the idols. Those who ignored the command were to be burned with fire. Whereupon it transpired that some of the Christians chose martyrdom to worshipping the idols.Some chose to convert temporarily and, out offear, worshipped the idols, so that they not be deprived of their lives and wordly goods. Meanwhile others took to the mountains and deserted places and somehow kept themselves alive. The group of the best Christians who lived in the Moghon plain thought to leave their belongings and to pass to Greece . While they were so resolved, the Emperor arose before them, ordering that those refusing to sacrifice to the idols should be pulled apart, limb by limb. Now the people cried out to the Lord Jesus Christ and, going by the straight path, they survived. However, the infidelshave resided in that gloomy valley to the present. And they must stay there until the end of the world. So it is believed by everyone, and so it is related. | |||
</ref>. | |||
Two other Armenian chronicles Ghewond and ] of Taron, report in short passages in their histories about a migration from Armenia/Oshakan led by prince Shapuh ] and his son Hamam. Ghewond conveys this immigration to be to avoid heavy taxes imposed on Armenians by the Arab rulers. The ] lords are offered fertile land to settle down by the Byzantine Emperor, after they crossed the ]. This migration is dated to be after 789 by Ghewond and as 750 by Stephen Asoghik of Taron.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|pp=20-21}} | |||
Simonian considers the so described difficulty in access not to imply total isolation . On the contrary, he reports, Hemshin served sometimes as a transit route between the coastal regions and the Armenian plateau <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p. 24</ref>. | |||
Benninghaus specifies "Tambur" as the destination of the migration led by Hamam and his father Shapuh Amaduni and says that they have seemingly met people there who were already Christians, possibly Greeks.{{sfnp|Andrews|Benninghaus|1989|p=92}} Redgate informs about possible symbolism used in the Ghewond's history and possible garbling in Mamikonian's history, and cautions not to take everything at face value.{{sfnp|Redgate|2007|pp=3-13}} Hachikian states "There is no clue as to where Tambur, the legendary capital of Hamshen, was located. The only certain thing about it is that it clearly belonged to a much earlier time - if it existed at all".{{sfnp|Hachikian|2007|p=147}} He also mentions in the footnote the name similarity between Tambur and a yayla known as Tahpur or Tagpur, in the heights of Kaptanpasa. Simonian states that Tambur is probably in the vicinity of Varoşkale (altitude 1800 m).{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=22}} | |||
Further theories of medieval settlement to Hemşin are that | |||
], Rize, Turkey.]] | |||
*following the Seljukid Turks occupation, Ani Armenians have fled to Hemshin which had never seen any human face before; | |||
*there has been continuous influx of Armenians from the South following the initial settlement; resulting in an armenisation of the area thru expelling local Tzan population and | |||
*the armenization of the Tzan people took place through ruling dynasties in the South <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and | |||
New York., p. 21,22</ref>. | |||
A description of "Haynsen" in the ], its inhabitants and history is contained in ''La Fleur des histoires de la terre d'Orient'' by ], written around 1307, translated into English in 1520, and later reproduced in the travellers' tales of Samuel Purchas published in 1614. Purchas uses the term "Hamsem" to designate the region and concludes that this is the place of the original Cimmerian gloom of ]'s ].{{sfnp|Redgate|2007|p=4}}<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/modernity/purchas.html |title=Purchas his Pilgrimage, or, Relations of the world and the religions obserued in all ages and places discoured, from the Creation vnto this present |last=Purchas |first=Samuel |edition=2nd |location=London |publisher=Henrie Fetherstone |date=1614 |via=University of Sydney Library |access-date=2008-06-24 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080728233753/http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/modernity/purchas.html |archive-date=2008-07-28}}</ref> The translation of He'tum's related passage to modern English uses the term Hamshen.<ref name="rbedrosian">{{cite book |chapter-url=http://rbedrosian.com/hetum1.htm |title=The Flower of Histories of the East |author=Het'um the Armenian of the Praemonstratensian Order |chapter=Chapter 10: The Kingdom of Georgia |others=Translated by Robert Bedrosian |date=2004 |via=History of the Tartars |access-date=4 December 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040622102325/http://rbedrosian.com/hetum1.htm |archive-date=2004-06-22}}</ref> Hayton describes the region to be "miraculous and strange place" unbelievable unless seen by one's own eyes, dark and without roads. Signs of human settlement are that "People in those parts say that one frequently hears the sounds of men bellowing, of cocks crowing, of horses neighing in the forest," Those people are described by Hayton, leaning upon Georgian and Armenian Histories, to be the descendants of the men of the "wicked" Iranian Emperor Shaworeos who had chased and harassed Christian people. The referenced translation suggests this Emperor could be ] (309–379 AD). | |||
Sources of the ruling powers in the region, (Byzantine Trapezuntine, Georgian, Armenian and Turkish) are silent about Hemshin; until the conquest by the Ottomans <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 26,31</ref>. It is deduced that Hemşin has been governed by local lords under the umbrella of the greater regional powers changing by the time namely the Bagratid Armenian kingdom, the Byzantine Empire, its successor the Empire of Trebizond, the Georgian Kingdom , the Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkmen Confederations <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p. 26</ref> until it was annexed by the Ottoman Empire which collapsed as a result of the WW1 and gave birth to the Republic of Turkey. | |||
Simonian considers the so described difficulty in access not to imply total isolation. On the contrary, he reports, Hamshen served sometimes as a transit route between the coastal regions and the Armenian Highlands.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=24}} | |||
The Ottoman conquest of Hamshen occurred sometime in the 1480s: an Ottoman register dated around 1486 calls it ''Hemshin'' and mentions it as being an Ottoman possession. <ref> Hovann Simonian (ed.) "The Hemshin", London, 2007. p31.</ref> | |||
In his analysis of the literary and non-literary sources from the 8th through the 19th centuries, combined with excursions into Hamšēn during the 1980s to identify the surviving Armenian architecture, Dr. Robert W. Edwards has defined the geographical perimeters of that region and assessed the historical impact of its extreme isolation.{{Sfnp|Edwards|1988|p=403–422}} | |||
==Groups== | |||
The Ottoman era has witnessed two major developments in the Hemshin region: Islamization and population movements. <ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 pp.1-2,4-5</ref><ref>Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. pp.476-477,483-485,491</ref><ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 52-99</ref> Islam faith has commenced to spread possibly prior to the Ottoman rule but it has become the general religion not before the end of the 16 th century. A number of population movements (both into and out of the region) are also known to have happened during the Ottoman era. Even though detailed information regarding the nature of these movements is missing, in summary: | |||
* there has been some emigration from Hemşin of Hemşinli belonging to the Armenian church to western counties of the eastern Blacksea region during the earlier centuries of the Ottoman rule, | |||
* some emigration by Hemşinli of İslam faith to western Anatolia as well as to the Caucasus has taken place as a result of Turco-Russia wars and the accomponying hardships in the 19 th century, | |||
* there have been some immigration into the area during the Ottoman rule. | |||
Sources of the ruling powers in the region, (Byzantine, Trapezuntine, Georgian, Armenian and Turkish) are silent about Hemshin; until the conquest by the Ottomans.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|pp=26, 31}} It is deduced that Hemşin has been governed by local lords under the umbrella of the greater regional powers changing by the time namely the ], the ], its successor the ], the ], the ] and ] ] Confederations{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=26}} until it was annexed by the ] which collapsed as a result of the World War I and gave birth to the Republic of Turkey. | |||
The present community of Hemşinli thus surfacing is exclusively of Islam faith and Turkish speaking. This goes for the people living in Hemşin or people still maintaining links to the area although they live all over in Turkey. <ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 p.1</ref><ref>Peter Alford Andrews, Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. pp.476-477, 484, 487</ref><ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 159, 165, 176, 257, 332, 333</ref> | |||
The Ottoman conquest of Hemshin occurred sometime in the 1480s: an Ottoman register dated around 1486 calls it ''Hemshin'' and mentions it as being an Ottoman possession.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=31}} | |||
A distinct community settled about 50 km east of Hemşin in villages around Hopa and Borçka call themselves also “Hemşinli” and they are often referred to as the “Hopa Hemşinli”. Professor of Linguistics Bert Vaux at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee refers to this group as the “Eastern Hamshenis”. Hemşinli and Hopa Hemşinli are separated not only by geography but also by language and some features of culture and are almost oblivious to one anothers existence. Simonian reports about existence of various different theories regarding the appearance of the Hope Hemshinli group. Those are related to whether they migrated from Hemshin or they were settled by the Ottoman authorities; whether the migration/settlement was early 16th or late 17th centuries; | |||
whether the migration took place in one step or two waves. The Hopa Hemşinli are exclusively of Islam faith as well. | |||
Simonian reports that there is a controversy regarding whether they arrived in Hope region as moslems or converted to Islam after arrival<ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., p. 80</ref> . | |||
===Turkish dominance and division=== | |||
The Hopa Hemşinli speak in addition to Turkish a language called "Hemşince" or (“Homşetsi” and/or Homshetsma in some sources). Recent studies suggest {{weasel-inline}} that this language is an archaic dialect of Armenian subject to influence from Turkish and Laz.<ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 p. 5</ref> Vaux also reports that "Hemşince" has been subject to influence from Turkish to a much greater extent than other Armenian dialects.<ref>Bert Vaux, Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians, Harvard University, 2001 p.8-9</ref>Hemşince and Armenian are generally mutually not intelligeble. <ref>Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York., pp. 257</ref> | |||
] influence was firmly established in the region after the ] in 1071, after which the ] and other ] gained a strong foothold in ] and Western ], often referred to as ], bringing the local population in contact with the religion of ]. In the 15th century, the region of Hamshen was incorporated into the ]. During the Turkish rule, two most important developments are ]s and ].{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|pp=61, 83}}{{sfnp|Beller-Hann|2007|p=340}} Most sources agree that prior to Ottoman era majority of the residents of Hemshin were ] and members of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The details and the accompanying circumstances for the migrations and the ] during the Ottoman era are not clearly known or documented.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=20}}{{sfnp|Simonian|2007b|pp=52, 58, 61-66, 80}} | |||
As a result of those developments, distinctive communities with the same generic name have also appeared in the vicinity of ], ] as well as in the ]. Those three communities are almost oblivious to one another's existence.{{sfnp|Awde|2007|p=xxi}} | |||
In addition to these groups there are people speaking Hemşince / Homshetsma in the countries of the former USSR whose ancestors have probably originated from Hemşin and/or Hopa Hemşin in course of the various population movements to the Caucasus. | |||
*The '''Hemshinli''' of Hemshin proper (also designated occasionally as '''western Hemshinli''' in publications) are ]-speaking ] who mostly live in the counties (ilçe) of ], ], ], ] and ] in Turkey's ].{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|pp=xxii}} | |||
*The '''Hopa Hemshinli''' (also designated occasionally as '''eastern Hemshinli''' in publications) are Sunni Muslims and mostly live in the ] and ] counties of Turkey's ]. In addition to Turkish, they also speak a dialect of ] they call "''Homshetsma''" or "Hemşince" in Turkish.{{sfnp|Blasing|2007}} | |||
*'''Homshentsik''' (also designated occasionally as '''Northern Homshentsik''' in publications) are Christians who live in ] and in Russia's ]. They speak Homshetsma as well.{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|p=2}} There are also some Muslim Hamshentsi living in ] and Krasnodar<ref name="Brysm"/> and some Hamshentsi elements amongst the ].{{sfnp|Bennigsen|Wimbush|1986|p=217}} | |||
==Demographics== | |||
Those among them who confess to the Islam have been deported from the Adjara area of Georgia at the Stalin era to Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. A considerable number of these deportees have moved to Krasnodar Krai since 1989, along with the Meskhetians. | |||
Two major developments in the ] during the ]: ] and population movements.{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|pp=1-2, 4-5}}{{sfnp|Andrews|Benninghaus|1989|pp=476-477, 483-485, 491}}{{sfnp|Simonian|2007b|pp=52-99}} Islam may have begun to spread prior to the Ottoman rule, but it did not become the general religion before the end of the 16th century. A number of population movements (both into and out of the region) also happened during the Ottoman era. Even though detailed information regarding the nature of these movements is missing, in summary: | |||
* Some Hemshinli who were members of the Armenian Orthodox Church emigrated to other countries on the eastern Black Sea during the early centuries of Ottoman rule; | |||
* Some Muslim Hemshinli migrated to western Anatolia and the Caucasus as a result of the ] and related hardships during the 19th century; | |||
* Some immigration into the area occurred during Ottoman rule. | |||
The present community of Hemshinli is exclusively Muslim and Turkish speaking. This goes for the people living in Hemshin or people maintaining links to the area and living elsewhere in Turkey.{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|p=1}}{{sfnp|Andrews|Benninghaus|1989|pp=476-477, 484, 487}}{{sfnp|Simonian|2007|pp=159, 165, 176, 257, 332, 333}} | |||
Most of those of Christian faith currently live in Abkhazia and in the Krasnodar Krai region of Russia, in particular, the Sochi area, and Adygeya. | |||
A distinct community settled about 50 km east of Hemşin in villages around Hopa and Borçka also call themselves "Hemşinli". They are often referred to as the "Hopa Hemşinli". Professor of Linguistics Bert Vaux at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee refers to this group as the "Eastern Hamshenis". Hemşinli and Hopa Hemşinli are separated not only by geography but also by language and some features of culture. The two groups are almost oblivious to one another's existence. Simonian reports various theories regarding the appearance of the Hopa Hemshinli group. Those theories relate to whether the groups migrated from Hemshin or they were settled by the Ottoman authorities, whether the migration/settlement was in the early 16th or late 17th centuries, and whether the migration took place in one step or two waves. The Hopa Hemşinli are exclusively Muslim as well. | |||
Simonian reports that there is a controversy regarding whether they arrived in the Hopa region as Muslims or converted to Islam after arrival.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007b|p=80}} | |||
The Hopa Hemşinli speak a language called "]" or ("Homşetsi" and/or Homshetsma in some sources) as well as Turkish. Recent studies by Hovann Simonian (Author: The Hemshin: A Handbook (Caucasus World)) suggest that this language is an archaic dialect of Armenian subject to influence from Turkish and ].{{sfnp|Vaux|2001|p=5}} Vaux also reports that "Hemşince" has been subject to influence from Turkish to a much greater extent than other Armenian dialects.{{sfnp|Vaux|2007|p=257}} Hemşince and Armenian are largely mutually unintelligible.{{sfnp|Simonian|2007a|p=257}} | |||
In addition to these two groups there are people speaking Hemşince / Homshetsma in the countries of the former USSR whose ancestors probably originated from Hemşin and/or Hopa Hemşin in course of the various population movements to the Caucasus. Many of the Muslim Hemşince speakers in the former USSR were ] from the ] area of ] during the ] to ] and ]. Since 1989, a considerable number of these deportees have moved to ] since 1989, along with the ]. | |||
==Culture== | ==Culture== | ||
].]] | |||
Hamshenis are well-known for the clever jokes, riddles, and stories that they tell. Some of the anecdotes that the Muslim Hamshenis tell are actually based on older Armenian ones. They accompany dances with their own brand of music using the '']'' (the ] ]) (for the Western group), the ''şimşir kaval'' (] made of ]) (for the Eastern group) or the ''Hamshna-Zurna'' (Hamsheni ]) (for the Northern group). The traditional occupations of the Turkish Hamshenis are cultivating ] and ], breeding ], and ]. The Northern Hamshenis of Russia and Georgia, meanwhile, are primarily known as citrus, corn, tobacco and tea growers as well as ]. Some Hamshenis (both Muslim and Christian) are also active in economic life as expert ]s, ]s, and ]s, and those in ] developed a keen and nationally-renowned expertise in the production of crafted ]. | |||
Hemshin peoples are well known for their baking, tea growing, and the clever jokes, riddles, and stories that they tell. Some of the anecdotes that the Muslim Hemshinli tell are actually based on older Armenian ones.{{citation needed|date=July 2022}} They accompany dances with their own brand of music using the '']'' (the ] ]) (for the Western group), the ''şimşir kaval'' (] made of ]) (for the Eastern group) or the ''Hamshna-Zurna'' (Hamsheni ]) (for the Northern group). The traditional occupations of the Turkish Hemshinli are cultivating ] and ], breeding ], and ]. The Northern Hamshenis of Russia and Georgia, meanwhile, are primarily known as citrus, corn, tobacco and tea growers as well as ].{{citation needed|date=September 2014}} | |||
], |
], mostly populated by western Hemshinlis.]] | ||
The people of Hemshin are known for their traditional dress. Women often choose to wrap their head with a "pushi" or long piece of cloth donned with beads, while men often choose to wear hats and vests made of wool or cotton. | |||
The Hemshin people and their mansions were featured in issue 12 of '']'' magazine.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.cornucopia.net/magazine/articles/the-country-houses-that-ride-the-storm |title=The Country Houses that Ride 'the Storm' |first1=Patricia |last1=Daunt |date=1997 |magazine=Cornucopia |number=12}}</ref> | |||
==Present situation== | ==Present situation== | ||
===Hemşinli in Turkey=== | ===Hemşinli in Turkey=== | ||
The "Turkey for the Turks" ideology, writes ], "offered no security for minorities" with "the tiny Hemşinli group having especially compelling reasons to keep its head down" because "its members are the descendants of Armenians."{{Sfnp|Ascherson|1995|p=198}} Beginning in the 1930s, a number of Turkish historians attempted to ascribe an entirely Turkish origin to the Hemshinli, the most prominent of them being M. Fahrettin Kırzıoğlu, whose theories have since gained wide currency among the community.{{sfnp|Simonian|2009|p=382–387}} His theories on the Hemshinli, however, have come under close scrutiny and have been roundly criticized.<ref>See for example; {{harvnb|Benninghaus|2002|p=}}.</ref> The German scholars Wolfgang Feurstein and Tucha Berdsena describe Kırzıoğlu's methodology as so: | |||
<blockquote>At first Kırzıoğlu assaults the reader with a flow of historical peoples; he then searches for some kind of phonetic correspondence or similarity with an old Turkish tribe, flavors this alleged historical outpouring with a pinch of "Islam," and presents himself as a competent researcher of Turkishness. Probably never before has a single person in Turkey falsified history so massively!{{sfnp|Benninghaus|2007|p=259}}</blockquote> | |||
The ] "Turkey for the Turks" ideology, writes ], "offered no security for minorities" with "the tiny Hemşinli group having especially compelling reasons to keep its head down" because "its members are the descendants of Armenians". <ref>Neal Ascherson "Black Sea", 1995, p198.</ref> In order to avoid accusations of "separatism" the Hemshinli are discreet and unprovocative about their own identity, taking a full but unobtrusive part in Turkish society. | |||
The filmmaker Özcan Alper, an eastern Hemshinli, made the first motion picture in Homshetsi, ''Momi'' (Grandma), released in 2000. As a result, Alper was accused in the Court for State Security of producing material intended to destroy the unity of the state, under article 8 of Turkey's anti-terror law. This law was repealed in 2003 after EU pressure, and Alper's trial did not go ahead. |
The filmmaker ], an eastern Hemshinli, made the first motion picture in Homshetsi, ''Momi'' ("Grandma"), released in 2000. As a result, Alper was accused in the Court for State Security of producing material intended to destroy the unity of the state, under article 8 of Turkey's anti-terror law. This law was repealed in 2003 after EU pressure, and Alper's trial did not go ahead.{{sfnp|Benninghaus|2007|pp=369-370, 388, notes 160 & 161}} Hamsheni singer ] (from the Western group) and ] singer ] had also sung in Homshetsi. In 2005, the first music album exclusively of anonymous Hamshen folk songs and sung mostly in Homshetsi, ''Vova - Hamşetsu Ğhağ'' was released. | ||
(ed.) "The Hemshin", London, 2007, pp369-370 and p388 footnotes 160 & 161.</ref> Hamsheni singer Gökhan Birben (from the Western group) and ] singer ] had also sung in Homshetsi. In 2005, the first music album exclusively of anonymous Hamshen folk songs and sung mostly in Homshetsi, ''Vova - Hamşetsu Ğhağ'' was released. | |||
Older generations of Turkish |
Older generations of Turkish Hemshinli see the reference "Ermeni" (often used by their ] neighbours) as an insult. | ||
], a former Prime Minister of Turkey, was born in ] to a family with partial Hamsheni (Western group) origins. |
], a former Prime Minister of Turkey, was born in ] to a family with partial Hamsheni (Western group) origins.{{Sfnp|Şener|2004}} ] (who was born in Yaltkaya (Gomno) village of Hemşin), a Deputy ] and before that, a ] in Turkey within successive ] governments between 1950 and 1960, as well as ], the ] ] on the eve of the ] in 1853 were also of Hamsheni descent.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.itibarhaber.eu/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=3822 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720163714/http://www.itibarhaber.eu/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=3822 |url-status=dead |archive-date=20 July 2011 |title=Biography of Hemşinli Damat Mehmet Ali Pasha |website=Itibarhaber.eu |language=tr}}</ref> The community issued other important names in Turkish history and society such as ], a former Deputy Prime Minister and mayor of ] who is from Şenyuva (Çinçiva) village of ].{{Sfnp|Şener|2004}}<ref>{{cite news |url=http://webarsiv.hurriyet.com.tr/2003/12/29/391722.asp |title=ODTÜ'de bozkurt rozeti taşırdım |trans-title=I used to wear a gray wolf badge at METU |first=Yener |last=Susoy |date=2003-12-29 |work=Hürriyet |language=tr |access-date=2008-08-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.karadeniz.nl/modules.php?op=modload&name=My_eGallery&file=index&do=showpic&pid=118&orderby=hitsA |title=Tevfik Rüştü Aras and Murat Karayalçın hail from Hemşin |website=Karadeniz.nl |language=tr}}{{dead link|date=December 2017|bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> | ||
|title=ODTÜ'de bozkurt rozeti taşırdım | |||
|work=Hürriyet | |||
|date=2003-12-29 | |||
|accessdate=2008-08-05 | |||
|first=Yener | |||
|last=Susoy | |||
|language=Turkish | |||
}}</ref><ref> {{tr icon}}</ref> | |||
There are two ongoing projects involving Turkish ]s and ], ]'s external aid instrument, that touch their issues. The more recently (2007) launched "Ecodialogue Project" |
There are two ongoing projects involving Turkish ]s and ], ]'s external aid instrument, that touch their issues. The more recently (2007) launched "Ecodialogue Project" has set itself as goal raising environment consciousness of the region's enterprises and improving the poor levels and quality of the information relayed by local guides,<ref name="Ecodialogue Project">{{cite journal |url=http://www.stgm.org.tr/docs/sivilizApril2007.pdf |title=Ecodialogue Project |date=April 2007 |issue=8 |journal=Siviliz |publisher=The Strengthening Freedom of Association for Further Development of Civil Society Project |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070809160610/http://www.stgm.org.tr/docs/sivilizApril2007.pdf |archive-date=2007-08-09}}</ref> many of whom are self-styled and unlicensed.<ref>] himself had as primary Hemshinli informant a young man in his twenties, whose name was changed "to protect the innocent".</ref> The other project, started 2004 and involving also the ], aims to raise the profile and awareness of the ], particularly ], who visit the region, also with focus on enterprises and guides.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://balwois.mpl.ird.fr/balwois/administration/files/iucn-see-bulletin3.pdf |title=Improving the conservation status of the Caucasian Black Grouse |website=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041219034118/http://balwois.mpl.ird.fr/balwois/administration/files/iucn-see-bulletin3.pdf |archive-date=December 19, 2004}}</ref> | ||
===Hamshenis in Russia and the former Soviet Union=== | ===Hamshenis in Russia and the former Soviet Union=== | ||
] | |||
There are two ongoing projects involving Turkish ]s and ], ]'s external aid instrument, that touch their issues. The more recently (2007) launched "Ecodialogue Project" () has set itself as goal raising environment consciousness of the region's enterprises and improving the poor levels and quality of the information relayed by local guides <ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.stgm.org.tr/docs/sivilizApril2007.pdf Bulletin:| title = Ecodialogue Project|author=|publisher=| access date=}}</ref>, many of whom are self-styled and unlicensed <ref> ] himself had as primary Hemshinli informant a young man in his twenties, whose name was changed "to protect the innocent".</ref> The other project, started 2004 and involving also the ], aims to raise the profile and awareness of the ], particularly ], who visit the region, also with focus on enterprises and guides.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:72XNmTyzzA8J:balwois.mpl.ird.fr/balwois/administration/files/iucn-see-bulletin3.pdf+%22europeaid%22+%2B+%22ayder%22&hl=tr&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=tr&ie=UTF-8&inlang=tr Bulletin:| title = Improving the conservation status of the Caucasian Black Grouse|author=|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
Interest in Hamshen heritage is rising among Christian Hamshenis in the former Soviet Union. In 2006, the first music album in Homshetsma by the Ensemble Caravan was released in Krasnodar. Hamshen Scientific, Information and Cultural Centre began to work on exclusive projects in order to recover the cultural heritage of the Hamshenis living in the region. The Armenian newspaper published in ] carries the name ''Hamshen''. | Interest in Hamshen heritage is rising among Christian Hamshenis in the former Soviet Union. In 2006, the first music album in Homshetsma by the Ensemble Caravan was released in Krasnodar. Hamshen Scientific, Information and Cultural Centre began to work on exclusive projects in order to recover the cultural heritage of the Hamshenis living in the region. The Armenian newspaper published in ] carries the name ''Hamshen''. | ||
During the ] period of the ] in the late 1980s, the Hamshenis of Kazakhstan began petitioning for the government to move them to the ]. |
During the ] period of the ] in the late 1980s, the Hamshenis of Kazakhstan began petitioning for the government to move them to the ]. However, this move was denied by Moscow because of fears that the Muslim Hamshenis might spark ethnic conflicts with their Christian Armenian brothers.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.usanogh.com/content/view/418/93/ |title=Muslim Armenians Part III: The Current Situation of Hamshentsi Armenians in the World |first1=Ruben |last1=Amshentsi |first2=Grigor |last2=Hakobyan |name-list-style=amp |date=4 October 2006 |website=Usanogh |access-date=2007-02-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061005040508/http://www.usanogh.com/content/view/418/93/ |archive-date=2006-10-05}}</ref> | ||
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, most Hamshenis lived relatively undisturbed. |
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, most Hamshenis lived relatively undisturbed. However, those in the Abkhazia region of Georgia had trouble coping with day-to-day life during the ]. | ||
Since 2000, several hundred of the Muslim Hamshenis in Russia who have |
Since 2000, several hundred of the Muslim Hamshenis in Russia who have resettled from Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan to ] (about 1000 total) have repeatedly attempted to formally receive registration from the local authorities. This is similar and related to the problem of the ]. These actions have been made difficult by the attitude of the Krasnodar officials. In defiance of the authorities an organisation of their co-ethnics in Armenia have appealed to the Russian ambassador in ] to get ] to intervene in this case and overrule the regional officials who seem intent on preventing Hamshenis from gaining a status of permanent residency.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fsumonitor.com/stories/051205Russia.shtml |title=Window on Eurasia: Russian Region Persecutes Armenian Muslims |first=Paul |last=Goble |date=May 12, 2005 |website=Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union |access-date=4 December 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927014846/http://www.fsumonitor.com/stories/051205Russia.shtml |archive-date=27 September 2007}}</ref> | ||
In the 2002 Russian Federation census, 1,542 people identified themselves as Hamshenis, two-thirds of whom were living in Krasnodar Krai. | In the 2002 Russian Federation census, 1,542 people identified themselves as Hamshenis, two-thirds of whom were living in Krasnodar Krai. | ||
Sochi has an ethnic ] majority (~70%) but is home to a sizable ] minority (~20%), which is especially notable in the ] where they compose more than half of the total population.<ref>80,000 of 138,572 (58%) | |||
* According to 2014 official estimates, the population of Adlersky City District is 138,572, see {{cite web |date=April 15, 2014 |title=Оценка численности населения на 1 января 2014 года по муниципальным образованиям Краснодарского края |url=http://krsdstat.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/krsdstat/ru/news/rss/4e0d2c0043a4c2d0955995d06954faf7 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140614194427/http://krsdstat.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/krsdstat/ru/news/rss/4e0d2c0043a4c2d0955995d06954faf7 |archive-date=June 14, 2014 |publisher=] |language=ru}} | |||
* '']'' estimated in 2006 that there were about 80,000 Armenians in Adler, see {{cite news |last=Schreck |first=Carl |date=May 5, 2006 |title=Sochi's Armenian Diaspora Weeps |url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/sochis-armenian-diaspora-weeps/205176.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140530201559/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/sochis-armenian-diaspora-weeps/205176.html |archive-date=May 30, 2014 |newspaper=] |quote=...Sochi's Adler district, home to about 80,000 ethnic Armenians...}}</ref> Most of Sochi's Armenian community are descendants of ] from Turkey's northeastern ] coast, who began arriving in the late 19th century.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Schreck |first1=Carl |title=Sochi's Armenian Diaspora Weeps |url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/sochis-armenian-diaspora-weeps/205176.html |work=] |quote=Hamshen Armenians comprise most of Sochi's Armenian population...}}</ref> | |||
===Recognition by the Armenian mainstream=== | ===Recognition by the Armenian mainstream=== | ||
From October 13 to 15, 2005, a Hamsheni international scientific convention was held in Sochi. The conference was organized under the Institute of History of the Academy of Sciences of Armenia, Russian-Armenian Commonwealth Organization of Moscow (commissioned by the ]) with help from the Armenian Scientific Informational and Cultural Center, "Hamshen" (Krasnodar, Russia) and Russian Armenian newspaper '']''. It involved scholars from Armenia, Russia, the ], ], and ] to discuss the past of the Hamshenis.{{Citation needed|date=January 2014}} | |||
== Notable Hamshenis == | |||
=== Politicians in Turkey === | |||
'''Ministers''' | |||
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* ]{{Sfnp|Karslıoğlu|2009|p=235}} (b. 1943) – politician who served as minister of foreign affairs, deputy prime minister, mayor of Ankara and the founder of the ]. | |||
* ]{{Sfnp|Karslıoğlu|2009|p=231, 235}} (1911–1961) – statesman who served as deputy prime minister, minister of national education, minister of public works and minister of transport. | |||
* ] (1947–2020) – politician who has held ministerial positions such as minister of culture and tourism, minister of state and deputy prime minister, including prime ministry also chairman of ]. | |||
'''Other''' | |||
* Alper Taş (b. 1967) – socialist politician and leader of ] | |||
* ] (1947–1972) – political activist, revolutionary and militant who was leader of left-wing organisations such as People's Liberation Army of Turkey and Revolutionary Youth Federation of Turkey. | |||
=== Popular culture === | |||
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* Behçet Gülas (b. 1977) – singer and musician | |||
* ] | |||
* Aydoğan Topal (b. 1982) – singer who is half Hamsheni | |||
'''] artists''' | |||
* Yaşar Çorbacıoğlu (b. 1939) | |||
* Remzi Bekar (b. 1937) | |||
* Dindar Güner (1942–2021) | |||
* Emin Yağcı (b. 1965) | |||
* Mahmut Turan (b. 1958) | |||
'''Other''' | |||
* ] (b. 1975) – director and screenwriter | |||
* ] (b. 1977) – political and social activist, journalist and ecologist | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
* Bert Vaux, '''', Harvard University, 2001. | |||
* Mack Chahin, ''The Kingdom of Armenia: A History'', Routledge, London, 2001. (ISBN 0-7007-1452-9) | |||
* Robert H. Hewsen, ''Armenia: A Historical Atlas'', University Of Chicago Press, 2000. (ISBN 0-226-33228-4) | |||
* Peter Alford Andrews, ''Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey'', Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1989. p475-497. (ISBN 3-89500-297-6) | |||
* Hovann H. Simonian (Ed.),"The Hemshin: History,society and identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey", Routledge, London and New York. (ISBN 0-7007-0656-9) | |||
</div> | |||
==Bibliography == | |||
=== Footnotes === | |||
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Andrews |editor1-first=Peter A. |editor2-last=Benninghaus |editor2-first=Rüdiger |name-list-style=amp |date=1989 |title=Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey |series=Supplements to the Tübingen Atlas of the Middle East: Series B (Humanities) No. 60.2 |location=Wiesbaden |publisher=Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag}} | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=Dubin |first1=Marc S. |title=Trekking in Turkey |last2=Lucas |first2=Enver |date=1989 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-864420374 |location=], Vic. |page=126 |name-list-style=amp}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Hewsen |first=Robert H. |author-link=Robert H. Hewsen |date=2000 |title=Armenia: A Historical Atlas |location=Chicago |publisher=University of Chicago Press}} | |||
* {{cite book |url=http://hemshin.org/books/TheHemshin-Full.pdf |editor-last=Simonian |editor-first=Hovann H. |editor-link=Hovann Simonian |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |location=London |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-79829-1}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Awde |first=Nicholas |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Foreword}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Beller-Hann |first=Ildiko |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Hemshinli-Lazi Relations in Northeast Turkey}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Benninghaus |first=Rüdiger |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Turk and Hemshinli: Manipulating Ethnic Origin and Identity}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Blasing |first=Uwe |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Armenian in the vocabulary and culture of the Turkish Hemshinli}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Hachikian |first=Hagop |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Notes on the Historical Geography and Present Territorial Distribution of the Hemshinli}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Simonian |first=Hovann H. |date=2007a |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Hamshen Before Hemshin: The Prelude to Islamicization}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Simonian |first=Hovann H. |date=2007b |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Hemshin from Islamicization to the End of the Nineteenth Century}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Redgate |first=Anne Elizabeth |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Morale, Cohesion and Power in the First Centuries of Amatuni Hamshen}} | |||
** {{cite book |last=Vaux |first=Bert |date=2007 |title=The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey |chapter=Homshetsma: The language of the Armenians of Hamshen}} | |||
*{{cite journal |url=http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~lingpub/misc/bert/forgot~1.pdf |title=Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians |last1=Vaux |first1=Bert |author-link1=Bert Vaux |date=2001 |journal=Harvard Working Papers in Linguistics |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |publisher=Harvard University |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060912203751/http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~lingpub/misc/bert/forgot~1.pdf |archive-date=2006-09-12}} | |||
*{{Cite journal |last=Papikyan |first=Arpine |date=March 2016 |title=The cultural identity of Islamized Hemshin Armenians |url=https://www.academia.edu/resource/work/26134245 |journal=M.A. Intercultural Theology |type=PDF}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Yepiskoposyan |first1=Levon |last2=Hovhannisyan |first2=Anahit |last3=Khachatryan |first3=Zaruhi |name-list-style=amp |year=2016 |title=Genetic Structure of the Armenian Population |url=https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00005-016-0431-9 |journal=Archivum Immunologiae et Therapiae Experimentalis |volume=64 |issue=Suppl. 1 |pages=113–116 |doi=10.1007/s00005-016-0431-9 |pmid=28083603 |url-access=registration |quote=The origin of another Armenian Diaspora community, Hamshenis, has been a controversial subject for scholars of various disciplines throughout the years. Three regions were considered as a putative homeland for this isolated ethnic group, namely Eastern Armenia, Western Armenia and Central Asia. However, the results of the genetic survey based on the Y-chromosomal markers indicated the central part of historical Armenia as a plausible place of origin for the Hamsheni population (Margaryan et al. 2011). |s2cid=7641438}} | |||
*{{cite journal |title=Hamšēn: An Armenian Enclave in the Byzanto-Georgian Pontos. A Survey of Literary and Nonliterary Sources |first=Robert W. |last=Edwards |date=1988 |journal=] |volume=101 |number=3–4 |pages=403–422|doi=10.2143/MUS.101.3.2011410 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=Bennigsen |first1=Alexandre |title=Muslims of the Soviet Empire: A Guide |last2=Wimbush |first2=S. Enders |date=1986 |publisher=C. Hurst & Company |isbn=978-1-850650102 |edition=New |location=London |page=217 |author-link1=Alexandre Bennigsen |orig-date=1960 |name-list-style=amp}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Şener |first=Cemal |title=Türkiye'de Yaşayan Etnik ve Dinsel Gruplar |date=2004 |publisher=Etik Yayınları |isbn=978-9-758565214 |language=tr |trans-title=Ethnic and Religious Groups Living in Turkey |chapter=Lazlar/Hemşinler}} | |||
*{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2012 |title=K̲h̲ems̲h̲in |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition |publisher=Brill |last=Wixman |first=R. |editor1=P. Bearman |editor2=Th. Bianquis |editor3=C.E. Bosworth |editor4=E. van Donzel |editor5=W.P. Heinrichs}} | |||
*{{Cite book |last=Karslıoğlu |first=Yusuf |title=Doğu Karadeniz tarihi: otokton halkları ve etnik yapısı |publisher=Universal Yayınları |year=2009 |isbn=978-975-01165-1-3 |pages= |language=Tr |quote=}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Ascherson |first=Neal |title=Black Sea |date=1995 |publisher=Jonathan Cape |location=London |page=198}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Simonian |first=Hovann H. |title=Armenian Pontus: The Trebizond-Black Sea Communities |date=2009 |publisher=Mazda Publishers |editor-last=Hovannisian |editor-first=Richard G. |editor-link=Richard G. Hovannisian |series=UCLA Armenian History and Culture Series: Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces |volume=8 |location=Costa Mesa, CA |pages=382–387 |chapter=History and Identity Among the Hemshin}} | |||
*{{Cite book |last=Benninghaus |first=Rüdiger |title=Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey |publisher=L. Reichert |year=2002 |isbn= |editor-last=Andrews |editor-first=Peter A. |location=Wiesbaden |language=German |chapter=Zur Herkunft und Identität der Hemşinli |orig-date=1989 |editor-last2=Benninghaus |editor-first2=Rüdiger}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
== External links == | |||
* {{cite book |first=Mack |last=Chahin |date=2001 |title=The Kingdom of Armenia: A History |location=London |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0-7007-1452-9}} | |||
* , a multi-lingual discussion forum on Hamshen topics | |||
*{{cite book |chapter-url=https://independent.academia.edu/ViacheslavChirikba/Papers/832581/ARMENIANS_AND_THEIR_DIALECTS_IN_ABKHAZIA |chapter=Armenians and their Dialects in Abkhazia |first=V.A. |last=Chirikba |author-link=Viacheslav Chirikba |title=Evidence and Counter-Evidence: Essays in honour of Frederik Kortlandt. Volume 2, General linguistics |year=2008 |location=Amsterdam |publisher=] |pages=51–67 |isbn=978-90-420-2471-7}} | |||
* {{tr icon}} An interview with the director of ''Momi'' on the film and Hamshenis | |||
* {{tr icon}} News article on ''Vova'' | |||
* {{tr icon}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* at the ''Voice of Hopa'' website features Hamsheni words and their Turkish equivalents. | |||
* News article about the release with concise info on Hamshenis | |||
* | |||
==External links== | |||
] | |||
{{Commons category|Hemshin people}} | |||
] | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.hamshen.org |title=Hamshenian Forum |website=Hamshen.org}}, a multi-lingual discussion forum on Hamshen topics. | |||
] | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.bianet.org/haber_eski/haber2485.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051130194811/http://www.bianet.org/haber_eski/haber2485.htm |archive-date=2005-11-30 |title="Momi" ve "Hamşetsi" Olmak.... |language=tr |first=Talin |last=Sucuyan |date=25 May 2001 |website=BİA}} An interview with the director of ''Momi'' on the film and Hamshenis. | |||
] | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/news/350649.asp |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090131230704/http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/news/350649.asp |archive-date=2009-01-31 |title=Damardan Hemşin Ezgileri |trans-title=Hamshin Melodies from the Vein |website=Vova |language=tr}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.karalahana.com/makaleler/Ozhan/gurbet%20pastasi.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070712032349/http://www.karalahana.com/makaleler/Ozhan/gurbet%20pastasi.htm |archive-date=2007-07-12 |title=Gurbet Pastası: Hemşinliler, Göç ve Pastacılık |trans-title=Hometown Cake: Hamshens, Immigration and Pastry |website=Karalahana.com |language=tr}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=Hamshen |title=Hamshen |website=Armeniapedia.org}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.karalahana.com/english/archive/hemsin.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070326214817/http://www.karalahana.com/english/archive/hemsin.html |archive-date=2007-03-26 |title=Hemşin: A Unique Land |website=Karalahana.com}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.hopaninsesi.com/index.php?optionfiltered=com_glossary&func=display&page=1&catid=31&Itemid=55 |title=Hamsheni-Turkish Dictionary |website=Voice of Hopa}} Features Hamsheni words and their Turkish equivalents. | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.panarmenian.net/news/eng/?nid=16820 |title=CD with Songs Having Lyrics in Hamshen Dialect of Armenian Language Released in Krasnodar |date=March 11, 2006 |website=PanArmenian.net}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.gulapoglu.com.tr.tc/ |title=Gulapoglu Family Site from Camlihemsin |access-date=23 June 2008 |archive-date=20 November 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081120054653/http://www.gulapoglu.com.tr.tc/ |url-status=dead }} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.dzaynhamshenakan.org/ |title=Dzayn Hamshenakan |language=hy}} | |||
*{{cite web |url=http://www.hemshin.org/index.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309014923/http://www.hemshin.org/index.html |archive-date=2012-03-09 |title=Hemshin.org}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{Demographics of Turkey}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 12:24, 29 December 2024
Ethnographic group of Armenians "Armenian Muslims" redirects here. For Muslims in Armenia, see Islam in Armenia.Ethnic group
Armenian: Համշենցիներ, Hamshentsiner | |
---|---|
Hemsheni women in Rize, Turkey | |
Total population | |
150,000–200,000 | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Turkey: Rize (majority: Hemşin, Çamlıhemşin; minority: Çayeli, İkizdere) Artvin (almost half: Kemalpaşa; minority: Hopa) Trabzon (minority: Araklı) Erzurum (minority: Tortum, İspir) Diaspora communities in Sakarya and Düzce Russia: Sochi (more than half: Adlersky City District) | |
Turkey | 150,000 |
Russia | 2,082 |
Languages | |
Armenian (Homshetsi dialect) Turkish | |
Religion | |
Sunni Islam in Turkey Armenian Apostolic in Georgia and Russia | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Armenians, Pontic Greeks, Laz people, Turks |
The Hemshin people (Armenian: Համշենցիներ, Hamshentsiner; Turkish: Hemşinliler), also known as Hemshinli or Hamshenis or Homshetsi, are a bilingual ethnographic group of Armenians who mostly practice Sunni Islam after their conversion from Christianity in the beginning of the 18th century and are affiliated with the Hemşin and Çamlıhemşin districts in the province of Rize, Turkey.
They are Armenian in origin, and were originally Christians and members of the Armenian Apostolic Church, but evolved into a distinct community over the centuries and converted to Sunni Islam after the conquest of the region by the Ottomans during the second half of the 15th century. In Turkey, Hemshin people do not speak the Homshetsi dialect apart from the "Eastern Hamsheni" group living in provinces of Artvin and Sakarya and their mother tongue is now Turkish.
For centuries, the ongoing migration from the geographically isolated highlands to lowlands made the Hemshin people settle in the areas near Trabzon, Artvin and in the Western part of the Black Sea coast. Thus, a significant Hamsheni population formed in those areas.
History
Genetic Origin
The origins of the Hemshin people has remained a subject of debate among scholars. The main two purported homelands of the Hemshin have been Eastern Armenia and Western Armenia. A 2011 genetic survey based on the Y-chromosomal markers of the Hemshin indicated the central part of the historical Armenian highlands as a plausible place of origin for the Hamsheni population.
History until the Ottoman conquest
The region of Hemshin is located on the coast of the Black sea, in the highlands of Rize Province. According to historical accounts, Armenians first settled in that region in the end of 8th century. While escaping Arab persecutions, about 12,000 Armenians led by Prince Shapuh Amatuni and his son Hamam moved to Pontos, ruled by Byzantine Empire. Robert H. Hewsen shows the region where today's Hemşin is located to be populated by a people with different designations throughout the ancient and early medieval history. He indicates thereby that some designations may have alternative forms and partially presents the names used with question marks. In summary from 13th century to 6th century BC Colchians, 550 to 330 BC Colchians and Macrones, 180 BC to 14 AD Lazoi (Chani/Tzan tribes), in the Arsacid Period (63–298 AD) Heniochi, Machelones, Heptakometians, Mossynoeci as well as Sanni, Drilae and Macrones are mentioned.
The Hemşin region is shown as part of Colchis (299–387), Tzanica (387–591) and Chaldia (654–750). The specific location of Hemşin is indicated as Tambur/Hamamašen as a fort and town for the first time in the map covering the period 654–750.
Those two names (Tambur and Hamamašen) are included in the History of Taron by John Mamikonean in a short passage about a war between the ruler of Tambur, Hamam, and his maternal uncle the Georgian Prince, which resulted in the destruction of the town to be rebuilt by Hamam and be named after him, namely Hamamshen.
As soon as read the letter, another letter arrived the same day from Vashdean's sister's son, Hamam, acquainting with the treachery before him from the troops who had come from Iran. He immediately wrote a letter to Vashdean reprimanding him for his plot. Vashdean grew angry and had Hamam's feet and hands lopped off. Then, taking the Iranians, crossed the Chorox river and went to Hamam's city, named Tambur, which he attacked with fire and sword and enslaved. Now the blessed bishop of the city, Manknos, severely cursed the prince. ordered the Iranians to kill the priests in the church named Holy Zion. The bishop had silently prayed to God to ask only that the city be turned into a desert and a ruin and that for all eternity no one reside there. He threw himself on the altar and sacrificed him on Pentecost before mass was offered to Christ. On the next day there was a cloudburst and was consumed by fire as he sat by the city gates of Tambur. Hamam subsequently built this calling it after himself, Hamamashen. And Mangnos' prayer was realized. In one night 3,000 men died, others fled, and the city remained a ruin.
This event is declared by Mamikonian to have taken place in early seventh century. Hamamashen became Hamshen over time. Simonian who conveys this story reports also that the date given by the author may be wrong.
Two other Armenian chronicles Ghewond and Stepanos Asoghik of Taron, report in short passages in their histories about a migration from Armenia/Oshakan led by prince Shapuh Amatuni and his son Hamam. Ghewond conveys this immigration to be to avoid heavy taxes imposed on Armenians by the Arab rulers. The Amatuni lords are offered fertile land to settle down by the Byzantine Emperor, after they crossed the Çoruh. This migration is dated to be after 789 by Ghewond and as 750 by Stephen Asoghik of Taron.
Benninghaus specifies "Tambur" as the destination of the migration led by Hamam and his father Shapuh Amaduni and says that they have seemingly met people there who were already Christians, possibly Greeks. Redgate informs about possible symbolism used in the Ghewond's history and possible garbling in Mamikonian's history, and cautions not to take everything at face value. Hachikian states "There is no clue as to where Tambur, the legendary capital of Hamshen, was located. The only certain thing about it is that it clearly belonged to a much earlier time - if it existed at all". He also mentions in the footnote the name similarity between Tambur and a yayla known as Tahpur or Tagpur, in the heights of Kaptanpasa. Simonian states that Tambur is probably in the vicinity of Varoşkale (altitude 1800 m).
A description of "Haynsen" in the Kingdom of Georgia, its inhabitants and history is contained in La Fleur des histoires de la terre d'Orient by Hayton of Corycus, written around 1307, translated into English in 1520, and later reproduced in the travellers' tales of Samuel Purchas published in 1614. Purchas uses the term "Hamsem" to designate the region and concludes that this is the place of the original Cimmerian gloom of Homer's Odyssey. The translation of He'tum's related passage to modern English uses the term Hamshen. Hayton describes the region to be "miraculous and strange place" unbelievable unless seen by one's own eyes, dark and without roads. Signs of human settlement are that "People in those parts say that one frequently hears the sounds of men bellowing, of cocks crowing, of horses neighing in the forest," Those people are described by Hayton, leaning upon Georgian and Armenian Histories, to be the descendants of the men of the "wicked" Iranian Emperor Shaworeos who had chased and harassed Christian people. The referenced translation suggests this Emperor could be Shapur II (309–379 AD).
Simonian considers the so described difficulty in access not to imply total isolation. On the contrary, he reports, Hamshen served sometimes as a transit route between the coastal regions and the Armenian Highlands.
In his analysis of the literary and non-literary sources from the 8th through the 19th centuries, combined with excursions into Hamšēn during the 1980s to identify the surviving Armenian architecture, Dr. Robert W. Edwards has defined the geographical perimeters of that region and assessed the historical impact of its extreme isolation.
Sources of the ruling powers in the region, (Byzantine, Trapezuntine, Georgian, Armenian and Turkish) are silent about Hemshin; until the conquest by the Ottomans. It is deduced that Hemşin has been governed by local lords under the umbrella of the greater regional powers changing by the time namely the Bagratid Armenian kingdom, the Byzantine Empire, its successor the Empire of Trebizond, the Kingdom of Georgia, the Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkmen Confederations until it was annexed by the Ottoman Empire which collapsed as a result of the World War I and gave birth to the Republic of Turkey.
The Ottoman conquest of Hemshin occurred sometime in the 1480s: an Ottoman register dated around 1486 calls it Hemshin and mentions it as being an Ottoman possession.
Turkish dominance and division
Turkish influence was firmly established in the region after the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, after which the Seljuk Turks and other Turkish tribes gained a strong foothold in Central Anatolia and Western Armenian Highlands, often referred to as Eastern Anatolia, bringing the local population in contact with the religion of Islam. In the 15th century, the region of Hamshen was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire. During the Turkish rule, two most important developments are human migrations and conversions. Most sources agree that prior to Ottoman era majority of the residents of Hemshin were Christian and members of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The details and the accompanying circumstances for the migrations and the conversions during the Ottoman era are not clearly known or documented.
As a result of those developments, distinctive communities with the same generic name have also appeared in the vicinity of Hopa, Turkey as well as in the Caucasus. Those three communities are almost oblivious to one another's existence.
- The Hemshinli of Hemshin proper (also designated occasionally as western Hemshinli in publications) are Turkish-speaking Sunni Muslims who mostly live in the counties (ilçe) of Çamlıhemşin, Çayeli, İkizdere, Pazar and Hemşin in Turkey's Rize Province.
- The Hopa Hemshinli (also designated occasionally as eastern Hemshinli in publications) are Sunni Muslims and mostly live in the Hopa and Borçka counties of Turkey's Artvin Province. In addition to Turkish, they also speak a dialect of western Armenian they call "Homshetsma" or "Hemşince" in Turkish.
- Homshentsik (also designated occasionally as Northern Homshentsik in publications) are Christians who live in Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia and in Russia's Krasnodar Krai. They speak Homshetsma as well. There are also some Muslim Hamshentsi living in Georgia and Krasnodar and some Hamshentsi elements amongst the Meskhetian Turks.
Demographics
Two major developments in the Hemshin region during the Ottoman era: Islamization and population movements. Islam may have begun to spread prior to the Ottoman rule, but it did not become the general religion before the end of the 16th century. A number of population movements (both into and out of the region) also happened during the Ottoman era. Even though detailed information regarding the nature of these movements is missing, in summary:
- Some Hemshinli who were members of the Armenian Orthodox Church emigrated to other countries on the eastern Black Sea during the early centuries of Ottoman rule;
- Some Muslim Hemshinli migrated to western Anatolia and the Caucasus as a result of the Russo-Turkish wars and related hardships during the 19th century;
- Some immigration into the area occurred during Ottoman rule.
The present community of Hemshinli is exclusively Muslim and Turkish speaking. This goes for the people living in Hemshin or people maintaining links to the area and living elsewhere in Turkey.
A distinct community settled about 50 km east of Hemşin in villages around Hopa and Borçka also call themselves "Hemşinli". They are often referred to as the "Hopa Hemşinli". Professor of Linguistics Bert Vaux at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee refers to this group as the "Eastern Hamshenis". Hemşinli and Hopa Hemşinli are separated not only by geography but also by language and some features of culture. The two groups are almost oblivious to one another's existence. Simonian reports various theories regarding the appearance of the Hopa Hemshinli group. Those theories relate to whether the groups migrated from Hemshin or they were settled by the Ottoman authorities, whether the migration/settlement was in the early 16th or late 17th centuries, and whether the migration took place in one step or two waves. The Hopa Hemşinli are exclusively Muslim as well. Simonian reports that there is a controversy regarding whether they arrived in the Hopa region as Muslims or converted to Islam after arrival.
The Hopa Hemşinli speak a language called "Hemşince" or ("Homşetsi" and/or Homshetsma in some sources) as well as Turkish. Recent studies by Hovann Simonian (Author: The Hemshin: A Handbook (Caucasus World)) suggest that this language is an archaic dialect of Armenian subject to influence from Turkish and Laz. Vaux also reports that "Hemşince" has been subject to influence from Turkish to a much greater extent than other Armenian dialects. Hemşince and Armenian are largely mutually unintelligible.
In addition to these two groups there are people speaking Hemşince / Homshetsma in the countries of the former USSR whose ancestors probably originated from Hemşin and/or Hopa Hemşin in course of the various population movements to the Caucasus. Many of the Muslim Hemşince speakers in the former USSR were deported from the Adjara area of Georgia during the Stalin era to Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. Since 1989, a considerable number of these deportees have moved to Krasnodar Krai since 1989, along with the Meskhetian Turks.
Culture
Hemshin peoples are well known for their baking, tea growing, and the clever jokes, riddles, and stories that they tell. Some of the anecdotes that the Muslim Hemshinli tell are actually based on older Armenian ones. They accompany dances with their own brand of music using the tulum (the Pontic bagpipe) (for the Western group), the şimşir kaval (flute made of buxus) (for the Eastern group) or the Hamshna-Zurna (Hamsheni zurna) (for the Northern group). The traditional occupations of the Turkish Hemshinli are cultivating tea and maize, breeding livestock, and beekeeping. The Northern Hamshenis of Russia and Georgia, meanwhile, are primarily known as citrus, corn, tobacco and tea growers as well as fishermen.
The people of Hemshin are known for their traditional dress. Women often choose to wrap their head with a "pushi" or long piece of cloth donned with beads, while men often choose to wear hats and vests made of wool or cotton.
The Hemshin people and their mansions were featured in issue 12 of Cornucopia magazine.
Present situation
Hemşinli in Turkey
The "Turkey for the Turks" ideology, writes Neal Ascherson, "offered no security for minorities" with "the tiny Hemşinli group having especially compelling reasons to keep its head down" because "its members are the descendants of Armenians." Beginning in the 1930s, a number of Turkish historians attempted to ascribe an entirely Turkish origin to the Hemshinli, the most prominent of them being M. Fahrettin Kırzıoğlu, whose theories have since gained wide currency among the community. His theories on the Hemshinli, however, have come under close scrutiny and have been roundly criticized. The German scholars Wolfgang Feurstein and Tucha Berdsena describe Kırzıoğlu's methodology as so:
At first Kırzıoğlu assaults the reader with a flow of historical peoples; he then searches for some kind of phonetic correspondence or similarity with an old Turkish tribe, flavors this alleged historical outpouring with a pinch of "Islam," and presents himself as a competent researcher of Turkishness. Probably never before has a single person in Turkey falsified history so massively!
The filmmaker Özcan Alper, an eastern Hemshinli, made the first motion picture in Homshetsi, Momi ("Grandma"), released in 2000. As a result, Alper was accused in the Court for State Security of producing material intended to destroy the unity of the state, under article 8 of Turkey's anti-terror law. This law was repealed in 2003 after EU pressure, and Alper's trial did not go ahead. Hamsheni singer Gökhan Birben (from the Western group) and Laz singer Kâzım Koyuncu had also sung in Homshetsi. In 2005, the first music album exclusively of anonymous Hamshen folk songs and sung mostly in Homshetsi, Vova - Hamşetsu Ğhağ was released.
Older generations of Turkish Hemshinli see the reference "Ermeni" (often used by their Laz neighbours) as an insult.
Mesut Yılmaz, a former Prime Minister of Turkey, was born in Istanbul to a family with partial Hamsheni (Western group) origins. Ahmet Tevfik İleri (who was born in Yaltkaya (Gomno) village of Hemşin), a Deputy Prime Minister and before that, a Minister of Education in Turkey within successive Adnan Menderes governments between 1950 and 1960, as well as Damat Mehmet Ali Pasha, the Ottoman Grand Vizier on the eve of the Crimean War in 1853 were also of Hamsheni descent. The community issued other important names in Turkish history and society such as Murat Karayalçın, a former Deputy Prime Minister and mayor of Ankara who is from Şenyuva (Çinçiva) village of Çamlıhemşin.
There are two ongoing projects involving Turkish NGOs and EuropeAid, European Commission's external aid instrument, that touch their issues. The more recently (2007) launched "Ecodialogue Project" has set itself as goal raising environment consciousness of the region's enterprises and improving the poor levels and quality of the information relayed by local guides, many of whom are self-styled and unlicensed. The other project, started 2004 and involving also the World Conservation Union, aims to raise the profile and awareness of the grouse, particularly black grouse, who visit the region, also with focus on enterprises and guides.
Hamshenis in Russia and the former Soviet Union
Interest in Hamshen heritage is rising among Christian Hamshenis in the former Soviet Union. In 2006, the first music album in Homshetsma by the Ensemble Caravan was released in Krasnodar. Hamshen Scientific, Information and Cultural Centre began to work on exclusive projects in order to recover the cultural heritage of the Hamshenis living in the region. The Armenian newspaper published in Sukhumi carries the name Hamshen.
During the Mikhail Gorbachev period of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, the Hamshenis of Kazakhstan began petitioning for the government to move them to the Armenian SSR. However, this move was denied by Moscow because of fears that the Muslim Hamshenis might spark ethnic conflicts with their Christian Armenian brothers.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, most Hamshenis lived relatively undisturbed. However, those in the Abkhazia region of Georgia had trouble coping with day-to-day life during the Georgian Civil War.
Since 2000, several hundred of the Muslim Hamshenis in Russia who have resettled from Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan to Krasnodar Krai (about 1000 total) have repeatedly attempted to formally receive registration from the local authorities. This is similar and related to the problem of the Meskhetians. These actions have been made difficult by the attitude of the Krasnodar officials. In defiance of the authorities an organisation of their co-ethnics in Armenia have appealed to the Russian ambassador in Yerevan to get Moscow to intervene in this case and overrule the regional officials who seem intent on preventing Hamshenis from gaining a status of permanent residency.
In the 2002 Russian Federation census, 1,542 people identified themselves as Hamshenis, two-thirds of whom were living in Krasnodar Krai.
Sochi has an ethnic Russian majority (~70%) but is home to a sizable Armenian minority (~20%), which is especially notable in the Adlersky City District where they compose more than half of the total population. Most of Sochi's Armenian community are descendants of Hamshen Armenians from Turkey's northeastern Black Sea coast, who began arriving in the late 19th century.
Recognition by the Armenian mainstream
From October 13 to 15, 2005, a Hamsheni international scientific convention was held in Sochi. The conference was organized under the Institute of History of the Academy of Sciences of Armenia, Russian-Armenian Commonwealth Organization of Moscow (commissioned by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation) with help from the Armenian Scientific Informational and Cultural Center, "Hamshen" (Krasnodar, Russia) and Russian Armenian newspaper Yerkramas. It involved scholars from Armenia, Russia, the United States, Germany, and Iran to discuss the past of the Hamshenis.
Notable Hamshenis
Politicians in Turkey
Ministers
Mesut Yılmaz Murat Karayalçın- Murat Karayalçın (b. 1943) – politician who served as minister of foreign affairs, deputy prime minister, mayor of Ankara and the founder of the SHP.
- Tevfik İleri (1911–1961) – statesman who served as deputy prime minister, minister of national education, minister of public works and minister of transport.
- Mesut Yılmaz (1947–2020) – politician who has held ministerial positions such as minister of culture and tourism, minister of state and deputy prime minister, including prime ministry also chairman of Motherland Party.
Other
- Alper Taş (b. 1967) – socialist politician and leader of Left Party
- Cihan Alptekin (1947–1972) – political activist, revolutionary and militant who was leader of left-wing organisations such as People's Liberation Army of Turkey and Revolutionary Youth Federation of Turkey.
Popular culture
Gökhan Birben- Behçet Gülas (b. 1977) – singer and musician
- Gökhan Birben
- Aydoğan Topal (b. 1982) – singer who is half Hamsheni
Tulum artists
- Yaşar Çorbacıoğlu (b. 1939)
- Remzi Bekar (b. 1937)
- Dindar Güner (1942–2021)
- Emin Yağcı (b. 1965)
- Mahmut Turan (b. 1958)
Other
- Özcan Alper (b. 1975) – director and screenwriter
- Cemil Aksu (b. 1977) – political and social activist, journalist and ecologist
See also
- Amatuni
- Armenians in Turkey
- Armeno-Tats
- Cherkesogai
- Christianity in Turkey
- Chveneburi
- Crypto-Armenians
- Empire of Trebizond
- Islam in Armenia
- Laz people
- Minorities in Turkey
- Pontic Greeks
- Principality of Hamamshen
References
- ^ Simonian (2007), p. xx, Preface.
- "The Hemshin: A Community of Armenians Who Became Muslims". Asbarez. 29 December 2010.
- ^ "Sergey Vardanyan'la söyleşi" [Interview with Sergey Vardanyan]. Biryaşam (in Turkish). 2010. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013.
- Goble, Paul (5 April 2017). "Islamicized Armenians in Turkey: A Bridge or a Threat?". Eurasia Daily Monitor. 14 (46). Jamestown Foundation.
- "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 31 August 2024.
- ^ Vaux (2001), p. 1.
- Simonian (2007).
- Dubin & Lucas (1989), p. 126.
- Kepenek, Evrim (5 October 2013). "Kimdir Bu Hemşinliler?". Bianet.
- Wixman (2012).
- ^ Vaux (2001), pp. 1–2, 4–5.
- ^ Andrews & Benninghaus (1989), pp. 476–477, 483–485, 491.
- ^ Simonian (2007b), p. 80.
- Hachikian (2007), pp. 146–147.
- Anumyan, Meline (22 January 2014). "Hemşinli aydınlara göre Hemşin ve Hemşin Ermenileri". hyetert.org (in Turkish). hyetert.org. Retrieved 1 August 2024.
Türkiye'de yaşayan Hemşinlilerin Hopa, Borçka ve Adapazarı'ında yaşayanlarının dışındakiler, Ermenice'nin bir lehçesi olan Hemşin Ermenicesi'ni konuşamamaktadır.
- Simonian (2007), p. 141.
- Yepiskoposyan, Hovhannisyan & Khachatryan (2016), p. 113–116.
- Papikyan (2016), p. 1–2.
- Hewsen (2000), maps 10, 13.
- Hewsen (2000), map 17.
- Hewsen (2000), map 21.
- Hewsen (2000), map 42.
- Hewsen (2000), map 55.
- Hewsen (2000), map 62.
- Hewsen (2000), map 65.
- Hewsen (2000), map 78.
- Mamikonean, John (1975) . "Patmut'iwn [History]". History of Taron. Translated by Robert Bedrosian. Archived from the original on 23 June 2004 – via History of the Tartars.
- ^ Simonian (2007a), pp. 20–21.
- Andrews & Benninghaus (1989), p. 92.
- Redgate (2007), pp. 3–13.
- Hachikian (2007), p. 147.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 22.
- Redgate (2007), p. 4.
- Purchas, Samuel (1614). Purchas his Pilgrimage, or, Relations of the world and the religions obserued in all ages and places discoured, from the Creation vnto this present (2nd ed.). London: Henrie Fetherstone. Archived from the original on 28 July 2008. Retrieved 24 June 2008 – via University of Sydney Library.
- Het'um the Armenian of the Praemonstratensian Order (2004). "Chapter 10: The Kingdom of Georgia". The Flower of Histories of the East. Translated by Robert Bedrosian. Archived from the original on 22 June 2004. Retrieved 4 December 2016 – via History of the Tartars.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 24.
- Edwards (1988), p. 403–422.
- Simonian (2007a), pp. 26, 31.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 26.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 31.
- Simonian (2007a), pp. 61, 83.
- Beller-Hann (2007), p. 340.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 20.
- Simonian (2007b), pp. 52, 58, 61–66, 80.
- Awde (2007), p. xxi.
- Simonian (2007a), pp. xxii.
- Blasing (2007).
- Vaux (2001), p. 2.
- Bennigsen & Wimbush (1986), p. 217.
- Simonian (2007b), pp. 52–99.
- Andrews & Benninghaus (1989), pp. 476–477, 484, 487.
- Simonian (2007), pp. 159, 165, 176, 257, 332, 333.
- Vaux (2001), p. 5.
- Vaux (2007), p. 257.
- Simonian (2007a), p. 257.
- Daunt, Patricia (1997). "The Country Houses that Ride 'the Storm'". Cornucopia. No. 12.
- Ascherson (1995), p. 198.
- Simonian (2009), p. 382–387.
- See for example; Benninghaus 2002.
- Benninghaus (2007), p. 259.
- Benninghaus (2007), pp. 369–370, 388, notes 160 & 161.
- ^ Şener (2004).
- "Biography of Hemşinli Damat Mehmet Ali Pasha". Itibarhaber.eu (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
- Susoy, Yener (29 December 2003). "ODTÜ'de bozkurt rozeti taşırdım" [I used to wear a gray wolf badge at METU]. Hürriyet (in Turkish). Retrieved 5 August 2008.
- "Tevfik Rüştü Aras and Murat Karayalçın hail from Hemşin". Karadeniz.nl (in Turkish).
- "Ecodialogue Project" (PDF). Siviliz (8). The Strengthening Freedom of Association for Further Development of Civil Society Project. April 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2007.
- Bert Vaux himself had as primary Hemshinli informant a young man in his twenties, whose name was changed "to protect the innocent".
- "Improving the conservation status of the Caucasian Black Grouse" (PDF). World Conservation Union. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 December 2004.
- Amshentsi, Ruben & Hakobyan, Grigor (4 October 2006). "Muslim Armenians Part III: The Current Situation of Hamshentsi Armenians in the World". Usanogh. Archived from the original on 5 October 2006. Retrieved 6 February 2007.
- Goble, Paul (12 May 2005). "Window on Eurasia: Russian Region Persecutes Armenian Muslims". Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
- 80,000 of 138,572 (58%)
- According to 2014 official estimates, the population of Adlersky City District is 138,572, see "Оценка численности населения на 1 января 2014 года по муниципальным образованиям Краснодарского края [Estimated population on January 1, 2014 by the municipalities of Krasnodar Region]" (in Russian). Russian Federal State Statistics Service. 15 April 2014. Archived from the original on 14 June 2014.
- The Moscow Times estimated in 2006 that there were about 80,000 Armenians in Adler, see Schreck, Carl (5 May 2006). "Sochi's Armenian Diaspora Weeps". The Moscow Times. Archived from the original on 30 May 2014.
...Sochi's Adler district, home to about 80,000 ethnic Armenians...
- Schreck, Carl. "Sochi's Armenian Diaspora Weeps". The Moscow Times.
Hamshen Armenians comprise most of Sochi's Armenian population...
- Karslıoğlu (2009), p. 235.
- Karslıoğlu (2009), p. 231, 235.
Bibliography
- Andrews, Peter A. & Benninghaus, Rüdiger, eds. (1989). Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey. Supplements to the Tübingen Atlas of the Middle East: Series B (Humanities) No. 60.2. Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag.
- Dubin, Marc S. & Lucas, Enver (1989). Trekking in Turkey. South Yarra, Vic.: Lonely Planet. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-864420374.
- Hewsen, Robert H. (2000). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Simonian, Hovann H., ed. (2007). The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey (PDF). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-79829-1.
- Awde, Nicholas (2007). "Foreword". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Beller-Hann, Ildiko (2007). "Hemshinli-Lazi Relations in Northeast Turkey". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Benninghaus, Rüdiger (2007). "Turk and Hemshinli: Manipulating Ethnic Origin and Identity". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Blasing, Uwe (2007). "Armenian in the vocabulary and culture of the Turkish Hemshinli". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Hachikian, Hagop (2007). "Notes on the Historical Geography and Present Territorial Distribution of the Hemshinli". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Simonian, Hovann H. (2007a). "Hamshen Before Hemshin: The Prelude to Islamicization". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Simonian, Hovann H. (2007b). "Hemshin from Islamicization to the End of the Nineteenth Century". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Redgate, Anne Elizabeth (2007). "Morale, Cohesion and Power in the First Centuries of Amatuni Hamshen". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Vaux, Bert (2007). "Homshetsma: The language of the Armenians of Hamshen". The Hemshin: History, Society and Identity in the Highlands of Northeast Turkey.
- Vaux, Bert (2001). "Hemshinli: The Forgotten Black Sea Armenians" (PDF). Harvard Working Papers in Linguistics. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 September 2006.
- Papikyan, Arpine (March 2016). "The cultural identity of Islamized Hemshin Armenians". M.A. Intercultural Theology (PDF).
- Yepiskoposyan, Levon; Hovhannisyan, Anahit & Khachatryan, Zaruhi (2016). "Genetic Structure of the Armenian Population". Archivum Immunologiae et Therapiae Experimentalis. 64 (Suppl. 1): 113–116. doi:10.1007/s00005-016-0431-9. PMID 28083603. S2CID 7641438.
The origin of another Armenian Diaspora community, Hamshenis, has been a controversial subject for scholars of various disciplines throughout the years. Three regions were considered as a putative homeland for this isolated ethnic group, namely Eastern Armenia, Western Armenia and Central Asia. However, the results of the genetic survey based on the Y-chromosomal markers indicated the central part of historical Armenia as a plausible place of origin for the Hamsheni population (Margaryan et al. 2011).
- Edwards, Robert W. (1988). "Hamšēn: An Armenian Enclave in the Byzanto-Georgian Pontos. A Survey of Literary and Nonliterary Sources". Le Muséon. 101 (3–4): 403–422. doi:10.2143/MUS.101.3.2011410.
- Bennigsen, Alexandre & Wimbush, S. Enders (1986) . Muslims of the Soviet Empire: A Guide (New ed.). London: C. Hurst & Company. p. 217. ISBN 978-1-850650102.
- Şener, Cemal (2004). "Lazlar/Hemşinler". Türkiye'de Yaşayan Etnik ve Dinsel Gruplar [Ethnic and Religious Groups Living in Turkey] (in Turkish). Etik Yayınları. ISBN 978-9-758565214.
- Wixman, R. (2012). "K̲h̲ems̲h̲in". In P. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill.
- Karslıoğlu, Yusuf (2009). Doğu Karadeniz tarihi: otokton halkları ve etnik yapısı (in Turkish). Universal Yayınları. ISBN 978-975-01165-1-3.
- Ascherson, Neal (1995). Black Sea. London: Jonathan Cape. p. 198.
- Simonian, Hovann H. (2009). "History and Identity Among the Hemshin". In Hovannisian, Richard G. (ed.). Armenian Pontus: The Trebizond-Black Sea Communities. UCLA Armenian History and Culture Series: Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces. Vol. 8. Costa Mesa, CA: Mazda Publishers. pp. 382–387.
- Benninghaus, Rüdiger (2002) . "Zur Herkunft und Identität der Hemşinli ". In Andrews, Peter A.; Benninghaus, Rüdiger (eds.). Ethnic Groups in the Republic of Turkey (in German). Wiesbaden: L. Reichert.
Further reading
- Chahin, Mack (2001). The Kingdom of Armenia: A History. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1452-9.
- Chirikba, V.A. (2008). "Armenians and their Dialects in Abkhazia". Evidence and Counter-Evidence: Essays in honour of Frederik Kortlandt. Volume 2, General linguistics. Amsterdam: Rodopi. pp. 51–67. ISBN 978-90-420-2471-7.
External links
- "Hamshenian Forum". Hamshen.org., a multi-lingual discussion forum on Hamshen topics.
- Sucuyan, Talin (25 May 2001). ""Momi" ve "Hamşetsi" Olmak..." BİA (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 30 November 2005. An interview with the director of Momi on the film and Hamshenis.
- "Damardan Hemşin Ezgileri" [Hamshin Melodies from the Vein]. Vova (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 31 January 2009.
- "Gurbet Pastası: Hemşinliler, Göç ve Pastacılık" [Hometown Cake: Hamshens, Immigration and Pastry]. Karalahana.com (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 12 July 2007.
- "Hamshen". Armeniapedia.org.
- "Hemşin: A Unique Land". Karalahana.com. Archived from the original on 26 March 2007.
- "Hamsheni-Turkish Dictionary". Voice of Hopa. Features Hamsheni words and their Turkish equivalents.
- "CD with Songs Having Lyrics in Hamshen Dialect of Armenian Language Released in Krasnodar". PanArmenian.net. 11 March 2006.
- "Gulapoglu Family Site from Camlihemsin". Archived from the original on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- "Dzayn Hamshenakan" (in Armenian).
- "Hemshin.org". Archived from the original on 9 March 2012.
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