Hatay Province
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Image:Hatay Turkey Provinces locator.jpg Image:HatayProvinceMap.png
Hatay is a province of southern Turkey, situated between the Mediterranean Sea to the west and Syria to the south and east. From the end of World War I in 1918 until 1938, it was a province of French Mandate of Syria and was known as Iskandarun Province or the Alexandretta Province; its unification with Turkey following a popular referendum organized in 1939 by the Republic of Hatay remained a cause of tension in relations between the two countries until recently, when the Syrian government let go of the issue [citation needed]. Some Syrian maps still show it as Syrian territory. Today, Arabs form the majority in three districts: Samandağ (Suwaidiyyah) (Alawi), Altınözü (Qusair) and Reyhanlı (Rihaniyyah) (Sunni).
Its administrative capital is Antakya, formerly Antioch. Alexandretta is also located within the province, but is now known by its Turkish name, İskenderun. The province has an area of 5,545 km² (2,141 mi²) and a population of 1,253,726 in the 2000 census.
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[edit] Sanjak of Alexandretta
Hatay was formerly part of various emirates. After being conquered by the Ottoman Empire, it was known as the sanjak (or governorate) of Alexandretta. Following the empire's demise after World War I, it became part of the French mandate of Syria.
The Sanjak of Alexandretta was an autonomous sanjak from 1921 to 1923, as a result of the French-Turkish treaty of 20 October 1921, considering the presence of an important Turkish community alongside with Arab (of various religious denominations: Sunni Muslims, Alawites, Greek Orthodox, Greek Catholics, Maronites etc.), quite numerous Jews, and Kurdish and Armenian ones, plus some Greeks. Then it was attached to the State of Aleppo, and in 1925 it was directly attached to the French mandate of Syria still with a special administrative status.
In 1936, the elections returned two Syrian independentist (favoring the independence of Syria from France) MPs in the sanjak, and this prompted communal riots as well as passionated articles in the Turkish and Syrian press. It then became the subject of a complaint to the League of Nations by the Turkish government under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk concerning alleged mistreatment of the area's Turkish populations. Atatürk demanded that it become part of Turkey, claiming that the majority of its inhabitants were Turks. The sanjak was given autonomy in November 1937 in an arrangement brokered by the League. Under its new statute, the sanjak became 'distinct but not separated' from the French mandate of Syria on the diplomatic level, linked to both France and Turkey for defence matters.
In 1938 there was an ethnic census by French authorities under international control, and the repartition of the seats in the sanjak assembly was based on it: out of 40 seats, 22 for the Turks, nine for Alawi Arabs, five for Armenians, two for Sunni Arabs, two for Christian Arabs.
The assembly was elected in the summer of 1938 and the French-Turkish treaty settling the status of the Sanjak was signed on 4th July 1938.
[edit] Republic of Hatay
Image:Flag of the Republic of Hatay.svg On 2 September 1938 the assembly proclaimed it the Republic of Hatay, taking as an excuse that rioting had broken out between Turks and Arabs [citation needed]. The Republic had a one year existence under joint French and Turkish military supervision. The name "Hatay" itself was proposed by Atatürk and the government was under Turkish control. The president Tayfur Sökmen was a member of Turkish parliament elected in 1935 (representing Antalya (Greek: Αττάλεια)) and the prime minister Dr. Abdurrahman Melek was also elected to Turkish parliament (representing Gaziantep) in 1939 while still holding the prime-ministerial post [citation needed].
[edit] Province of Hatay
In 1939, following a popular referandum, Republic of Hatay became a Turkish province. The Hassa district of Gaziantep and Dörtyol district of Adana were incorporated to the province in order to increase the Turkish proportion of the population [citation needed]. The result was a flight of many Arabs and Armenians from Hatay to other parts of Syria. France's willingness to accede to Turkish demands was at least partly influenced by its government's wariness of getting involved in a potential overseas conflict while Germany posed a clear military threat on its immediate borders [citation needed]. As World War II began just afterwards, the League of Nations didn't have time to give its opinion about this cession [citation needed]. Syria did not recognize Turkey's incorporation of Hatay and the issue has been a source of some tension between the two countries until recently. The French action to cede the province to Turkey influenced the decision of Syrian President Hashim al-Atassi to resign in protest at continued French intervention in Syrian affairs. However, the advent in 2000 of Syrian President Bashar al Assad was to prove to be the circumstance of a lessening of tensions between Turkey and Syria over the issue. Indeed, in early 2005, when the visits from Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Turkish prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan opened a way to discussions between two states, Syrian government announced it had no claims to sovereignty concerning Hatay any more. [citation needed]
[edit] Hatay in popular culture
Hatay figured in the Indiana Jones movie Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, where it was portrayed as the final resting place of the Holy Grail in the "canyon of the crescent moon" outside of Alexandretta. In the movie, the Nazis offer the "sultan of Hatay" precious valuables to compensate for removing the Grail from his borders. He ignores the valuables, but accepts their Rolls-Royce Phantom II..
The Turkish film Propaganda [1], realised in 1999 by Sinan Çetin, portrays the difficult materialisation of the Turkish-Syrian border in 1948, cutting through villages and families.
[edit] External links
- Governor's web site
- Pictures of the capital of this province
- Pictures of a museum in the capital of this province
- Hatay Weather Forecast Information
[edit] Source
fr Elizabeth Picard, 'Retour au Sandjak', Maghreb-Machrek (Paris) n°99, jan.-feb.-march 1982
| Image:Hatay Turkey Provinces locator.gif | Districts of Hatay | Image:Flag of Turkey.svg |
|---|---|---|
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Antakya | Altınözü | Belen | Dörtyol | Erzin | Hassa | İskenderun | Kırıkhan | Kumlu | Reyhanlı | Samandağ | Yayladağı | ||
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| Provinces of Turkey | Image:Flag of Turkey.svg |
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de:Hatay es:Provincia de Hatay fr:Hatay id:Provinsi Hatay it:Hatay (provincia) nl:Hatay (provincie) pl:Hatay pt:Hatay (província) sl:Hatay sv:Hatay tr:Hatay (il) zh:哈塔伊省

