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Eastern Anatolia Region
region of East Turkey
Nika riots
rebellion in the Byzantine empire
Hamidian massacres
massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire which took place in the mid-1890s
Arzawa
Erivan Khanate
Iranian khanate (1747–1828)
Anatolian Plate
Continental tectonic plate comprising most of the Anatolia (Asia Minor) peninsula
Burning of Smyrna
fire (13–22 Sept. 1922) that destroyed much of Smyrna/İzmir, soon after Turkey recaptured the city (9 Sept.) from Greece
Karun Treasure
Treasure amassed by Croesus looted, sold and litigated, aka “Lydian hoard”
Washukanni
thumb|A map of Mesopotamia showing Waššukanni, [[Nineveh, Hatra, Assur, Nuzi, Palmyra, Mari, Sippar, Babylon, Kish, Nippur, Isin, Lagash, Uruk, Charax Spasinu and Ur, from north to south.]]
Trebizond vilayet
Ottoman province
Erzurum eyalet
Ottoman province
Column of Justinian
Roman triumphal column in Constantinople (Istanbul, Turkey)
Wilusa
thumb|385x385px|Map of Bronze Age [[Near East depicting the location of Wilusa in Northwest Anatolia.]]
Van vilayet
Ottoman province
Menteşe
__NOTOC__ thumb|300px|The Beylik of Menteshe (blue) in 1300
Diocese of Asia
diocese of the Roman Empire
Erzurum vilayet
Ottoman province
Dulkadir eyalet
Ottoman province
Istanbul vilayet
Ottoman province
Nea Ekklesia
Byzantine church in Constantinople (now Istanbul) from 880 to 1490
1913 Ottoman coup d'état
coup d'état in the Ottoman Empire
Mesopotamia
Byzantine district (theme)
yalı
thumb|Yalı of Ahmet Afif Pasha in Yeniköy, Istanbul|Yeniköy on the European coast of the [[Bosphorus strait, designed by Alexandre Vallaury.]]
Battle of Sakarya
1921 battle
Kars eyalet
Ottoman province
Magnaura
The Magnaura (Medieval , possibly from Latin: Magna Aula, "Great Hall") was a large building in Byzantine Constantinople located next to the Great Palace. It was situated to the east of the Augustaion, close to the Hagia Sophia, and next to the Chalke Gate and has often equated by scholars with the building that housed the Senate. thumb|Map of the Imperial District of Byzantine Constantinople, with the Magnaura in the upper right next to the [[Augustaion]]
Trebizond eyalet
Ottoman province
Runic inscriptions in Hagia Sophia
runic inscriptions that are left in Hagia Sophia
Battle of Erzincan
1916 battle
Candar dynasty
Anatolian princely dynasty
Çıldır eyalet
Ottoman province
Battle of Nihriya
battle
Archipelago eyalet
Ottoman province
Chrysotriklinos
thumb|right|250px|Map of the Great Palace and its surroundings. The approximate location of the Chrysotriklinos is shown in the south, near the seaside Boukoleon Palace and the Pharos light tower. The Chrysotriklinos (, "golden reception hall", cf. triclinium), Latinized as Chrysotriclinus or Chrysotriclinium, was the main reception and ceremonial hall of the Great Palace of Constantinople from its construction, in the late 6th century, until the 10th century. Its appearance is known only through literary descriptions, chiefly the 10th-century De Ceremoniis, a collection of imperial ceremonies
Battle of Mari
1266 battle in Mari
Battle of Bitlis
1915 battle
Great Offensive
largest and final military operation of the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1922)
Battle of Konya
1832 battle of the First Turko-Egyptian War
Karaman eyalet
Ottoman province
Rum eyalet
Ottoman province
Constantinople Observatory of Taqi ad-Din
astronomical observatory (1575-1580 CE)
Konya vilayet
Ottoman province
Battle of Krasos
battle in the Arab–Byzantine Wars
Kastamonu vilayet
Ottoman province
Turkish capture of Smyrna
Turkish capture of the city of Smyrna during the Greco-Turkish War in 1922
Battle of Pankalia
978 battle
Maraş Massacre
Pogrom of Alevis and leftists by right-wing extremists in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey in 1978
Kastamonu eyalet
Ottoman province
Siege of Trebizond
siege from 1205-1206
Siege of Smyrna
1402 battle in Anatolia
Pervâneoğlu
thumb|300px|The Beylik of Pervane (dark blue) in 1300. Pervâneoğlu (in Turkish plural Pervâneoğulları, 'sons of the pervâne') or Beylik of Sinop was an Anatolian beylik that existed between the second half of the 13th century and the beginning of the 14th (1261–1326).
Dokumacılar
village in Yusufeli, Artvin, northeastern Turkey
Synod of the Oak
provincial synod, held in Constantinople in July of 403, which condemned and deposed John Chrysostom as Patriarch of Constantinople
Perateia
thumb|The upper territories make up Perateia Perateia (, "place beyond [the sea]", cf. peraia) was the overseas territory of the Empire of Trebizond, comprising the Crimean cities of Cherson, Kerch and their hinterlands. The territory was probably administered during Byzantine rule from Trebizond before the Comneni established a separate empire a few weeks before the Crusader sack of Constantinople in 1204.
HMS Triumph
1903 Swiftsure-class pre-dreadnought battleship
Second Battle of İnönü
1921 battle of the Turkish War of Independence
Siege of Van
1548 siege in the Ottoman–Safavid War
Fall of Harran
siege and capture of the Assyrian city of Harran by the Median and Neo-Babylonian empires.
Erler
village in Mutki, Bitlis, southeastern Turkey
Dörtağaç
village in central district, Bitlis, southeastern Turkey