Abstract:
Many Georgians live in the Republic of Turkey. They live not only in the
historical territory of Georgia – Tao-Klarjeti, but in other places as well. One of
the areas of their compact settlement is the Marmara Sea region. Considerable
number of ethnic Georgians live in ılçe/districts of Bursa, Sakarya and Kocaeli
vilayets. For example, the informants from Bursa province name about 70
Georgian villages there. Overall, the Muhajir Georgians had 125 villages in the
above-mentioned region of Turkey, where they still live today. The present
paper specifically discusses the villages with the Georgian population.
The migration of ethnic Georgians in the Marmara Sea region mainly
took place during three years after the end of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-
1878. Russia forced Ottomans to cede the historical territories of southern
Georgia. The main reason for the resettlement of Muslim Georgians from their
ancestral lands was the incompatibility of Muslim Georgians and Christian
Russians and the rumors spread by Muslim religious leaders as though Christian
Russians were going to kill them. Deportation of Muslim Georgians from their
own territories was in the interests of both Russians and Ottomans. The reason
for the deportation was also the conflict with ethnic Armenians. The process of
deportation was promoted by harsh demographic situation in the historicalethnographic
areas inhabited by the Georgian Muslims, overpopulation and the
land crisis were among it. The Georgian Muslims were exiled mostly from the
following historical-ethnographic regions of South Georgia: Adjara-Kobuleti,
Shavshet-Imerkhevi, and Klarjet-Ligani.
The authorities of the Ottoman Empire initially offered the Muslim
Georgians lands in the coastal zone, but for the migrants from mountainous and
forested areas this climate and ecological environment were unacceptable; they
had adaptation problems in a new geographical environment. Therefore the
Georgian Muhajirs chose mountainous and forested places near the sea and
started to settle there. The migration of Muslim Georgians to the Marmara Sea region does not
include only three-year period after the end of the Russian-Turkish War of
1877-1878, when it had a massive occurrence. Individual migrations of the
Georgians also took place after that as well, including the Soviet period until the
barbed wire fences were installed on the Soviet-Turkish border. A large number
of the Georgians moved to the Marmara Sea region in 1923, 1931, 1939, 1941
and 1942 is considered as the final stage of this process. As the same informants
correctly point “Muhajirs left their places, they did not escape”. But they refer
to migration of the 1920s-1930s as “a runaway”. And at this time they escaped
from the Soviet government.