Historical Reference

Merv, the Queen of the World By Charles Marvin

Merv, the Queen of the World;
and the Scourge of the Man-stealing Turcomans. With an Exposition of the Khorassan Question:
By Charles Thomas Marvin, Published by W.H. Allen, 1881

CHAPTER III. THE ORIGIN OF THE Turkmen. WITH AN ACCOUNT OF THE MINOR TRIBES.

Page 39 - Page 40 - Page 41 - Page 42 - Page 43 - Page 44 - Page 45 - Page 46 - Page 47 - Page 48 - Page 49 - Page 50 - Page 51 - Page 52 - Page 53 - Page 54 - Page 55 - Page 56 - Page 57 - Page 58 - Page 59 - Page 60 - Page 61 - Page 62 - Page 63 - Page 64

Page 42

 

 

of the Arabs, and, strange to say, in the very place which they now occupy. A few centuries later we meet the Kara and Alieli Turkmen in a successful engagement with Sultan Sandjar around Andkhoy and Maimana, in the very place where the remnants of these once mighty tribes are actually to be found. Again, a few centuries later, other families spread their influence as far as Asia Minor. Towards the end of the fifteenth century the Ada district of the Mangishlak peninsula was entirely in the hands of the Turkmen, a place which is now almost exclusively in the hands of the Kazaks, and in the vicinity of which only the small tribes of Chodor and Imreli linger in a miserable existence. The Ersari Turkmen, to-day living between Kerki and Chardzhou, are said to have lived in the sixteenth century near the Balkan, and whilst the Tekkes had then only a secondary importance, mention is made of the tribes of Aradji, Ali, and Khizr, of which now only small traces are to be found."

We thus see that the Turkmen originated in mid-Siberia, migrated to the East Caspian region at a period probably when the Oxusran into the Caspian, and the existing Aral-Caspian steppe was a tolerably fertile tract of ground; and that, finally, they settled along the North Persian frontier, where they are to be found to-day. In his statement that the Turkmen are of Turkish origin, Vambery simply repeats what Burnes said 50 years ago, and Klaproth a year or two earlier in his notes to the Voyage de Murav’ev en Turcomanie, and as his account is clearer and more minute than theirs we may suppress the latter, Regarding the origin of the term Turkmen

JBOC Note:  

Page 39 - Page 40 - Page 41 - Page 42 - Page 43 - Page 44 - Page 45 - Page 46 - Page 47 - Page 48 - Page 49 - Page 50 - Page 51 - Page 52 - Page 53 - Page 54 - Page 55 - Page 56 - Page 57 - Page 58 - Page 59 - Page 60 - Page 61 - Page 62 - Page 63 - Page 64