Languages of Turkey

The languages of Turkey, apart from the official language Turkish, include the widespread Kurdish (Kurmanji), Zazaki, and Arabic, and a number of less common minority languages. Four minority languages are officially recognized in the Republic of Turkey by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne and the Turkey-Bulgaria Friendship Treaty (Türkiye ve Bulgaristan Arasındaki Dostluk Antlaşması) of 18 October 1925: Armenian,[3][4][5] Bulgarian,[6][7][8][3] Greek,[3][9][10] and Hebrew.[11][12] In 2013, the Ankara 13th Circuit Administrative Court ruled that the minority provisions of the Lausanne Treaty should also apply to Assyrians in Turkey and the Syriac language.[13][14][15]

Languages of Turkey
OfficialTurkish
RecognisedArmenian, Bulgarian, Greek, Hebrew
MinorityKurdish (Kurmanji), Zazaki, Azerbaijani, Arabic, Aramaic, Pomak Bulgarian, Balkan Gagauz Turkish, Laz, Georgian, Megleno-Romanian, Pontic Greek, Judaeo-Spanish
ImmigrantAdyghe, Albanian, Arabic, Bosnian, Crimean Tatar, Kabardian[1] (in alphabetical order)
ForeignEnglish (17%)
German (4%)
Arabic (2%)
French (1%)[2]
SignedTurkish Sign Language
Mardin Sign Language
Keyboard layout

History

Turkey has historically been the home to many now extinct languages. These include Hittite, the earliest Indo-European language for which written evidence exists (circa 1600 BCE to 1100 BCE when the Hittite Empire existed). The other Anatolian languages included Luwian and later Lycian, Lydian and Milyan. All these languages are believed to have become extinct at the latest around the 1st century BCE due to the Hellenization of Anatolia which led to Greek in a variety of dialects becoming the common language.

Urartian belonging to the Hurro-Urartian language family existed in eastern Anatolia around Lake Van. It existed as the language of the kingdom of Urartu from about the 9th century BCE until the 6th century. Hattian is attested in Hittite ritual texts but is not related to the Hittite language or to any other known language; it dates from the 2nd millennium BCE.

In the post-Tanzimat period French became a common language among educated people, even though no ethnic group in the empire natively spoke French.[16] Johann Strauss, author of "Language and power in the late Ottoman Empire," wrote that "In a way reminiscent of English in the contemporary world, French was almost omnipresent in the Ottoman lands."[17] Strauss also stated that French was "a sort of semi-official language",[18] which "to some extent" had "replaced Turkish as an 'official' language for non-Muslims".[19] Therefore late empire had multiple French-language publications, and several continued to operate when the Republic of Turkey was declared in 1923. However French-language publications began to close in the 1930s.[20] As the Treaty of Lausanne went into effect and was intended to protect languages of instruction for ethnic minorities, French was not included, and so schools for Jewish children teaching in French converted into being Turkish medium schools. The quantity and quality of French instruction declined in those schools for Jewish children, and so many Jewish students began attending other language-medium private schools.[12]

When French-medium schools operated by Alliance Israélite Universelle opened in the 1860s, the position of Judaeo-Spanish (Ladino) began to weaken in the Ottoman Empire areas. In time Judaeo-Spanish became perceived as a low status language.[21] Hebrew was the instructional language of Judaism, and so the Treaty of Lausanne protected instruction in Hebrew, but not in Judaeo-Spanish, a language passed along in families but never used in school instruction.[12] Judaeo-Spanish was still the native language of 85% of Turkish Jews in 1927; there was still relatively low fluency in Turkish in that population, which meant they encountered issues with the Citizen, speak Turkish! campaign.[22] However, as time progressed, Judaeo-Spanish language and culture declined, and in 2017 writer Melis Alphan described Judaeo-Spanish as "dying in Turkey".[21]

Constitutional rights

Official language

Article 3 of the Constitution of Turkey defines Turkish as the official language of Turkey.[23]

Minority language rights

Article 42 of the Constitution explicitly prohibits educational institutions to teach any language other than Turkish as a mother tongue to Turkish citizens.[24]

No language other than Turkish shall be taught as a mother tongue to Turkish citizens at any institutions of training or education. Foreign languages to be taught in institutions of training and education and the rules to be followed by schools conducting training and education in a foreign language shall be determined by law. The provisions of international treaties are reserved.

Due to Article 42 and its longtime restrictive interpretation, ethnic minorities have been facing severe restrictions in the use of their mother languages.

Concerning the incompatibility of this provision with the International Bill of Human Rights, Turkey signed the International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights only with reservations constraining minority rights and the right to education. Furthermore, Turkey hasn't signed either of the Council of Europe's Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, or the anti-discrimination Protocol 12 to the European Convention on Human Rights.[25]

A 1901 postcard depicting Galata in Constantinople (Istanbul), showing signage in Ottoman Turkish, French, Greek, and Armenian

This particular constitutional provision has been contested both internationally and within Turkey. The provision has been criticized by minority groups, notably the Kurdish community. In October 2004, the Turkish State's Human Rights Advisory Board called for a constitutional review in order to bring Turkey's policy on minorities in line with international standards, but was effectively muted.[26] It was also criticized by EU member states, the OSCE, and international human rights organizations, including Human Rights Watch who observe that "the Turkish government accepts the language rights of the Jewish, Greek and Armenian minorities as being guaranteed by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne. But the government claims that these are Turkey's only minorities, and that any talk of minority rights beyond this is just separatism".[27][28][29][30][31][32] Bulgarian-speakers are also officially recognized by the Turkey-Bulgaria Friendship Treaty (Türkiye ve Bulgaristan Arasındaki Dostluk Antlaşması) of 18 October 1925.[3][6][7][8]

Supplementary language education

In 2012, the Ministry of Education included Kurdish (based on both Kurmanji and Zazaki dialects)[33] to the academic programme of the basic schools as optional classes from the fifth year on.[33]

Later, the Ministry of Education also included Abkhaz, Adyghe, Standard Georgian, and Laz languages in 2013, and Albanian as well as Bosnian languages in February 2017.[34]

In 2015, the Turkey’s Ministry of Education announced that as of the 2016-17 academic year, Arabic courses (as a second language) will be offered to students in elementary school starting in second grade. The Arabic courses will be offered as an elective language course like German, French and English. According to a prepared curriculum, second and third graders will start learning Arabic by listening-comprehension and speaking, while introduction to writing will join these skills in fourth grade and after fifth grade students will start learning the language in all its four basic skills.[35][36]

Statistics

Main language families in Turkey according to Ethnologue, 2009[37][38]
RankLanguage familyTotal (both L1 and L2)
1Turkic84,730,500
2Indo-European12,680,500
3Afro-Asiatic5,666,204
4Northwest Caucasian1,580,800
5Kartvelian187,000
6Northeast Caucasian113,200
7Sino-Tibetan42,000

1965 Census

Languages spoken in Turkey, 1965 census[39]
LanguageMother tongueOnly language spokenSecond best language spoken
Abaza4,5632807,556
Albanian12,8321,07539,613
Arabic365,340189,134167,924
Armenian33,0941,02222,260
Bosnian17,6272,34534,892
Bulgarian4,08835046,742
Pomak23,1382,77634,234
Chechen7,5632,5005,063
Circassian58,3396,40948,621
Croatian4511,585
Czech1682576
Dutch36623219
English27,84121,766139,867
French3,30239896,879
Georgian34,3304,04244,934
German4,90179035,704
Greek48,0963,20378,941
Italian2,9262673,861
Kurdish (Kurmanji)2,219,5021,323,690429,168
Judæo-Spanish9,9812833,510
Laz26,0073,94355,158
Persian948722,103
Polish11020377
Portuguese5253,233
Romanian406536,909
Russian1,0882844,530
Serbian6,59977658,802
Spanish2,7911384,297
Turkish28,289,68026,925,6491,387,139
Zaza150,64492,28820,413
Total31,009,93428,583,6072,786,610
Languages spoken in Turkey by provinces, 1965 census[40]
Province / LanguageTurkishKurdishArabicZazakiCircassianGreekGeorgianArmenianLazPomakBosnianAlbanianJewish
Adana (including Osmaniye)866,3167,58122,35633251510289031248329
Adıyaman143,054117,32576,7050008440000
Afyonkarahisar499,4611251912,172169221161421
Ağrı90,021156,3161054227750110300
Amasya279,9782,179921,49761,37820860103361
Ankara (including Kırıkkale and parts of Aksaray)1,590,39236,798814213931244166120712683364
Antalya486,69723200140020010
Artvin190,1834640047,698112,0931100
Aydın523,58316885011271414026880
Balıkesir698,6795603883,1442361,27392051,707314244
Bilecik137,674540736473112630
Bingöl62,66856,8811930,87817011110003
Bitlis56,16192,3273,2632,082205151600012
Bolu (including Düzce)375,786363001,59331,5414881,79104061
Burdur194,9102700312000010
Bursa (including parts of Yalova)746,6332132207991062,93835517651,1691,92869
Çanakkale338,3794430251,6045,25849123,6755166121
Çankırı (including parts of Karabük)250,51015810010320000
Çorum474,6388,736401,8081285137000
Denizli462,8602832858971102130
Diyarbakır178,644236,1132,53657,693113134348150
Edirne290,61038610421918212310,2853295892
Elazığ244,01647,4461730,92102023012320
Erzincan243,91114,323132984501223010
Erzurum555,63269,648862,1851098411247151
Eskişehir406,2123274201,3904301423114780
Gaziantep490,04618,95488514604301110
Giresun425,66530511202,029050000
Gümüşhane (including Bayburt)260,4192,1890091000170000
Hakkari (including parts of Şırnak)10,35772,36516501012120000
Hatay350,0805,695127,072778076711376628441
Isparta265,30568875118910121134
Mersin500,2071,0679,43023761371312193391
İstanbul (including parts of Yalova)2,185,7412,5862,8432631735,09784929,4791281653,0724,3418,608
İzmir1,214,21986335251,2878981517151,2892,3491,265753
Kars (including Ardahan and Iğdır)471,287133,14461992215685241541
Kastamonu439,3551,090203218084910000
Kayseri509,9328,45434817,11011969151601
Kırklareli252,59460213624535373,3751,14814411
Kırşehir185,48911,30940200010100
Kocaeli (including 3 villages of İstanbul and parts of Yalova)320,8082350101,467632,755462,2643813,827227
Konya (including Karaman)1,092,81927,8116741,1393715111750
Kütahya397,221105132174288900340
Malatya374,44977,7943310145714854030
Manisa746,514241150488426726541161923
Kahramanmaraş386,01046,5482104,185001330090
Mardin (including parts of Batman and Şırnak)35,494265,32879,687607511151100160
Muğla334,8836410280001004
Muş110,55583,0203,5755078980131030000
Nevşehir203,15622000000000220
Niğde (including Aksaray)353,1468,9911002275012401540
Ordu538,9781200504,8153401010
Rize275,291111109405,7541010
Sakarya (including 1 village of Düzce)388,4812,16332353864,53522,671232,8997941
Samsun747,1151,366303,401912,350551319106100
Siirt (including parts of Batman and Şırnak)46,722179,02338,273484101598301000
Sinop261,3412,1260065911,14422835073
Sivas649,09932,28419232,086002171051500
Tekirdağ (including 1 village of İstanbul)284,222548761851952821,627651102
Tokat483,9483,974735,9340367452009640
Trabzon590,7997212004,53511100000
Tunceli120,55333,431202,370280040181080
Şanlıurfa207,652175,10051,09014,554305240200
Uşak190,5061620100410000
Van118,481147,69455731211801166
Yozgat433,3852,424101,59720118001410
Zonguldak (including Bartın and parts of Karabük)649,7574326051723150111

  Provinces with Turkish speakers in majority   Provinces with Turkish speakers in plurality   Provinces with Kurdish speakers in plurality   Provinces with Kurdish speakers in majority

KONDA, 2006

The following table lists the mother tongues of people in Turkey by percentage of their speakers.

Mother tongues in Turkey[41]
Mother tonguePercentage
Turkish84.54
Kurdish (Kurmanji)11.97
Arabic1.38
Zazaki1.01
Other Turkic languages0.28
Balkan languages0.23
Laz0.12
Circassian languages0.11
Armenian0.07
Other Caucasian languages0.07
Greek0.06
West European languages0.03
Jewish languages0.01
Other0.12

Ethnologue

Ethnologue lists many minority and immigrant languages in Turkey some of which are spoken by large numbers of people.

Languages by number of speakers in Turkey (with Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale)[37][38]
FamilyLanguageISOSpeakersStatus (EGIDS)[a]Notes
Turkic languages
OghuzTurkishtur83,440,000 (2019)1 (National)
South Azerbaijaniazb596,000 (2019)5 (Dispersed)
Balkan Gagauz Turkishbgx460,000 (2019)7 (Shifting)
Turkmentuk5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous
KipchakCrimean Tatarcrh110,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)Non-indigenous
Karakalpakkaa81,700 (2019)Non-indigenous
Tatartat28,700 (2019)5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous
Kazakhkaz8,500 (2019)5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous
Kyrgyzkir5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous
Kumykkum1,600 (2021)6b (Threatened)Non-indigenous
KarlukSouthern Uzbekuzs4,200 (2019)5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous
Uyghuruig
Indo-European languages
IranianNorthern Kurdishkmr9,000,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)3,000,000 monolinguals
Southern Zazakidiq1,280,000 (2019)
Northern Zazakikiu203,000 (2019)
Persianpes682,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
Digor Ossetianoss41,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)Non-indigenous
Indo-AryanBalkan Romanirmn72,900 (2019)6a (Vigorous)Non-indigenous
Domarirmt6b (Threatened)
Urduurd24,300 (2019)Non-indigenous
SlavicPomak Bulgarianbul395,000 (2019)5 (Dispersed)
Bosnianbos112,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
Russianrus600,000 (2012)
Macedonianmkd35,000 (2019)
Serbiansrp5,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)
GreekPontic Greekpnt5,000 (2015)7 (Shifting)
Greekell4,000 (2019)5 (Dispersed)Non-indigenous, due to emigration
AlbanianTosk Albanianals72,900 (2019)6b (Threatened)Non-indigenous
Gheg Albanianaln5 (Dispersed)
ArmenianWestern Armenianhyw67,300 (2019)6b (Threatened)
ItalicLadinolad8,000 (2018)7 (Shifting)Non-indigenous
Spanishspa16,000 (2019)
Frenchfra4,300 (2019)
GermanicEnglisheng47,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
Germandeu6,700 (2019)
Semitic languages
ArabicLevantine Arabicapc4,250,000 (2021)6b (Threatened)The vast majority of speakers are Syrian refugees and migrants.
Modern Standard Arabicarb686,000 (2015)4 (Educational)Non-indigenous
North Mesopotamian Arabicayp574,000 (2019)6a (Vigorous)Do not read Arabic
Mesopotamian Arabicacm112,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
AramaicTuroyotru16,600 (2019)6b (Threatened)
Hértevinhrt4 (2012)8b (Nearly extinct)
Syriacsyc09 (Dormant)
Assyrian Neo-Aramaicaii27,600 (2019)Non-indigenous
Northwest Caucasian languages
CircassianKabardiankbd1,170,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)Non-indigenous
Adygheady349,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
AbazgiAbkhazabk48,600 (2019)Non-indigenous
Abazaabq13,200 (2019)Non-indigenous
UbykhUbykhuby010 (Extinct)Last speaker died in 1992
Kartvelian languages
Karto-ZanGeorgiankat167,000 (2019)6b (Threatened)
Lazurilzz20,000 (2007)
Northeast Caucasian languages
LezgicLezgilez1,200 (1996)Non-indigenous
NakhChechenche112,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
Sino-Tibetan languages
SiniticMandarin Chinesecmn42,000 (2019)Non-indigenous
Sign languages
Deaf communityTurkish Sign Languagetsm250,000 (2021)6a (Vigorous)
Mardin Sign Languagedsz40 (2012)8b

Not included in the report by Ethnologue is the Megleno-Romanian language, spoken by the Megleno-Romanians, who number around 5,000 in the country.[42]

a^ Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (EGIDS) of Ethnologue:
0 (International): "The language is widely used between nations in trade, knowledge exchange, and international policy."
1 (National): "The language is used in education, work, mass media, and government at the national level."
2 (Provincial): "The language is used in education, work, mass media, and government within major administrative subdivisions of a nation."
3 (Wider Communication): "The language is used in work and mass media without official status to transcend language differences across a region."
4 (Educational): "The language is in vigorous use, with standardization and literature being sustained through a widespread system of institutionally supported education."
5 (Developing): "The language is in vigorous use, with literature in a standardized form being used by some though this is not yet widespread or sustainable."
6a (Vigorous): "The language is used for face-to-face communication by all generations and the situation is sustainable."
6b (Threatened): "The language is used for face-to-face communication within all generations, but it is losing users."
7 (Shifting): "The child-bearing generation can use the language among themselves, but it is not being transmitted to children."
8a (Moribund): "The only remaining active users of the language are members of the grandparent generation and older."
8b (Nearly Extinct): "The only remaining users of the language are members of the grandparent generation or older who have little opportunity to use the language."
9 (Dormant): "The language serves as a reminder of heritage identity for an ethnic community, but no one has more than symbolic proficiency."
10 (Extinct): "The language is no longer used and no one retains a sense of ethnic identity associated with the language."

Ethnologue, 2022

The following languages are listed as having 50,000 or more total speakers in Turkey according to the 2022 edition of Ethnologue.[43] Entries identified by Ethnologue as macrolanguages (such as Arabic, Persian, Pashto, Chinese, and Zaza, encompassing all their respective varieties) are not included in this section.

Languages of Turkey, Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)[a][43]
LanguageFamilyBranchFirst-language (L1)
speakers in Turkey
Second-language (L2)
speakers in Turkey
Total (L1+L2)
speakers in Turkey
AdygheNorthwest CaucasianCircassian349,000
Albanian, ToskIndo-EuropeanAlbanian72,900
Mesopotamian ArabicAfro-AsiaticSemitic112,000
North Levantine ArabicAfro-AsiaticSemitic4,250,000
North Mesopotamian ArabicAfro-AsiaticSemitic574,000
Modern Standard ArabicAfro-AsiaticSemitic686,000
Western ArmenianIndo-EuropeanArmenian67,300
South AzerbaijaniTurkicOghuz596,000
Balkan Gagauz TurkishTurkicOghuz460,000
BosnianIndo-EuropeanSlavic112,000
BulgarianIndo-EuropeanSlavic395,000
ChechenNortheast CaucasianNakh112,000
Crimean TatarTurkicKipchak110,000
GeorgianKartvelianKarto-Zan167,000
KabardianNorthwest CaucasianCircassian1,170,000
KarakalpakTurkicKipchak81,700
Northern KurdishIndo-EuropeanIranian9,000,000
Iranian PersianIndo-EuropeanIranian682,000
Balkan RomaniIndo-EuropeanIndo-Aryan72,900
TurkishTurkicOghuz77,600,0005,840,00083,440,000
Turkish Sign LanguageIsolate250,000
Northern ZazakiIndo-EuropeanIranian203,000
Southern ZazakiIndo-EuropeanIranian1,280,000

See also

Notes

References

Sources

Further reading