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After World War I ended, the victorious allied European powers occupied the
Ottoman Empire with the intention of dismembering it. The Young Turk (CUP)
government fled into exile. The last Ottoman sultan, Mhammad VI Vahideddin
(1861-1926), was convinced that resistance to the Allies was futile, but the
Young Turk Mustafa Kemal, later Kemal Ataturk (1881-1938), refused to
capitulate, and the emergence of modern Turkey is a monument to his
perseverance, immortalized in his name after 1934: Kemal ("the
perfect") Ataturk ("Father of the Turks"). In 1919, he gained an
official post in Anatolia (Asian Turkey), from which he led a national
resistance movement against both the sultan's armies and Greek occupying forces.
Kemal also became, in 1919, leader of the Association of the Rights of Anatolia
and Rumelia at a congress at Erzurum; his group forced Constantinople
(Istanbul), seat of the government, to yield in 1920 and pass a "National
Pact" asserting Turkish boundaries extant on November 11, 1918, Armistice
Day ending World War I. In response, the Allies occupied Constantinople,
arrested deputies, and began military opposition to the Kemalists, or
nationalists. Civil war erupted, and Kemal, through a provisional parliament in
Ankara, declared the sultan to be under foreign control and appealed for all
Muslims to fight foreign aggrandizement. A new Fundamental Law in 1921 gave
sovereignty to the Turkish people and named the nation Turkey. The civil war now
flared up. The Greeks were defeated at the Battle of the Sakarya River in 1921
and retreated painfully until they surrendered in September 1922, at Smyrna (Izmir).
The Kemalists received international recognition in 1921 and 1922: a treaty with
Russia, Italian withdrawal of troops, French abandonment of Cilicia in Turkey,
the return of Constantinople and Thrace to Turkish control. In 1922, the
Kemalist parliament began the abolishment of the sultanate, and the Lausanne
Conference in Switzerland (November 1922-July 1923) established modern Turkey's
borders, arranged the exchange of Greek and Turkish minorities, and made the
straits of the Dardanelles and Bosporus international. Turkey was proclaimed a
republic on October 29, 1923, with Kemal Ataturk as its first president.
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