Atlas of Turkey
Specific status: Akrotiri and Dhekelia‡ · Faroe Islands · Gibraltar · Bailiwick of Guernsey · Isle of Man · Jersey · Svalbard – Limited recognition: Abkhazia‡ · Gagauzia · Kosovo · South Ossetia‡ · Transnistria · Northern Cyprus‡
‡: partly located in Europe
Wikimedia Commons Atlas of the World The Wikimedia Atlas of the World is an organized and commented collection of geographical, political and historical maps available at Wikimedia Commons. Discussion • Update the atlas • Index of the Atlas • Atlas in categories • Other atlases on line |
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General maps
Map of Turkey |
Location of Turkey with reference to Europe and the European Union |
Turkey and the European Union |
Topography |
Maps of divisions
This section holds maps of the administrative divisions.
en:Provinces of Turkey tr: Türkiye'deki iller Location of Provinces in Turkey - Türkiye'deki illerin konumları |
en:Districts of Turkey tr:Türkiye'deki ilçeler Districts of Turkey - Türkiye'deki ilçeler |
en: Regions of Turkey tr: Türkiye'nin coğrafi bölgeleri Regions of Turkey - Türkiye'nin coğrafi bölgeleri |
Alevis in Turkey |
Main cities |
History maps
This section holds a short summary of the history of the area of present-day Turkey, illustrated with maps, including historical maps of former countries and empires that included present-day Turkey.
Before the Roman Empire
The Hittite Empire (red) at the height of its power in ca. 1290 BC, bordering on the Egyptian Empire (green) |
Hittite Empire |
The Region in the 9th to 7th centuries BC |
Urartu at its greatest extent in the time of Sarduris II, 743 BC |
The Achaemid Empire (Persia (648–330 BCE) at its greatest extent |
The Persian Achaemenid Empire |
The Persian Achaemenid Empire |
The Persian Achaemenid Empire |
ancient Thrace, map made in 1585 |
The Expedition of Alexander the Great 334-323 BCE |
Map of the Empire of Alexander |
Map of the Empire of Alexander 334-323 BCE |
Map of the Empire of Alexander (Norwegian) |
Hellenistic successor states: Kingdom of Kingdom of Kingdom of Kingdom of Other states: |
Hellenistic world in 200 BCE |
Lydia |
Map of Lydia |
Phrygia and other regions |
Roman and Byzantine Empires
Territorial development of the Roman Empire 264 BC-192, including the conquest of present |
Anatolia 264BC-180AD |
Roman conquest of Minor Asia |
Roman Republic 100 BCE |
Map of the Roman Empire in 50 |
The extent of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire; 133 BC 44 BC (late Republic, after conquests by republican generals) AD 14 (death of Augustus)
117 (maximum extension) |
Roman dependencies of Corduene, Sophene, Commagene and Osrhoene (as of 31 BC) |
Camps of the Roman Legions in 80 |
Map of the Roman Empire in 116 |
Roman Empire in 117 |
Roman Empire divided 395, showing the dioceses and praetorian prefectures of Gaul, Italy, Illyricum and Oriens (east), roughly analogous to the four Tetrarch zones of influence after Diocletian's reforms. |
The division of the Empire after the death of Theodosius I, ca.395 AD superimposed on modern borders. |
Invasions of the Roman Empire 100-500 |
Invasions of the Roman Empire 100-500 |
Division of the Roman Empire in 406 |
Eastern Roman Empire and Western Roman Empires, c.476 |
Eastern Roman Empire |
Eastern Roman Empire under emperor Justinianus |
Eastern Roman Empire under emperor Justinianus |
Byzantine Empire 550 |
The Sassanid Empire around 602-629 |
The Byzantine Empire at the accession of Leo III, c. 717 |
The Byzantine Empire at the accession of Basil I, c. 867 |
Seljuq Empire around 1000 |
The Byzantine Empire under Basil II, c. 1025 |
Byzantine Empire 1025 |
The Byzantine Empire at the accession of Alexios I Komnenos, c. 1081 |
The Parthian Empire (250 BCE-226 CE) |
Map of Parthia 100 BC |
Indo-Sassanide Empire |
The Persian Sassanian Empire (226-650) in 602 to 629, Strokes: Under Sassanid military control. |
Sassanide Empire |
Sassanide Empire |
Expansion of the Caliphate: I: Muhammad; II: Abu Bakr; III: Omar and IV: Othman |
Age of the :en:Caliphs |
Caliphate around 750 |
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w:Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia |
The Crusader States |
Map of the Byzantine Empire under Manuel Komnenos, c.1170. |
Byzantine Empire 1180 |
The Kingdom of Cilician Armenia, 1199-1375 |
The Byzantine Empire in 1204 A.D. was divided into the Empire of Nicaea, the Empire of Trebizond and the Despotate of Epirus |
Map to show the partition of the empire following the Fourth Crusade, c.1204. |
The Byzantine Empire in 1265 (William R. Shepherd, Historical Atlas, 1911). |
Byzantine Empire in 1265 |
Byzantine Empire in 1355 |
Byzantine Empire 1400 |
Map showing changes in borders of the Mongol Empire from founding by Genghis Khan in 1206, Genghis Khan's death in 1227 to the rule of Kublai Khan (1260–1294). (Uses modern day borders)
Mongol Empire By 1294 the empire had split into: Empire of the Great Khan ( |
Ottoman Empire
- Main page Atlas of the Ottoman Empire.
Ottoman Empire in 1410 |
Ottoman Empire in 1683 |
Ottoman Empire in 1920 |
Turkey after the Ottoman Empire
Fronts of the Turkish War of Independence |
The Kemalist influence and its claims |
Map of the Republic of Turkey, Anavatan ("Motherland"), in 1927 |
Map of Turkey after the 1939 annexation of Hatay |
Old maps
This section holds copies of original general maps more than 70 years old.
Map by Pieter van der Aa made in 1719 of Turkey and Cyprus |
Ottoman Empire in Europe, made by T. Jefferys, 1785 |
15th Century map of the region now known as Turkey |
How the Treaty of Sèvres planed to break up Turkey |
Today, Turkey. |
Notes and references
General remarks:
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