Poland–Turkey relations
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Polish–Turkish relations are foreign relations between Poland and Turkey. Poland has an embassy in Ankara, and a general consulate in Istanbul. Turkey has an embassy in Warsaw. Both countries are full members of NATO and the Union for the Mediterranean.
Polish-Turkish relations were historically strong, the official relations were established in the 15th century.[1] The Ottoman Empire was the only major country in the world which did not recognize the Partitions of Poland.[1] In the 19th century many Polish veterans of the November Uprising, January Uprising and Crimean War arrived in Turkey. Many Polish officers, like Michał Czajkowski, served in the Ottoman Army. Polish general Marian Langiewicz spent the last years of his life in Turkey, fought in the Ottoman Army and died in Istanbul, where he is buried at the Haydarpaşa Cemetery. Polish national poet Adam Mickiewicz spent the last months of his life in Istanbul and died there. The house where he lived was later transformed into the Adam Mickiewicz Museum.
There is also a Polish village of Polonezköy (Adampol) in Turkey. It lies on the Anatolian side of Istanbul and was settled in 1842 by Polish veterans of the November Uprising. In the 19th and 20th centuries further Polish settlers arrived. As of 2009 there is still Polish minority in the village.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Edukacja Międzykulturowa: Turcy PDF (48.9 KB)
External links
- Polish embassy in Ankara
- Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs about relations with Poland
- Poland-Turkey: A Love Story, Culture.pl
- Polish-Turkish Relations: A Social-Political Analysis (MA thesis, Vienna University, written by Antonina Tausch)
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