Capture of Izmir (1922)

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Liberation of Izmir
Propagandist representation of the invasion of the Turkish army in İzmir (Museum of the Liberation War)
Propagandist representation of the invasion of the Turkish army in İzmir ( Museum of the Liberation War )
date September 9, 1922
place Izmir , Ottoman Empire
output Decisive Turkish victory
Parties to the conflict

Ottoman Empire 1844Ottoman EmpireAnkara government of the Turkish national movement

Kingdom of GreeceKingdom of Greece Kingdom of Greece

Commander

Ottoman Empire 1844Ottoman Empire Mustafa Kemal Pasha Fahreddin Pasha
Ottoman Empire 1844Ottoman Empire

Kingdom of GreeceKingdom of Greece Aristidis Stergiadis

Troop strength
40,000 (İzmir Defense, 4 Divisions)

The capture of Smyrna ( Turkish İzmir'in Kurtuluşu , dt. Liberation of Izmir ) was the last phase of the Smyrna Offensive and the last conflict in the Turkish Liberation War . The port city of Izmir was recaptured by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk , and the occupation of Izmir and Istanbul was ended.

After the Turkish army inflicted heavy losses on the Greek army at the Battle of Dumlupınar , the Greek units were only in the process of withdrawing towards Izmir from August 30, 1922, as the Turkish army advanced westward. On September 9, 1922, the Turkish army marched with the Kuvayı Milliye in Izmir from the east from Kemalpaşa . In the first days after the conquest, the Armenian and Greek quarters of the city were destroyed in a large fire lasting several days .

Since then, September 9 has been celebrated as a local holiday - the Liberation of Smyrna or the Liberation of Izmir ( Turkish İzmir'in Kurtuluş Bayramı ) - in the entire Turkish province of Izmir and has a similar status as Republic Day throughout the country.

photos

literature

  • Marjorie Housepian Dobkin: Smyrna 1922. The Destruction of a City. Newmark Press, New York 1998, ISBN 0-9667451-0-8 .
  • Giles Milton: Paradise lost. Smyrna 1922 - the destruction of Islam's city of tolerance. Scepter, London 2009, ISBN 978-0-340-83787-0 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Greeks surrender Smyrna to Turks after shell fire , New York Times , published September 10, 1922.