Turkmenistan
Turkmenistan, one of former Soviet
Union Republics, is a
Turkic country in Central Asia. The name Turkmenistan is
derived from Persian, meaning "land of the Turkmen". It is bordered
by Afghanistan, Iran, Uzbekistan
and Kazakhstan.
Although it is wealthy in natural resources in certain areas, most of the
country is covered by the Kara Kum (Black Sands)
Desert.
In 19 Century, rivalry for
control of the area between the British Empire
and Tsarist Russia was characterized as The Great Game. Throughout their
conquest of Central Asia, the Russians were
met with the stiffest resistance by the Turkmen. By 1894, however, Russia had gained control of Turkmenistan
and incorporated it into its empire. The rivalry officially concluded with the
Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907. The October Revolution of 1917 in Russia and subsequent political unrest led to
the declaration of the area as the Turkmen SSR, one of the six republics of the
Soviet Union in 1924, assuming the borders of modern Turkmenistan.
The new Turkmen SSR went through
a process of further Europeanization. The tribal Turkmen people were encouraged
to become secular and adopt European-style clothing. The Turkmen alphabet was
changed from the traditional Arabic script to Latin and finally to Cyrillic.
When the Soviet Union began to
collapse, Turkmenistan and
the rest of the Central Asian states heavily favored maintaining a reformed
version of the state, mainly because they needed the economic power and common
markets of the Soviet Union to prosper.
Turkmenistan declared independence on October 27, 1991, one of the last
republics to secede.