Antiquity The eastern coast of the
Aegean was inhabited by Greeks as early as the 9th century BC.
Aeolian,
Ionian and
Dorian colonies were established from the
Dardanelles to
Caria, with the most important being
Miletus,
Phocaea,
Ephesus and
Smyrna. The prominence of the Ionians gave to the region the name
Ionia. The Greeks of Asia Minor contributed significantly in the
ancient Greek history, from the
Ionian Revolt, the
Ionian League and the conquests of
Alexander the Great, to the
Hellenistic kingdoms of
Pergamos and
Pontus. The Ionians were the first Greek-speaking people that the Persians encountered, and the
Persian name for Greece became
Younan or
Yunan (یونان), derived from the word "Ionia." The name spread throughout the Near East and Central Asia. Following the spread of the
Hellenistic civilization in the 3rd century BC, Greek became the
lingua franca of Asia Minor, and by the fifth century AD, when the last of the
Indo-European native languages of Anatolia ceased to be spoken, Greek became the sole spoken language of the natives of Asia Minor.
Byzantine Empire After the founding of
Constantinople by the first Christian Roman Emperor
Constantine the Great in 330, Asia Minor, the major part of the
Greek East, became the most important region of the
Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire. For the centuries to follow, the area was the main manpower and wheat source of the state. Numerous invasions and
epidemics (especially the
Plague of Justinian) devastated the area in various times. However, Asia Minor remained
densely populated, compared to the rest of the
Medieval world and held the bulk of the empire's Greek speaking orthodox Christian population. Thus, many renowned Greek-speaking figures who lived during this time were Asia Minor Greeks, including
Saint Nicholas (270-343),
John Chrysostomos (349-407),
Isidore of Miletus (6th century), and
Basilios Bessarion (1403-1472). The Greek speaking Christian population began to decline with the invasions of the Muslim
Seljuq Turks in the 11th century. The establishment of the
Seljuk Empire deprived the
Byzantines of a large part of Asia Minor. The
Fall of Constantinople on May 29, 1453, and the subsequent fall in 1461 of the Greek
Empire of Trebizond, located along the eastern Black Sea coast, marked the end of Greek sovereignty in Asia Minor.
Ottoman Empire The first centuries of the Ottoman rule were named
The Dark centuries by the Greeks. The custom of the
Janissaries and the various restrictions on the religious, economic and social lives of the non-Muslim inhabitants of the Empire constituted an imminent danger for the continuation of the Greek inhabitation of Asia Minor. Conditions were improved over the following centuries, but the Greeks remained in the lower caste status of
Dhimmi.
Islamization and gradual
Turkification continued. The ideas of
The Enlightenment and the subsequent
Greek War of Independence, raised the hopes of the Asia Minor Greeks for sovereignty. Many Greeks from Anatolia fought as revolutionaries and faced the retaliations of the
Sultan.
20th century The
persecutions,
massacres,
expulsions, and
death marches of the Asia Minor Greeks were renewed during the early 20th century by the
Young Turk administration of the
Ottoman Empire and during the subsequent revolution of
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The
Ottoman Greek population was severely affected; its misfortunes became known as the
Greek Genocide. After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire during World War I, the
Allies granted Greece, with the
Treaty of Sèvres, the administration of
Eastern Thrace (apart from
Constantinople) and the city of
Smyrna and its environs. The Pontic Greeks attempted to establish their own republic, the
Republic of Pontus. The defeat of the Greek army during the
Greco-Turkish War led to what became known in Greece as the
Asia Minor Catastrophe. A series of events, with the
Great Fire of Smyrna been their peak, ended the 3,000-year-old Greek presence in Asia Minor. The
Treaty of Lausanne, which was signed in 1923, anticipated the compulsory exchange of populations. The remaining
Greek Orthodox population of Asia Minor and Eastern Thrace, as well as the Muslim population of Greece (the Greeks of Constantinople,
Imbros and
Tenedos and the Muslims of
Western Thrace were excluded) were
denaturalized from homelands of centuries or millennia. ==Population strength==