After the establishment of the movement and the successful
Turkish War of Independence, the revolutionaries abolished the
Ottoman sultanate on November 1, 1922, and proclaimed the Republic of
Turkey on October 29, 1923. The movement terminated the
Treaty of Sèvres and negotiated the
Treaty of Lausanne, assuring recognition of the national borders, termed
Misak-ı Millî (National Pact). The national forces were united around the leadership of
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and the authority of the
Grand National Assembly set up in
Ankara, which pursued the Turkish War of Independence. The movement gathered around the idea of
the integration of the other native populations (
Greeks,
Armenians,
Assyrians) to make Turkish nation-state and a progressively defined political ideology that is generally termed "
Kemalism", or "Atatürkçülük" ("Atatürkism"). Its basic principles stress the
Republic - a form of government representing the power of the electorate, secular administration (
laïcité),
nationalism, a mixed economy with state participation in some sectors (as opposed to
state socialism), and national modernization. Turkish revolutionaries were mainly influenced by ideas which flourished during the
Tanzimat period. The revolutionaries should not be associated with the
Young Turk movement of the same era, which was tightly bound to the Ottoman State and the ideals of
Ottomanism. Turkish revolutionaries indeed were not a homogeneous group of people, as they had different ideas on social and political issues. There were years in which most of them did not communicate with each other, even though they presided over the major social and political institutions. The common idea which held them together was having a
sovereign nation. ==See also==