Turkey
Armenians and Kurds
The Armenians took refuge in the Lake Van region in the seventh century B.C.,
apparently in reaction to Cimmerian raids. Their country was described by Xenophon
around 400 B.C. as a tributary of Persia. By the first century B.C., a united Armenian
kingdom that stretched from the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea had been established as a
client of the Roman Empire to buffer the frontier with Persia.
Xenophon also recorded the presence of the Kurds. Contemporary linguistic evidence has
challenged the previously held view that the Kurds are descendants of the Medes,
although many Kurds still accept this explanation of their origin. Kurdish people
migrated from the Eurasian steppes in the second millennium B.C. and joined indigenous
inhabitants living in the region.
Library of Congress Country Studies
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