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Suphi
Suphi is a Turkish name of Arabic origin (صبحي). Turkish Language Association gives its meaning as "about dawn." Notable people with the name include: First name * Suphi Baykam (1926–1996), Turkish physician and politician * Suphi Bereket (1889–1939), Turkish politician * Suphi Ezgi (1869–1962), Turkish military physician * Suphi Nuri İleri (1887–1945), Turkish politician and writer Middle name *Hamdullah Suphi Tanrıöver Hamdullah Suphi Tanrıöver (1885 – 10 June 1966) was a highly influential Turkish people, Turkish poet, intellectual, diplomat and politician. He adopted his surname Tanrıöver after the Turkish Surname Law was enacted in 1934. Life He was ... (1885–1966), Turkish poet and politician * Mehmet Suphi Kula (1881–1948), Turkish military officer * Mustafa Suphi (1883–1921), Turkish communist leader See also * Sobhi References {{DEFAULTSORT:Suphi Turkish masculine given names Masculine given names ...
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Suphi Ezgi
Mehmet Suphi Ezgi (1869 – 12 April 1962) was an Ottoman-born Turkish military physician who specialized in neurology, and a musician, musicologist and composer. He is best known for his studies of Ottoman classical music. Early life and education Mehmet Suphi was born to İsmail Zühdü and his spouse Emine in Açıktürbe quarter of Üsküdar, Istanbul, then Ottoman Empire, in 1869. His family name "Ezgi", he took after the adoption of the Surname Law in 1934, means ""melody"in Türkish leanguage.His father was an accounting controller at the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs of the Ottoman Government. Following the secondary education, he attended the Imperial Military Medicine School. He graduated in 1892 in the rank of Captain. Already at the age of five, he stood out while chanting in the neighborhood school. His father was an amateur singer and music instrument player, who arranged weekly musical meetings at home with music lover associates. Notable musicians of the era l ...
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Mustafa Suphi
Mustafa Suphi or Mustafa Subhi (1883 – 28 January 1921) was a Turkish revolutionary and communist during the period of dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. Early life Suphi was born in 1883 in Giresun Province, in the Ottoman Empire, now located in Turkey. He was educated in Jerusalem, Damascus and Erzurum before he attended Galatasaray High School. He studied political science in Paris, where he was also a correspondent of the Turkish newspaper '' Tanin''. He returned to Turkey in 1910, where he edited the newspaper ''Ifham''. He also gave lectures on law and economics. In 1913 he was accused of involvement in the assassination of Mahmud Şevket Pasha and sentenced to fifteen years of exile in Sinop. There, he contributed articles about western philosophy to the periodicals ''Ictiha'' and ''Hak''. However, in 1914 he escaped from Sinop and fled to Russia, where, following the outbreak of the First World War, Russian authorities regarded him as a prisoner of war and sent h ...
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Hamdullah Suphi Tanrıöver
Hamdullah Suphi Tanrıöver (1885 – 10 June 1966) was a highly influential Turkish people, Turkish poet, intellectual, diplomat and politician. He adopted his surname Tanrıöver after the Turkish Surname Law was enacted in 1934. Life He was born to Abdüllatif Suphi Pasha, an Ottoman Empire, Ottoman statesman in Istanbul, Constantinople in 1885. He studied at Galatasaray High School graduating in 1904. He later served as a translator, and a teacher for Turkish language, Turkish after earning a certificate. In Darülfünün, later renamed to Istanbul University, he was appointed professor of Islamic art. During the Turkey, Turkish Republic era, he was elected to the parliament, and also served as a government minister. He married Ayşe Saide, who, according to some sources, was a descendant of two former Anatolian beyliks, Anatolian beys (Isfendiyarids and Ramazanids). Tanrıöver died on 10 June 1966. He was interred at Merkezefendi Cemetery in Istanbul. Poet and orator Du ...
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Suphi Baykam
Suphi Baykam (1926–1996) was a Turkish physician and politician from the Republican People's Party (CHP). He served at the Parliament for three terms. Early life and education He was born in Adana in 1926. His father worked as a teacher and then as a tax official. He graduated from of the School of Medicine, Istanbul University in 1950. He was also educated at Institute of Public Administration for Turkey and the Middle East in 1955 and at the Radiology Institute in 1956. Baykam served as the president of the Turkish National Student Union between 1948 and 1950 while attending the School of Medicine. During his term the Union adopted a Kemalist approach unlike its previous ideology of nationalism. Career and activities Baykam worked at the student dormitories until 1951 when he was dismissed by the Ministry of Education due to his criticisms against the ruling Democrat Party (DP). Then he left political activity and worked as a physician in Karaman. Following his return to ...
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Mehmet Suphi Kula
Mehmet Suphi Kula (1881 in Monastir (Bitola) – October 19, 1948 in Istanbul) was an officer of the Ottoman Army and the general of the Turkish Army. He captured Smyrna from the Greek forces during the Turkish War of Independence. See also *List of high-ranking commanders of the Turkish War of Independence This list includes high-ranking commanders who took part in the Turkish War of Independence: See also * Turkish State Cemetery#Burials * List of recipients of the Medal of Independence with Red-Green Ribbon (Turkey) Footnotes References ... Sources {{DEFAULTSORT:Kula, Mehmet Suphi 1881 births 1948 deaths People from Bitola Ottoman Military Academy alumni Ottoman Army officers Ottoman military personnel of the Balkan Wars Ottoman military personnel of World War I Turkish military personnel of the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922) Recipients of the Medal of Independence with Red-Green Ribbon (Turkey) Turkish Army generals Burials at Turkish State Cemet ...
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Suphi Nuri İleri
Suphi Nuri İleri (1887–1945) was a Turkish politician and writer. Biography Suphi was born in Gallipoli, Ottoman Empire, in 1887. He was the brother of Celal Nuri İleri. Their mother was Nefise Hanım, the eldest daughter of the Ottoman Albanian statesman Prevezeli Abidin Pasha, who served as Adana governor, Bahr-i Sefit (Aegean Islands) governor and minister of foreign affairs.Hatice Çöpel, ''Celal Nuri İleri’nin Din Anlayışı'', Selçuk Üniversitesi, Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, Felsefe ve Din Bilimleri Bölümü Din Felsefesi Anabilim Dalı Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Konya 2010 Together in 1918 they founded the Turkish nationalist magazine '' İleri''. In 1936 he produced the Turkish translation of Karl Marx's '' Capital: Critique of Political Economy''. İleri was among the contributors of the cultural magazine ''Yeni Adam''. İleri died in Istanbul Istanbul is the List of largest cities and towns in Turkey, largest city in Turkey, constituting the country's ...
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Suphi Bereket
Subhi Bey Barakat al-Khalidi (; ; 1889–1939) was a Turkish-born Syrian politician who served as the first president of Syria from 1922 until his resignation in 1925. He served during the French Mandate where the French controlled the country. He also served as the fourth prime minister during his tenure as president. Part of the reason the French supported his candidacy as president of the Syrian Federation was because as neither a native of Damascus nor a very strong Arabic speaker ( Turkish was his mother tongue), he did not seem to pose a nationalist threat to French rule. Initially, he was a partner of Ibrahim Hanano in his revolt. He played a major role in merging the States of Aleppo and Damascus into one state, and he quit the presidency of Syria in 1925 in protest to the French position regarding the fate of the Alawite and Druze States, which France refused to add to Syria because it feared that might endanger the independence of the newly created Lebanon. Pers ...
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Sobhi
Sobhi, Sobhy, Subhy or Subhi (, transliterated as ''Ṣubḥī'') is an Arabic name meaning "my dawn" or "my morning". It means "matutinal" if the ''yā'' (ي) at the end indicates a relative adjective or ''nisba'' of ''ṣubḥ'' (morning), thus it transliterated as ''Ṣubḥiyy''. Given name Sobhi * Sobhi Abu Setta (1944-2001), better known as Mohammed Atef, also known as Abu Hafs al-Masri, the military chief of al-Qaeda * Sobhi Mahmassani (1909–1986), Lebanese legal scholar, practising lawyer, judge, and political figure * Sobhi Saïed (born 1982), Tunisian handball player * Sobhi Sioud (born 1975), Tunisian handball player Subhi * Subhi Abdilah Bakir (born 1980), Bruneian footballer * Subhi al-Badri al-Samerai (1936–2013), Iraqi muhaddith * Subhi Bey Barakat (1889–1939) was a Syrian politician * Subhi Saleh (born 1953), Egyptian lawyer, a prominent member of the Muslim Brotherhood *Subhi al-Tufayli (born 1948), leader of Hezbollah Middle name * Ahmed Subhy Mansour (bo ...
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Turkish Language Association
The Turkish Language Association (, TDK) is the List of language regulators, regulatory body for the Turkish language, founded on 12 July 1932 by the initiative of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and headquartered in Ankara, Turkey. The Institution acts as the official authority on the language, contributes to linguistic research on Turkish and other Turkic languages, and is charged with publishing the official dictionary of the language, ''Güncel Türkçe Sözlük''. Origins A Language Council (Turkish language, Turkish: ''Dil Heyeti'') which was established in March 1926 following approval of a draft bill presented by Ministry of National Education (Turkey), Education Minister Mustafa Necati in the Grand National Assembly of Turkey, Turkish parliament. In 1928 it was tasked with the latinization of the Turkish alphabet. The Language Council would be put under the supervision of a Central Bureau, in which also Ahmet Cevat Emre, later the head of the Grammar and Syntax commission of the T ...
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Turkish Masculine Given Names
Turkish may refer to: * Something related to Turkey ** Turkish language *** Turkish alphabet ** Turkish people, a Turkic ethnic group and nation *** Turkish citizen, a citizen of Turkey *** Turkish communities in the former Ottoman Empire * The word that Iranian Azerbaijanis use for the Azerbaijani language * Ottoman Empire (Ottoman Turkey), 1299–1922, previously sometimes known as the Turkish Empire ** Ottoman Turkish, the Turkish language used in the Ottoman Empire * Turkish Airlines, an airline * Turkish music (style), a musical style of European composers of the Classical music era * Turkish, a character in the 2000 film ''Snatch (film), Snatch'' See also

* * * Turk (other) * Turki (other) * Turkic (other) * Turkey (other) * Turkiye (other) * Turkish Bath (other) * Turkish population, the number of ethnic Turkish people in the world * Culture of Turkey * History of Turkey ** History of the Republic of Turkey * Turki ...
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