Browse stories

History glossary

Anatolia

the large peninsula that makes up most of modern Turkey, important in ancient trade and empire-building.

Category
Region
Region
Modern Turkey
Date range
Ancient to present

What it means

Anatolia is the historical name for the peninsula of western Asia that forms most of modern Turkey. In ancient history it connected Mesopotamia, the Aegean, the Caucasus, and the Levant through trade routes, migrations, kingdoms, and empires.

Related terms

Stories using this term

The Celtic World Before Rome

Celtic tribes spanned Europe, shaping culture, conflict, and a lasting legacy.

The Fall of Rome to Early Medieval Europe

From the arrival of Gothic peoples at the Danube to the crowning of Charlemagne, this story traces how the Western Roman Empire fragmented into successor kingdoms and how a new medieval world took shape.

Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic World

From Philip II's military reforms to the fall of the last Hellenistic kingdom, this story follows Alexander's conquests, the wars of his successors, and the spread of Greek culture across the ancient Near East.

Mesopotamia

Ancient Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, was one of the birthplaces of urban civilisation. In this Tigris and Euphrates civilization, communities built some of the first cities, developed cuneiform writing, organised law codes, and created early empires. From Sumer and Akkad to Babylon and Assyria, this history of Mesopotamia shows how farming, irrigation, temples, kingship, trade, and record-keeping helped create the structures of complex society. It also works as a Mesopotamia timeline and Mesopotamia civilization overview, with clear Mesopotamia facts tracing how Mesopotamian civilization grew from villages into states and empires.

The Crusades

From Pope Urban II's call at Clermont to the fall of Acre, the Crusades reshaped the medieval world through religious war, cross-cultural encounter, and lasting consequences for Europe and the Middle East.

The Ottoman Empire

From a small frontier principality in Anatolia, the Ottomans built a multiethnic empire across Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa before reform, nationalism, and world war ended imperial rule.

A weekly route through history

Find out first about the latest published stories, feature notes and occasional Premium offers in one weekly email.