General/Off-topic |
|
|
|
Turk Town
|
1. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 12:17 pm |
I recently found out about a lovely tribute to Turkish people near my home. A small town near Portsmouth, (Gosport) in the south of England, has been nicknamed "Turktown" for as long as people can remember and many were unaware of the origins of this.
It dates back to 1850 when a Turkish or Ottoman frigate was paying a visit there. The Turkish crew remained there for several months and became good triends with the locals. Then tragedy struck and 26 of the sailors died of cholera. The town's people buried them a local cememetry and they were given beautiful white marble gravestones with the turkish flag. This graveyard has been kept immaculate ever since.
If only the family of those men could have known how how much they were honoured
(Note: for some reason the link wont post in one line here. You will need to copy and paste it:-
http://www.portsmouthtoday.co.uk/CustomPages/
CustomPage.aspx?PageID=26944§ionID=4553)
|
|
2. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 01:28 pm |
Great article, thanks!
Link didn't work though, not even through copying and pasting..
But typing in "Turktown" on Google works, first hit is the right one!
|
|
3. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 01:30 pm |
I know, I dont understand why the link wont work . Anyway, I was hoping that perhaps there is a connection with this and the fact that Portsmouth Football Club have a star and moon on their emblem!! However, I can't find a definitive reason for this on google.
However, I sent a Portsmouth FC shirt to someone in Turkey and he wears it with pride
|
|
4. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 01:40 pm |
Turktown - Gosport
hey dear, I made it work!
edit: it looked good in the preview section but no, I failed.............
|
|
5. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 01:43 pm |
Turktown - Gosport
hey dear, I made it work!
edit: it looked good in the preview section but no, I failed.............
|
|
6. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 02:05 pm |
Here is a link that tells the story of Turktown and shows an image of one of the Turkish graves.
http://www.portsmouthtoday.co.uk/CustomPages/CustomPage.aspx?PageID=26944§ionID=4553
Thanks aenigma x for this very interesting post! I checked the Portsmouth football club site and located their emblem.
Very cool!
|
|
7. |
14 Feb 2007 Wed 04:05 pm |
Found this on Wikipedia.org:
Club crest
Portsmouth F.C.'s club crest, like its nickname, is derived from that of the city. The official emblem contains a gold star and crescent on a blue shield. Portsmouth's adoption of the star and crescent (usually synonymous with Islam) is said to have came from when King Richard I, granted the city "a crescent of gold on a shade of azure, with a blazing star of eight points" which he had taken from the Emperor's standard of Governor Isaac Komnenos, after capturing Cyprus. It is one of the most recognisable football crests in English football and is nicknamed 'the smiley crest' because of its similarity to a smiling face.
Throughout its history Portsmouth have tried different variations of the crest before reverting back to the basic gold star and crescent. In the 1950s and 1960s the traditional crest was emblazoned on the shirt in white rather than gold but this was due to white being a cheaper alternative.
Between 1980 and 1989 the club scrapped the original crest and replaced it with a new design. This crest showed a football on top of an anchor (representing the navy) and a sword (representing the army). An interchangble version included a circular version of the star and crescent crest in place of the football.
Portsmouth F.C. badge in the early '90s.
The return of the original crest in 1989 only lasted 4 years when it was replaced by the city's coat of arms in 1993. This design centred around the basic star and crescent but was unpopular with many fans who thought it was overelaborate. After only four seasons the original crest was again reinstated and remains to the present day.
|
|
9. |
15 Feb 2007 Thu 12:54 am |
awww hello to the residents of this beautiful town then from turkiye
|
|
10. |
15 Feb 2007 Thu 06:20 am |
Thank you for sharing this with us. It was very intersting.
I think this will be good to see here.
The immaculately-kept Turkish graves at Haslar Royal Naval Cemetery, Gosport ‘Turktown’
|
|
|