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Why Is Suleyman Shah's Tomb So Important?

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  • Why Is Suleyman Shah's Tomb So Important?

    WHY IS SULEYMAN SHAH'S TOMB SO IMPORTANT?

    22 February 2015 Last updated at 14:36 GMT

    The tomb of Suleyman Shah has now been evacuated and destroyed by
    the Turkish military

    Scores of Turkish troops and vehicles have entered Syria to evacuate
    and destroy a mausoleum where a forefather of the Ottoman empire
    was buried. The BBC's Matthew Davis considers why the site was so
    important.

    The now ruined tomb of Suleyman Shah stands on a football pitch-sized
    spit of Turkish land inside Syria, but its historical and political
    significance belie this humble geography.

    Shah was a Turkic tribal leader who lived from about 1178 until 1236,
    when according to an epigraph in his mausoleum he "drowned in the
    Euphrates along with two of his men, in search for a home for himself
    and his people".

    Official accounts are questioned by some, but the story goes that
    Shah's followers headed north into modern-day Turkey.

    It was there that his grandson, Osman I, founded the Ottoman Empire,
    which at the height of its powers centuries later controlled swathes
    of territory across south-west Europe, the Middle East and North
    Africa from its capital in Constantinople (now Istanbul).

    The Ottoman empire had disintegrated by the early 20th Century, and
    the new state of Turkey emerged - but such was the national importance
    of Shah's burial complex that the site was protected under a 1921
    agreement with France, which then occupied the area now located in
    Syria's Aleppo province.

    The now-destroyed complex was on a spit of land by the Euphrates river

    Since then, Turkey has invoked its right to station troops there and
    fly its flag over the site, which was relocated some 80km (50 miles)
    to the north when the original area was flooded by the creation of
    the reservoir Lake Assad in 1974.

    Turkey's only foreign enclave has retained immense emotional value
    for its people, but the chaos engulfing Syria in recent years has
    seen it assume a growing political significance.

    In August 2012 President Recep Tayyip Erdogan - then prime minister -
    warned all parties in the Syrian conflict that an action against the
    tomb would be considered an attack on Turkish territory "as well an
    attack on Nato land".

    And amid reports that the soldiers stationed there had been besieged
    for months by Islamic State militants, last year the Turkish parliament
    authorised the use of force against the jihadists.

    However despite recently joining the US in training some rebels
    fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad, Turkey has resisted playing
    a full role in the US-led campaign against Islamic State.

    Correspondents say that if the historic Suleyman Shah tomb had come
    under attack, the effect on public opinion would have made it harder
    for Turkey to avoid a full-scale military campaign against the group.

    So the fact that the tomb is now moved and the Turkish soldiers
    evacuated is a great relief for the nation and its leaders, local
    commentators say.

    "We had given the Turkish armed forces a directive to protect our
    spiritual values and the safety of our armed forces personnel,"
    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said after Saturday's operation.

    Turkish media later showed images of three soldiers raising the flag at
    a new site closer to the Turkish border, which is likely to host a new
    tomb that authorities hope will provide a final home for Suleyman Shah.

    This is the new resting place for the remains of Suleyman Shah

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-31574209

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