Year |
Date |
Event
|
1923 |
October 29 |
The Republic of Turkey was proclaimed.[1]
|
Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) was unanimously elected the first President of the Republic of Turkey by secret vote.
|
October 30 |
The first cabinet of the Republic of Turkey was formed by İsmet İnönü.
|
1924 |
|
A new policy was instituted that imams be appointed by the government.
|
March 3 |
The Ottoman caliphate was abolished by the Turkish Grand National Assembly.
|
The Union of Education (Tevhid-i Tedrisat) Law was passed.
|
The Ministry of Religious Affairs and all religious schools were abolished.
|
March 6 |
Second cabinet, again by İsmet İnönü
|
April 8 |
Religious courts were abolished and replaced with civil courts.
|
April 20 |
A new Turkish constitution was accepted.
|
August 26 |
Türkiye Is Bankasi was established.[2]
|
October 30 |
The generals who were also in parliament were asked to choose either military profession or politics but not both. (This event is known as the crisis of generals.)
|
November 17 |
The second political party in Turkey, the Progressive Republican Party, was formed.
|
November 22 |
Third cabinet by Ali Fethi Okyar.
|
1925 |
February 11 |
The Sheikh Said rebellion started in the eastern provinces.
|
February 25 |
A law separating religion from politics was accepted and passed in the TBMM.
|
March 4 |
Fourth cabinet by İsmet İnönü
|
May 5 |
An Armenian named Manok Manukyan was executed in Ankara for planning an assassination attempt on Mustafa Kemal.
|
June 3 |
The Progressive Republican Party was closed and abolished for exploiting religion for political purposes.
|
June 29 |
Sheikh Said and his 46 followers were sentenced to death in Diyarbakır.
|
August 27 |
Mustafa Kemal came to Kastamonu to initiate the Hat Revolution.
|
September 1 |
The first Turkish Medical Congress was assembled.
|
September 4 |
Turkish women entered a beauty contest for the first time.
|
October 1 |
Atatürk opened the Bursa textile factory.
|
November 5 |
Ankara Law School (then the Ankara University Faculty of Law) was opened.
|
November 25 |
"Hat Law" was issued, abolishing religious dress.
|
December 26 |
A law was passed which abolished the lunar calendar in favor of the international calendar.
|
1926 |
February 17 |
A Turkish civil code based on the Swiss Civil Code was accepted. The code granted expanded civil rights to women and prohibited polygamy.
|
March 1 |
A Turkish criminal code was established based on the Italian Criminal Code.
|
March 17 |
A law was passed to nationalise the iron industry.
|
March 24 |
A law was passed to nationalise the petroleum industry.
|
1927 |
March 7 |
The extraordinary Independence Tribunals were abolished.
|
October 15 |
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk started his "Nutuk" speech.
|
The second nationwide congress of the Republican People's Party took place.
|
October 20 |
The "Nutuk" speech ended.
|
October 28 |
The first population census counted the population at approximately thirteen and a half million.
|
November 27 |
Fifth cabinet by İsmet İnönü
|
December 25 |
The first female Turkish lawyer, Sureyya Agaoglu, began her duty.
|
1928 |
April 10 |
The article "The official religion of Turkey is Islam" was removed from the constitution.
|
May 19 |
A law establishing an engineering school was accepted.
|
November 1 |
A new Turkish alphabet based on the Latin alphabet was accepted.
|
1929 |
April 3 |
A new municipal law enabled women to enter municipal elections both as voters and as candidates.
|
April 29 |
The first female Turkish judges were appointed.
|
May 13 |
A trade law was accepted by the TBMM.
|
September 1 |
Arabic and Persian courses were abolished replaced by Turkish-only language courses.
|
1930 |
June 11 |
A law was accepted which established the Turkish Republic Central Bank.
|
August 12 |
The Free Republican Party, the third party in the republic, was established.
|
September 27 |
Sixth cabinet by İsmet İnönü
|
October 27 |
Greek prime minister Venizelos visited Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Ankara.
|
November 17 |
After the Free Republican Party's cooption by radical religious groups, its leader Fethi Okyar decided to close.
|
December 30 |
Kubilay was killed in an anti-republican rebellion.
|
1931 |
March 16 |
The first female Turkish surgeon, Dr. Suat, received her specialty.
|
March 26 |
The Measurements Law was accepted, abolishing the former Arabic length and weight measurement units and replacing them with the metric system (kilogram instead of okka, meter instead of endaze, etc.)
|
April 20 |
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk historically declared the slogan "Peace at home, peace in the world!"
|
May 4 |
Seventh cabinet by İsmet İnönü
|
July 25 |
A new press law was accepted.
|
1932 |
July 18 |
Turkey became a member of the League of Nations.
|
July 31 |
Turkish woman Keriman Halis Ece was declared the World Beauty Queen at a contest in Belgium.
|
November 13 |
Dr. Müfide Kazim became the first female Turkish government physician.
|
December 12 |
Adile Ayda became the first female Turkish civil servant in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
|
1933 |
February 7 |
The first Turkish-language mosque prayers began in Istanbul.
|
May 31 |
The 480-year-old Darülfünun was abolished, to be converted into Istanbul University.
|
June |
Sümerbank and Halkbank were established.
|
October 26 |
Turkish women were granted the right to vote and be elected to Village Councils.
|
November 18 |
Istanbul University was opened.
|
December 1 |
The first five-year development plan was accepted.
|
1934 |
June 21 |
The Surname Law was accepted, abolishing the former titles of Bey, Efendi, Pasha, Sultan, and Hanım as of November 26.
|
November 24 |
Mustafa Kemal Pasha took the surname Atatürk.
|
The Hagia Sophia mosque was converted to the Ayasofya (Hagia Sophia) Museum.
|
December 5 |
Turkish women were granted the right to vote and be elected in Turkish parliamentary elections. (Afterwards, in the first elections, 18 women were elected to the Turkish Grand National Assembly).
|
1935 |
March 1 |
Eight cabinet by İsmet İnönü.
|
1936 |
May 29 |
A law determining the size and ratios of the star and crescent in the Turkish flag was accepted.
|
June 8 |
A labor law was accepted which represented the first step towards the Turkish Social Security System.
|
1937 |
January 27 |
Hatay's independence was accepted by the League of Nations in its Geneva meeting.
|
June 9 |
A law establishing a medical faculty in Ankara was accepted.
|
September 20 |
Atatürk opened the first art gallery in his residence, the Dolmabahce Palace.
|
October 9 |
Atatürk opened the Nazilli Printed Cloth Fabric Factory.
|
October 25 |
Ninth cabinet by Celal Bayar, former minister of Economy
|
1938 |
November 10 |
The founder Mustafa Kemal Atatürk died. He was succeeded by İsmet İnönü, former prime minister and general.
|
1939 |
|
World War II: World War II began. Turkey was to remain neutral for most of the war, until a declaration of war against Germany at its end.
|
July 7 |
The Province of Hatay joined Turkey following a rigged referendum included by the Turkish government.[3][4]
|