The Melungeons: Genetic, Linguistic, and Historic Evidence of Their Turkish Roots
by
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
April/May 2001
Hundreds of years ago, there were tales of a tri-racial people
different from others. This tri-racial group of people was
simply called mysterious. In eighteenth century Virginia this
mysterious group was pushed and forced further west, higher
up in the mountains as Scotch, Irish, English and other settlers
moved into the area where the mysterious people had been living
for centuries.
Only one, yes, only one word.
One awful word, a dark word, a lonely word, a mysterious
but a powerful word continued over the centuries in confusion,
derision but pride.
MELUNGEON!
Racial, social, and cultural differences over three hundred
years made them second class citizens in the regions where
this people was named Melungeons.
A little mention is made of these enigmatic Melungeons throughout
history as a mysterious and lost people. Nobody seemed to
know for sure who these people were or where they came from.
They spoke an earlier form of English but with dark skin did
not look white European.
The loss of rights and land caused many Melungeons to leave
the areas where they lived for centuries and to start over
in new areas where no one knew them. These people made themselves
friendly with the Indians and lived in a peaceful Utopia of
their own creations. Afterwards, they married the local Indians,
and also subsequently their descendants married the local
Negroes and the whites, thus this mixture was going to become
the formation of the present day Melungeons.
Current popular theory suggests that the Melungeons were
descendants of abandoned Portuguese and Spanish settlers.
The English word Melungeon has both Arabic and Turkish roots,
meaning "cursed soul." Also in Portuguese, "Melungo" means
shipmate. In the Turkish language Melungeons are called Melun-can,
"Melun" being a borrowed word from Arabic meaning one that
carries bad luck and ill omen. And "can," which is Turkish,
means soul. Meluncan then means a person whose soul is a born
loser (Melungeons' Home Page). This term was in common usage
among sixteenth-century Ottoman Turks, Arabs, and Muslim converts
to Christianity in Spain and Portugal, and is still understood
by modern Turks as a self-deprecating term by a Muslim who
feels abandoned by God.
Traditionally, Melungeons have been darker skinned people
and, as a result, have frequently been discriminated against
by their Anglo-Saxon neighbors. Many Melungeons have hidden
their heritage, and until recently, history has not revealed
where they came from or even how long they have lived on the
American Continent. During the struggles for land, when the
white settlers arrived to the territory of the copper-skinned
Melungeons, the whites declared that they were "free persons
of color." In many cases this legal designation stripped the
Melungeons of their many rights, including the right to vote,
to own their own land, educate or send their children to schools,
to defend themselves in courts of law, and also to intermarry
with anyone who was not also Melungeon. Kennedy, a Melungeon
researcher, says that "Melungeons had always been precluded
to get all those rights until 1942." This designation led
to the taking of Melungeon land by the new white settlers.
Thus, Melungeons are a small group of people of uncertain
origin who have lived for years in the mountains of the East
Tennessee, Southwest Virginia, and Western North Carolina.
The Melungeons are copper-skinned, dark eyed, and dark haired,
but they mostly had English names and were commonly speaking
Elizabethan English. Some historians claim that Europeans
encountered the Melungeon settlers in the region of Carolina
and Virginia. Also the Melungeons mixed with remnants of Indian
tribes, but the Melungeons called themselves "Portygee," which
means "Portuguese" (Melungeons' Home page).
They over time were generally pigeonholed into one of the
four permissible (and inflexible) American racial classifications:
white (northern European), black (African), Indian, or mulatto
(a mix of the first three, or anyone of questionable racial
background). And thus an entire layer of early American ethnic
and cultural fusion was effectively "erased." By the time
the first U.S. census was conducted, the mixing and cultural
fusion had been underway for 200 years, ensuring that the
story would remain buried and certainly never be told via
standard census records. Around one thousand Melungeon descendants
now live in the United States, but Melungeon researcher Kennedy
claims that "the number more than doubles that, and included,
to the consternation of some family members, his own lineage"
(Melungeons' Home page).
The Melungeons are most likely the descendants of the late
sixteenth century Turks and Portuguese stranded on the Carolina
shores when the Spanish force abandoned the settlement of
Santa Elena and Carolina. They may have also been survivors
of several hundred Turkish sailor slaves who were left on
Roanoke Island by Sir Francis Drake in 1586. A large part
of the Turkish fleet was destroyed by the Crusaders in the
Inebahtin war in 1570 and several hundred Turkish sailors
were captured by Sir Francis Drake in the same war. They were
rescued from slavery in South America and put on the coast
of Roanoke Island by Francis Drake in the late 1500s The Melungeons
later intermarried with the Powhatan, Pamukey, Chickahominy,
and Catawba Indians, and later the Negroes. After they were
abandoned by the Spanish force, they started to survive in
the Appalachians and intermarried with the Cherokees and afterwards
with the northern European settlers, who were becoming part
of the classic American melting pot (Melungeons' Home page).
The resulting mixture created a unique appearance, which Europeans
could not recognize.
The basis for the link between Melungeons and Turks is linguistic,
genetic, medical, historical, cultural, etc.
More than 1000 Melungeon and related Native American terms
have been preliminarily linked with Ottoman Turkish and Arabic
words with identical pronunciations and meaning. The old name
for Kentucky was "Kain Tuck" which means dark and also bloody
ground in the local Indians dialect. "Kan Tok" is Turkish
for "full of blood." "Kan" means blood and "Tok" means filled
or full. The Turkish word for "huge noise" is "Ne yaygara,"
also pronounced identically to "Niagara". The Turkish term
for "good cotton" is "pamukey" (pamuk iyi) similar to "Pamunkey,"
an eastern Virginia Native American tribe to which many Melungeons
claim a relationship. The old Appalachian term "gaum," which
means messy or sad, is pronounced identically to the Turkish
"gam," meaning messy or sad. In the late nineteenth century
the Melungeons of East Tennessee and also Southwest Virginia
used to say "Satz" for a watch or a timepiece which is spelled
as "Sotz." The Turkish word for timepiece or watch is 'Saat."
The top tribal administrator for the Creek Indian was called
a "Mico." A Mico held the same position on a sixteen-century
Ottoman galley. Hodja is also the Creek Indian word for the
tribe's wisest and strongest warrior. Hodja is also the Turkish
word for the most respected teacher in the Muslim community
(Melungeons' home page). All of those words are still used
and pronounced incredibly the same as Turkish people today
pronounce them.
There is credible historical evidence that Turks were abandoned
in the New World. The Ottoman archival confirmations prove
that the Ottoman marines had been taken to the Canary Islands
in both early sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Also, a
Turkish journalist discovered archival records of the Ottoman
Empire in Istanbul that report the Portuguese had sold to
the British Navy a huge number of the Ottoman prisoners of
war, who were probably taken to the New World for labor purposes
by the British Navy (Nuri Yilmaz).
No trace was found of these people when later English vessels
dropped anchor for re-resupplying. It is possible, if not
likely, that many of them survived and were absorbed into
the surrounding Native American tribes. This is particularly
intriguing when one considers that most sixteenth-century
Turkish sailors were themselves of central Asian heritage,
thus making them literal cousins to the Native Americans they
would have encountered, if the purported Bering Strait-migration
thesis is to be believed. Furthermore, there is documented
evidence of the importation of Karachai and Kavkaz Turkish
textile workers, artisans, and servants by both the English
and the Spanish into sixteenth-century Virginia, the Caribbean,
Brazil, and Mexico, lending even more support to previous
Melungeon claims of a Turkish origin. All these people survived
by blending into the various Native American, European, and
African communities.
Turkish historical archives in Turkey, Eurasia, and Central
Asia include cultural links, medical and genetic data, and
linguistic similarities between Turks and Melungeons. The
historical, cultural, genetic and oral traditions lend very
important credence to the Melungeon-Turkic tie. "Qualified
linguists and historians may find other explanations for the
similarities in the language, and also culture," says Kennedy.
According to the English records only one hundred Turks were
taken back to England where they were ransomed to the Turkish
dominions, but there is no further mention of the other remaining
Turkish sailors. "Perhaps those who returned to Turkey left
statements regarding the others that were apparently left
in North Carolina. History already shows through the archives,
for example, that in the 1500s other Turkish sailors having
no connection to Drake were also left in the Caribbean. The
records are there," says Ozdogan.
Plans are also underway for similar cooperative efforts in
general historical data, especially those data relating to
Turkish and Ottoman naval efforts, as well as the transportation
of Ottoman peoples, both captives and employed textile workers,
to various destinations in the New World, generally by the
Spanish, Portuguese, and English. "The Ottomans maintained
wonderful records, though usually in old Turkish script. There
may be a wealth of data pertaining to lost or abandoned Turkish
sailors, for example, or the reports of those 100 young Turkish
men who we know were documentably returned home by Sir Francis
Drake in 1587," says Ozdogan.
Modern science has added new support to the Turkish theory
in the form of DNA, related to disease and appearance.
Recent genetic studies show an undeniable link between the
Melungeon people and the Mediterranean region. A 1990 reanalysis
of blood samples taken in 1969 from 177 Melungeon descendants
showed no significant differences between east Tennessee and
southwestern Virginia Melungeons and populations in Portugal,
Canary Islands, North Africa, Malta, Cyprus, and Turkey (the
Levant). Furthermore, significant genetic relationships also
appear to be present between the Melungeons and Virginia and
certain populations in South America and Cuba. Perhaps Sir
Francis Drake really did leave those people on Roanoke Island!
Amazing "coincidences," but perfectly in line with what the
first Melungeons had so persistently claimed (The Melungeons
127).
Modern-day Melungeons have found an intriguing link between
their peculiar diseases and those of eastern Mediterranean.
Diseases identified in the Melungeon population include thallasemia,
Behcet's Syndrome, Machado-Joseph (Azorean) Disease, sarcoidosis,
and Familial Mediterranean Fever.
"Behcet's Syndrome, which is a disease from the region
of Anatolia and Mediterranean, is a relapsing, multi-system
inflammatory disease in which there are oral/genital ulcers.
There may be inflammation of the eyes, joints, blood vessels,
central nervous system and gastrointestinal tract involvement.
Attacks last about a week to a month and recur spontaneously.
Onset is usually between twenty to thirty years of age with
symptoms occurring up to several years after the onset. Twice
as many men as women are affected. There is a genetic predisposition,
with autoimmune mechanism and viral infection which may all
play a part" (Morrison).
There are some physiological characteristics, which are not
entirely documented, but seem to be passed on through the
lines of some Melungeon descendants. There is a bump on the
back of the head of some descendants of Melungeons, that is
located at mid-line, just above the juncture with the neck.
It is about the size of half a golf ball or smaller. Some
people who live in the Anatolian region of Turkey also have
that Anatolian Bump (Morrison)
The possible Turkish-Melungeon link has created considerable
interest among both groups, leading to the establishment of
sister cities.
The sister cities of Wise, Virginia, and Cesme, Turkey, were
selected to receive the Diverse Community Award at the 35th
Annual Awards Program of Sister City International's Annual
Conference in San Diego, California in 1996.
"The Diverse Community Award "distinguishes sister city programs
that best promote international understanding and long-term
partnerships through community activities which involve participants
that reflect the diversity of the community" (Melungeons'
home page).
Wise and Cesme became sister cities in mid-1995. At the 1995
Wise Fall Fling, Mustafa Siyahhan, Director of Tourism of
the Turkish Embassy in Washington, visited Wise to commemorate
the growing relationship between Wise and Cesme.
In commemoration of the sister city relationship, the Town
of Wise has erected a sign at its entrance paying tribute
to its "sister" in Turkey. Cesme, in return, has renamed its
main street "Wise Avenue," while the mountain overlooking
Cesme has been renamed "Melungeon Mountain." Cesme, like Wise,
lies in a mountainous area.
According to Kennedy, thousands of Americans share Melungeons
heritage, such as, Abraham Lincoln, Elvis Presley, and Eva
Gardner. However, some scholars, according to Virginia Demarse,
the former president of the National Genealogical Society,
dismiss the theories of Kennedy. Kennedy says, "I do not care
who we are or were. I just believe that we need to know who
we are or were" (Melungeons' home page).
The Melungeons have begun to clarify their past and future.
Such clarification is a reminder for academics and policymakers
about possible ramifications of their actions. There are some
arguments at several points against the imposition of new
racial categories, like the Turk-Indian-Negro blend. One too
seldom hears from the scholarly community to point out that
"all human beings harbor a racial diversity, known unknown."
Although, differing in details, the story is one where colonized,
oppressed, and forgotten mysterious people are finally recognized.
While interesting in its particulars, the true importance
of the Melungeon story is its universality.
Kennedy, N. Brent. The Melungeons. Macon: Mercer University
Press, 1994.
|