Cirit - Turkey’s Traditional
Equestrian Sport
When the Turkish people poured westwards
from their Central Asian homelands in the 11th century,
they came on horseback into Anatolia, the land which
the poet Nazım Hikmet described as stretching
like a mare’s head into the Mediterranean. The
horse, which played a central role in Turkish life
in the Central Asian steppes, was probably first ridden
and harnessed to vehicles in the area between the
Black Sea and the Caspian Sea northeast of Anatolia.
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The Turks brought not
only their horses to Anatolia but many related
aspects of their culture, one being the equestrian
sport known as cirit [je-rid].
Cirit is a means of improving equestrian skills,
and involves two teams of horsemen, each armed
with a dried date, oak or poplar stick. These
sticks are 70-100 cm in length and 2-3 cm in diameter,
with blunt ends. |
They were originally heavier and
thicker, but to reduce the risk of injury players
came to prefer sticks made of poplar wood, which become
lighter when dried. The players ride horses specially
trained for the sport. The teams line up facing one
another on the field, each player at a distance of
about 100 metres from the next. The person who signals
the start of the game is known as the çavuş,
and before the game he introduces each of the players
to the spectators with words of praise. Meanwhile
drums and reed pipes play military marches and Köroğlu
folk airs. At the beginning of the game it is traditional
for the youngest rider to trot towards the opposing
team, and at a distance of 10-15 metres toss his cirit
stick at one of the players. Simultaneously he turns
his horse back and tries to reach the safety of his
own side, pursued by the other player with a stick
in his hand.
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This process of chasing and fleeing, while trying to hit an opponent
with a stick, is the essence of the game, which requires skill and sportsmanship. To hit
the horse instead of the rider, which is regarded as the sign of an inexperienced player,
is against the rules, and the offender is sent off the field.
The referees, who are former cirit players with
standing in the community, count the number of hits
and at the end of the game announce the winning team.
Experienced cirit players rarely miss hitting an opponent,
and are skilled at avoiding hits themselves by bending
low, hanging down from one side of the horse, and
other feats of acrobacy. Part of the skill lies in
training the horses so that they play a significant
role in the outcome of the game. The formation of
the two teams has its traditional etiquette. Care
is taken not to put players who are on bad terms in
opposing teams, and players who display deliberately
hostile behaviour during a match are blacklisted.
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Cirit was particularly widespread in the Ottoman
Empire from the 16th century onwards, becoming the
foremost martial sport. In peace time it was played
to improve the cavalry’s attack and defence skills,
and during campaigns to whip up their enthusiasm for
battle. Some of the sultans are known to have been
cirit players, and early Ottoman sultans like Yyldyrym
Bayezyd (1389-1402) and Çelebi Mehmed (1413-1421)
attached importance to cirit in the training of their
armies. A superior class of cavalrymen known as cündi
was formed from those skilled at cirit. However, the
game was not without its dangers, and injuries and
even death from falls in the attempt to catch the
flying cirit sticks prompted Mahmud II (1808-1839)
to ban the sport altogether after he dissolved the
Janissary Corps. Although playing cirit resumed before
long, particularly in the provinces, it never recovered
the importance of former times. Today cirit is not
as widespread as it once was, but is still played
as a spectator sport, primarily in Erzurum, but also
in the provinces of Artvin, Kars, Bayburt, Diyarbakyr,
Siirt and Konya.
Folklore societies are also attempting to keep this
traditional sport alive by organising tournaments.
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