National symbols of Turkey

The image of the Turkish flag was formed with the crescent moon and a star reflected on these bloods at midnight.

For this reason, Mehmet Âkif, who did not participate in the competition because he thought that "the achievements of the nation cannot be praised with money",[4] changed his mind after the invitation letter written to him on February 5, 1921, by the Minister of Education, Hamdullah Suphi, and wrote the poem in which he addressed the Turkish army in his room in the Taceddin Lodge in Ankara.

[6] The seven poems that passed the pre-selection were discussed in the Assembly session chaired by Mustafa Kemal on March 12, 1921.

[5] Mehmet Âkif donated the five hundred lira award he won to Darülmesai, which was established to end their poverty by teaching poor women and their children to work.

Edgar Manas made the harmonization of the anthem, which consists of a total of nine quatrains and a fifth, and İhsan Servet Künçer arranged the band.

In 2013, various technical arrangements were made in order to eliminate the difficulty of reading the composition of the anthem.

In August 2014, the ruling Justice and Development Party's Şanlıurfa Deputy Zeynep Karahan Uslu officially submitted the "Draft Law on Determination of the Official Coat of Arms of the Republic of Turkey" to the Group Presidency of her party for the design of a new coat of arms.

In the office room, it is placed on the left back of the desk, and it is pulled to the chromed pole with the star and crescent in front of the car it is in.

According to the first interpretation, the sun in the middle of the coat of arms, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, "The Republic of Turkey will stand forever."

supports the promise of eternity and Turkey, and 16 stars symbolize the 16 Great Turkic Empires established throughout history.

The tulip, whose homeland is the Pamirs, Hindu Kush and Tian Shan,[18] was brought to Anatolia for the first time with the migration of Turks from Central Asia.

A waving Turkish flag
The text of the Turkish national anthem on the first page of the issue of Cerîde-i Resmiye , dated March 21, 1921
The writing of the entire anthem in modern Turkish
A version of the national anthem recorded in 2013
The red crescent and star de facto replaces the Turkish coat of arms.
Namık İsmail 's proposed Turkish coat of arms
Official marketing logo of Turkey with a tulip