Germans and Turks
A Forgotten History of Europe
Bloomsbury
25 June 2026

German-Turkish relations form an integral backdrop to many of today's most pressing political concerns, including the absorption of refugees from the Middle East in Europe, debates about coexistence with Muslims in Western societies, and European geopolitics in Western Asia. Yet the story of this relationship, its 1000-year history and often fateful consequences, has never been fully told.
In this book, Stefan Ihrig presents the first combined history of the two peoples, from the Middle Ages until today. It is a relationship that has had many twists and turns, from adversaries in the early modern conflict between the Ottoman Empire and Christian Central Europe to allies at the end of the nineteenth century and during WWI. It is also a relationship that has shaped world history, often to disastrous effect: Ihrig shows how the Armenian Genocide of the early twentieth century and Mustafa Kemal's ethno-nationalist 'Turkification' project influenced Nazi Germany's murderous policies. And, as Ihrig shows, it's a relationship that surprises and confounds simplistic narratives. Far from one sided, the encounter between German and Turkish-speaking people over the centuries reveals a mutual fascination that stands in contrast to British, French or American interactions with the Middle East and North Africa.
The coda to this story is the now up to four million people of Turkish descent living in Germany. With modern Turkey taking an increasingly prominent role on the global stage and the German state the most powerful in the European Union, understanding the history of this complicated and dynamic relationship is more important than ever.
"a delightfully sprawling book overflowing with empathy, irony and a wealth of detail"
Nicholas Danforth, Deputy Editor, Foreign Policy Magazine
"Bringing to life Bismarck’s adage that ‘the love of Turks and Germans to one another is so old that it will never break’, Ihrig accomplishes what no other scholar has attempted to do: write an engaging history of a thousand years of interactions between Germans and Turks, of a shared past and a shared present in Germany. If not love, Ihrig charts astonishing episodes of conflict and cohabitation across Central and Southeastern Europe and the Middle East from medieval times to the present, leaving the reader with a whole new image of German and Turkish history."
Marc David Baer, Professor, LSE, UK
"Throughout the centuries, Germans and the Turks developed an 'elective affinity,' and Stefan Ihrig does a great job telling this story."
Ayhan Aktar, Retired Professor of Sociology, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey
"A timely and thought-provoking account of the deep, complex, and often surprising history connecting Germans and Turks. Thoroughly researched, elegantly written, and rich in insight, it is a valuable resource for historians, students, and general readers alike."
Pascal Firges, Lecturer, University of Basel, Switzerland