AHC/WI Greeks entirely/90% assimilated?

What would the world be like today if either:

1. The land of OTL Greece becomes Bulgarian during the Bulgarian Empire and all of Antolia is, as OTL, Turkish, thus the Greeks are either gone completely or are only left as small pockets in Anatolia and Cyprus, or

2. OTL Greece is entirely Turkicized (as with Anatolia) sometime during the Ottoman era, leaving only Greek pockets here and there and perhaps a Greek Peloponnese

What impact would this have on the world, how can this happen and how would the Greek culture, language etc of the past be viewed today? Would it be seen as a great tragedy that they disappeared from the world or would it just be seen as another one of many cultures that was assimilated by another culture?

Disclaimer: I am not anti-Greek or in any way racist, I'm just interested to know how this would impact history.
 
I don't think that would work, The Ottoman Millet system allow for some anatomy for some peoples as long they obeyed the Sultan. Anatolia also was more threatened by invasions then Greece proper, and did have many Turkish settlers. The Ottomans would have to have an interest in assimilating the Greeks when they had bigger concerns to worry about, which wasn't there. Even if there is assimilation I see as more mutual influence in cultures than being completely subsumed.
 
What would the world be like today if either:

1. The land of OTL Greece becomes Bulgarian during the Bulgarian Empire and all of Antolia is, as OTL, Turkish, thus the Greeks are either gone completely or are only left as small pockets in Anatolia and Cyprus, or

2. OTL Greece is entirely Turkicized (as with Anatolia) sometime during the Ottoman era, leaving only Greek pockets here and there and perhaps a Greek Peloponnese

What impact would this have on the world, how can this happen and how would the Greek culture, language etc of the past be viewed today? Would it be seen as a great tragedy that they disappeared from the world or would it just be seen as another one of many cultures that was assimilated by another culture?

Disclaimer: I am not anti-Greek or in any way racist, I'm just interested to know how this would impact history.

I don't know how possible this was. (Although one could point out that many, perhaps most Turks were assimilated, converted Greeks.)

Could be that whichever culture assimilates the Greeks (the Bulgarians, the Turks) claims Greek heritage and culture.

And after all, Greek-descended Turks have much the same relationship with the Classical Greeks as modern Greeks. Both Greeks and Turks follow different religions, basically different languages, and very different cultures than the Ancient Greeks.
 
The death of Greek culture probably wouldn't be lamented any more than the death of ancient Egyptian culture or Roman culture. In fact, you might still have the people living in "Greece" develop a national identity in which they refer to themselves as Greeks, not unlike the Slavic-speaking Macedonians or the Arabic-speaking Egyptians. They might still identify themselves as having the blood of the ancient Greeks, and inheriting some or many aspects of Greek culture, while speaking a non-Greek language. Any remaining Greek speakers might be seen as a linguistic or ethno-religious minority like the Copts in Egypt or the Assyrians in their homelands.
 
The death of Greek culture probably wouldn't be lamented any more than the death of ancient Egyptian culture or Roman culture. In fact, you might still have the people living in "Greece" develop a national identity in which they refer to themselves as Greeks, not unlike the Slavic-speaking Macedonians or the Arabic-speaking Egyptians. They might still identify themselves as having the blood of the ancient Greeks, and inheriting some or many aspects of Greek culture, while speaking a non-Greek language. Any remaining Greek speakers might be seen as a linguistic or ethno-religious minority like the Copts in Egypt or the Assyrians in their homelands.
This is what I am thinking, even though the "Greek Greeks" will be gone, their legacy will still live on in what they accomplished. In fact they would probably be romanticized even more, because there would be no modern Greeks to contrast the views of the "brilliant ancients", just as we do with Ancient Egypt today.
 
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