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Russo-Circassian War

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Russian-Circassian War
Part of The Caucasian Wars
Date1763 – 2 June [O.S. 21 May] 1864
Location
Result Russian victory, annexation of Circassia, mass expulsion
Belligerents
Russia Russian Empire Circassia
 Ottoman Empire
Caucasian Imamate
Commanders and leaders
Tsar Nicholas I,
Tsar Alexander I,
Tsar Alexander II,
Aleksey Yermolov,
Mikhail Vorontsov,
Aleksandr Baryatinskiy,
Nikolai Evdokimov
Strength
150,000 – 200,000.[1] 20,000 regulars.[2]
Casualties and losses
An unknown number of indigenous Caucasians killed during deportation.[3] About 500,000[4] indigenous highland Caucasians were expelled to the Ottoman Empire.

The Russian-Circassian War (1763? - 1864) (sometimes Russo-Circassian War) refers to a series of battles and wars in Circassia, the northwestern part of the Caucasus, which were part of the Russian Empire's conquest of the Caucasus lasting approximately 150 years, starting under the reign of Tsar Peter the Great and being completed in 1864. Although the conquest of the Caucasus started at least as early as the Russo-Persian War, the term Caucasian War commonly refers only to the period 1817-1864. Those who use the term Russian-Circassian War take its starting date as 1763, when the Russians began establishing forts, including at Mozdok, to be used as springboards for conquest.[5]

The Caucasian War ended with the signing of loyalty oaths by Circassian leaders on 2 June 1864 (21 May, O.S.). Thereupon, Russia undertook the expulsion of the entire indigenous Circassian population, herding them to Black Sea ports for deportation to neighboring Anatolia, the heart of the Ottoman Empire. A relative few were offered the choice of being resettled elsewhere within Russia, an offer rarely accepted[6][7] and ended up in modern Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan and Kosovo). Various Russian, Caucasus, and Western historians agree on the figure of ca. 500,000 inhabitants of the highland Caucasus being deported by Russia in the 1860s [8] A large fraction of them died in transit from disease.

Early relations between Russia and Circassians

A map of Circassia from 1840

Circassia (Cherkessia in Russian) refers to a region the majority of whose inhabitants before 1860s were the Adygey (Adyghey, Adyghe) ethnic group, known to the West as Circassians. This region consisted for the most part of the region between the westward flowing Kuban River to the north and the Caucasus mountain range to the south, although the Kuban River constituted only part of the northern boundary. The Circassians were never politically united. The western bulk of Circassia, they belonged to any of about ten tribes, living in communities headed by chieftains. In the east of Circassia were two feudal polities, Greater Kabardá and Lesser Kabardá. In the late 1550s, the ruler of one of the Kabardás, Temryuk (or Temriuk), struck a politico-military alliance with Tsar Ivan IV of Russia (“Ivan the Terrible”), for mutual assistance against expansionist attacks by the Persian and Ottoman Empires.[citation needed] In this period of history, the Circassians were Christians; Islam did not begin to penetrate Circassia until the following century.[9] In the 1560s Ivan and Temryuk directed forts to be constructed, including Tumnev at the western end of Circassian lands and along the upper reaches of the Sunzha river, at the eastern end of Circassian lands.[citation needed]

Opportunity for Russia

Painting of the Russian fleet that was constructed in the ports along the Black Sea conquered during the conflict

During the mid 18th century, the Circassian region was a key strategic location to the power struggle between the surging British and French empires, the emerging Russian Empire, and the declining Ottoman Empire. Russia had set its sights on expansion along the Black Sea, while Britain and France sought to reduce Russia’s ability to take advantage of the declining Ottoman Empire, a foreign policy known as the answer to the Eastern Question.

Peter the Great’s plans for expansion into India and the Black Sea included engaging both the Turks and Persia. To facilitate the fall of Persia, Russia would require shipyards on the Black Sea, which made Circassia, with its coastline, a target.

Occupation of eastern Circassia

Construction of the Georgian Military Road through disputed territories was a key factor in the eventual Russian success

On a number of occasions, the Russian army took advantage of unrest and difficulty both within and between the Persian potentates,[10] illustrated on 22 June 1806 when — during the Russo-Persian War (1804-1813) — the Caspian Sea town of Derbend fell to the Russian forces without a shot being fired. The ruler of Derbend, Shaykh Ali, was so unpopular with his people that upon the arrival of the Russian army, they revolted and allowed the Russians to take over.[11]

In 1804, the subjugated Kabardians, as well as the remaining Western Circassians and neighbouring Balkars, Karachays, Abazins, Ossetins, Ingushes, and Chechens, united in a military uprising.[citation needed] The rebels demanded the destruction of the Kislovodsk Russian fort and of the Cordon line. This was one of three defensive lines, all of which consisted of chains of forts, which were built during the whole conflict: the Caucasian line in 1780, the Chernomorski Cordon line in 1793, and the Sunja line in 1817. With the refusal of these demands, and despite threats of bloodshed from Russian commander, General Pavel Tsitsianov, the rebel forces began threatening the Kislovodsk fort.[12] Kabardian forces pushed Russian forces commanded by General Glazenap back to Georgievsk and then besieged them, but the attackers were in turn eventually pushed back, and 80 Kabardian villages were torched as a reprisal.[citation needed] In October 1809, rebel forces attacked the Caucasian Line. Between 1809 and 1810, Russian reinforcements began arresting Kabardian princes for resisting colonial rule, which led many of the princes to submit to Russian control and some resistance forces to abandon the war. 1810, a Russian army under General Bulgakov destroyed 200 Circassian and Balkar villages and drove away 20,000 cattle.[13]

Aleksey Yermolov

In 1811, petitions were sent to St. Petersburg in Russia, appealing for the rights of Kabardian aristocrats in the occupied areas. While many other points were quickly agreed to, requests for the return of land occupied by Russian fortresses were deliberated over. Russia encouraged the loyalty of defeated Kabardian nobles with donations to the Circassian government and honorary military ranks for the aristocracy in the Russian army. Meanwhile, on the military front, Russian forces in the Circassian region were consolidated into a new Caucasian corps in 1816 under the command of newly arrived General Aleksey Yermolov. In May 1818, the village of Tramov was surrounded, burnt, and its inhabitants killed by Russian forces under the command of General Delpotso, who took orders from Yermolov and who then wrote to the rebel forces: “This time, I am limiting myself on this. In the future, I will have no mercy for the guilty brigands; their villages will be destroyed, properties taken, wives and children will be slaughtered."[citation needed] The Russians also constructed several more fortifications during that year.

Military forces were sent into Kabardia, killing cattle and causing large numbers of inhabitants to flee into the mountains, with the land these inhabitants had once lived on being acquired for the Kuban Cossacks. The entirety of Kabardia (eastern Circassia) was now declared Russian territory.[14]

Russo-Circassian fighting in A Scene from the Caucasian War, by Franz Roubaud (1856–1928)

Yermolov accelerated his efforts, with the month of March 1822 alone seeing fourteen Kabardian villages being displaced as Yermolov led expeditions into western Circassia.[citation needed] The construction of new defensive lines in Kabardia led to renewed uprisings, which were eventually crushed. To discourage further uprisings, the Russians granted freedom to the serfs of the lords who had led the latest uprisings. Circassia was placed under Russian military rule in 1822, with a Temporary Kabardian Court also being established.

Invasion of western Circassia

Prologue: Russian Forays into western Circassia

A Circassian soldier

Minor Kabardia, or western Circassia, was targeted for a new offensive by General Stal, who was given command of the Caucasian Line in 1819. In September 1820, Stal and his forces began to forcibly resettle inhabitants of western Circassia. Throughout the conflict, Russia had employed a tactic of divide and rule,[15] and following this, Yermolov instructed Stal on 1 July 1821 to encourage the Ingushes and Taugur tribes, who had previously been subjugated by the Circassians, to rise up and join the Russian efforts.[citation needed]

The invasion

While eastern Circassia was being occupied, Russia was also engaged in a war with the Turks in order to free Black Sea coastline from Turkish control, and sporadic wars had also flared up with other neighbours, including the Chechens. In western Circassia, a number of tribes were dominant; the Besleneys, Abadzekhs, Ubykhs, Shapsughs, and Natkhuagias. The first of these were particularly involved in raiding Russian outposts in former eastern Circassia, or Kabardia.

Location of the conflict in relation to modern Russia

These raids continued for several years, while the Russians continued to fortify their position; constructing the Labinski defensive front in 1840, and beginning to develop a new form of scout, known as a plastun, for scouting Circassian held territory beyond such defensive positions. Russian and Circassian forces clashed repeatedly, particularly on the Kuban plains, where cavalry from both sides could manoeuvre freely.[16]

Trade with Circassia could not be prevented, however, and both the Turkish and the English supplied Circassia with firearms and ammunition with which to fight the Russians. England also supplied several advisors, while Turkey attempted to persuade Circassia to start a Holy War, which would draw support from other nations.[citation needed] In 1836, the Russian navy captured an English merchant ship supplying ammunition to the Circassians.[17][18]

Tsar Nicolas I

At this time, the current Russian Tsar, Nicholas I, ordered construction to begin on the coastline, by building fortresses at every point on the captured Black Sea coast that was able to accommodate Russian naval vessels.[19] Cape Adler was one of these locations. On 3 June 1837, Russian naval forces under the command Rear-Admiral Esmont, with troops commanded by General Volkhovski, began to head towards Cape Adler, arriving on 6 June. A Russian commander, Baron Rosen, sent a scout ship to locate a place for landing, but it was driven back by Circassian defenders.[citation needed]

On 7 June 1837, General Volkhovski landed at Cape Adler and entered a nearby forest, through which Circassian defenders had retreated after being bombarded by the Russian ships. In the dense forest, however, the Circassian defenders quietly approached the Russian positions and attacked. They were driven back, but the pursuing Russian forces ran into more Circassian defenders, and the messengers sent back for instructions were found by Circassian parties and killed. The Russians were then engaged in hand-to-hand combat with their enemy, and only after the late arrival of reinforcements managed to push the Circassians back and secure Cape Adler. Later that year, Nicholas I visited the area to see the situation for himself.[citation needed]

On 13 April 1838, Russian forces engaged the Circassian army in the estuary of River Sochi, and on 12 May 1838 the Russians landed at Tuapse. The majority of engagements during this part of the conflict took place in the form of either amphibious landings on coastal towns in accordance with the Tsar's directive to secure possible ports, or by routing out Circassian forces entrenched in mountain strongholds. At Tuapse, one of the fiercest battles of the conflict, the Russian landing had begun at 10:00 in the morning, and the Circassians were not beaten back from their positions until 5:00 in the afternoon, with the Russians suffering heavy casualties.[20][21] On the following day, 13 May, when arriving to request permission to remove their dead from the battlefield, the Circassians were lectured on the benefits of staying under Russian control by the Russian commanders, Colonel Olshevski and Lieutenant Colonel Baron Grach.[22]

The beginning of the end

Later that year, the Russian Tsarevich Alexander III visited the Russian forces. The fall of Gunib and capture of Imam Shamil (or Schamyl[23]), a rebel religious leader, by Dmitry Milyutin in 1859, marked the final conquest of the eastern part of the north Caucasus (specifically, of Chechnya and Dagestan). This freed the Russian forces that had fought there to join the hostilities in Circassia. Between 1856 and 1859, two defensive lines were built to contain the remaining hostile tribes, the Adagumski Line and the Belorechenski Line. In May 1859, elders from the Bjedughs negotiated a peace with Russia and submitted to the Tsar, with the oath of loyalty to the Tsar being taken at assembly points beyond the Kuban River. The surviving Circassian leaders saw little chance in resisting against the economic and military superiority of Russia. Many of the remaining tribes soon submitted to the Russians, including the Abadzekhs on 20 November 1859.[24] The remaining Ubykhs were killed or forced to flee into the Ottoman Empire.[25] The Caucasian War, which had grown out of the Russian-Circassian War, ended on 2 June 1864 (21 May 1864 (O.S.)), in Kbaada, a village populated by the Akhchipsou tribe of Abazins, as declared by the Tsar's manifesto. Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia, overall commander of Russian forces in the region, recognized this as the “conquest of the Western Caucasus and the end of the Caucasian War.”[citation needed]

Consequences of the conflict

Civilian casualties

Towards the end of the conflict, Russian General Yevdokimov was tasked with driving the remaining Circassian inhabitants out of the region, primarily into the Ottoman Empire. This policy was enforced by mobile columns of Russian riflemen and Cossack cavalry. [26] [27] [28] "In a series of sweeping military campaigns lasting from 1860 to 1864 . . . the northwest Caucasus and the Black Sea coast were virtually emptied of Muslim villagers. Columns of the displaced were marched either to the Kuban [River] plains or toward the coast for transport to the Ottoman Empire . . . . One after another, entire Circassian tribal groups were dispersed, resettled, or killed en masse"[29] Such tactics had been in use for a number of years. Count Leo Tolstoy, the future author of War and Peace, saw action in the war in 1850-51. He described how "It had been the cutom to rush the auls [mountain villages] by night, when, taken by surprise, the women and children had no time to escape, and the horrors that ensued under the cover of darkness when the Russian soldiers made their way by twos and threes into the houses were such as no official narrator dared describe"[30] Similar atrocities committed in the final campaign of 1859-1864 were recorded by contemporary Russian observers and British consuls.[31] A consul Dickson recounted in an 1864 dispatch: "A Russian detachment having captured the village of Toobah on the Soobashi river, inhabited by about a hundred Abadzekh [a tribe of Circassians], and after these had surrendered themselves prisoners, they were all massacred by the Russian Troops. Among the victims were two women in an advanced state of pregnancy and five children. The detachment in question belongs to Count Evdokimoff's Army, and is said to have advanced from the Pshish valley. As the Russian troops gain ground on the [Black Sea] Coast, the natives are not allowed to remain there on any terms, but are compelled either to transfer themselves to the plains of the Kouban or emigrate to Turkey".[32]

This expulsion, along with the actions of the Russian military in acquiring Circassian land,[33] has given rise to a movement among descendants of the expelled ethnicities for international recognition that genocide was perpetrated.[34] In 1840, Karl Friedrich Neumann estimated the Circassian casualties to be around one and a half million.[35] Some sources state that hundreds of thousands of others died during the exodus.[36] Several historians use the term, 'Circassian massacres'[37] and the consequences of Russian actions in the region.[38]

Circassian historians cite casualty figures that lie near the four million mark, while official Russian figures are near 300,000. If Neumann's estimations were correct, it would make it the largest civilian death toll of the 19th century,[39] and indeed, the Russian census of 1897 records only 150,000 Circassians, one tenth of the original number, still remaining in the now conquered region[40] In reference to the actions of the Russian army during the conflict, Russian President Boris Yeltsin stated in May 1994 that resistance to the tsarist forces was legitimate; however, he did not recognize "the guilt of the tsarist government for the genocide."[41]

In October 2006, the Adyghe (Circassian) organizations of Russia, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Syria, the USA, Belgium, Canada and Germany sent the president of the European Parliament a letter with the request to recognize the genocide against the Adyghe people.[42][43]

Migration

Some sources state that three million Circassians were evicted from Circassia in a period lasting until 1911.[44] Other sources cite upwards of two million Circassian refugees fleeing Circassia by 1914 and entering nations and regions such as the Balkans, Turkey, what was the Ottoman Empire in what was known as the Muhajir, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Kosovo, Egypt (Circassians were part of the Mamluk armies since the Middle Ages), Israel (in the villages of Kfar Kama and Rikhaniya, since 1880) and as far afield as upstate New York and New Jersey. A map here depicts the routes taken by Circassian refugees and the recipient countries.

According to historians who support the concept of a Circassian genocide, 90 percent of people with Circassian descent now live in other countries, primarily in Turkey, Jordan and other countries of the Middle East, with only 300,000–400,000 remaining in what is now Russia.[45] The depopulated Circassian lands were resettled by numerous ethnic groups, including Russians, Ukrainians and Georgians.[46] Friction developed between the latter group and the remaining indigenous people in Abkhazia, a factor later contributing to friction between the two ethnic groups and the resulting War in Abkhazia.[47]

Citations and notes

  1. ^ Mackie 1856:291
  2. ^ Mackie 1856:292
  3. ^ McCarthy 1995:53, fn. 45
  4. ^ King 2008:96
  5. ^ Henze 1992
  6. ^ Henze 1992
  7. ^ Shenfield 1999
  8. ^ King 2008:96
  9. ^ Shenfield 1999:150
  10. ^ Baddeley 1908:123
  11. ^ Baddeley 1908:74
  12. ^ Baddeley 1908:92
  13. ^ Baddeley 1908:73
  14. ^ Baddeley 1908:135
  15. ^ Henze 1992.
  16. ^ Karpat 1985.
  17. ^ Baddeley 1908:344
  18. ^ Henze 1992.
  19. ^ Mackie 1856:208
  20. ^ Mackie 1856:207
  21. ^ Baddeley 1908:313
  22. ^ Mackie 1856:207
  23. ^ Mackie 1856:1
  24. ^ Mackie 1856:275
  25. ^ Baddeley 1908:458
  26. ^ Levene 2005:297
  27. ^ Richmond, Chapter 4
  28. ^ King 2008:94-96
  29. ^ King 2008:94-96
  30. ^ Baddeley 1908:446
  31. ^ King 2008:94-96
  32. ^ Cited in McCarthy 1995:34
  33. ^ Shenfield 1999
  34. ^ UNPO 2006.
  35. ^ Neumann 1840
  36. ^ Shenfield 1999
  37. ^ Levene 2005:299
  38. ^ Levene 2005:302
  39. ^ Leitzinger 2000
  40. ^ UNPO 2004
  41. ^ Goble 2005.
  42. ^ Goble 2005.
  43. ^ UNPO 2006.
  44. ^ Karpat 1985.
  45. ^ Shenfield 1999
  46. ^ Shenfield 1999
  47. ^ Shenfield 1999

References

  • Baddeley, John F. 1908. The Russian conquest of the Caucasus. London: Longmans, Green and Co. ISBN 0700706348
  • Goble, Paul. 2005. Circassians demand Russian apology for 19th century genocide. Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, 15 July 2005, 8(23).
  • Henze, Paul B. 1992. Circassian resistance to Russia. In Marie Bennigsen Broxup, ed., The North Caucasus Barrier: The Russian Advance Towards The Muslim World. London: C Hurst & Co, 266 pp. (Also New York: St. Martin's Press, 252 pp.) Part of it can be found here, retrieved on 11 March 2007.
  • Karpat, Kemal H. 1985. Ottoman population, 1830-1914 : demographic and social characteristics. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Levene, Mark. 2005. Genocide in the age of the nation state. London; New York: I.B. Tauris.
  • King, Charles. 2008. The ghost of freedom: a history of the Caucasus. Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Mackie, J[ohn] Milton. 1856. Life of Schamyl: and narrative of the Circassian War of independence against Russia. ISBN 1425529968
  • McCarthy, Justin. 1995. Death and exile: the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Muslims 1821-1922. Princeton, NJ: Darwin. Chapter 2: Eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus.
  • Neumann, Karl Friedrich. 1840. Russland und die Tscherkessen. Stuttgart und Tübingen: J. G. Cotta. In PDF through Google Books
  • Richmond, Walter. 2008. The Northwest Caucasus: Past, Present, Future. Routledge. Excerpt of Chapter 4.
  • Shenfield, Stephen D. 1999. The Circassians: a forgotten genocide?. In Levene, Mark and Penny Roberts, eds., The massacre in history. Oxford and New York: Berghahn Books. Series: War and Genocide; 1. 149-162.
  • Unrepresented Nations and People Organisation (UNPO). 2004. The Circassian Genocide, 2004-12-14.
  • Ibid. 2006. Circassia: Adygs Ask European Parliament to Recognize Genocide, 2006-10-16.

Further reading

Printed matter:

  • The Annual Register. 1836. United Kingdom
  • Butkov, P.G. 1869. Materials for New History of the Caucasus 1722–1803.
  • Jaimoukha, A., The Circassians: A Handbook, London: RoutledgeCurzon; New York; Routledge and Palgrave, 2001.
  • Khodarkovsky, Michael. 2002. Russia's steppe frontier : the making of a colonial empire, 1500-1800. Bloomington : Indiana University Press. Series: Indiana-Michigan series in Russian and East European studies.
  • Leitzinger, Antero. 2000. The Circassian Genocide. In The Eurasian Politician, 2000 October 2000, Issue 2.

Websites: