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Andranik

Andranik Ozanian,[B] commonly known as General Andranik[4][C] or simply Andranik;[D] 25 February 1865 – 31 August 1927),[E] was an Armenian military commander and statesman, the best known fedayi[1][5][7] and a key figure of the Armenian national liberation movement.[8] From the late 19th century to the early 20th century, he was one of the main Armenian leaders of military efforts for the independence of Armenia.

Andranik
General Andranik Ozanian, wearing his uniform and medals with a papakha hat
Nickname(s)Andranik pasha[1]
Born(1865-02-25)25 February 1865
Shabin-Karahisar, Ottoman Empire
Died31 August 1927(1927-08-31) (aged 62)
Richardson Springs, California, U.S.
Buried
Ararat Cemetery (1927–28)
Père Lachaise (1928–2000)
Yerablur (2000–present)
Allegiance Dashnaktsutyun (1892–1907)
Bulgaria (1912–13)
 Russian Empire (1914–16)
Armenian paramilitaries (1917–19)
Years of service1888–1904 (fedayi)
1912–13 (Bulgaria)
1914–16 (WWI)
1917–19 (Armenia)
RankCommander of the fedayi (1899–1904)[2]
First lieutenant (Bulgaria)
Major-general (Russia)[A]
Commander of the Western Armenian division of the Armenian Army Corps (1918)
Commander of the Special Striking Division (1919)
WarsArmenian National Liberation Movement
Sasun Uprising
First Balkan War
World War I Armenian–Azerbaijani War
Awardssee below
Signature

He became active in an armed struggle against the Ottoman government and Kurdish irregulars in the late 1880s. Andranik joined the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktustyun) party and, along with other fedayi (militias), sought to defend the Armenian peasantry living in their ancestral homeland, an area known as Western (or Turkish) Armenia—at the time part of the Ottoman Empire. His revolutionary activities ceased and he left the Ottoman Empire after the unsuccessful uprising in Sasun in 1904. In 1907, Andranik left Dashnaktustyun because he disapproved of its cooperation with the Young Turks, a party which years later perpetrated the Armenian genocide. Between 1912 and 1913, together with Garegin Nzhdeh, Andranik led a few hundred Armenian volunteers within the Bulgarian army against the Ottomans during the First Balkan War.

From the early stages of World War I, Andranik commanded the first Armenian volunteer battalion within the Russian Imperial army against the Ottoman Empire, capturing and later governing much of the traditional Armenian homeland. After the Revolution of 1917, the Russian army retreated and left the Armenian irregulars outnumbered against the Turks. Andranik led the defense of Erzurum in early 1918, but was forced to retreat eastward. By May 1918, Turkish forces stood near Yerevan—the future Armenian capital—and were halted at the Battle of Sardarabad. The Dashnak-dominated Armenian National Council declared the independence of Armenia and signed the Treaty of Batum with the Ottoman Empire, by which Armenia gave up its rights to Western Armenia. Andranik never accepted the existence of the First Republic of Armenia because it included only a small part of the area many Armenians hoped to make independent. Andranik, independently from the Republic of Armenia, fought in Zangezur against the Azerbaijani and Turkish armies, and helped to keep it within Armenia.[9]

Andranik left Armenia in 1919 due to disagreements with the Armenian government and spent his last years of life in Europe and the United States seeking relief for Armenian refugees. He settled in Fresno, California in 1922 and died five years later in 1927. Andranik is greatly admired as a national hero by Armenians; numerous statues of him have been erected in several countries. Streets and squares were named after Andranik, and songs, poems and novels have been written about him, making him a legendary figure in Armenian culture.[10]

Early life

 
Undated photo of Andranik. The text on the flag is from a Mikayel Nalbandian poem, "The Song of an Italian Girl", which became Armenia's national anthem): "Death is the same everywhere / A man dies but once / Blessed is the one that dies / For the freedom of his nation."

Andranik Ozanian was born on 25 February 1865,[11] in the town of Shabin-Karahisar (Şebinkarahisar), Sivas Vilayet, Ottoman Empire, to Mariam and Toros Ozanian.[12] Andranik means "firstborn" in Armenian. His paternal ancestors came from the nearby village of Ozan (now Ozanlı) in the early 18th century and settled in Shabin-Karahisar to avoid persecution from the Turks.[12] His ancestors took the surname Ozanian in honor of their hometown. Andranik's mother died when he was one year old and his elder sister Nazeli took care of him. Andranik went to the local Musheghian School from 1875 to 1882 and thereafter worked in his father's carpentry shop.[13] He married at the age of 17, but his wife died a year later while giving birth to their son—who also died days after the birth.[12]

The situation of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire had worsened under the reign of Abdul Hamid II, who sought to unify all Muslims under his rule.[14] In 1882, Andranik was arrested for assaulting a Turkish gendarme for mistreating Armenians. With the help of his friends, he escaped from prison. He settled in the Ottoman capital Constantinople in 1884 and stayed there until 1886, working as a carpenter.[15] He began his revolutionary activities in 1888 in the province of Sivas.[16][17] Andranik joined the Hunchak party in 1891.[18] He was arrested in 1892 for taking part in the assassination of Constantinople's police chief, Yusup Mehmet Bey—known for his anti-Armenianism—on 9 February.[19] Andranik once again escaped from prison.[15] In 1892, he joined the newly created Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF or Dashnaktsutyun).[16][17] During the Hamidian massacres, Andranik with other fedayi defended the Armenian villages of Mush and Sasun from attacks of the Turks and the Kurdish Hamidiye units.[17][20] The massacres, which occurred between 1894 and 1896 and are named after Sultan Abdul Hamid II, killed between 80,000 and 300,000 people.[21]

In 1897, Andranik went to Tiflis—the largest city of the Caucasus and a major center of Armenian culture at the time—where the ARF headquarters was located.[17] Andranik returned to Turkish Armenia "entrusted with extensive powers, and with a large supply of arms" for the fedayi.[20] Several dozen Russian Armenians joined him, with whom he went to the Mush-Sasun area where Aghbiur Serob was operating.[22] Serob's forces had already established semi-independent Armenian areas by expelling the Ottoman government representatives.[8]

Leader of the fedayi

 
Andranik on his horse, early 1900s

Aghbiur Serob, the main leader of the fedayi in the 1890s, was killed in 1899 by a Kurdish chieftain, Bushare Khalil Bey.[17] Months later, Bey committed further atrocities against the Armenians by killing a priest, two young men and 25 women and children in Talvorik, a village in the Sasun region.[22] Andranik replaced Serob as the head of the Armenian irregular forces "with 38 villages under his command" in the Mush-Sasun region of Western Armenia,[8] where a "warlike semi-independent Armenian peasantry" lived.[17] Andranik sought to kill Bey; he captured and reportedly decapitated the chieftain, and took the medal given to Bey by Sultan Abdul Hamid II.[22][23][20] Andranik thus earned an undisputed authority among his fedayi.[24]

Although small groups of Armenian fedayi conducted an armed struggle against the Ottoman state and the Kurdish tribes, the situation in Western Armenia deteriorated as the European powers stood indifferent to the Armenian Question. Article 61 of the 1878 Treaty of Berlin intended the Ottoman government to "carry out, without further delay, the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by the Armenians, and to guarantee their security against the Circassians and Kurds" remained unimplemented.[25] According to Christopher J. Walker, the attention of the European powers was on Macedonia, while Russia was "in no mood for reactivating the Armenian question."[26]

 
The New York Times report on the battle

Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery

In November 1901 the fedayi clashed with the Ottoman troops in what later became known as the Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery. One of the best-known episodes of Andranik's revolutionary activities, it was an attempt by the Ottoman government to suppress his activities. Since Andranik had gained more influence over the region, more than 5,000 Turkish soldiers were sent after him and his band. The Turks chased and eventually circled him and his men, numbering around 50, at the Arakelots (Holy Apostles) Monastery in early November. A regiment under the command of Ferikh Pasha and Ali Pasha besieged the fort-like monastery. The Turkish generals leading the army of twelve hundred men asked the fedayi to negotiate their surrender.[27]

After weeks of resistance and negotiations—in which Armenian clergy and the headman of Mush and foreign consuls took part—Andranik and his companions left the monastery and fled in small groups. According to Leon Trotsky, Andranik—dressed in the uniform of a Turkish officer—"went the rounds of the entire guard, talking to them in excellent Turkish," and "at the same time showing the way out to his own men."[17][28] After breaking through the siege of the monastery, Andranik gained legendary stature among provincial Armenians.[4][29] He became so popular that the men he led came to refer to him always by his first name.[30] Andranik intended to attract the attention of the foreign consuls at Mush to the plight of the Armenian peasants and to provide hope for the oppressed Armenians of the eastern provinces.[30] According to Trotsky, Andranik's "political thinking took shape in a setting of Carbonarist activity and diplomatic intrigue."[20]

1904 Sasun uprising and exodus

In 1903, Andranik demanded the Ottoman government stop the harassment of Armenians and implement reforms in the Armenian provinces.[31] Most fedayi were concentrated in the mountainous region of Sasun, an area of about 12,000 km2 (4,600 sq mi) with an overwhelming Armenian majority—1,769 Armenian and 155 Kurdish households—which was traditionally considered their main operational area.[32] The region was in "a state of revolutionary turmoil" because the local Armenians had refused to pay taxes for the past seven years.[8][33] Andranik and tens of other fedayi—including Hrayr and Sebouh—held a meeting at Gelieguzan village in the third quarter of 1903 to manage the future defense of the Armenian villages from possible Turkish and Kurdish attacks. Andranik suggested a widespread uprising of the Armenians of Taron and Vaspurakan; Hrayr opposed his view and suggested a small, local uprising in Sasun, because the Armenian irregulars lacked resources. Hrayr's suggestion was eventually approved by the fedayi meeting. Andranik was chosen as the main commander of the uprising.[34][33]

 
The location of the Sasun uprising (orange) and the Bitlis Vilayet (yellow).

The first clashes took place in January 1904 between the fedayi and Kurdish irregulars supported by the Ottoman government.[34] The Turkish offensive started in early April with an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 soldiers and 7,000 Kurdish irregulars put against 100 to 200 Armenian fedayi and 700 to 1,000 local Armenian men.[35][36] Hrayr was killed during the intense fighting; Andranik survived and resumed the fight.[37] Between 7,000 and 10,000 Armenian civilians were killed during the two months of the uprising, while about 9,000 were left homeless.[38] Around 4,000 Sasun villagers were forced into exile after the uprising.[35]

After weeks of fighting and cannon bombardment of the Armenian villages,[35] the Ottoman forces and Kurdish irregulars suppressed the uprising by May 1904; they outnumbered the Armenian forces several times.[8][38] Minor clashes occurred thereafter.[38] According to Christopher J. Walker, the fedayi came "near to organising an uprising and shaking Ottoman power in Armenia," but "even then it was unthinkable that the empire would lose any of her territory, since the idea of intervention was far from Russia."[26] Trotsky wrote that international attention was on the Russo-Japanese War and the uprising went largely unnoticed by the European powers and Russia.[35]

In July–August 1904, Andranik and his fedayi reached Lake Van and got to Aghtamar Island with sailing ships.[39][35] They escaped to Persia via Van in September 1904,[39] "leaving little more than a heroic memory."[8] Trotsky states that they were forced to leave Turkish Armenia to avoid further killings of Armenians and to lower the tensions,[35] while Tsatur Aghayan wrote that Andranik left the Ottoman Empire because he sought to "gather new resources and find practical programs" for the Armenian struggle.[15]

Immigration and conflict with the ARF

 
Andranik in the Bulgarian army, c. 1913

From Persia, Andranik moved to the Caucasus,[17] where he met the Armenian leaders in Baku and Tiflis. He then left Russia and traveled to Europe, where he was engaged in advocacy in support of the Armenians' national liberation struggle.[15][39] In 1906 in Geneva, he published a book on military tactics.[40] Most of the work was about his activities and the strategies he used during the 1904 Sasun uprising.[29]

In February–March 1907, Andranik went to Vienna to participate in the fourth ARF Congress. The ARF, which had been collaborating with Turkish émigré political groups in Europe since 1902, discussed and approved the negotiations with the Young Turks—who later perpetrated the Armenian genocide—to overthrow Sultan Abdul Hamid II. Andranik strongly denounced this cooperation and left the party.[8][41] In 1908, the ARF asked Andranik to move to Constantinople and nominate his candidacy in the Ottoman parliament election, but he declined the offer, saying "I don't want to sit there and do nothing."[11][42] Andranik distanced himself from active political and military affairs for several years.

First Balkan War

 
Armenian volunteers under Andranik during the Balkan War

In 1907 Andranik settled in Sofia, where he met the leaders of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization—including revolutionary Boris Sarafov—and the two pledged to work jointly for the oppressed peoples of Armenia and Macedonia.[35][43] During the First Balkan War (1912–13), Andranik led a company of 230 Armenian volunteers— part of the Macedonian-Adrianopolitan Volunteer Corps of Aleksandar Protogerov within the Bulgarian army—against the Ottoman Empire.[17][44][45] He shared the command with Garegin Nzhdeh.[46] On the opposite side, approximately 8,000 Armenians fought for the Ottoman Empire.[47] Andranik was given the rank of a first lieutenant by the Bulgarian government.[39] He distinguished himself in several battles, including in the Battle of Merhamli, when he helped the Bulgarians to capture Turkish commander Yaver Pasha.[48][49] Andranik was honored with the Order of Bravery by General Protogerov in 1913.[49][50] However, Andranik disbanded his men in May 1913,[51] and foreseeing the war between Bulgaria and Serbia he "retired to a village near Varna, and lived as a farmer until August 1914."[39]

World War I

 
Andranik as the commander of the first Armenian volunteer battalion
 
Andranik with his men during World War I

With the outbreak of World War I in July 1914 between Russia, France and Britain on one side and Germany, the Ottoman Empire and Austria on the other, Andranik left Bulgaria for Russia.[17] He was appointed the commander of the first Armenian volunteer battalion by the Russian government. From November 1914 to August 1915, Andranik took part in the Caucasus Campaign as the head commander of the first Armenian battalion of about 1,200 volunteers within the Imperial Russian Army.[52][49] Andranik's battalion particularly stood out at the Battle of Dilman in April 1915.[17] By the victory at Dilman, the Russian and Armenian forces under the command of General Nazarbekian, effectively stopped the Turks from invading the Caucasus via Iranian Azerbaijan.[49][53]

Through 1915, the Armenian genocide was underway in the Ottoman Empire.[53] By the end of the war, virtually all Armenians living in their ancestral homeland were either dead or forced into exile by the Ottoman government. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died in the process, ending the Armenian presence in Western Armenia.[54][55] The only major resistance to the Turkish atrocities took place in Van.[56] The Turkish army besieged the city but the local Armenians, under the leadership of Aram Manukian, kept them out until the Armenian volunteers reached Van, forcing the Turks to retreat.[57] Andranik with his unit entered Van on 19 May 1915.[53] Andranik subsequently helped the Russian army to take control of Shatakh, Moks and Tatvan on the southern shore of Lake Van.[58] During the summer of 1915, the Armenian volunteer units disintegrated and Andranik went to Tiflis to recruit more volunteers and continued the combat from November 1915 until March 1916.[57] With Andranik's support, the city of Mush was captured by Russians in February 1916.[58] In recognition of lieutenant general Theodore G. Chernozubov, the successes of Russian army in numerous locations were significantly associated with the fighting of the first Armenian battalion, headed by Andranik. Chernozubov praised Andranik as a brave and experienced chief, who well understood the combat situation; Chernozubov described him as always at the head of militia, enjoying great prestige among the volunteers.[59]

The situation drastically changed in 1916 when the Russian government ordered the Armenian volunteer units to be demobilized and prohibited any Armenian civic activity.[56] Andranik resigned as the commander of the first Armenian battalion.[57] Despite the earlier Russian promises, their plan for the region was to make Western Armenia an integral part of Russia and "possibly repopulate by Russian peasants and Cossacks."[60] Richard Hovannisian wrote that because the "Russian armies were in firm control of most of the Armenian plateau by the summer of 1916, there was no longer any need to expend niceties upon the Armenians."[61] According to Tsatur Aghayan, Russia used the Armenian volunteers for its own interests.[57] Andranik and other Armenian volunteers, disappointed by the Russian policy, left the front in July 1916.[57]

Russian Revolution and Turkish reoccupation

 
The greatest extent of the Russian occupation of Turkish Armenia during World War I, September 1917. The area was reoccupied by the Turks between February and April 1918.

The February Revolution was positively accepted by the Armenians because it ended the autocratic rule of Nicholas II.[59] The Special Transcaucasian Committee (known as OZAKOM) was set up in the South Caucasus by the Russian Provisional Government.[61] In April 1917, Andranik initiated the publication of the newspaper Hayastan (Armenia) in Tiflis.[59][62] Vahan Totovents became the editor of this non-partisan, Ottoman Armenian-orientated newspaper.[63] Until December 1917, Andranik remained in the South Caucasus where he sought to help the Armenian refugees from the Ottoman Empire in their search for basic needs.[57] The provisional government decree of 9 May 1917 put Turkish Armenia under civil administration, with Armenians holding key positions. About 150,000 local Armenians began to rebuild devastated Turkish Armenia; however the Russian army units gradually disintegrated and many soldiers deserted and returned to Russia.[61]

After the 1917 October Revolution, the chaotic retreat of Russian troops from Western Armenia escalated.[64] Bolshevik Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Armistice of Erzincan on 5 December 1917, ending the hostilities. The Soviet Russian government formally acknowledged the right of self-determination of the Ottoman Armenians in January 1918, but on 3 March 1918, Russia signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with the Central Powers, ceding Western Armenia and large areas in Eastern Europe to concentrate its forces against the Whites in the Russian Civil War.[65]

In December 1917, because the Russian divisions were deserting the region en masse, the Russian command authorized the formation of the Armenian Army Corps under the Transcaucasian Commissariat. Under the command of General Nazarbekian, the Corps was positioned in the front line from Van to Erzincan—a city of around about 20,000 people. Two of the Corps' three divisions were made up of Russian Armenians, while Andranik commanded the Turkish (Western) Armenian division.[66] The Georgian forces patrolled the area between Erzincan and the Black Sea. Hovannisian states that the only "several thousand men now defended a 300-mile front formerly secured by a half million Russian regulars."[67] Since December 1917, Andranik commanded the Armenian forces in Erzurum. In January 1918, he was appointed commander of the Western Armenian division of the Armenian Army Corps and given the rank of major-general by the Caucasus Front command.[3][11] Andranik was unable to defend Erzurum for long and the outnumbering Turks captured the city on 12 March 1918, forcing the Armenians to evacuate.[66][17]

While the Transcaucasian delegation and the Turks were holding a conference in Trebizond, through March and April the Turkish forces, according to Walker, "overran the temporary establishment of Armenian rule in Turkish Armenia, extinguishing the hope so recently raised."[66] Hovannisian wrote, "the battle for Turkish Armenia had been quickly decided; the struggle for Russian Armenia was now at hand."[68] After the Turks captured Erzurum, the largest city in Turkish Armenia, Andranik retreated through Kars, passed through Alexandropol and Jalaloghly, and arrived in Dsegh by 18 May.[11][69] By early April 1918, the Turkish forces had reached the pre-war international borders.[68] Andranik and his unit in Dsegh were not able to take part in the battles of Sardarabad, Abaran and Karakilisa.[69]

First Republic of Armenia

 
Republic of Armenia delegation to the United States. Andranik is second from the bottom right.

After the Ottoman forces were effectively stopped at Sardarabad, the Armenian National Council declared the independence of the Russian Armenian lands on 28 May 1918. Andranik condemned this move and denounced the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.[70] Angry with the Dashnaks, he favored good relations with Bolshevik Russia instead.[17][69] Andranik refused to acknowledge the Republic of Armenia, which he regarded as little more than "a pawn in the grip of [Ottoman] Turkey․"[71] He condemned the singing of the Treaty of Batum (by which the Ottoman Empire recognized the independence of a greatly reduced Armenia and imposed a number of humiliating conditions) as an act of treason.[71] As Christopher Walker notes, many Turkish Armenians saw the new republic as "only a dusty province without Turkish Armenia whose salvation Armenians had been seeking for 40 years."[72] In early June, Andranik departed from Dilijan with thousands of refugees; they traveled through Sevan, Nor Bayazet and Vayots Dzor, and arrived in Nakhichevan on 17 June.[11] He subsequently tried to help the Armenian refugees from Van at Khoy, Iran. He sought to join the British forces in northern Iran, but after encountering a large number of Turkish soldiers he retreated to Nakhichevan.[11][71] On 14 July 1918, he proclaimed Nakhichevan an integral part of (Soviet) Russia. His move was welcomed by Armenian Bolshevik leader Stepan Shahumyan and Vladimir Lenin.[17][73]

Zangezur

 
Andranik with the commanders of the Special Striking Division in Zangezur, 1918

As the Turkish forces moved towards Nakhichevan, Andranik with his Armenian Special Striking Division moved to the mountainous region of Zangezur to set up a defense.[11] By mid-1918, the relations between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Zangezur had deteriorated.[74] Andranik arrived in Zangezur at a critical moment with around 30,000 refugees and an estimated force of between 3,000 and 5,000 men. He established effective control of the region by September. The role of Zangezur was crucial because it was a connection point between Turkey and Azerbaijan. Under Andranik, the region became one of the last centers of Armenian resistance after the Treaty of Batum.[71]

Andranik's irregulars remained in Zangezur surrounded by Muslim villages that controlled the key routes connecting the different parts of Zangezur.[71] According to Donald Bloxham, Andranik initiated the change of Zangezur into a solidly Armenian land by destroying Muslim villages and trying to ethnically homogenize key areas of the Armenian state.[75] In late 1918, Azerbaijan accused Andranik of killing innocent Azerbaijani peasants in Zangezur and demanded that he withdraw Armenian units from the area. Antranig Chalabian wrote that, "Without the presence of General Andranik and his Special Striking Division, what is now the Zangezur district of Armenia would be party of Azerbaijan today. Without General Andranik and his men, only a miracle could have saved the sixty thousand Armenian inhabitants of the Zangezur district from complete annihilation by the Turko-Tatar forces in the fall of 1918";[76] he further stated that Andranik "did not massacre peaceful Tatars."[77] Andranik's activities in Zangezur were protested by Ottoman general Halil Pasha, who threatened the Dashnak government with retaliation for Andranik's actions. Armenia's Prime Minister Hovhannes Katchaznouni said he had no control over Andranik and his forces.[78]

Karabakh

 
Andranik with the Military Council of Goris, 1918

The Ottoman Empire was officially defeated in the First World War and the Armistice of Mudros was signed on 30 October 1918. The Ottoman forces evacuated Karabakh in November 1918 and by the end of October of that year, Andranik's forces were concentrated between Zangezur and Karabakh. Before moving towards Karabakh, Andranik made sure that the local Armenians would support him in fighting the Azerbaijanis. In mid-November 1918, he received letters from Karabakh Armenian officials asking him to postpone the offensive for 10 days to allow negotiations with the Muslims of the region. According to Hovannisian, "the time lost proved crucial." In late November, Andranik's forces headed towards Shushi—the main city of Karabakh and a major Armenian cultural center. After an intense fight against the local Kurds, his forces broke through Abdallyar (Lachin) and the surrounding villages.[79]

By early December, Andranik was 40 km (25 mi) away from Shushi when he received a message from British General W. M. Thomson in Baku, suggesting that he retreat from Karabakh because the World War was over and any further Armenian military activity would adversely affect the solution of the Armenian question, which was soon to be considered by the 1919 peace conference in Paris.[80] Trusting the British, Andranik returned to Zangezur.[81]

The region was left under limited control of the Armenian Karabakh Council. The British mission under command of Thomson arrived in Karabakh in December 1918. Thomson insisted the council "act only in local, nonpolitical matters," which sparked discontent among the Armenians.[80] An "ardent pan-Turkist" Khosrov bey Sultanov was soon appointed the governor of Karabakh and Zangezur by Thomson to "squash any unrest in the region."[81] Christopher J. Walker wrote that "[Karabakh] with its large Armenian majority remained Azerbaijani throughout the pre-Soviet and Soviet period" because of "Andranik's trust of the word of a British officer."[82]

Departure

 
Andranik with his men and two archbishops in Etchmiadzin just before leaving Armenia, April 1919

During the winter of 1918–19, Zangezur was isolated from Karabakh and Yerevan by snow. The refugees intensified the famine and epidemic conditions and gave way to inflation. In December 1918, Andranik withdrew from Karabakh to Goris. On his way, he met with British officers who suggested the Armenian units stay in Zangezur for the winter. Andranik agreed to such a proposal and on 23 December 1918, a group of Armenian leaders met in a conference and concluded that Zangezur could not cope with the influx of refugees until spring.[83] They agreed that the first logical step in relieving the tension was the reparation of more than 15,000 refugees from Nakhichevan—the adjoining district that had been evacuated by the Ottoman armies.[84] Andranik and the conference called upon the British to provide for the refugees in the interim. Major W. D. Gibbon arrived with limited supplies and money donated by the Armenians of Baku, but this was not enough to support the refugees.[85]

 
Andranik Ozanian and Hovhannes Tumanyan in Tiflis

At the end of February 1919, Andranik was ready to leave Zangezur. Gibbon suggested Andranik and his soldiers leave by Baku-Tiflis railway at Yevlakh station. Andranik rejected this plan and on 22 March 1919, he left Goris and traveled across Sisian through deep snowdrifts to Daralagyaz, then moved to the Ararat plain with his few thousand irregulars.[84] After a three-week march, his men and horses reached the railway station of Davalu. He was met by Dro, the Assistant Minister of Military Affairs and Sargis Manasian, the Assistant Minister of Internal Affairs, who offered to take him to visit Yerevan, but he rejected their invitation as he believed the Dashnak government had betrayed the Armenians and was responsible for the loss of his homeland and the annihilation of his people. Zangezur became more vulnerable to Azerbaijani threats after Andranik left the district. Earlier, before Andranik's and his soldiers' dismissal, the local Armenian forces had requested support from Yerevan.[85]

On 13 April 1919, Andranik reached Etchmiadzin, the seat of Catholicos of All Armenians and the religious center of the Armenians, who helped the troops prepare for disbanding.[86] His 5,000-strong division had dwindled to 1,350 soldiers.[87] As a result of Andranik's disagreements with the Dashnak government and the diplomatic machinations of the British in the Caucasus, Andranik disbanded his division and handed his belongings and weapons to the Catholicos George V.[88] On 27 April 1919, he left Etchmiadzin accompanied by 15 officers, and went to Tiflis on a special train; according to Blackwood, "news of his journey traveled before him. At every station crowds were waiting to get a glimpse of their national hero."[86] He left Armenia for the last time; in Tiflis he met with Georgia's Foreign Minister Evgeni Gegechkori and discussed the Georgian–Armenian War. The Tbilisi-based writer Hovhannes Tumanyan served as their interpreter.[88]

Last years

 
Andranik Ozanian with General Jaques Bagratuni and Hovhannes Katchaznouni and Armenian military personnel in the United States, 1919

From 1919 to 1922, Andranik traveled around Europe and the United States seeking support for the Armenian refugees. He visited Paris and London, where he tried to persuade the Allied powers to occupy Turkish Armenia.[17] In 1919, during his visit to France, Andranik was bestowed the title of Legion of Honor Officier by President Raymond Poincaré.[89][90] In late 1919, Andranik led a delegation to the United States to lobby its support for a mandate for Armenia and fund-raising for the Armenian army.[17][91][92] He was accompanied by General Jaques Bagratuni and Hovhannes Katchaznouni.[93] In Fresno, he directed a campaign which raised US$500,000 for the relief of Armenian war refugees.[94]

 
Andranik's wedding in Paris, 1922

When he returned to Europe, Andranik married Nevarte Kurkjian in Paris on 15 May 1922; Boghos Nubar was their best man.[95] Andranik and Nevarte moved to the United States and settled in Fresno, California in 1922.[96] In his 1936 short story, Antranik of Armenia, Armenian-American writer William Saroyan described Andranik's arrival. He wrote, "It looked as if all Armenians of California were at the Southern Pacific depot at the day he arrived." He said Andranik "was a man of about fifty in a neat Armenians suit of clothes. He was a little under six feet tall, very solid and very strong. He had an old-style Armenian mustache that was white. The expression of his face was both ferocious and kind."[97] Andranik lived with the family of Armen Alchian, who later became a prominent economist, in Fresno for several months.[98]

In his novel Call of the Plowmen («Ռանչպարների կանչը», 1979), where Andranik is called Shapinand, Khachik Dashtents describes his life in Fresno:

After clashing with the leaders of the Araratian Republic and leaving Armenia, Shapinand settled in the city of Fresno, California. The basement of his house was converted into a hotel. His sword, the Mosin–Nagant rifle and his military uniform hung from the wall. This is also where he kept his horse, which he had brought to America on a steamship. Those weapons, that uniform, the grey papakhi, the black boots, and lion-like steed – this was the personal wealth he had come to possess throughout his life. His business no longer had to do with weapons. Shapinand spent his free time making small wooden chairs in his hotel. Many people, refusing to buy the quality American armchairs, bought his simple ones, some for use, others as souvenirs.[99]

Death

 
Andranik's grave in Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris
 
Andranik's grave at Yerablur cemetery

In February 1926, Andranik left Fresno to reside in San Francisco in an unsuccessful attempt to regain his health.[94] According to his death certificate found in the Butte County, California records, Andranik died from angina on 31 August 1927 at Richardson Springs, California.[100][101] On 7 September 1927, citywide public attention was accorded to him for his funeral in the Ararat Cemetery, Fresno.[102] On October 9 more than 2,500 members of the Armenian community attended memorial services at Carnegie Hall in New York.[103]

He was initially buried at Ararat Cemetery in Fresno. After his first funeral, it was planned to take Andranik's remains to Armenia for final burial; however, when they arrived in France, the Soviet authorities refused permission to allow his remains to enter Soviet Armenia.[6][17] Instead they remained in France and, after a second funeral service held in the Armenian Church of Paris, were buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris on 29 January 1928.[104][105] In early 2000, the Armenian and French governments arranged the transfer of Andranik's body from Paris to Yerevan. Asbarez wrote that the transfer was initiated by Armenia's Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan.[106] Andranik's body was moved to Armenia on 17 February 2000.[107] It was placed in the Sport & Concert Complex in Yerevan for two days and was then taken to Etchmiadzin Cathedral, where Karekin II officiated the funeral service.[106] Andranik was re-interred at Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan on 20 February 2000, next to Vazgen Sargsyan.[106][108][109] In his speech during the reburial ceremony, Armenia's President Robert Kocharyan described Andranik as "one of the greatest sons of the Armenian nation."[110] Prime Minister Aram Sargsyan, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, and one of Andranik's soldiers, 102-year-old Grigor Ghazarian, were also in attendance.[111] A memorial was built on his grave with the phrase Zoravar Hayots—"General of the Armenians"—engraved on it.

Legacy and recognition

Public image

"General Andranik, the great Armenian leader, who is our national hero [...] For many years General Andranik kept alive the courage of all Armenians. He promised them freedom and constantly endangered his life to keep up the spirits of my people."

 —Aurora Mardiganian, Ravished Armenia (1918)[112]

Andranik was considered a hero during his lifetime.[113][114] The Literary Digest described Andranik in 1920 as "the Armenian's Robin Hood, Garibaldi, and Washington, all in one."[115] The Independent wrote that he is "worshiped by his countrymen for his heroic fighting in their defense against the Turks."[116] Andranik was praised by the noted Armenian writer Hovhannes Tumanyan,[59] while Armenian Bolshevik Anastas Mikoyan wrote in his memoirs that "the name Andranik was surrounded by halo of glory."[117]

 
General Andranik on the cover of the French magazine L'Image, 1919

Andranik is considered a national hero by Armenians worldwide.[108][118][119] He is also seen as a legendary figure in Armenian culture.[11][120] In a series of polls in 2006–08, Andranik consistently placed second after Vazgen Sargsyan in the list of Armenian national heroes and leaders.[121]

During the Soviet period, his legacy and those of other Armenian national heroes were diminished and "any reference to them would be dangerous since they represented the strive for independence," especially prior to the Khrushchev Thaw.[122] Paruyr Sevak, a prominent Soviet Armenian author, wrote an essay about Andranik in 1963 after reading one of his soldier's notes. Sevak wrote that his generation knew "little about Andranik, almost nothing." He continued, "knowing nothing about Andranik means to know nothing about modern Armenian history."[123] In 1965, Andranik's 100th anniversary was celebrated in Soviet Armenia.[11]

Criticism

Andranik's activities have also attracted occasional criticism. Andranik, generally seen as a pro-Russian (and pro-Soviet) figure,[124][69] was criticized by the scholar-turned-political activist Rafael Ishkhanyan for his constant reliance on Russia.[125] Ishkhanyan characterized Andranik and Hakob Zavriev as leaders of the stream within Armenian political thought unconditionally reliant on Russia. He contrasted them with Aram Manukian and his self-reliant stance.[125] The poet Ruben Angaladyan [hy] spoke out against the erection of Andranik's statue in Yerevan. He opined that Andranik "doesn't have the right" to have a statue in the capital, because he did not do "anything real" for the First Republic and left Armenia. He called Andranik a popular hero and finds calling him a national hero unacceptable.[126]

Memorials

Statues and memorials of Andranik have been erected around the world, including in Bucharest, Romania (1936),[127] Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris (1945), Melkonian Educational Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus (1990),[128] Le Plessis-Robinson, Paris (2005),[129][130] Varna, Bulgaria (2011),[131] and Armavir, Russia.[132][133] A memorial exists in Richardson Springs, California, where Andranik died.[134] In May 2011, a statue of Andranik was erected in Volonka village near Sochi, Russia;[135] however, it was removed the same day, apparently under pressure from Turkey, which earlier announced that they would boycott the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics if the statue remained standing.[136][137]

 
An equestrian statue of Andranik near the Saint Gregory Cathedral in central Yerevan
 
An equestrian statue of Andranik in Gyumri.

The first statue of Andranik in Armenia was erected in 1967 in the village of Ujan.[138][139] Another early statue in Armenia was erected in Voskehask, near Gyumri, in 1969.[140] More statues have been erected after Armenia's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991; three of which can be found in the Armenian capital of Yerevan—in Malatia-Sebastia district (2000); near the St. Gregory Cathedral (by Ara Shiraz, 2002); and outside the Fedayi Movement Museum (2006) in the Armenian capital Yerevan.[141] Elsewhere in Armenia, Andranik's statues stand in Voskevan and Navur villages of Tavush, in Gyumri's Victory Park (1994), Arteni, and Angeghakot, among other places.[142][143][144][145]

Numerous streets and squares both inside and outside Armenia, including in Córdoba, Argentina,[146] Plovdiv[147] and Varna[148] in Bulgaria, Meudon, Paris[149][150] and a section of Connecticut Route 314 state highway running entirely within Wethersfield, Connecticut[151] are named after Andranik. General Andranik Station of the Yerevan Metro was opened in 1989 as Hoktemberyan Station and was renamed for Andranik in 1992.[2][152] In 1995, General Andranik's Museum was founded in Komitas Park of Yerevan, but was soon closed because the building was privatized.[153] It was reopened on 16 September 2006, by Ilyich Beglarian as the Museum of Armenian Fedayi Movement, named after Andranik.[154]

According to Patrick Wilson, during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War Andranik "inspired a new generation of Armenians."[155] A volunteer regiment from Masis named "General Andranik" operated in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh during the conflict.[156]

Many organizations and groups in the Armenian diaspora are named after Andranik.[157][158][159][160] On 11 September 2012, during the Bulgaria vs. Armenia football match in Sofia's Levski National Stadium, Armenian fans brought a giant poster with pictures of General Andranik and Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan, who was murdered in 2004 by Azerbaijani lieutenant Ramil Safarov. The text on the poster read, "Andranik's children are also heroes ... The work will be done."[161] In the Armenian Youth Federation Eastern Region, the Granite City chapter is named "Antranig" in Andranik's honor.

The 65 page manuscripts of General Andranik, the only known memoir written by him, were returned to Armenia in May 2014 and sent to the History Museum of Armenia through Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan, almost a century after Andranik had parted with them.[162]

In culture

 
Lord Kitchener Wants You-influenced poster depicting Andranik. The caption reads "Chase the holy dream of your people."
 
A comic by Stookie Allen depicting Andranik, New York Journal-American, 1920

Andranik has been figured prominently in the Armenian literature, sometimes as a fictional character.[120] The Western Armenian writer Siamanto wrote a poem entitled "Andranik", which was published in Geneva in 1905.[163] The first book about Andranik was published during his lifetime. In 1920, Vahan Totovents, under the pen name Arsen Marmarian, published the book Gen. Andranik and His Wars (Զոր. Անդրանիկ և իր պատերազմները) in Entente-occupied Constantinople.[120] The famed Armenian-American writer William Saroyan wrote a short story titled Antranik of Armenia, which was included in his collection of short stories Inhale and Exhale (1936).[164] Another US-based Armenian writer Hamastegh's novel The White Horseman (Սպիտակ Ձիավորը, 1952) was based on Andranik and other fedayi.[165][166] Hovhannes Shiraz, one of the most prominent Armenian poets of the 20th century, wrote at least two poems about Andranik; one in 1963 and another in 1967. The latter one, titled Statue to Andranik (Արձան Անդրանիկին), was published in 1991 after Shiraz's death.[167] Sero Khanzadyan's novel Andranik was suppressed for years and was published in 1989 when the tight Soviet control over publications was relaxed.[168][169] Between the 1960s and the 1980s, author Suren Sahakyan collected folk stories and completed a novel, "Story about Andranik" (Ասք Անդրանիկի մասին). It was first published in Yerevan in 2008.[170]

Andranik's name has been memorialized in numerous songs.[31] In 1913, Leon Trotsky described Andranik as "a hero of song and legend."[16] Italian diplomat and historian Luigi Villari wrote in 1906 that he met a priest from Turkish Armenia in Erivan who "sang the war-song of Antranik, the leader of Armenian revolutionary bands in Turkey."[171] Andranik is one of the main figures featured in Armenian patriotic songs, performed by Nersik Ispiryan, Harout Pamboukjian and others. There are dozens of songs dedicated to him, including Like an Eagle by gusan Sheram, 1904[172] and Andranik pasha by gusan Hayrik.[173] Andranik also features in the popular song The Bravehearts of the Caucasus (Կովկասի քաջեր) and other pieces of Armenian patriotic folklore.[174]

Several documentaries about Andranik have been produced; these include Andranik (1929) by Armena-Film in France, directed by Asho Shakhatuni, who also played the main role;[175][176] General Andranik (1990) directed by Levon Mkrtchyan, narrated by Khoren Abrahamyan; and Andranik Ozanian, a 53-minute-long documentary by the Public Television of Armenia.[177]

Awards

 
Legion of Honour Officer certificate of Andranik

Through his military career, Andranik was awarded with a number of medals and orders by governments of four countries.[178] Andranik's medals and sword were moved to Armenia and given to the History Museum of Armenia in 2006.[179][180]

Country Award Rank Year
  Kingdom of Bulgaria   Order of Bravery
IV grade,
"For Bravery"
1913[181][50]
  Russian Empire   Order of St. Stanislaus
II class
with Swords
1914–16[182]
  Order of St. Vladimir
IV class
1914–16[182][183]
  Cross of St. George
I, II, III class
1914–16[49][182]
  Order of St. George
II, III, IV classes
1914–16[184][182]
  French Republic   Legion of Honor
Officier
1919[115]
  Kingdom of Greece   War Cross
II class
1920[185][186]

Published works

  • Մարտական հրահանգներ: Առաջարկներ, նկատողութիւններ եւ խորհուրդներ [Combat Commands: Suggestions, Remarks, Recommendations]. Geneva: ARF Press. 1906. OCLC 320038626.[40]
  • Հայկական առանձին հարուածող զօրամասը [The Armenian Special Striking Division]. Boston: Azg. 1921. OCLC 49525413.[187]
  • Զորավար Անդրանիկը կը խոսի [General Andranik Speaks]. Paris: Abaka weekly. 1921. OCLC 234085160.
  • Առաքելոց վանքին կռիւը (Հայ յեղափոխութենէն դրուագ մը) [The Battle of Arakelots (An Episode of Armenian Revolution)]. Boston: Baikar. 1924. Memoirs of Andranik written down by Levon K. Lyulejian.[188]

References

Notes
  1. ^ Andranik was given the rank of a major-general by the command of the Caucasus Front, a formation of the army of the dissolved Russian Republic.[3]
  2. ^ In classical orthography his name is spelled Անդրանիկ Օզանեան and pronounced [ɑntʰɾɑniɡ ɔzɑnjɑn] in Western Armenian. In reformed orthography his name is spelled Անդրանիկ Օզանյան and pronounced [ɑndɾɑnik ɔzɑnjɑn] in Eastern Armenian.
  3. ^ Զօրավար Անդրանիկ in classical spelling, Զորավար Անդրանիկ in reformed, Zoravar Andranik.
  4. ^ Armenian: Անդրանիկ. Also spelled Antranik or Antranig
  5. ^ Some sources mistakenly indicate 1866 as Andranik's date of birth.[5] 1866 is also engraved on his grave in the Père Lachaise Cemetery. Some sources also erroneously indicate 1928 as his date of death, perhaps because Andranik's body was moved to France and reburied there in 1928.[6]
Citations
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Bibliography

  • Trotsky, Leon (1980). "Andranik and his Troop, from Kievskaya Mysl No. 197, July 19, 1913". The Balkan wars: 1912–13: the war correspondence of Leon Trotsky. New York: Monad Press. pp. 247–256. ISBN 978-0-909196-08-0.
  • "Antranik". Blackwood's Magazine. CCVI (206): 441–477. October 1919.
  • Mahdesian, Arshag D., ed. (June 1920). "General Antranik". The New Armenia. New York: New Armenia Publishing Company. 12 (6): 82–85.
  • Haroutyunian, A. H. (1965). "Անդրանիկը որպես մարտիկ և զորավար /Ծննդյան 100-ամյակի առթիվ/ [Andranik as Warrior and Commander]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (1): 109–124.
  • Aghayan, Tsatur (1968). "Զորավար Անդրանիկի գործունեության մասին [On the Activities of General Andranik]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (2): 40–56.
  • Hovannisian, Richard (1971). The Republic of Armenia: Volume 1, The First Years, 1918–1919. Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-01805-2.
  • Chalabian, Antranig (1988). General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement. Southfield, Michigan: Antranig Chalabian.
  • Hambarian, A. S. (1989). "Սասունի 1904 թվականի գոյամարտը [Sasun's Self-Defence in 1904]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (4): 22–34. ISSN 0135-0536.
  • Walker, Christopher J. (1990). Armenia: The Survival of a Nation (revised second ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-04230-1.
  • Kharatian, A. (1990). "Վահան Թոթովենցը Անդրանիկի մասին [Vahan Totovents about Andranik]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (1): 3–14. ISSN 0135-0536.
  • Mouradian, George (1995). Armenian infotext. Southgate, Michigan: Bookshelf Publishers. ISBN 978-0-9634509-2-0.
  • Payaslian, Simon (2007). The history of Armenia. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-7467-9.
  • Chalabian, Antranig (2009). Dro (Drastamat Kanayan): Armenia's First Defense Minister of the Modern Era. Los Angeles: Indo-European Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60444-078-2.
  • Adalian, Rouben Paul (2010). Historical Dictionary of Armenia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7450-3.

Further reading

Articles

  • Nercissian, M.; Harutyunian, A.; Mouradian, D. (1981). "Материалы о генерале Андранике [Documents on General Andranik]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Russian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (1): 242–248. ISSN 0135-0536.
  • Karapetyan, H. (1996). "Անդրանիկ (Andranik)". Հայկական հարց» հանրագիտարան ["Armenian Question" Encyclopedia] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Encyclopedia. ()
  • Hrachik, Simonian (2000). "Զորավար Անդրանիկ (ընդհանուր բնութագիր) [General Andranik (general characteristic)]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (1): 44–50. ISSN 0135-0536.
  • Severikova, N. M. (2007). "Великий сын Отечества: К 80-летию со дня кончины Андраника Сасунского [Great Son of Fatherland: On the 80th anniversary of death of Andranik of Sasun]". Historical Science (in Russian). Massmedia Center of the Moscow State University (6). ISSN 2304-4551.

Books

  • Զօրավար Անդրանիկի կովկասեան ճակատի պատմական օրագրութիւնը 1914–1917 [Historic Timeline of Caucasian Front of General Andranik] (in Armenian). Boston: Baikar. 1924.
  • Aharonyan, Vardges (1957). Անդրանիկ. մարդը եւ ռազմիկը [Andranik: the man and the soldier] (in Armenian). Boston: Hairenik. OCLC 47085812.
  • (PDF) (in Armenian). Beirut, Lebanon: Hamazkayin. 1985. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  • Chalabian, Antranig (1986). Զօրավար Անդրանիկ Եւ Հայ Յեղափոխական Շարժումը [General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement] (in Armenian). Beirut: Donikian Press.
  • Simonian, Hrachik (1988). "Истинный народный герой [The True Popular Hero]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Russian). Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences (3): 12–28. ISSN 0135-0536.
  • Antranig, Chalabian (1990). Զօրավար Անդրանիկ Եւ Հայ Յեղափոխական Շարժումը [General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement] (in Armenian). Yerevan.
  • Garibdzhanian, Gevorg (1990). Ժողովրդական հերոս Անդրանիկ [Andranik the Popular Hero] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Hayastan Publishing. OCLC 26596860.
  • National Archives of Armenia (1991). Андраник Озанян. документы и материалы [Andranik Ozanian: documents and materials] (in Russian). Yerevan.
  • Aghayan, Tsatur (1994). Անդրանիկ. դարաշրջան, դեպքեր, դեմքեր [Andranik: era, events, faces] (in Armenian). Yerevan.
  • Simoyan, Hrachik (1996). Անդրանիկի ժամանակը [Andranik's time] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Kaisa.
  • Aghayan, Tsatur (1997). Андраник и его эпоха [Andranik and his era] (in Armenian). Moscow: Международный гуманитарный фонд арменоведения им. Ц. П. Агояна. ISBN 5-7801-0050-0.
  • Grigoryan, Ashot, ed. (2002–2004). Անդրանիկագիտական Հանդես Andranikological Review (in Armenian). Yerevan.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  • Simonyan, Ruben (2006). Անդրանիկ. Սիբիրական վաշտի ոդիսականը [Andranik: The Siberian company's odyssey] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Voskan Yerevantsi. OCLC 76872489.
  • Andreasyan, Vazken (1982). Անդրանիկ (PDF) (in Armenian). Beirut, Lebanon: Tonikyan.

andranik, other, people, with, name, given, name, ozanian, commonly, known, general, simply, february, 1865, august, 1927, armenian, military, commander, statesman, best, known, fedayi, figure, armenian, national, liberation, movement, from, late, 19th, centur. For other people with the name see Andranik given name Andranik Ozanian B commonly known as General Andranik 4 C or simply Andranik D 25 February 1865 31 August 1927 E was an Armenian military commander and statesman the best known fedayi 1 5 7 and a key figure of the Armenian national liberation movement 8 From the late 19th century to the early 20th century he was one of the main Armenian leaders of military efforts for the independence of Armenia AndranikGeneral Andranik Ozanian wearing his uniform and medals with a papakha hatNickname s Andranik pasha 1 Born 1865 02 25 25 February 1865Shabin Karahisar Ottoman EmpireDied31 August 1927 1927 08 31 aged 62 Richardson Springs California U S BuriedArarat Cemetery 1927 28 Pere Lachaise 1928 2000 Yerablur 2000 present AllegianceDashnaktsutyun 1892 1907 Bulgaria 1912 13 Russian Empire 1914 16 Armenian paramilitaries 1917 19 Years of service1888 1904 fedayi 1912 13 Bulgaria 1914 16 WWI 1917 19 Armenia RankCommander of the fedayi 1899 1904 2 First lieutenant Bulgaria Major general Russia A Commander of the Western Armenian division of the Armenian Army Corps 1918 Commander of the Special Striking Division 1919 WarsArmenian National Liberation MovementSasun UprisingFirst Balkan WarWorld War I Caucasus Campaign Persian CampaignArmenian Azerbaijani WarAwardssee belowSignatureHe became active in an armed struggle against the Ottoman government and Kurdish irregulars in the late 1880s Andranik joined the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktustyun party and along with other fedayi militias sought to defend the Armenian peasantry living in their ancestral homeland an area known as Western or Turkish Armenia at the time part of the Ottoman Empire His revolutionary activities ceased and he left the Ottoman Empire after the unsuccessful uprising in Sasun in 1904 In 1907 Andranik left Dashnaktustyun because he disapproved of its cooperation with the Young Turks a party which years later perpetrated the Armenian genocide Between 1912 and 1913 together with Garegin Nzhdeh Andranik led a few hundred Armenian volunteers within the Bulgarian army against the Ottomans during the First Balkan War From the early stages of World War I Andranik commanded the first Armenian volunteer battalion within the Russian Imperial army against the Ottoman Empire capturing and later governing much of the traditional Armenian homeland After the Revolution of 1917 the Russian army retreated and left the Armenian irregulars outnumbered against the Turks Andranik led the defense of Erzurum in early 1918 but was forced to retreat eastward By May 1918 Turkish forces stood near Yerevan the future Armenian capital and were halted at the Battle of Sardarabad The Dashnak dominated Armenian National Council declared the independence of Armenia and signed the Treaty of Batum with the Ottoman Empire by which Armenia gave up its rights to Western Armenia Andranik never accepted the existence of the First Republic of Armenia because it included only a small part of the area many Armenians hoped to make independent Andranik independently from the Republic of Armenia fought in Zangezur against the Azerbaijani and Turkish armies and helped to keep it within Armenia 9 Andranik left Armenia in 1919 due to disagreements with the Armenian government and spent his last years of life in Europe and the United States seeking relief for Armenian refugees He settled in Fresno California in 1922 and died five years later in 1927 Andranik is greatly admired as a national hero by Armenians numerous statues of him have been erected in several countries Streets and squares were named after Andranik and songs poems and novels have been written about him making him a legendary figure in Armenian culture 10 Contents 1 Early life 2 Leader of the fedayi 2 1 Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery 2 2 1904 Sasun uprising and exodus 3 Immigration and conflict with the ARF 3 1 First Balkan War 4 World War I 4 1 Russian Revolution and Turkish reoccupation 5 First Republic of Armenia 5 1 Zangezur 5 2 Karabakh 5 3 Departure 6 Last years 7 Death 8 Legacy and recognition 8 1 Public image 8 1 1 Criticism 8 2 Memorials 8 3 In culture 9 Awards 10 Published works 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 Further reading 12 1 Articles 12 2 BooksEarly life Edit Undated photo of Andranik The text on the flag is from a Mikayel Nalbandian poem The Song of an Italian Girl which became Armenia s national anthem Death is the same everywhere A man dies but once Blessed is the one that dies For the freedom of his nation Andranik Ozanian was born on 25 February 1865 11 in the town of Shabin Karahisar Sebinkarahisar Sivas Vilayet Ottoman Empire to Mariam and Toros Ozanian 12 Andranik means firstborn in Armenian His paternal ancestors came from the nearby village of Ozan now Ozanli in the early 18th century and settled in Shabin Karahisar to avoid persecution from the Turks 12 His ancestors took the surname Ozanian in honor of their hometown Andranik s mother died when he was one year old and his elder sister Nazeli took care of him Andranik went to the local Musheghian School from 1875 to 1882 and thereafter worked in his father s carpentry shop 13 He married at the age of 17 but his wife died a year later while giving birth to their son who also died days after the birth 12 The situation of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire had worsened under the reign of Abdul Hamid II who sought to unify all Muslims under his rule 14 In 1882 Andranik was arrested for assaulting a Turkish gendarme for mistreating Armenians With the help of his friends he escaped from prison He settled in the Ottoman capital Constantinople in 1884 and stayed there until 1886 working as a carpenter 15 He began his revolutionary activities in 1888 in the province of Sivas 16 17 Andranik joined the Hunchak party in 1891 18 He was arrested in 1892 for taking part in the assassination of Constantinople s police chief Yusup Mehmet Bey known for his anti Armenianism on 9 February 19 Andranik once again escaped from prison 15 In 1892 he joined the newly created Armenian Revolutionary Federation ARF or Dashnaktsutyun 16 17 During the Hamidian massacres Andranik with other fedayi defended the Armenian villages of Mush and Sasun from attacks of the Turks and the Kurdish Hamidiye units 17 20 The massacres which occurred between 1894 and 1896 and are named after Sultan Abdul Hamid II killed between 80 000 and 300 000 people 21 In 1897 Andranik went to Tiflis the largest city of the Caucasus and a major center of Armenian culture at the time where the ARF headquarters was located 17 Andranik returned to Turkish Armenia entrusted with extensive powers and with a large supply of arms for the fedayi 20 Several dozen Russian Armenians joined him with whom he went to the Mush Sasun area where Aghbiur Serob was operating 22 Serob s forces had already established semi independent Armenian areas by expelling the Ottoman government representatives 8 Leader of the fedayi Edit Andranik on his horse early 1900s See also Armenian national liberation movement Aghbiur Serob the main leader of the fedayi in the 1890s was killed in 1899 by a Kurdish chieftain Bushare Khalil Bey 17 Months later Bey committed further atrocities against the Armenians by killing a priest two young men and 25 women and children in Talvorik a village in the Sasun region 22 Andranik replaced Serob as the head of the Armenian irregular forces with 38 villages under his command in the Mush Sasun region of Western Armenia 8 where a warlike semi independent Armenian peasantry lived 17 Andranik sought to kill Bey he captured and reportedly decapitated the chieftain and took the medal given to Bey by Sultan Abdul Hamid II 22 23 20 Andranik thus earned an undisputed authority among his fedayi 24 Although small groups of Armenian fedayi conducted an armed struggle against the Ottoman state and the Kurdish tribes the situation in Western Armenia deteriorated as the European powers stood indifferent to the Armenian Question Article 61 of the 1878 Treaty of Berlin intended the Ottoman government to carry out without further delay the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by the Armenians and to guarantee their security against the Circassians and Kurds remained unimplemented 25 According to Christopher J Walker the attention of the European powers was on Macedonia while Russia was in no mood for reactivating the Armenian question 26 The New York Times report on the battle The Holy Apostles Monastery of Mush Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery Edit In November 1901 the fedayi clashed with the Ottoman troops in what later became known as the Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery One of the best known episodes of Andranik s revolutionary activities it was an attempt by the Ottoman government to suppress his activities Since Andranik had gained more influence over the region more than 5 000 Turkish soldiers were sent after him and his band The Turks chased and eventually circled him and his men numbering around 50 at the Arakelots Holy Apostles Monastery in early November A regiment under the command of Ferikh Pasha and Ali Pasha besieged the fort like monastery The Turkish generals leading the army of twelve hundred men asked the fedayi to negotiate their surrender 27 After weeks of resistance and negotiations in which Armenian clergy and the headman of Mush and foreign consuls took part Andranik and his companions left the monastery and fled in small groups According to Leon Trotsky Andranik dressed in the uniform of a Turkish officer went the rounds of the entire guard talking to them in excellent Turkish and at the same time showing the way out to his own men 17 28 After breaking through the siege of the monastery Andranik gained legendary stature among provincial Armenians 4 29 He became so popular that the men he led came to refer to him always by his first name 30 Andranik intended to attract the attention of the foreign consuls at Mush to the plight of the Armenian peasants and to provide hope for the oppressed Armenians of the eastern provinces 30 According to Trotsky Andranik s political thinking took shape in a setting of Carbonarist activity and diplomatic intrigue 20 1904 Sasun uprising and exodus Edit See also 1904 Sasun uprising In 1903 Andranik demanded the Ottoman government stop the harassment of Armenians and implement reforms in the Armenian provinces 31 Most fedayi were concentrated in the mountainous region of Sasun an area of about 12 000 km2 4 600 sq mi with an overwhelming Armenian majority 1 769 Armenian and 155 Kurdish households which was traditionally considered their main operational area 32 The region was in a state of revolutionary turmoil because the local Armenians had refused to pay taxes for the past seven years 8 33 Andranik and tens of other fedayi including Hrayr and Sebouh held a meeting at Gelieguzan village in the third quarter of 1903 to manage the future defense of the Armenian villages from possible Turkish and Kurdish attacks Andranik suggested a widespread uprising of the Armenians of Taron and Vaspurakan Hrayr opposed his view and suggested a small local uprising in Sasun because the Armenian irregulars lacked resources Hrayr s suggestion was eventually approved by the fedayi meeting Andranik was chosen as the main commander of the uprising 34 33 The location of the Sasun uprising orange and the Bitlis Vilayet yellow The first clashes took place in January 1904 between the fedayi and Kurdish irregulars supported by the Ottoman government 34 The Turkish offensive started in early April with an estimated 10 000 to 20 000 soldiers and 7 000 Kurdish irregulars put against 100 to 200 Armenian fedayi and 700 to 1 000 local Armenian men 35 36 Hrayr was killed during the intense fighting Andranik survived and resumed the fight 37 Between 7 000 and 10 000 Armenian civilians were killed during the two months of the uprising while about 9 000 were left homeless 38 Around 4 000 Sasun villagers were forced into exile after the uprising 35 After weeks of fighting and cannon bombardment of the Armenian villages 35 the Ottoman forces and Kurdish irregulars suppressed the uprising by May 1904 they outnumbered the Armenian forces several times 8 38 Minor clashes occurred thereafter 38 According to Christopher J Walker the fedayi came near to organising an uprising and shaking Ottoman power in Armenia but even then it was unthinkable that the empire would lose any of her territory since the idea of intervention was far from Russia 26 Trotsky wrote that international attention was on the Russo Japanese War and the uprising went largely unnoticed by the European powers and Russia 35 In July August 1904 Andranik and his fedayi reached Lake Van and got to Aghtamar Island with sailing ships 39 35 They escaped to Persia via Van in September 1904 39 leaving little more than a heroic memory 8 Trotsky states that they were forced to leave Turkish Armenia to avoid further killings of Armenians and to lower the tensions 35 while Tsatur Aghayan wrote that Andranik left the Ottoman Empire because he sought to gather new resources and find practical programs for the Armenian struggle 15 Immigration and conflict with the ARF Edit Andranik in the Bulgarian army c 1913 From Persia Andranik moved to the Caucasus 17 where he met the Armenian leaders in Baku and Tiflis He then left Russia and traveled to Europe where he was engaged in advocacy in support of the Armenians national liberation struggle 15 39 In 1906 in Geneva he published a book on military tactics 40 Most of the work was about his activities and the strategies he used during the 1904 Sasun uprising 29 In February March 1907 Andranik went to Vienna to participate in the fourth ARF Congress The ARF which had been collaborating with Turkish emigre political groups in Europe since 1902 discussed and approved the negotiations with the Young Turks who later perpetrated the Armenian genocide to overthrow Sultan Abdul Hamid II Andranik strongly denounced this cooperation and left the party 8 41 In 1908 the ARF asked Andranik to move to Constantinople and nominate his candidacy in the Ottoman parliament election but he declined the offer saying I don t want to sit there and do nothing 11 42 Andranik distanced himself from active political and military affairs for several years First Balkan War Edit Armenian volunteers under Andranik during the Balkan War In 1907 Andranik settled in Sofia where he met the leaders of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization including revolutionary Boris Sarafov and the two pledged to work jointly for the oppressed peoples of Armenia and Macedonia 35 43 During the First Balkan War 1912 13 Andranik led a company of 230 Armenian volunteers part of the Macedonian Adrianopolitan Volunteer Corps of Aleksandar Protogerov within the Bulgarian army against the Ottoman Empire 17 44 45 He shared the command with Garegin Nzhdeh 46 On the opposite side approximately 8 000 Armenians fought for the Ottoman Empire 47 Andranik was given the rank of a first lieutenant by the Bulgarian government 39 He distinguished himself in several battles including in the Battle of Merhamli when he helped the Bulgarians to capture Turkish commander Yaver Pasha 48 49 Andranik was honored with the Order of Bravery by General Protogerov in 1913 49 50 However Andranik disbanded his men in May 1913 51 and foreseeing the war between Bulgaria and Serbia he retired to a village near Varna and lived as a farmer until August 1914 39 World War I Edit Andranik as the commander of the first Armenian volunteer battalion Andranik with his men during World War I With the outbreak of World War I in July 1914 between Russia France and Britain on one side and Germany the Ottoman Empire and Austria on the other Andranik left Bulgaria for Russia 17 He was appointed the commander of the first Armenian volunteer battalion by the Russian government From November 1914 to August 1915 Andranik took part in the Caucasus Campaign as the head commander of the first Armenian battalion of about 1 200 volunteers within the Imperial Russian Army 52 49 Andranik s battalion particularly stood out at the Battle of Dilman in April 1915 17 By the victory at Dilman the Russian and Armenian forces under the command of General Nazarbekian effectively stopped the Turks from invading the Caucasus via Iranian Azerbaijan 49 53 Through 1915 the Armenian genocide was underway in the Ottoman Empire 53 By the end of the war virtually all Armenians living in their ancestral homeland were either dead or forced into exile by the Ottoman government An estimated 1 5 million Armenians died in the process ending the Armenian presence in Western Armenia 54 55 The only major resistance to the Turkish atrocities took place in Van 56 The Turkish army besieged the city but the local Armenians under the leadership of Aram Manukian kept them out until the Armenian volunteers reached Van forcing the Turks to retreat 57 Andranik with his unit entered Van on 19 May 1915 53 Andranik subsequently helped the Russian army to take control of Shatakh Moks and Tatvan on the southern shore of Lake Van 58 During the summer of 1915 the Armenian volunteer units disintegrated and Andranik went to Tiflis to recruit more volunteers and continued the combat from November 1915 until March 1916 57 With Andranik s support the city of Mush was captured by Russians in February 1916 58 In recognition of lieutenant general Theodore G Chernozubov the successes of Russian army in numerous locations were significantly associated with the fighting of the first Armenian battalion headed by Andranik Chernozubov praised Andranik as a brave and experienced chief who well understood the combat situation Chernozubov described him as always at the head of militia enjoying great prestige among the volunteers 59 The situation drastically changed in 1916 when the Russian government ordered the Armenian volunteer units to be demobilized and prohibited any Armenian civic activity 56 Andranik resigned as the commander of the first Armenian battalion 57 Despite the earlier Russian promises their plan for the region was to make Western Armenia an integral part of Russia and possibly repopulate by Russian peasants and Cossacks 60 Richard Hovannisian wrote that because the Russian armies were in firm control of most of the Armenian plateau by the summer of 1916 there was no longer any need to expend niceties upon the Armenians 61 According to Tsatur Aghayan Russia used the Armenian volunteers for its own interests 57 Andranik and other Armenian volunteers disappointed by the Russian policy left the front in July 1916 57 Russian Revolution and Turkish reoccupation Edit The greatest extent of the Russian occupation of Turkish Armenia during World War I September 1917 The area was reoccupied by the Turks between February and April 1918 The February Revolution was positively accepted by the Armenians because it ended the autocratic rule of Nicholas II 59 The Special Transcaucasian Committee known as OZAKOM was set up in the South Caucasus by the Russian Provisional Government 61 In April 1917 Andranik initiated the publication of the newspaper Hayastan Armenia in Tiflis 59 62 Vahan Totovents became the editor of this non partisan Ottoman Armenian orientated newspaper 63 Until December 1917 Andranik remained in the South Caucasus where he sought to help the Armenian refugees from the Ottoman Empire in their search for basic needs 57 The provisional government decree of 9 May 1917 put Turkish Armenia under civil administration with Armenians holding key positions About 150 000 local Armenians began to rebuild devastated Turkish Armenia however the Russian army units gradually disintegrated and many soldiers deserted and returned to Russia 61 After the 1917 October Revolution the chaotic retreat of Russian troops from Western Armenia escalated 64 Bolshevik Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Armistice of Erzincan on 5 December 1917 ending the hostilities The Soviet Russian government formally acknowledged the right of self determination of the Ottoman Armenians in January 1918 but on 3 March 1918 Russia signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk with the Central Powers ceding Western Armenia and large areas in Eastern Europe to concentrate its forces against the Whites in the Russian Civil War 65 In December 1917 because the Russian divisions were deserting the region en masse the Russian command authorized the formation of the Armenian Army Corps under the Transcaucasian Commissariat Under the command of General Nazarbekian the Corps was positioned in the front line from Van to Erzincan a city of around about 20 000 people Two of the Corps three divisions were made up of Russian Armenians while Andranik commanded the Turkish Western Armenian division 66 The Georgian forces patrolled the area between Erzincan and the Black Sea Hovannisian states that the only several thousand men now defended a 300 mile front formerly secured by a half million Russian regulars 67 Since December 1917 Andranik commanded the Armenian forces in Erzurum In January 1918 he was appointed commander of the Western Armenian division of the Armenian Army Corps and given the rank of major general by the Caucasus Front command 3 11 Andranik was unable to defend Erzurum for long and the outnumbering Turks captured the city on 12 March 1918 forcing the Armenians to evacuate 66 17 While the Transcaucasian delegation and the Turks were holding a conference in Trebizond through March and April the Turkish forces according to Walker overran the temporary establishment of Armenian rule in Turkish Armenia extinguishing the hope so recently raised 66 Hovannisian wrote the battle for Turkish Armenia had been quickly decided the struggle for Russian Armenia was now at hand 68 After the Turks captured Erzurum the largest city in Turkish Armenia Andranik retreated through Kars passed through Alexandropol and Jalaloghly and arrived in Dsegh by 18 May 11 69 By early April 1918 the Turkish forces had reached the pre war international borders 68 Andranik and his unit in Dsegh were not able to take part in the battles of Sardarabad Abaran and Karakilisa 69 First Republic of Armenia Edit Republic of Armenia delegation to the United States Andranik is second from the bottom right After the Ottoman forces were effectively stopped at Sardarabad the Armenian National Council declared the independence of the Russian Armenian lands on 28 May 1918 Andranik condemned this move and denounced the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 70 Angry with the Dashnaks he favored good relations with Bolshevik Russia instead 17 69 Andranik refused to acknowledge the Republic of Armenia which he regarded as little more than a pawn in the grip of Ottoman Turkey 71 He condemned the singing of the Treaty of Batum by which the Ottoman Empire recognized the independence of a greatly reduced Armenia and imposed a number of humiliating conditions as an act of treason 71 As Christopher Walker notes many Turkish Armenians saw the new republic as only a dusty province without Turkish Armenia whose salvation Armenians had been seeking for 40 years 72 In early June Andranik departed from Dilijan with thousands of refugees they traveled through Sevan Nor Bayazet and Vayots Dzor and arrived in Nakhichevan on 17 June 11 He subsequently tried to help the Armenian refugees from Van at Khoy Iran He sought to join the British forces in northern Iran but after encountering a large number of Turkish soldiers he retreated to Nakhichevan 11 71 On 14 July 1918 he proclaimed Nakhichevan an integral part of Soviet Russia His move was welcomed by Armenian Bolshevik leader Stepan Shahumyan and Vladimir Lenin 17 73 Zangezur Edit Andranik with the commanders of the Special Striking Division in Zangezur 1918 As the Turkish forces moved towards Nakhichevan Andranik with his Armenian Special Striking Division moved to the mountainous region of Zangezur to set up a defense 11 By mid 1918 the relations between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis in Zangezur had deteriorated 74 Andranik arrived in Zangezur at a critical moment with around 30 000 refugees and an estimated force of between 3 000 and 5 000 men He established effective control of the region by September The role of Zangezur was crucial because it was a connection point between Turkey and Azerbaijan Under Andranik the region became one of the last centers of Armenian resistance after the Treaty of Batum 71 Andranik s irregulars remained in Zangezur surrounded by Muslim villages that controlled the key routes connecting the different parts of Zangezur 71 According to Donald Bloxham Andranik initiated the change of Zangezur into a solidly Armenian land by destroying Muslim villages and trying to ethnically homogenize key areas of the Armenian state 75 In late 1918 Azerbaijan accused Andranik of killing innocent Azerbaijani peasants in Zangezur and demanded that he withdraw Armenian units from the area Antranig Chalabian wrote that Without the presence of General Andranik and his Special Striking Division what is now the Zangezur district of Armenia would be party of Azerbaijan today Without General Andranik and his men only a miracle could have saved the sixty thousand Armenian inhabitants of the Zangezur district from complete annihilation by the Turko Tatar forces in the fall of 1918 76 he further stated that Andranik did not massacre peaceful Tatars 77 Andranik s activities in Zangezur were protested by Ottoman general Halil Pasha who threatened the Dashnak government with retaliation for Andranik s actions Armenia s Prime Minister Hovhannes Katchaznouni said he had no control over Andranik and his forces 78 Karabakh Edit Andranik with the Military Council of Goris 1918 The Ottoman Empire was officially defeated in the First World War and the Armistice of Mudros was signed on 30 October 1918 The Ottoman forces evacuated Karabakh in November 1918 and by the end of October of that year Andranik s forces were concentrated between Zangezur and Karabakh Before moving towards Karabakh Andranik made sure that the local Armenians would support him in fighting the Azerbaijanis In mid November 1918 he received letters from Karabakh Armenian officials asking him to postpone the offensive for 10 days to allow negotiations with the Muslims of the region According to Hovannisian the time lost proved crucial In late November Andranik s forces headed towards Shushi the main city of Karabakh and a major Armenian cultural center After an intense fight against the local Kurds his forces broke through Abdallyar Lachin and the surrounding villages 79 By early December Andranik was 40 km 25 mi away from Shushi when he received a message from British General W M Thomson in Baku suggesting that he retreat from Karabakh because the World War was over and any further Armenian military activity would adversely affect the solution of the Armenian question which was soon to be considered by the 1919 peace conference in Paris 80 Trusting the British Andranik returned to Zangezur 81 The region was left under limited control of the Armenian Karabakh Council The British mission under command of Thomson arrived in Karabakh in December 1918 Thomson insisted the council act only in local nonpolitical matters which sparked discontent among the Armenians 80 An ardent pan Turkist Khosrov bey Sultanov was soon appointed the governor of Karabakh and Zangezur by Thomson to squash any unrest in the region 81 Christopher J Walker wrote that Karabakh with its large Armenian majority remained Azerbaijani throughout the pre Soviet and Soviet period because of Andranik s trust of the word of a British officer 82 Departure Edit Andranik with his men and two archbishops in Etchmiadzin just before leaving Armenia April 1919 During the winter of 1918 19 Zangezur was isolated from Karabakh and Yerevan by snow The refugees intensified the famine and epidemic conditions and gave way to inflation In December 1918 Andranik withdrew from Karabakh to Goris On his way he met with British officers who suggested the Armenian units stay in Zangezur for the winter Andranik agreed to such a proposal and on 23 December 1918 a group of Armenian leaders met in a conference and concluded that Zangezur could not cope with the influx of refugees until spring 83 They agreed that the first logical step in relieving the tension was the reparation of more than 15 000 refugees from Nakhichevan the adjoining district that had been evacuated by the Ottoman armies 84 Andranik and the conference called upon the British to provide for the refugees in the interim Major W D Gibbon arrived with limited supplies and money donated by the Armenians of Baku but this was not enough to support the refugees 85 Andranik Ozanian and Hovhannes Tumanyan in Tiflis At the end of February 1919 Andranik was ready to leave Zangezur Gibbon suggested Andranik and his soldiers leave by Baku Tiflis railway at Yevlakh station Andranik rejected this plan and on 22 March 1919 he left Goris and traveled across Sisian through deep snowdrifts to Daralagyaz then moved to the Ararat plain with his few thousand irregulars 84 After a three week march his men and horses reached the railway station of Davalu He was met by Dro the Assistant Minister of Military Affairs and Sargis Manasian the Assistant Minister of Internal Affairs who offered to take him to visit Yerevan but he rejected their invitation as he believed the Dashnak government had betrayed the Armenians and was responsible for the loss of his homeland and the annihilation of his people Zangezur became more vulnerable to Azerbaijani threats after Andranik left the district Earlier before Andranik s and his soldiers dismissal the local Armenian forces had requested support from Yerevan 85 On 13 April 1919 Andranik reached Etchmiadzin the seat of Catholicos of All Armenians and the religious center of the Armenians who helped the troops prepare for disbanding 86 His 5 000 strong division had dwindled to 1 350 soldiers 87 As a result of Andranik s disagreements with the Dashnak government and the diplomatic machinations of the British in the Caucasus Andranik disbanded his division and handed his belongings and weapons to the Catholicos George V 88 On 27 April 1919 he left Etchmiadzin accompanied by 15 officers and went to Tiflis on a special train according to Blackwood news of his journey traveled before him At every station crowds were waiting to get a glimpse of their national hero 86 He left Armenia for the last time in Tiflis he met with Georgia s Foreign Minister Evgeni Gegechkori and discussed the Georgian Armenian War The Tbilisi based writer Hovhannes Tumanyan served as their interpreter 88 Last years Edit Andranik Ozanian with General Jaques Bagratuni and Hovhannes Katchaznouni and Armenian military personnel in the United States 1919 From 1919 to 1922 Andranik traveled around Europe and the United States seeking support for the Armenian refugees He visited Paris and London where he tried to persuade the Allied powers to occupy Turkish Armenia 17 In 1919 during his visit to France Andranik was bestowed the title of Legion of Honor Officier by President Raymond Poincare 89 90 In late 1919 Andranik led a delegation to the United States to lobby its support for a mandate for Armenia and fund raising for the Armenian army 17 91 92 He was accompanied by General Jaques Bagratuni and Hovhannes Katchaznouni 93 In Fresno he directed a campaign which raised US 500 000 for the relief of Armenian war refugees 94 Andranik s wedding in Paris 1922 When he returned to Europe Andranik married Nevarte Kurkjian in Paris on 15 May 1922 Boghos Nubar was their best man 95 Andranik and Nevarte moved to the United States and settled in Fresno California in 1922 96 In his 1936 short story Antranik of Armenia Armenian American writer William Saroyan described Andranik s arrival He wrote It looked as if all Armenians of California were at the Southern Pacific depot at the day he arrived He said Andranik was a man of about fifty in a neat Armenians suit of clothes He was a little under six feet tall very solid and very strong He had an old style Armenian mustache that was white The expression of his face was both ferocious and kind 97 Andranik lived with the family of Armen Alchian who later became a prominent economist in Fresno for several months 98 In his novel Call of the Plowmen Ռանչպարների կանչը 1979 where Andranik is called Shapinand Khachik Dashtents describes his life in Fresno After clashing with the leaders of the Araratian Republic and leaving Armenia Shapinand settled in the city of Fresno California The basement of his house was converted into a hotel His sword the Mosin Nagant rifle and his military uniform hung from the wall This is also where he kept his horse which he had brought to America on a steamship Those weapons that uniform the grey papakhi the black boots and lion like steed this was the personal wealth he had come to possess throughout his life His business no longer had to do with weapons Shapinand spent his free time making small wooden chairs in his hotel Many people refusing to buy the quality American armchairs bought his simple ones some for use others as souvenirs 99 Death Edit Andranik s grave in Pere Lachaise Cemetery Paris Andranik s grave at Yerablur cemetery In February 1926 Andranik left Fresno to reside in San Francisco in an unsuccessful attempt to regain his health 94 According to his death certificate found in the Butte County California records Andranik died from angina on 31 August 1927 at Richardson Springs California 100 101 On 7 September 1927 citywide public attention was accorded to him for his funeral in the Ararat Cemetery Fresno 102 On October 9 more than 2 500 members of the Armenian community attended memorial services at Carnegie Hall in New York 103 He was initially buried at Ararat Cemetery in Fresno After his first funeral it was planned to take Andranik s remains to Armenia for final burial however when they arrived in France the Soviet authorities refused permission to allow his remains to enter Soviet Armenia 6 17 Instead they remained in France and after a second funeral service held in the Armenian Church of Paris were buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris on 29 January 1928 104 105 In early 2000 the Armenian and French governments arranged the transfer of Andranik s body from Paris to Yerevan Asbarez wrote that the transfer was initiated by Armenia s Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan 106 Andranik s body was moved to Armenia on 17 February 2000 107 It was placed in the Sport amp Concert Complex in Yerevan for two days and was then taken to Etchmiadzin Cathedral where Karekin II officiated the funeral service 106 Andranik was re interred at Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan on 20 February 2000 next to Vazgen Sargsyan 106 108 109 In his speech during the reburial ceremony Armenia s President Robert Kocharyan described Andranik as one of the greatest sons of the Armenian nation 110 Prime Minister Aram Sargsyan Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and one of Andranik s soldiers 102 year old Grigor Ghazarian were also in attendance 111 A memorial was built on his grave with the phrase Zoravar Hayots General of the Armenians engraved on it Legacy and recognition EditPublic image Edit General Andranik the great Armenian leader who is our national hero For many years General Andranik kept alive the courage of all Armenians He promised them freedom and constantly endangered his life to keep up the spirits of my people Aurora Mardiganian Ravished Armenia 1918 112 Andranik was considered a hero during his lifetime 113 114 The Literary Digest described Andranik in 1920 as the Armenian s Robin Hood Garibaldi and Washington all in one 115 The Independent wrote that he is worshiped by his countrymen for his heroic fighting in their defense against the Turks 116 Andranik was praised by the noted Armenian writer Hovhannes Tumanyan 59 while Armenian Bolshevik Anastas Mikoyan wrote in his memoirs that the name Andranik was surrounded by halo of glory 117 General Andranik on the cover of the French magazine L Image 1919 Andranik is considered a national hero by Armenians worldwide 108 118 119 He is also seen as a legendary figure in Armenian culture 11 120 In a series of polls in 2006 08 Andranik consistently placed second after Vazgen Sargsyan in the list of Armenian national heroes and leaders 121 During the Soviet period his legacy and those of other Armenian national heroes were diminished and any reference to them would be dangerous since they represented the strive for independence especially prior to the Khrushchev Thaw 122 Paruyr Sevak a prominent Soviet Armenian author wrote an essay about Andranik in 1963 after reading one of his soldier s notes Sevak wrote that his generation knew little about Andranik almost nothing He continued knowing nothing about Andranik means to know nothing about modern Armenian history 123 In 1965 Andranik s 100th anniversary was celebrated in Soviet Armenia 11 Criticism Edit Andranik s activities have also attracted occasional criticism Andranik generally seen as a pro Russian and pro Soviet figure 124 69 was criticized by the scholar turned political activist Rafael Ishkhanyan for his constant reliance on Russia 125 Ishkhanyan characterized Andranik and Hakob Zavriev as leaders of the stream within Armenian political thought unconditionally reliant on Russia He contrasted them with Aram Manukian and his self reliant stance 125 The poet Ruben Angaladyan hy spoke out against the erection of Andranik s statue in Yerevan He opined that Andranik doesn t have the right to have a statue in the capital because he did not do anything real for the First Republic and left Armenia He called Andranik a popular hero and finds calling him a national hero unacceptable 126 Memorials Edit Statues and memorials of Andranik have been erected around the world including in Bucharest Romania 1936 127 Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris 1945 Melkonian Educational Institute Nicosia Cyprus 1990 128 Le Plessis Robinson Paris 2005 129 130 Varna Bulgaria 2011 131 and Armavir Russia 132 133 A memorial exists in Richardson Springs California where Andranik died 134 In May 2011 a statue of Andranik was erected in Volonka village near Sochi Russia 135 however it was removed the same day apparently under pressure from Turkey which earlier announced that they would boycott the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics if the statue remained standing 136 137 An equestrian statue of Andranik near the Saint Gregory Cathedral in central Yerevan An equestrian statue of Andranik in Gyumri The first statue of Andranik in Armenia was erected in 1967 in the village of Ujan 138 139 Another early statue in Armenia was erected in Voskehask near Gyumri in 1969 140 More statues have been erected after Armenia s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 three of which can be found in the Armenian capital of Yerevan in Malatia Sebastia district 2000 near the St Gregory Cathedral by Ara Shiraz 2002 and outside the Fedayi Movement Museum 2006 in the Armenian capital Yerevan 141 Elsewhere in Armenia Andranik s statues stand in Voskevan and Navur villages of Tavush in Gyumri s Victory Park 1994 Arteni and Angeghakot among other places 142 143 144 145 Numerous streets and squares both inside and outside Armenia including in Cordoba Argentina 146 Plovdiv 147 and Varna 148 in Bulgaria Meudon Paris 149 150 and a section of Connecticut Route 314 state highway running entirely within Wethersfield Connecticut 151 are named after Andranik General Andranik Station of the Yerevan Metro was opened in 1989 as Hoktemberyan Station and was renamed for Andranik in 1992 2 152 In 1995 General Andranik s Museum was founded in Komitas Park of Yerevan but was soon closed because the building was privatized 153 It was reopened on 16 September 2006 by Ilyich Beglarian as the Museum of Armenian Fedayi Movement named after Andranik 154 According to Patrick Wilson during the First Nagorno Karabakh War Andranik inspired a new generation of Armenians 155 A volunteer regiment from Masis named General Andranik operated in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh during the conflict 156 Many organizations and groups in the Armenian diaspora are named after Andranik 157 158 159 160 On 11 September 2012 during the Bulgaria vs Armenia football match in Sofia s Levski National Stadium Armenian fans brought a giant poster with pictures of General Andranik and Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan who was murdered in 2004 by Azerbaijani lieutenant Ramil Safarov The text on the poster read Andranik s children are also heroes The work will be done 161 In the Armenian Youth Federation Eastern Region the Granite City chapter is named Antranig in Andranik s honor The 65 page manuscripts of General Andranik the only known memoir written by him were returned to Armenia in May 2014 and sent to the History Museum of Armenia through Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan almost a century after Andranik had parted with them 162 In culture Edit Lord Kitchener Wants You influenced poster depicting Andranik The caption reads Chase the holy dream of your people A comic by Stookie Allen depicting Andranik New York Journal American 1920 Andranik has been figured prominently in the Armenian literature sometimes as a fictional character 120 The Western Armenian writer Siamanto wrote a poem entitled Andranik which was published in Geneva in 1905 163 The first book about Andranik was published during his lifetime In 1920 Vahan Totovents under the pen name Arsen Marmarian published the book Gen Andranik and His Wars Զոր Անդրանիկ և իր պատերազմները in Entente occupied Constantinople 120 The famed Armenian American writer William Saroyan wrote a short story titled Antranik of Armenia which was included in his collection of short stories Inhale and Exhale 1936 164 Another US based Armenian writer Hamastegh s novel The White Horseman Սպիտակ Ձիավորը 1952 was based on Andranik and other fedayi 165 166 Hovhannes Shiraz one of the most prominent Armenian poets of the 20th century wrote at least two poems about Andranik one in 1963 and another in 1967 The latter one titled Statue to Andranik Արձան Անդրանիկին was published in 1991 after Shiraz s death 167 Sero Khanzadyan s novel Andranik was suppressed for years and was published in 1989 when the tight Soviet control over publications was relaxed 168 169 Between the 1960s and the 1980s author Suren Sahakyan collected folk stories and completed a novel Story about Andranik Ասք Անդրանիկի մասին It was first published in Yerevan in 2008 170 Andranik s name has been memorialized in numerous songs 31 In 1913 Leon Trotsky described Andranik as a hero of song and legend 16 Italian diplomat and historian Luigi Villari wrote in 1906 that he met a priest from Turkish Armenia in Erivan who sang the war song of Antranik the leader of Armenian revolutionary bands in Turkey 171 Andranik is one of the main figures featured in Armenian patriotic songs performed by Nersik Ispiryan Harout Pamboukjian and others There are dozens of songs dedicated to him including Like an Eagle by gusan Sheram 1904 172 and Andranik pasha by gusan Hayrik 173 Andranik also features in the popular song The Bravehearts of the Caucasus Կովկասի քաջեր and other pieces of Armenian patriotic folklore 174 Several documentaries about Andranik have been produced these include Andranik 1929 by Armena Film in France directed by Asho Shakhatuni who also played the main role 175 176 General Andranik 1990 directed by Levon Mkrtchyan narrated by Khoren Abrahamyan and Andranik Ozanian a 53 minute long documentary by the Public Television of Armenia 177 Awards Edit Legion of Honour Officer certificate of Andranik Through his military career Andranik was awarded with a number of medals and orders by governments of four countries 178 Andranik s medals and sword were moved to Armenia and given to the History Museum of Armenia in 2006 179 180 Country Award Rank Year Kingdom of Bulgaria Order of Bravery IV grade For Bravery 1913 181 50 Russian Empire Order of St Stanislaus II classwith Swords 1914 16 182 Order of St Vladimir IV class 1914 16 182 183 Cross of St George I II III class 1914 16 49 182 Order of St George II III IV classes 1914 16 184 182 French Republic Legion of Honor Officier 1919 115 Kingdom of Greece War Cross II class 1920 185 186 Published works Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andranik Ozanyan Մարտական հրահանգներ Առաջարկներ նկատողութիւններ եւ խորհուրդներ Combat Commands Suggestions Remarks Recommendations Geneva ARF Press 1906 OCLC 320038626 40 Հայկական առանձին հարուածող զօրամասը The Armenian Special Striking Division Boston Azg 1921 OCLC 49525413 187 Զորավար Անդրանիկը կը խոսի General Andranik Speaks Paris Abaka weekly 1921 OCLC 234085160 Առաքելոց վանքին կռիւը Հայ յեղափոխութենէն դրուագ մը The Battle of Arakelots An Episode of Armenian Revolution Boston Baikar 1924 Memoirs of Andranik written down by Levon K Lyulejian 188 References EditNotes Andranik was given the rank of a major general by the command of the Caucasus Front a formation of the army of the dissolved Russian Republic 3 In classical orthography his name is spelled Անդրանիկ Օզանեան and pronounced ɑntʰɾɑniɡ ɔzɑnjɑn in Western Armenian In reformed orthography his name is spelled Անդրանիկ Օզանյան and pronounced ɑndɾɑnik ɔzɑnjɑn in Eastern Armenian Զօրավար Անդրանիկ in classical spelling Զորավար Անդրանիկ in reformed Zoravar Andranik Armenian Անդրանիկ Also spelled Antranik or Antranig Some sources mistakenly indicate 1866 as Andranik s date of birth 5 1866 is also engraved on his grave in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery Some sources also erroneously indicate 1928 as his date of death perhaps because Andranik s body was moved to France and reburied there in 1928 6 Citations a b Libaridian Gerard J 1991 Armenia at the Crossroads Democracy and Nationhood in the Post Soviet Era Watertown Massachusetts Blue Crane Books p 20 ISBN 978 0 9628715 1 1 a b Holding Nicholas 2008 Armenia with Nagorno Karabagh 2nd ed Chalfont St Peter Bradt Travel Guides p 93 ISBN 978 1 84162 163 0 a b Hovannisian Richard G 1967 Armenia on the Road to Independence 1918 Berkeley California University of California Press p 113 ISBN 978 0 520 00574 7 a b Adalian 2010 p 79 a b Hovannisian Richard G 2000 Armenian Van Vaspurakan Costa Mesa California Mazda Publishers p 233 ISBN 978 1 56859 130 8 a b Hovannisian 1971 p 191 Sarkisyanz Manuel 1975 A Modern History of Transcaucasian Armenia Social Cultural and Political Leiden Netherlands p 140 OCLC 8305411 a b c d e f g Walker 1990 p 178 Panossian Razmik 2006 The Armenians From Kings and Priests to Merchants and Commissars London Columbia University Press p 250 ISBN 978 0 231 51133 9 Ghaziyan Alvard 1984 Զորավար Անդրանիկը որպես վիպա հերոսական կերպար General Andranik as a heroic character in Armenian Yerevan Institute of Archeology and Ethnography Armenian National Academy of Sciences 25 26 Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e f g h i Haroutyunian A 1974 Անդրանիկ Andranik In Hambardzumyan Viktor ed Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia in Armenian Vol 1 Yerevan Armenian Encyclopedia Publishing p 392 a b c Chalabian 1988 p 3 Aghayan 1968 p 40 Nalbandian Louise 1963 The Armenian Revolutionary Movement The Development of Armenian Political Parties Through the Nineteenth Century Berkeley University of California Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 520 00914 1 a b c d Aghayan 1968 p 41 a b c Trotsky 1980 p 247 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Walker 1990 p 411 Mouradian 1995 p 12 Haroutyunian 1965 p 109 a b c d Trotsky 1980 p 249 Akcam Taner 2006 A shameful act the Armenian genocide 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istorii Defense Minister of Armenia handed Andranik s sword and medals to the Museum of History Novosti Armenia in Russian 29 November 2006 Archived from the original on 24 June 2014 1921 National Library of Armenia Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2013 1924 National Library of Armenia Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Bibliography Edit Trotsky Leon 1980 Andranik and his Troop from Kievskaya Mysl No 197 July 19 1913 The Balkan wars 1912 13 the war correspondence of Leon Trotsky New York Monad Press pp 247 256 ISBN 978 0 909196 08 0 Antranik Blackwood s Magazine CCVI 206 441 477 October 1919 Mahdesian Arshag D ed June 1920 General Antranik The New Armenia New York New Armenia Publishing Company 12 6 82 85 Haroutyunian A H 1965 Անդրանիկը որպես մարտիկ և զորավար Ծննդյան 100 ամյակի առթիվ Andranik as Warrior and Commander Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1 109 124 Aghayan Tsatur 1968 Զորավար Անդրանիկի գործունեության մասին On the Activities of General Andranik Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 2 40 56 Hovannisian Richard 1971 The Republic of Armenia Volume 1 The First Years 1918 1919 Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 0 520 01805 2 Chalabian Antranig 1988 General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement Southfield Michigan Antranig Chalabian Hambarian A S 1989 Սասունի 1904 թվականի գոյամարտը Sasun s Self Defence in 1904 Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 4 22 34 ISSN 0135 0536 Walker Christopher J 1990 Armenia The Survival of a Nation revised second ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 04230 1 Kharatian A 1990 Վահան Թոթովենցը Անդրանիկի մասին Vahan Totovents about Andranik Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1 3 14 ISSN 0135 0536 Mouradian George 1995 Armenian infotext Southgate Michigan Bookshelf Publishers ISBN 978 0 9634509 2 0 Payaslian Simon 2007 The history of Armenia New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 7467 9 Chalabian Antranig 2009 Dro Drastamat Kanayan Armenia s First Defense Minister of the Modern Era Los Angeles Indo European Publishing ISBN 978 1 60444 078 2 Adalian Rouben Paul 2010 Historical Dictionary of Armenia Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7450 3 Further reading EditArticles Edit Nercissian M Harutyunian A Mouradian D 1981 Materialy o generale Andranike Documents on General Andranik Patma Banasirakan Handes in Russian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1 242 248 ISSN 0135 0536 Karapetyan H 1996 Անդրանիկ Andranik Հայկական հարց հանրագիտարան Armenian Question Encyclopedia in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Encyclopedia archived link Hrachik Simonian 2000 Զորավար Անդրանիկ ընդհանուր բնութագիր General Andranik general characteristic Patma Banasirakan Handes in Armenian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1 44 50 ISSN 0135 0536 Severikova N M 2007 Velikij syn Otechestva K 80 letiyu so dnya konchiny Andranika Sasunskogo Great Son of Fatherland On the 80th anniversary of death of Andranik of Sasun Historical Science in Russian Massmedia Center of the Moscow State University 6 ISSN 2304 4551 Books Edit Զօրավար Անդրանիկի կովկասեան ճակատի պատմական օրագրութիւնը 1914 1917 Historic Timeline of Caucasian Front of General Andranik in Armenian Boston Baikar 1924 Aharonyan Vardges 1957 Անդրանիկ մարդը եւ ռազմիկը Andranik the man and the soldier in Armenian Boston Hairenik OCLC 47085812 Զօր Անդրանիկ Օզանեան կեանքն ու գործունէութիւնը PDF in Armenian Beirut Lebanon Hamazkayin 1985 Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Chalabian Antranig 1986 Զօրավար Անդրանիկ Եւ Հայ Յեղափոխական Շարժումը General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement in Armenian Beirut Donikian Press Simonian Hrachik 1988 Istinnyj narodnyj geroj The True Popular Hero Patma Banasirakan Handes in Russian Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 3 12 28 ISSN 0135 0536 Antranig Chalabian 1990 Զօրավար Անդրանիկ Եւ Հայ Յեղափոխական Շարժումը General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement in Armenian Yerevan Garibdzhanian Gevorg 1990 Ժողովրդական հերոս Անդրանիկ Andranik the Popular Hero in Armenian Yerevan Hayastan Publishing OCLC 26596860 National Archives of Armenia 1991 Andranik Ozanyan dokumenty i materialy Andranik Ozanian documents and materials in Russian Yerevan Aghayan Tsatur 1994 Անդրանիկ դարաշրջան դեպքեր դեմքեր Andranik era events faces in Armenian Yerevan Simoyan Hrachik 1996 Անդրանիկի ժամանակը Andranik s time in Armenian Yerevan Kaisa Aghayan Tsatur 1997 Andranik i ego epoha Andranik and his era in Armenian Moscow Mezhdunarodnyj gumanitarnyj fond armenovedeniya im C P Agoyana ISBN 5 7801 0050 0 Grigoryan Ashot ed 2002 2004 Անդրանիկագիտական Հանդես Andranikological Review in Armenian Yerevan a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint untitled periodical link Simonyan Ruben 2006 Անդրանիկ Սիբիրական վաշտի ոդիսականը Andranik The Siberian company s odyssey in Armenian Yerevan Voskan Yerevantsi OCLC 76872489 Andreasyan Vazken 1982 Անդրանիկ PDF in Armenian Beirut Lebanon Tonikyan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andranik amp oldid 1135657165, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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