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Circassian genocide

The Circassian genocide,[9][10] or Tsitsekun,[a][b] was the Russian Empire's systematic mass murder, ethnic cleansing, and expulsion of 95–97%[c][d] of the Circassian population, resulting in 1 to 1.5 million deaths[14][e] during the final stages of the Russo-Circassian War .[15][16][17] The peoples planned for extermination were mainly the Muslim Circassians, but other Muslim peoples of the Caucasus were also affected.[16] Killing methods used by Russian forces during the genocide included impaling and tearing the bellies of pregnant women as means of intimidation of the Circassian population.[15][18] Russian generals such as Grigory Zass described the Circassians as "subhuman filth", and glorified the mass murder of Circassian civilians,[15][19][20] justified their use in scientific experiments,[21] and allowed their soldiers to rape women.[15]

Circassian genocide
Part of the Russo-Circassian War
Painting depicting Circassians trying to evacuate their town in order to avoid Russian aggression
Circassian population remaining in Circassia after the genocide. After the genocide, only those forced into exile, hiding in marshes and caves, and, in rare cases, who could make agreements with the Russians, survived.
Native nameUbykh: ЦӀыцӀэкӀун
LocationCircassia under Russian invasion
Date1800–1870s
(systematic massacre of Circassians started by early 1800s; surviving Circassian population was forcefully deported to the Ottoman Empire between 1864 and 1870s)
TargetCircassians and other Muslim peoples of the Caucasus
Attack type
Genocidal massacres, genocidal rape, deportation, torture, death march, ethnic cleansing
Deaths
  • Killed in Russian massacres: 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 deaths[1][2][3]
  • Lives lost during death march and fleeing: 500,000 deaths[4][5]
Victims
PerpetratorsRussian Empire
MotiveImperialism, Anti-Muslim sentiment, Russification, Christianization

The Genocide is considered to have had its first steps in the deportation and/or massacre of the Muslim Circassian population of the Russian Empire. The Muslim Circassians were deported to the Muslim Ottoman Empire. During the Russo-Circassian War, the Russian Empire employed a genocidal strategy of massacring Circassian civilians. Only a small percentage who accepted Russification and resettlement within the Russian Empire were completely spared. The remaining Circassian population who refused were variously dispersed or killed en masse.[22] Circassian villages would be located and burnt, systematically starved, or their entire population massacred.[23] Leo Tolstoy reported that Russian soldiers would attack village houses at night.[24] William Palgrave, a British diplomat who witnessed the events, adds that "their only crime was not being Russian".[25] In 1864, "A Petition from Circassian leaders to Her Majesty Queen Victoria" was signed by the Circassians requesting humanitarian aid from the British Empire.[26][27][28] In the same year, mass deportation was launched against the surviving population before the end of the war in 1864 and it was mostly completed by 1867.[29] Some died from epidemics or starvation among the crowds of deportees and were reportedly eaten by dogs after their death.[25] Others died when the ships underway sank during storms.[30]

Calculations, including taking into account the Russian government's own archival figures, have estimated a loss of 94–97%[31][32][33] of the Circassian population in the process that would be 2 to 3.5 million people. The displaced people were settled primarily in the Ottoman Empire.[15] Most sources state that as many as 1 to 1.5 million Circassians were forced to flee in total, but only around half of them could make it to land.[34][35] Ottoman archives show more than one million migrants entering their land from the Caucasus by 1879, with nearly half of them dying on the shores as a result of disease.[4] If Ottoman archives are correct, it would make this the biggest genocide of the 19th century.[36] In confirmation of Ottoman archives, Russian records documented only the presence of 106,798 Circassians in the region, following the events of the genocide. Other estimates by Russian historiographers are even lower, with figures ranging from 40,400 to 65,900.[12] The Russian census of 1897 recorded 150,000 Circassians still remaining in the now-conquered region.[37][38]

As of 2023, Georgia is the only country to recognize the Circassian genocide.[39] Russia actively denies the Circassian genocide,[40][41][42] and classifies the events as a migration (Russian: Черкесское мухаджирство, lit.'Circassian migrationism'). Some Russian nationalists in the Caucasus region continue to celebrate the day when the Circassian deportation was launched, 21 May (O.S), each year as a "holy conquest day". Circassians commemorate 21 May every year as the Circassian Day of Mourning commemorating the Circassian genocide.[43] On 21 May, Circassians all over the world protest against the Russian government, especially in cities with large Circassian populations such as Kayseri and Amman, as well as other large cities such as Istanbul.[44][45]

Background

In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, although it was already making attempts in the early 18th century, the Russian Empire began actively seeking to expand its territory to the south at the expense of the neighboring Ottoman Empire and Qajar Iran, and thus aimed to incorporate the Caucasus into its domain. Some areas proved easier to incorporate than others, largely depending on the nature of local political structures. Eastern Georgia for example, comprising the most powerful and dominant Georgian regions of Kartli and Kakheti had been under intermittent Iranian suzerainty since 1555. Russia eventually found itself able, through instability in the geopolitical situation of Georgia within Qajar Iran, to annex eastern Georgia in the early 19th century, ratified in the 1803 Treaty of Gulistan.[46]

Russia endeavored to bring the entire Caucasus region under its control, conquering Armenia, Caucasian Azerbaijan, and southern Dagestan, while co-opting the nobility of other areas such as Lower Kabardia and parts of Dagestan. Although the Russians faced considerable resistance to incorporation in Dagestan and Georgia, as well as military resistance by the local government of Imereti, the regions they felt most difficult of all to incorporate were those that had not been conquered by foreign empires and did not have any local monopolies of power—which was the state of most Circassian territories, where resistance to absorption into the Russian Empire was most tenacious.[47]

The decision to launch the genocide was driven by anti-Muslim sentiments and the Russian Empire's "messianic self-image" as the champion of Eastern Orthodoxy against non-Christian inhabitants in its territories. Russian Tsars viewed the Circassian tribes in the Caucasus as "primitive" humans to either be forcibly converted to Christianity or exterminated and expelled. Imperial army generals further regarded Circassia as a strategic territory to advance Russian expansionism in the Caucasus and surrounding lands.[48]

Prelude: Russo-Circassian War

Start of conflicts with Circassia

Circassians, Christianised through Byzantine influence between the 5th and 6th centuries, were generally allied with Georgians.[49] From the 16th century it entered into alliance with Georgia: Georgians and Circassians regarded themselves as constituting a single Christian island in the Black Sea and jointly appealed to Russia for protection.[49] Although there had previously been a small Muslim presence in Circassia, significant conversions came after 1717, when Sultan Murad IV ordered the Crimeans to spread Islam among the Circassians, with the Ottomans seeing success in converting members of the aristocracy who would then ultimately spread the religion to their dependents; Islam gained much more ground later as conversion came to be used to cement defensive alliances to protect their independence against Russian expansion.[50][49]

During the reign of Catherine II, the Russian army started entering Circassian soil and erecting forts, in an attempt at quick annexation In 1763, Russian forces occupied the town of Mezdeug (modern-day Mozdok) in Eastern Circassia, turning it into a Russian fortress. Thus began the first hostilities between Circassians and the Russian Empire.

In 1764, Circassian prince Misost Bematiqwa started the Circassian resistance in Eastern Circassia.[51] Bematiqwa's resistance was strengthened when on October 18, 1768, the Ottoman sultan, who had declared war on Russia, sent a letter to Bematiqwa stating that he, as caliph, ordered all Muslim peoples of the Caucasus to officially make war against Russia.[52] The Ottoman Empire lost its protector status with the Crimean Khanate with the 1774 Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca. Following these events, Russian presence in the region increased, and the Circassians requested help and alliance from the Ottomans.[53]

The Russians introduced courts in Kabarda (Eastern Circassia) in the early 1790s and declared that the Adyghe Xabze, the Circassian law, has been removed, greatly angering Circassians.[54]

Methods of massacre

In 1799, Russian general Fyodor Bursak organized several raids against the Western Circassians, and ordered his men to burn Circassian villages, including those loyal to the Russian Empire.[23] From 1802 to 1806, General Pavel Tsitsianov led campaigns in Circassia and targeted Circassian villages. He referred to the Circassians as "untrustworthy swine"[23] to "show how insignificant they are compared to Russia".[55]

In 1805, a plague struck Kabardia. Using this as an excuse, General Glazenap ordered his forces to burn down 80 villages to terrorize the people into submission and to wreak vengeance upon the Kabardians.[54]

A village burning campaign started, in which the Circassian population were burnt without separation. First, the Russian army would enter and loot a Circassian village, then they would kill those who resist or complain, and finally, they would set fire to the village and make sure all inhabitants were killed. In 1810 about 200 villages were burned. Between 1805 and 1807, General Bulgakov's army alone burned more than 280 villages.[56] The population of Kabarda, which was 350,000 in 1763, was only 37,000 in 1817.[57]

In 1808, a Russian commission decided that in order to end Circassian resistance against the Russian Empire, the Circassians would need to be eliminated from their homeland.[58][20] In February 1810, General Fyodor Bursak's forces entered a Circassian village near the Sop River and proceeded to burn the village. They decided to postpone their plans to attack the next village when the river began to overflow.[20][59] In December, the same methods were applied in the Shapsug region, and several villages were burnt. After some civilians deserted to the forests, forests in the region were burnt down.[59] In 1811, petitions were sent to St. Petersburg in Russia, appealing for the basic rights of Circassians in the occupied areas.[54]

In 1817, Russian veteran general Aleksey Yermolov arrived in the Caucasus. Deciding that Circassians would not surrender willingly, General Yermolov concluded that "terror" as an official strategy would be effective.[60] Although terror methods were already in use, they were only officialized after Yermolov's orders. Russian generals began to destroy Circassian villages and towns and slaughter people as part of an official duty to shock the population into surrender.[61][62][60] Under Yermolov, Russian troops retaliated by destroying villages where resistance fighters were thought to hide, as well as employing assassinations, kidnappings and the execution of whole families.[61] Because the resistance was relying on sympathetic villages for food, the Russian military also systematically destroyed crops and livestock and killed Circassian civilian farmers.[62][60] Circassians responded by creating a tribal federation encompassing all tribes of the area.[60]

In May 1818, the village of Tram was surrounded, burnt, and its inhabitants killed by Russian forces under the command of General Ivan Petrovich Delpotso, who took orders from Yermolov and who then wrote to the Circassian forces:[63]

This time, I am limiting myself on this. In the future, I will have no mercy for the guilty brigands; their villages will be destroyed, properties taken, wives and children will be slaughtered.

— Ivan Petrovich Delpotso

The complete destruction of villages with everything within them became a standard action by the Russian army and Cossack units. Nevertheless, the Circassian resistance continued. Villages that had previously accepted Russian rule were found resisting again, much to the ire of Russian commanders.[64]

In September 1820, Russian forces began to forcibly resettle inhabitants of Eastern Circassia. Military forces were sent into Kabardia, killing cattle and causing large numbers of inhabitants to flee into the mountains, with the land these inhabitants had once lived on being acquired for the Kuban Cossacks. The entirety of Kabardia (Eastern Circassia) was then declared property of the Russian government.[65]

General Yermolov accelerated his efforts in Kabardia, with the month of March 1822 alone seeing 14 villages being destroyed as Yermolov led expeditions.[63] In February 1824, the Russian army led by General Vlasov attacked the Circassian villages of Jambut, Aslan, Morza, and Tsab Dadhika and completely destroyed them, along with the inhabitants, despite the villages being at peace with the Russian Empire.[59] In 1828, General Emanuel destroyed 6 Natukhaj Circassian villages and many more Shapsug Circassian villages. He then passed the Kuban and burned 210 more villages.

The Treaty of Adrianople was signed on 14 September 1829.[66] According to the document, Circassia was given by the Ottoman Empire to Russia. The Circassians considered it invalid, arguing that because their territory had been independent of the Ottomans, Istanbul had no right to cede it.[67] Circassian ambassadors were sent to England, France and Ottoman lands announcing that they denied the treaty under all conditions.

In 1831, the Russian government considered the destruction of the Natukhaj tribe in favor of populating their land on the northern coast of the Black Sea with Cossacks. In late 1831, in retaliation for Circassian attacks against Cossack military bases, Russian General Frolov and his task force destroyed several villages.[59] Beginning the night of November 20, a "horror campaign" was started, in which villages were surrounded by artillery and bombarded. The targets were local homes, as well as mosques. The operation was described in a report:[59]

In this affair the Russians lost 10 soldiers and had one officer and 16 soldiers wounded. At the scene of the battle there were more than 150 bodies of Circassians killed by bayonets and up to 50 women and children killed from the action of the Russian artillery.

In another report, General Rosen described how, in December 1831, 381 Circassians were captured by his forces and boasted about taking them prisoner and firing at villages, leaving 100 men and 50 women dead. He goes on to detail how when setting fire to a village, a Russian soldier named Midvideiv killed a Circassian who tried to stop him from burning down a mosque.[68]

The Russians countered the heavy Circassian resistance by modifying the terrain. They laid down a network of roads and cleared the forests around these roads, destroyed native villages, and often settled new farming communities of Russians or other Orthodox Slavic people. In this increasingly bloody situation, the wholesale destruction of villages became a standard tactic.[69]

 
Russian military and Circassian representatives meet for discussions, 1855

General Yermolov remarked that "We need the Circassian lands, but we don't have any need of the Circassians themselves".[70] Russian military commanders, such as Yermolov and Bulgakov, acting in their own interests to attain glory on the battlefield and riches through conquest, which would be much more difficult to attain on the Western front than in the Caucasus, often deceived the central administration and obscured the attempts of Circassian groups to establish peace with Russia.[23]

In 1833, Colonel Grigory Zass was appointed commander of a part of the Kuban Military Line with headquarters in the Batalpashinsk fortress. Colonel Zass received wide authority to act as he saw fit. He was a racist who considered Circassians to be inferior.[23][71] The only way to deal with the Circassians, in his opinion, was to scare them away "just like wild animals". Zass advocated ruthless military methods predicated on this notion, including burning people alive, cutting off heads with show, burning populated villages to the ground, spreading epidemics on purpose, and mass rape of children.[72][failed verification][73] He kept a box under his bed with his collection of severed Circassian body parts.[19] He operated on all areas of Circassia.

Zass' main strategy was to intercept and retain the initiative, terrorize the Circassians, and destroy Circassian settlements. After a victory, he would usually burn several villages and seize cattle and horses to show off, acts which he proudly admitted. In his reports, he frequently boasted about the destruction of villages and glorified the mass murder of civilians.[19]

In August 1833, Zass led his first expedition into Circassian territory, with the goal being destroying as many villages and towns as possible. He attacked the Besleney region between November and December, destroying most villages, including the village of the double agent Aytech Qanoqo. He continued to exterminate the Circassian population between 1834 and 1835, particularly in the Abdzakh, Besleney, Shapsug, and Kabardian regions. Zass' forces referred to all Circassian elderly, children women and men as "savages", "bandits", "plunderers" or "thieves" and the Russian Empire's forces were commanded by officers who commanded political dissidents and criminals.[57][74][75][76][77][78][79]

In 1834, Zass sent a report to Rosen detailing his campaign into Circassia. He talks about how he killed three Circassian civilians on their way to fetch grass:[80]

I captured three Circassians from carriages that were on their way to fetch grass, other than the thirteen we already had, who did not wish to surrender to us voluntarily, so I ordered to kill them.

He then talks about how he destroyed a neighborhood:[80]

The savages panicked and started fleeing from their homes, leaving their weapons behind attempting to escape to the forest but most of them were killed by the Cossacks ... with the soldiers lined up ready to fight, the cleansing continued with artillery shells, and I sent there two infantry brigades, but they could only capture 11 more people, and since the fire was in flames in many places, the rest were either killed or burned after attempting to escape by hiding on the roofs of their homes or by the manure. So like this, we destroyed and destructed[clarification needed] the neighborhood.

Reportedly, Zass would pick random Circassian males from the towns he attacked and burn them alive as a form of entertainment. He did not stop at burning women; he also cut the pregnant women's bellies with a bayonet.[19] He sent severed Circassian heads to friends in Berlin who were professors and used them to study anatomy.[81] The Decembrist Nikolai Ivanovich Lorer said that Zass cleaned and boiled the flesh off the heads after storing them under his bed in his tent. He also had Circassian heads outside of his tent impaled on lances on a hill. Circassian men's corpses were decapitated by Russian-Cossack women on the battlefield after the battles were over for the heads to be sent to Zass for collection.[82][83][84][85]

 
Russian Tsar Alexander II officially greenlit the extermination campaign of Circassians. In 1861, he further ordered the large-scale establishment of Russian Christian settlements in Circassian lands.[86][87]

Zass erected Circassian heads on poles outside of his tent, and witnesses reported seeing wind blowing the beards. Russian soldiers and Cossacks were paid for sending Circassian heads to General Zass.[88][89][90][91] Besides cutting Circassian heads off and collecting them, Zass employed a deliberate strategy of annihilating Circassians en masse, burning entire Circassian villages with the people in them and encouraging violation of Circassian women and children.[92][93] Zass is depicted as the Devil or Satan in Circassian folklore. In 1842, Zass was removed from service due to his methods being deemed too cruel by St. Petersburg.[citation needed]

In 1837, some Circassian leaders offered the Russians a white peace, arguing that no more blood should be shed. In response to this offer, the Russian army under the command of General Yermolov burnt 36 Circassian villages.[70]

In the negotiations to formulate the 1856 Treaty of Paris, the British representative, the Earl of Clarendon, defended the Circassians' rights, but was thwarted. The final treaty also extended amnesty to nationals that had fought for enemy powers, but since Circassia had never previously been under Russian control, Circassians were exempt, and thus Circassians were now placed under de jure Russian sovereignty by the treaty, with Russia under no compulsion to grant Circassians the same rights as Russian citizens elsewhere, effectively making them Russian property with which Russia could do whatever it wanted.[94][95][96]

Genocide and ethnic cleansing: 1860s

"The state needed the Circassians' land, but had absolutely no need of them."

— Military historian Rostislav Fadeyev summarising Russian policy towards Circassians[97]

 
Russian general Count Nikolay Yevdokimov organized the operations of massacres and extermination of Circassian populations during the Russian military campaign.[7]
 
Dmitry Milyutin, 1865
 
Commanders of Russian troops in the Western Caucasus: Infantry General Count Nikolai Yevdokimov (left), Governor of the Caucasus and Grand Duke Mikhail Nikolayevich (centre), and Major General D. I. Svyatopolk-Mirsky (right) at Qbaada, 21 May 1864.

In 1857, Dmitry Milyutin published the idea of mass expulsions of Circassian natives.[98] Milyutin argued that the goal was not to simply move them so that their land could be settled by productive farmers, but rather that "eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself – to cleanse the land of hostile elements".[98][99][100] Tsar Alexander II endorsed the plans to exterminate Circassians,[98] and in June 1861 ordered the launch of a settler-colonial Russification and Christianization programme.[87] Milyutin later had been appointed as the minister of war the same year, and from the early 1860s massacres and ethnic cleansing began occurring in the Caucasus.[98][99][101]

Others among the Russian military class such as Rostislav Fadeyev characterized the Circassians as a "barbaric people", additionally expressing his view that they were incapable of being Russified. Fadeyev argued that a "re-education of a people is a centuries-long process" and claimed that Russia was at a pivotal moment in its history towards the total assimilation of the Caucasus region into the Russian empire.[60][87] Fadeyev supported the extermination of half the population, stating that Russians intended to "exterminate half the Circassian people in order to compel the other half to lay down their arms".[60] Sentiments for expulsion existed among prominent Russian politicians such as Prince Kochubei.[60] Kochubei said to Americans visiting the region that "these Circassians are just like your American Indians – as untamable and uncivilized ... and, owning to their natural energy of character, extermination only would keep them quiet."[60]

As Russian armies advanced in Circassia in the late 1850s and early 1860s, Circassians were evicted from their lands so they could be settled by loyal Cossacks as the Russian military elite developed a belief that Circassians would have to be entirely expelled from regions for the security of Russian rule.[102] Yermolov wrote that "resettlement of intractable mountaineers" to Turkey would be the easiest way to "give freedom" to those who "prefer death to allegiance to the Russian government".[103] The Circassian resettlement plan was eventually agreed upon at a meeting of the Russian Caucasus commanders in October 1860 in Vladikavkaz and officially approved on 10 May 1862 by Tsar Alexander II[104] and a flood of refugee movements began as Russian troops advanced in their final campaign.[105]

Although the order given by Tsar Alexander II was to deport the Circassians rather than to massacre them, the Russian commanders instead preferred the idea of massacring large portions of the Circassian population. Richmond has noted that "reports abound" of massacres in the final stages of the Caucasus campaign.[97]

In 1859, three years before the approval of the plan by the Russian government, Russian officials began talks with the Ottomans about the migration of a limited number of emigrants,[106] and in 1860 the two sides negotiated a treaty for the migration of 40,000–50,000 Circassians, with the Ottoman side being eager for an increase in population.[107] However, Russia did not aim to limit the number of exilees to 50,000, as the plan was to exile the entire Circassian population.

With a gathering sense of emergency, on 25 June 1861, leaders of all the Circassian tribes gathered in Sochi to jointly petition the Western powers for help.[108] Ottoman and British delegations both promised recognition of an independent Circassia, as well as recognition from Paris, if they unified into a coherent state,[109] and in response the Circassian tribes formed a national parliament in Sochi, but Russian General Kolyobakin quickly overran Sochi and destroyed it,[110] while there was no action to stop this by any major power's government.[108]

Russian geographer Mikhail Ivanovich Venyukov, who was co-operating with Russian military at that time for cartographic purposes; was shocked by Yevdokimov's plans for exterminating the Circassians and other natives. In his memoirs, Venyukov reported that Count Yevdokimov pursued all means to sabotage communications between the Emperor and native tribal chiefs; since he was determined to expel all the inhabitants from the region.[111] Describing Count Yevdokimov's strategy of inflicting state terror and mass-starvations on Circassian tribes, Adolf Berzhe reports:

Evdokimov's plan was to base the conquest of the western Caucasus on the Kuban Caucasus Army, and by means of military lines and new settlements continually pressure the mountain tribes until it became completely impossible for them to live in the mountains.[87]

In April 1862, a group of Russian soldiers slaughtered hundreds of Circassians who had run out of ammunition, leaving "the mountain covered with corpses of bayoneted enemies", as reported by Ivan Drozdov.[112] He tried to justify the extensive death and destruction that his army brought upon the Circassians: "Mankind has rarely experienced such disasters and to such extremes, but only horror could have an effect on the hostile mountaineers and drive them from the impenetrable mountain thickets."[113] For the most part, the Imperial Russian army preferred to indiscriminately destroy areas where Circassians resided. In September 1862, after attacking a Circassian village and seeing some of its inhabitants flee into the forest, General Nikolay Yevdokimov bombarded that forest for six hours and ordered his men to kill on sight; he then set the forest on fire to make sure no survivors were left.[112]

"The war was conducted with implacable, merciless severity. We went forward step by step, irrevocably cleansing the mountaineers to the last man from any land the soldiers set foot on. The mountaineers' auls were burned by the hundreds, just as soon as the snow melted but before the leaves returned to the trees (in February and March). We trampled and destroyed their crops with our horses. If we were able to capture the villagers by surprise we immediately sent them via convoy to the shore of the Black Sea, and farther, to Turkey...there were atrocities bordering on barbarity"

— Russian geographer Mikhail Ivanovich Venyukov describing the brutality of massacres against Circassians[114]

Drozdov reported to have overheard numerous Circassian men taking oaths to fight the heavy artillery forces; so as to allow their family and rest of their villages to escape, and later more reports of groups of Circassians doing so were received.[115] Leo Tolstoy reported that Russian soldiers would attack village houses at night.[24]

In October 1862, Yevdokimov ordered the de-population and mass-expulsion of all Circassians from Caucasus.[116] By the fall of 1863, Russian operations had become methodical, following a formula by which, after the Circassians fled into the woods, their village and any food that could be found would be burned, then after a week or two they would search for and destroy any huts the Circassians might have made for shelter, burn the forest, and then this process would be repeated until General Yevdokimov was satisfied that all the natives in the area had died either by being shot, starved, or burned.[117] By this period, combat phase of the war was over; and Russian military forces were simply engaging in systematic massacres, torture and de-population of unarmed civilians, women and children.[118]

In the southeast, Circassians prepared to resist and hold their last stand against Russian military advances and troops.[119] With the refusal to surrender, Circassian tribes were targeted one by one by the Russian military, with thousands massacred and whole villages razed to the ground.[60]

On April 9, 1864, "A Petition from Circassian leaders to Her Majesty Queen Victoria" was signed by the Circassians. The document requested British military aid, or at least humanitarian aid, for the Circassian people.[26][27][28] It reads:

In the name of God, the Most Compassionate, the Most Merciful.

Our most humble Petition to Her Magnificent Majesty the Queen and Emperor of England is to the effect that –

It is now more than eighty years since the Russian Government is unlawfully striving to subdue and annex to its dominions Circassia, which since the creation of the world has been our home and our country. It slaughters like sheep the children, helpless women, and old men that fall into its hands. It rolls about their heads with the bayonet like melons, and there is no act of oppression or cruelty which is beyond the pale of civilisation and humanity, and which defies description, that it has not committed.

We have not, from father to son, at the cost of our lives and properties, refrained from opposing the tyrannical acts of that Government in defence of our country, which is dearer to us than our lives. But during the last year or two it has taken advantage of a famine caused by a drought with which the Almighty visited us, as well as by its own ravages, and it has occasioned us great distress by its severe attacks by sea and land. Many are the lives which have been lost in battle, from hunger in the mountains, from destitution on the sea-coast, and from want of skill at sea.

We therefore invoke the mediation and precious assistance of the British Government and people – the guardian of humanity and centre of justice – in order to repel the brutal attacks of the Russian Government on our country, and save our country and our nation together.

But if it is not possible to afford this help for the preservation of our country, and race, then we pray to be afforded facilities for removing to a place of safety our helpless and miserable children and women that are perishing by the brutal attacks of the enemy as well as by the effects of famine; and if neither of these two requests are taken into consideration, and if in our helpless condition we are utterly annihilated notwithstanding our appeals to the mercy and grace of the Governments, then we shall not cease to invoke our right in the presence of the Lord of the Universe, of Him who has confided to Your Majesty sovereignty, strength, and power for the purpose of protecting the weak.

We beg Your Excellency [Sir Henry Bulwer] to be the medium of making known to the great British Government and to the glorious British nation our condition of helplessness and misery, and we have therefore ventured to present to Your Excellency our most humble petition. A copy of it has been submitted to the Sultan's Government and to the Embassies of other Powers.

Signed by the People of Circassia. 29 Sheval, 1280 [April 7, 1864][26][27][28]

In 1864, in the valley of Khodz near Maikop, the Ubykh population resisted Russian troops.[120][121] During the battle, the men were joined by women, who disposed of their jewellery into the river and took up arms into a fight to the end.[120][121] As part of Yevdokimov's strategy, Russian Imperial Army blocked all exitways and bombarded the valley from all directions with heavy artillery, indiscriminately killing men, women and children for several days.[7] Russians troops with heavy artillery and other modern weaponry killed all the men, women and children, in a scene that a Circassian chronicler Shauket who had witnessed the events described as "a sea of blood".[120] Describing his account of the mass-murder in the valley, Shauket outlined:

"men and women were slaughtered mercilessly and blood flowed in rivers, so that it was said that the 'bodies of the dead swam in a sea of blood'. Nevertheless, the Russians were not content with what they had done but sought to satisfy their instincts by making children targets for their cannon shells[7]

Another chronicler reported that all living inhabitants of Khodz valley were slaughtered by Russian military assaults and bombardments.[7] In March 1864, a surrounded Circassian army refused to surrender and committed mass suicide. Around the same time, a final battle took place in Qbaada in 1864 between the Circassian army of 20,000 men and women, consisting of local villagers and militia and a Russian army of 100,000 men, consisting of Cossack and Russian horsemen, infantry and artillery. The Circassians were defeated, and after the battle, masses of Circassians were driven to Sochi, where thousands died as they awaited deportation.[122]

The last Circassian resistance, along with the coastal Abkhaz tribes of Pskhu, Akhtsipsou, Aibgo and Jigit were defeated and then killed en masse to the last man, woman and child, after which, on 21 May, Prince Mikhail Nikolayevich gathered the troops in a clearing in the area for a thanksgiving service.[123] The Russian army began celebrating victory, as a military-religious parade was held, and 100 Circassian warriors were publicly mutilated in a public execution in order to establish authority.[124] After this, the Russian army began increasing their efforts in raiding and burning Circassian villages, destroying fields to prevent return, cutting down trees, and driving the people to the Black Sea coast.

In this year of 1864 a deed has been accomplished almost without precedent in history: not one of the mountaineer inhabitants remains on their former places of residence, and measures are being taken to cleanse the region in order to prepare it for the new Russian population.

— Main Staff of the Caucasian Army[125]

The Ottomans hoped to increase the proportion of Muslims in regions where there were large Christian populations. Mountaineers were invited to "go to Turkey, where the Ottoman government would accept them with open arms and where their life would be incomparably better".[126]

 
Russian military outpost on the Circassian frontier, 1845

General Yevdokimov was entrusted with enforcing the Russian policy of mass Circassian migration to other parts of the Russian Empire or the Ottoman Empire.[119] Although some Circassians went by land to the Ottoman Empire, the majority went by sea, and those tribes which had "chosen" deportation were marched to the ports along the Black Sea by Russian forces.[127] Russian commanders and governors warned that if the order to leave was not carried out, more forces would be sent.[128]

Conditions during the deportation process

The situation of the Circassian and Abkhaz masses that had been driven into the coastal gorges prior to transport was dire. A Russian historian of the time, Adolph Petrovich Berzhe, who witnessed the events regarding the departure of the Circassians described the following:[129]

I shall never forget the overwhelming impression made on me by the mountaineers in Novorossiisk Bay, where about seventeen thousand of them were gathered on the shore. The late, inclement and cold time of the year, the almost complete absence of means of subsistence and the epidemic of typhus and small pox raging among them made their situation desperate. And indeed, whose heart would be touched on seeing, for example, the already stiff corpse of a young Circassian woman lying in rags on the damp ground under the open sky with two infants, one struggling in his death-throes while the other sought to assuage his hunger at his dead mother's breast? And I saw not a few such scenes.

— Adolph Petrovich Berzhe, Ahmed 2013, pp. 162–163.
 
Circassian refugees

Ivan Drozdov, a Russian officer who witnessed the scene in May 1864 as the other Russians were celebrating their victory remarked:

On the road our eyes were met with a staggering image: corpses of women, children, elderly persons, torn to pieces and half-eaten by dogs; deportees emaciated by hunger and disease, almost too weak to move their legs, collapsing from exhaustion and becoming prey to dogs while still alive.

— Ivan Drozdov[130]

An unknown number of deportees perished during the process. Some died from epidemics among crowds of deportees both while awaiting departure and while languishing in their Ottoman Black Sea ports of arrival. Others perished when ships underway sank during storms[30] or due to cases where profit-minded transporters overloaded their ships to maximize profit.[131] To pay for the voyage, Circassians sometimes were forced to sell their cattle, belongings, or even themselves into slavery.[132][133]

 
Circassians leaving their villages

The operation was not done with any degree of efficiency by the Russians, forcing the Circassians typically to leave using unchartered vessels, thus opening themselves up to abuses by the captains of such vessels.[134] In some cases as many as 1,800 refugees were packed into one ship, which would also carry livestock and household possessions. When the ships did not sink, such crowded environments proved suitable for the spread of diseases and dehydration, and when the ships arrived at their destinations, they contained only remnants of their original human cargo. For this reason, they were referred to by contemporary observers as "floating graveyards"[135] with "decks swarming with the dead and dying".[136]

Abuses in the transport of refugees between Turkish cities were also noted, with one particular incident concerning a ship bound for Cyprus in which mutilated and decapitated bodies were found washed ashore, compounded by accounts of refugees being tied up and tossed overboard while still alive. On this particular Cyprus-bound ship, only one third of the refugees who had boarded survived.[137] Another Russian observer, Olshevsky, also noted abuses by Turkish skippers, as well as bribes paid by Circassians to get onto departing ships, but he blamed most of all the Russian command under Yevdokimov for the situation:

Why did it happen that ... the Abzakhs and Shapsugs, who were being driven from their homeland, suffered such horrific sufferings and deaths? It was exclusively because of the hurried and premature movement of our troops to the sea prior to the spring equinox. Had the Dakhovsky Detachment moved a month or two weeks later, this would not have happened.[138]

Despite the conditions, Russian forces under Yevdokimov kept driving Circassians to the coast. In January he annihilated Ubykh villages, leaving the Ubykhs without shelter in the severe winter, and in March, the crowd of refugees at the Circassian port of Tuapse approached twenty thousand.[139]

Only a portion of those who had left the Circassian coast actually made it to Ottoman ports.[26] Of the portion that made it to Ottoman shores, many more would die there soon after while they were quarantined on either beach, the vessels that had carried them, or in lazarettos, and many more died in makeshift accommodations or in the process of being transported a second time to their final destinations.[140] One British eyewitness recalled that:

Dense masses of ragged men, women, and children literally covered the seashore. All looked wan and hungry. Many were all but naked. Several lay dying.[141]

In 1864, the Ottoman Porte repeatedly asked the Russian government to stop the deportations on humanitarian grounds, in light of the human disaster unfolding on their shores, but the Ottoman requests were repeatedly refused, as Yevdokimov argued with urgency that the deportations should instead be accelerated. When October 1864 was chosen as a cutoff point for the departures, Yevdokimov successfully postponed it two weeks, after which he ignored the deadline and deported Circassians without stop, even as winter set in again.[142] Later in 1867, Grand Prince Mikhail Nikolaevich stated that the cleansing had had to be accelerated "in light of a possible European coalition".[143]

Transport vessels

As Russia made it clear that it would not try hard to keep deported Circassians alive, and provide few ships for the effort, the Ottomans sent their navy to carry the Circassians. As the deportations increased, there were not enough Ottoman vessels to carry all the deportees, even when warships were recruited for the job, and the situation began taking a heavy toll on the Ottoman treasury, as it bore the brunt of the cost.[144]

Initially, on 17 May 1863, Tsar Alexander II ruled that those who "chose" to emigrate should pay their own way.[142] Later, the Russians offered financial incentives for vessels to take the Circassians to Ottoman ports, but forced the Circassians themselves to pay. In some cases, Circassians were forced to sell their cattle or their belongings to pay; in others, one of every thirty Circassians were sold into slavery to pay.[132][133] These funds ultimately ended up in the hands of the transporters, including Russian military officiers.[142] Many vessels refused to carry Circassians because of the disease that was present among them as many of the ships that had been carrying Circassians had had their crews fall ill, while others that did agree tried to make as much profit out of it as possible by overloading their vessels with refugees, ultimately causing many transport boats to sink, killing their human cargo.[131] In April 1864, after one Russian crew was entirely wiped out by disease, Russian vessels stopped offering themselves for transport, dumping the entire process onto the burden of the Ottomans; and Yevdokimov made no effort to make provisions for food, water or medical help.[145]

The Russian consul based in the Ottoman Black Sea port of Trabzon reported the arrival of 240,000 Circassians with 19,000 dying shortly thereafter with the death rate being around 200 people per day.[146]

On 25 May 1864, Henry Bulwer, the British ambassador in Istanbul, argued that the British government charter some of its own vessels for the purpose because the Ottomans simply did not have enough on their own, and innocent civilians would be left to rot; the vessels were not forthcoming but British government ships provided assistance at various points and British steamships also helped.[147] On 29 May, eight Greek vessels were reported to be helping with the transportation of Circassians, as were one Moldavian, one German, and one British vessel.[148][149]

Demographic changes

Affected tribes Population in Circassia before the genocide Population in Circassia after the genocide
Kabardians 500,000 34,730
Shapsugs 300,000 1,983
Abzakhs 260,000 14,660
Natukhajs 240,000 175
Hatuqway and Zhaney 100,000 0
Temirgoys 80,000 3,140
Ubykhs 74,000 0
Bzhedugs 60,000 15,263
Khegayk 20,000 0
Hakuchey 15,000 0
Mamkhegh 15,000 1,204
Ademey 5,000 0
Chebsin 4,000 0
Chebsin, Guaye, Khatuq and Cherchenay 3,000 0
Total 1,661,000 71,155
 
Parade by Russian troops, symbolizing the end of the Caucasian War at a military encampment in Qbaada, 21 May 1864

Among the main peoples that moved to Turkey were Adyghe, Ubykhs, and Muslim Abkhazians – hence the reference in the name to the deportation being of Circassians. The Shapsugh tribe, which had numbered some 300,000, was reduced to the 3,000 people who managed to flee into the forests and plains.[60] The 140 Shapsugh that remained were sent to Siberia.[60] Overall, calculations including those taking into account the Russian government's own archival figures as well as Ottoman figures have estimated a loss of 90%,[150][39] 94%[151] or 95–97%[32] of the Circassian nation in the process. One of the biggest population changes came in the Circassian capital city of Sochi, which previously had a population of around 100,000, and according to Russian sources, was reduced to 98 after the events.[20][152][153][154][155]

Most sources state that as many as 1 to 1.5 million Circassians were forced to flee in total, but only around half of them could make it to land.[156][35] Ottoman archives show nearly one million migrants entering their land from the Caucasus by 1879, with nearly half of them dying on the shores as a result of diseases. If Ottoman archives are correct, it would make it the biggest genocide of the 19th century, and indeed, in support of the Ottoman archives, the Russian census of 1897 records only 150,000 Circassians, one tenth of the original number, still remaining in the now conquered region.[23][157][30][37][38]

 
Resettlement of Circassians in the Ottoman Empire

Genocides and mass expulsions of Caucasian natives and Crimean Tatars were perpetrated by the Russian empire during the latter half of 19th century as it expanded southwards and launched extermination campaigns against Circassians, Chechens, Crimean Tatars, etc.; while also intensifying pogroms against Jews.[158] These extermination campaigns were part of Tsarist Russia's "brosok na yug" ("throw to the south") settler-colonial policy of Russification in the Caucasus and surrounding regions. Following the Crimean war, Russian empire forcibly expelled millions of Crimean Tatars and sent Russian settlers to the Crimean peninsula. During the 1860s, Russian imperial army conquered Circassia and launched a scorched-earth campaign of state terror aimed at the extermination or complete expulsion of all Circassian natives from the Caucasus region.[159]

"the cleansing of the latter canyons of natives required a large number of soldiers...
Through all these actions of the Dakhovsky Detachment, the entire mountainous and inaccessible areas between the sources of the Belaya and Pshekha rivers were cleansed of natives.
In order to further squeeze this population and cleanse the land of the natives as much as possible...
on the fifteenth of November three columns advanced to the mouth of the Defan. On the first, second, third and fourth of December several columns went from the source of the Defan along the upper and middle reaches of the rivers annihilating the population, after which, having ascended along the Shapsugo and crossed over into Psekups Basin, they cleansed the left bank of this river of natives."

— Russian general Nikolay Yevdokimov deploying the terms "ochistit" (lit. "to cleanse") and "ochishchenie" (lit. "cleansing") to refer to the massacres and ethnic cleansing of Circassians.[160][13]

Although Circassians were the main (and most notorious) victims, the expulsions also gravely affected other peoples in the region. It was estimated that 80% of the Ingush left Ingushetia for the Middle East in 1865.[161][162] In 1865, Tsarist Russia expanded its extermination campaigns against the Chechen people.[163] Lowland Chechens as well were evicted in large numbers, and while many came back, the former Chechen lowlands lacked their historical Chechen populations for a long period until Chechens were settled in the region during the return from their 1944–1957 deportation to Siberia. The Arshtins, at that time a (debatably) separate people, were completely wiped out as a distinct group: according to official documents, 1,366 Arshtin families disappeared (i.e. either fled or were killed) and only 75 families remained.[164][165] Additionally, in 1860–1861 the Russian army forced a series of evictions of lands in the Central Caucasus, forcing about 10,000 Circassians, 22,000 Chechens and additionally a significant number of Muslim Ossetians out and to Turkey.[166] Two other Muslim peoples in the northwest Caucasus, the Karachay and the Balkars, were not deported in large numbers during the process as they were loyal to Russia since the beginning. Abkhazia, meanwhile, lost 60% of its ethnic Abkhaz population by the end of the 19th century.[167]

Whether sources treat the evictions of these non-Circassian peoples as a part of the same process varies; most sources include the evictions and massacres of the Ubykh (considered by many to be part of the Circassian ethnos despite having a different language[168]) and Abazin populations as part of the same operation against the neighboring ethnic Circassian populations,[23] and some sources also include the Abkhaz in counts of the evicted[169] while others group the expulsions of Chechens, Ingush, Arshtins[165][164][170] and Ossetians[166] with those of Kabardins, and also some include the earlier and less systematic expulsions of Nogai.[171][172] The 1861 order by Yevdokimov to relocate populations of Circassians (including Ubykhs) to the swamps also included the Nogais and Abazas.[173][174]

Shenfield has argued that those that died in the ensuing catastrophe were probably more than a million, likely approaching 1.5 million.[175] Imperial Russian Army constantly deployed the terms "ochistit" (lit. "to cleanse") and "ochishchenie" (lit. "cleansing") to refer to its military operations that inflicted mass-killings and ethnic cleansing of Circassians. This was part of Russian Empire's settler-colonial policy of expansionism in Caucasus; which involved the de-populating of its inhabitants. The genocide culminated in the deaths and forced expulsions of 95-97% of Circassian natives from Caucasus.[176][177]

Repopulation of affected lands

On 25 June 1861, Tsar Alexander II signed an imperial rescript titled "Settlement of the North Caucasus", reading as follows:

Now with God's help, the matter of complete conquest of the Caucasus is near to conclusion. A few years of persistent efforts are remaining to utterly force out the hostile mountaineers from the fertile countries they occupy and settle on the latter a Russian Christian population forever. The honor of accomplishing this deed belongs mainly to the Cossacks of the Kubanski armed forces.[178]

To speed up the process, Alexander offered monetary compensation and various privileges. From the spring of 1861 to 1862, 35 Cossack stanitsas were established, with 5,480 families newly settling the land. In 1864, seventeen new Cossack stanitsas were established in the Transkuban region.[179]

International reactions

Ottoman Empire

With regard to Ottoman policy overall, Fabio Grassi argues that the Ottoman policy was quite successful with respect to the conditions at hand. He states that the Ottomans saw Circassians as fellow Muslims who were in hard times, but they could not do anything to help them.[25] Rosser-Owen portrays the Ottomans as having been constrained by pragmatic concerns and at a loss for what to do about the flood of refugees, and he notes the hardships suffered by British consular staff as they tried to help the Circassian refugees as well as the improvement of Ottoman policy toward accommodating the refugees over time so that by 1867, when the final Abkhaz refugees were transported, there were many fewer deaths in the process.[180]

Others, however, disagree; historian Walter Richmond accuses the Ottoman government of "playing a double game", "gross irresponsibility" and being "either unconcerned with or oblivious to the consequences immigration would have for the refugees, by having at various points encouraged Circassian population movement", in its previous statements, having earlier encouraged immigration, urging the Circassians to "stay and fight" in late 1863 and promising the arrival of an international coalition force, and then encouraging another wave of immigration as late as June 1864 when the human costs were beyond clear,[181] while Shenfield also describes the Ottoman response to the crisis as "grossly inadequate"[182] and Marc Pinson accuses the Ottoman government of not trying to formulate a coherent policy toward the refugees.[183]

United Kingdom

Richmond also argues that the British, despite serious discussion of the possibility of military intervention to alleviate the situation in Circassia, were ultimately concerned only with their own geopolitical interests and "deserting" Circassia to its fate.[184] He further argues that Western European indignation at the unfolding situation in Circassia arose only after Russia leveraged the Ottomans to gain special rights in the Dardanelles thus threatening their trade interests.[185]

William Palgrave, a British diplomat who witnessed the events of the genocide, stated regarding the victims that "their only crime was not being Russian".[25]

Scotland

Rosser-Owen emphasizes that the philanthropic efforts of British organizations and that the concern for the well-being of Circassians was most intense in Scotland where Circassian struggles were compared to past traumas in then-recent Scottish history.[186]

Advocacy and relief efforts

In 1862, the Circassians sent a delegation of leaders to major cities in Britain, which had been covertly helping the Circassians with tactics and with organizing their resistance, visiting major English and Scottish cities including London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Dundee to advocate for their cause.[187] The visits caused a swelling of public support for the Circassians and outrage directed at Russia, with sympathies particularly intense in Scotland perhaps owing to the recent Highland Clearances,[188] and sparked lobbying for intervention by the Dundee Foreign Affairs Committee, calls to arms for the defense of Circassia, the founding of the Circassian Aid Committee in London, and constant reporting on the issue by various newspapers such as The Scotsman.[187]

Politicians and newspapers began taking up the "Circassian cause", and calling for intervention to save Circassia from decimation, and at one point Parliament came close to going to war with Russia and attempting to establish a protectorate over struggling Circassia.[185] Although such initiatives failed to change British government policy, the Circassian Aid Committee, organized by many individuals who were angry at inaction by London, managed to gather £2,067 for the provision of mattresses, blankets, pillows, woolens and clothing especially for Circassian orphans in Istanbul, while Russophobic commentary by some of its members has been attributed for its closing in March 1865.[189] British consuls became involved with relief patterns and the organization of resettlement for Circassians, with various British consuls and consular staff catching illnesses from plague-ridden Circassian refugees, and a few died from such illnesses.[190]

In the initial stages of the process, relief efforts were also made by the Ottoman population, both by Muslims and Christians. In Vidin, in Bulgaria, the Muslim and Christian inhabitants volunteered to increase their grain production and send it to the local Circassian refugees, while in Cyprus, the Muslim population sheltered Circassian orphans. The Ottoman government built mosques for them and provided them with teachers, while the Sultan donated £50,000 from his Privy Purse, although there were some reports in the British press that most of this money did not actually end up helping Circassian refugees, having been embezzled by Ottoman officials at various steps along the way.[191] As the burden of the refugees increased however, sentiments against the refugees, particularly among the Bulgarian and Turkish populations, grew and tensions began to develop between the Bulgarian and Turkish natives and the Circassian refugees.[192]

Resettlement

 
Present-day Inner Anatolia

The Ottoman authorities often failed to offer any support to the newly arrived. They were settled in the inhospitable mountainous regions of Inner Anatolia and were given menial and exhausting jobs.[193]

Imam Shamil's son Muhamed Shafi was appalled by the conditions the migrants had faced upon their arrival to Anatolia and went to investigate the situation: "I will write to (Turkish sultan) Abdülmecid that he should stop fooling mountaineers ... The government's cynicism could not be more pronounced. The Turks triggered the resettlement by their proclamations, probably hoping to use refugees for military ends ... but after facing the avalanche of refugees, they turned turtle and shamefully condemned to slow death those people who were ready to die for Turkey's glory".[194]

In 1864 alone, about 220,000 people disembarked in Anatolia. Between 6 March and 21 May 1864, the entire Ubykh nation had departed the Caucasus for Turkey, leading to the extinction of the Ubykh language in 1992. By the end of the movement, more than 400,000 Circassians, as well as 200,000 Abkhazians and Ajars, fled to Turkey. The term Çerkes, "Circassians", became the blanket term for them in Turkey because the majority were Circassians (Adyghe). Some other Circassian refugees fled to the border areas of the Danube Vilayet where Ottomans had expanded their military forces to defend the new province and some Circassians enrolled in military service while others settled in the region.[195]

The Ottoman authorities often opted to settle Circassians in Christian-majority regions that were beginning to clamor for independence, as a loyal counterweight population to the rebellious natives. These places had just recently taken on large numbers of around a hundred thousand Crimean Tatar refugees, in a previous resettlement operation that had also seen widespread complications and problems.[196] In Varna, it was reported that the situation was particularly bad, with 80,000 Circassians settled on the outskirts of the city in "camps of death" where they were unprotected from weather or disease and left without food. When Circassians tried to beg for bread, Turkish soldiers chased them out for fear of the diseases they carried. It was reported that the Turks were unable to keep up with burying Circassian corpses, and recruited convicts to do the work as well; one Circassian wrote to the Governor-General "We rather go to Siberia than live in this Siberia ... one can die, not live, on the indicated place".[197]

Areas settled by Circassians

 
Distribution of Circassian populations in historic Circassia and the diaspora, 21st century

Balkans

In 1861–1862 alone, in the Danube Vilayet, there were 41,000 Circassian refugee families.[198] By the end of the process, there were around 250,000 Circassians in the Balkans, accounting for 5 to 7 percent of the total Balkan population, on top of the earlier arrival of 100,000 Crimean Tatars that Balkan populations had just recently had to absorb.[199][200]

Kadir Natho notes that "a net of Circassian settlements enveloped practically all the European part of the Ottoman Empire". Very large numbers of Circassians were settled in Bulgaria. Istoria Bulgarii reports that "about 6,000 families were transferred through Burgas and settled in Thrace; 13,000 families – through Varna and Shumen – to Silistra and Vidin; 12,000 families to Sofia and Nish. The remainder 10,000 families were distributed in Svishtovsk, Nikipolsk, Oriskhovsk, and other outskirts." There was a chain of Circassian settlements stretching from Dobruja (see Circassians in Romania) to the Serbian border, with an additional cluster of 23 settlements in the Kosovo field. Circassians also settled in a few mostly Greek areas, particularly in the southern part of Epirus, Cyprus and one colony at Panderma in the Sea of Marmara.[198]

Russians raped Circassian girls during the 1877 Russo-Turkish war from the Circassian refugees who were settled in the Ottoman Balkans.[201] Circassian girls were sold into Turkish harems by their relatives.[202][203] Circassians in the Ottoman army also raped and murdered Bulgarians during the 1877 Russo-Turkish war.[204][205][206][207][208][209][210]

Anatolia and Iraq

Kadir Natho lists the following areas as having notable concentrations of Circassian refugee settlements: "in spacious Anatolia ... near Amasya, Samsun, Cilicia, Mesopotamia, on the Charshamba peninsula, along the Aegean Sea, in Turkish Armenia, Adapazar, Duzge, Eskisehir, and Balikesir. From Trebizond the mountaineers were directly sent to Kars and Erzincan ... many exiles were distributed in ... the vilayet of Sivas, on the extensive desert between Tokat and Sivas".[198]

Levant

Proposed return

Many Circassian households petitioned the Russian embassy in Constantinople for their resettlement back in the Caucasus.[211] By the end of the century, the Russian consulates all over the Ottoman Empire were deluged with such petitions. Later, re-emigration was sanctioned only on a limited scale, as mostly large villages (up to 8,500 inhabitants) applied for re-emigration and their relocation posed formidable difficulties to the imperial authorities. Perhaps more importantly, Alexander II suspected that the British and Ottoman governments had instructed Circassians to seek return with the purpose of sparking a new war against their Russian overlords.[212] As a consequence, he was known to personally decline such petitions.

Consequences

 
Site of Circassian village established in 1860 in the Ottoman Levant, abandoned soon after due to malaria

The overall resettlement was accompanied by hardships for the common people. A significant number died of starvation – many Turks of Adyghe descent still do not eat fish today, in memory of the tremendous number of their kinfolk that they lost during the passage across the Black Sea.

Some of the deportees and their descendants did well and they would eventually earn high positions within the Ottoman Empire. A significant number of Young Turks had Caucasian origins.

All nationals of Turkey are considered Turkish for official purposes. However, there are several hundred villages which are considered purely "Circassian", whose total "Circassian" population is estimated to be 1,000,000, although there is no official data in this respect, and the estimates are based on informal surveys. The "Circassians" in question may not always speak the languages of their ancestors, and Turkey's center-right parties, often with varying tones of Turkish nationalism, generally do well in localities where they are known to constitute sizable parts of the population (such as in Akyazı).

Along with Turkey's aspirations to join the European Union, population groups with specificities[vague] started receiving more attention on the basis of their ethnicity or culture.

In Middle Eastern countries, which were created from the dismembered Ottoman Empire (and were initially under an Allied protectorate), the fate of the ethnos was better. The Al Jeish al Arabi (Arab Legion), created in Trans-Jordan under the influence of Lawrence of Arabia, in significant part consisted of Chechens – arguably because the Bedouin were reluctant to serve under the centralized command. In addition, the modern city of Amman was born after Circassians settled there in 1887.

Apart from substantial numbers of Kabardian Circassians consisting of qalang tribes, small communities of mountainous Circassians (nang tribes) remained in their original homeland under Russian rule that were separated from among one another within an area heavily resettled by Russian Cossacks, Slavs and other settlers.[146] For example, the capital of the Shapsugh tribe was renamed after the Russian general that committed atrocities in the region along with the erection of a victory statue to him.[146] In the Caucasus, some 217,000 Circassians remained in 1897.[146]

Ethnic tensions in the Ottoman Empire

 
Circassians are settled in the house of an evicted Bulgarian family, painting in the 1870s

Misha Glenny notes that the settlement of the Circassian deportees played a major role in destabilizing the Ottoman Balkans, especially Bulgaria. Their arrival helped spread starvation and epidemics (including smallpox) in the Balkan territories, and worse, the Porte ordered that Christians be evicted en masse from their homes in certain areas in order to accommodate the need to house the deportees. This, and the outbreak of armed conflict between the Circassians and the Christian and Muslim natives, accelerated the growth of nationalist sentiments in the Balkans.[213] Kadir Natho argues that the Ottomans coopted the Circassians into a "police force" in the Balkans as well as for settling them to increase the local Muslim population, with Circassians being made to take arms against rebellions, even those Circassians that had not settled in affected regions.[198] The local Balkan peoples, having just taken on large numbers of Crimean Tatar refugees, an operation which had caused the deaths of thousands of refugees and natives alike due to disease and starvation, were sometimes loath to take in more Muslim refugees expelled by the Russians,[196] and some Bulgarians, in particular, were convinced that Circassians had been placed into scattered Bulgarian villages "in order to paralyze any kind of liberation and independence Slavic movement".[198] While, in many areas, Bulgarian Christians had initially been very hospitable to the Circassian refugees, including by producing extra resources to support them, the collapsing humanitarian situation combined with the political instability caused relations between the two groups to spiral downward.

In many cases, lands were assigned to North Caucasian refugees by the Ottoman government, but the locals refused to give up their homes, causing outbreaks of fighting between Circassians and Chechens on one side, and the Bulgarian, Serbian, Arab, Bedouin, Druze, Armenian, Turkish and Kurdish natives on the other, leading to armed conflict. In Uzun Aile, between Kayseri and Sivas, Circassians ultimately pushed the local Kurdish population out, and to this day the Kurds with roots in that region recall in a folk song how a "cruel fair-haired and blue-eyed people with sheep-skin hats" drove them from their homes.[214]

Traumatized, desperate, and having lived for many decades previously in a situation where Circassians and Russians would regularly raid each other, Circassians sometimes resorted to raiding the native populations, ultimately causing a reputation for the Circassians as being particularly barbaric to spread throughout the Empire.[215]

 
Circassian raid by Franz Roubaud

Eventually, fear of the Circassians, due to the diseases they spread and the stereotype of them as either beggars or bandits, became so great that Christian and Muslim communities alike would protest upon hearing that Circassians were to be settled near them.[199]

Later, in the 1870s, war again struck in the Balkans where most Circassians had made their homes, and they were deported by Russian and Russian-allied forces a second time.[216]

Numbers of refugees

Alan Fisher notes that accurate counts of the refugees were difficult to impossible to obtain because "Most of those leaving the Caucasus did it in a hurry, in a disorganised fashion, without passing any official border point where they might have been counted or officially noted",[217] however estimates have been made primarily based on the available documents[218] including Russian archival documents[219] as well as Ottoman documents.[220]

  • 1852–1858: Abkhaz population declined from 98,000 to 89,866[221]
  • 1858–1860: Over 30,000 Nogais left[221]
  • 1860–1861: 10,000 Kabardians left[222]
  • 1861–1863: 4,300 Abaza, 4,000 Natukhais, 2,000 Temirgoi, 600 Beslenei, and 300 Bzhedugs families were exiled[222]
  • by 1864: 600,000 Circassians have left for the Ottoman Empire, with more leaving afterwards[223]
  • 1865: 5,000 Chechen families were sent to Turkey[222]
  • 1863–1864: 470,703 people left the West Caucasus (according to G. A. Dzidzariia)[224]
  • 1863–1864: 312,000 people left the West Caucasus (according to N. G. Volkova)[224]
  • Between November 1863 and August 1864: over 300,000 Circassians seek refuge in the Ottoman Empire; over two thirds die.[225][226]
  • 1858–1864: 398,000 people left the Kuban oblast (according to N. G. Volkova)[224]
  • 1858–1864: 493,194 people left (according to Adol'f Berzhe)[224]
  • 1863–1864: 400,000 people left (according to N. I. Voronov)[224]
  • 1861–1864: 418,000 people left (according to the Main Staff of the Caucasus Army)[224]

Genocide classification

In recent times, scholars and Circassian activists have proposed that the deportations and mass killings can certainly be considered as a manifestation of the modern-day concept of genocide, though the term had not been in use in the 19th century. Noting the systematic massacre of villages by Russian soldiers[227] that was accompanied by the Russian colonization of these lands, Circassian activists claim it is "certainly and undeniably" a genocide.[228] Scholars estimate that some 90 percent of Circassians (estimated at more than one million)[229] had vanished from the territories occupied by Russia. During these events, at least hundreds of thousands of people were "killed or starved to death".[230]

Anssi Kulberg has asserted that the Russian Empire played a central role in formulating "the strategy of modern ethnic cleansing and genocide" during its systematic extermination campaigns against Crimean Tatars and Circassians.[231]

Political positions

Russia

In Russia, a presidential commission has been set up[when?] to try and deny the Circassian genocide, with respect to the events of the 1860s.[122] There is concern by the Russian government that acknowledging the events as genocide would entail possible claims of financial compensation in addition to efforts toward repatriating diaspora Circassians back to Circassia.[232]

Boris Yeltsin

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin's May 1994 statement stated that Circassian resistance to the Tsarist forces was legitimate, and that there were sad casualties, but he did not recognize "the guilt of the tsarist government for the genocide".[233]

Circassian Organizations

In 1997 and 1998, the leaders of Kabardino-Balkaria and Adygea sent appeals to the Duma to reconsider the situation and to issue an apology; to date, there has been no response from Moscow. In October 2006, the Adygeyan public organizations of Russia, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Syria, the United States, Belgium, Canada, and Germany have sent the president of the European Parliament a letter with the request to recognize the genocide against Adygean (Circassian) people.[234]

On 5 July 2005, the Circassian Congress, an organization that unites representatives of the various Circassian peoples in the Russian Federation, has called on Moscow first to acknowledge and then to apologize for tsarist policies that Circassians say constituted a genocide.[232] Their appeal pointed out that "according to the official tsarist documents more than 400,000 Circassians were killed, 497,000 were forced to flee abroad to Turkey, and only 80,000 were left alive in their native area."[233] The Russian parliament (Duma) rejected the petition in 2006 in a statement that acknowledged past actions of the Soviet and previous regimes while referring to in overcoming multiple contemporary problems and issues in the Caucasus through cooperation.[232]

Georgia

On 21 May 2011, the Parliament of Georgia passed a resolution stating that pre-planned mass killings of Circassians by Imperial Russia, accompanied by "deliberate famine and epidemics", should be recognized as "genocide", and that those deported during those events from their homeland should be recognized as "refugees". Georgia has made outreach efforts to North Caucasian ethnic groups since the 2008 Russo-Georgian War.[39] Following a consultation with academics, human rights activists and Circassian diaspora groups and parliamentary discussions in Tbilisi in 2010 and 2011, Georgia became the first country to use the word "genocide" to refer to the events.[39][235][236][237] On 20 May 2011 the parliament of the Republic of Georgia declared in its resolution[238] that the mass annihilation of the Cherkess (Adyghe) people during the Russian-Caucasian war and thereafter constituted genocide as defined in the Hague Convention of 1907 and the UN Convention of 1948. The next year, on the same day of 21 May, a monument was erected in Anaklia, Georgia, to commemorate the suffering of the Circassians.[239]

Turkey

 
Circassian march calling for the recognition of the Circassian genocide, Turkey

Circassians in Turkey have made multiple attempts to get Turkey to recognize the genocide.[240] There are multiple monuments in Turkey erected to commemorate the Circassian genocide.[241] Turkish politicians have referenced the events multiple times. Every year on 21 May, Turkish politicians and major political parties post Tweets commemorating the events, while referring to it as an "exile", including Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.[242] Some political parties such as the Pluralist Democracy Party (ÇDP), Labour Party (EMEP) and Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) have called on Turkey to recognize the genocide.[243]

Appeals to world governments by Circassians

On 1 December 2015, in the Great Union Day (the national day of Romania), a large number of Circassian representatives sent a request to the Romanian government asking it to recognize the Circassian genocide. The letter was specifically sent to the President (Klaus Iohannis), the Prime Minister (Dacian Cioloș), the President of the Senate (Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu) and the President of the Chamber of Deputies (Valeriu Zgonea). The document included 239 signatures and was written in Arabic, English, Romanian and Turkish. Similar requests had already been sent earlier by Circassian representatives to Estonia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland and Ukraine.[244][245] In the case of Moldova, the request was sent on 27 August of the same year (2015), on the Moldovan Independence Day, to the President (Nicolae Timofti), the Prime Minister (Valeriu Streleț) and the President of the Parliament (Andrian Candu). The request was also redacted in Arabic, English, Romanian and Turkish languages and included 192 signatures.[246][247]

Scholarly viewpoints

 
Professor Doctor İlber Ortaylı

Most scholars today agree that the term "genocide" is justified to define the events, except some Russian scholars in the minority. Some scholarly views include:

  • Alexander Ohtov says the term genocide is justified in his Kommersant interview:

    Yes, I believe that the word "genocide" is justified. To understand why we are talking about the genocide, you have to look at history. During the Russian–Caucasian war, Russian generals not only expelled the Circassians, but also destroyed them physically. Not only killed them in combat but burned hundreds of villages with civilians. Spared neither children nor women nor the elderly. They killed and tortured them with no separation. The entire fields of ripe crops were burned, the orchards cut down, people burnt alive, so that the Circassians could not return to their habitations. A destruction of civilian population on a massive scale ... is it not a genocide? [248]

  • Scholar Anssi Kullberg states that the "Russian suppression of the Caucasus" directed at the Crimean Tatars and Circassians, resulted in the Russian state "inventing the strategy of modern ethnic cleansing and genocide".[249]
  • Paul Henze credits the events of the 1860s in Circassia with inspiring the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.[250]
  • Walter Richmond also argues the term "genocide" is appropriate, considering the events of 1864 to have been "one of the first examples of modern social engineering". Citing international law which holds that "genocidal intent applies to acts of destruction that are not the specific goal but are predictable outcomes or by-products of a policy, which could have been avoided by a change in that policy", he considers the events to have been genocide on the grounds that the ensuing demographic transformation of Circassia to a predominantly ethnically Russian region was viewed as desirable by the Russian authorities,[251] and that the Russian commanders were fully aware of the huge number of deaths by starvation that their methods in the war and the expulsion would bring, as they viewed them as necessary for their supreme goal that Circassia be firmly and permanently Russian territory, all the while viewing Circassia's native inhabitants as "little more than a pestilence to be removed".[252]
  • Michael Ellman, meanwhile, in a book review of Richmond's Circassian Genocide, agrees that the term's use is justified under the UN definition as referring to actions intending to destroy "in whole or in part an ethnic group", with the part referring to those Circassians whom St. Petersberg thought could not accept its rule.[253]
  • According to the Italian historian Fabio Grassi, the word "exile" would unquestionably underestimate the scale of the events, and the word "massacre" can be used to describe it.[254]
  • French historian Robert Mantran used the term "Circassian Exile and Genocide" to describe the events in volume 3 of his book Ottoman History.[255]
  • Turkish historian Server Tanilli used the term "Great Circassian Exile, Genocide, and Massacre" for the events in his work The Reality and Heritage of Centuries.[256]
  • The events were described as "an exile to certain death" by the Turkish historian İlber Ortaylı.[257] In May 2021, Ortaylı attended a KAFFED conference dedicated to the Circassian genocide, where he advised the Circassians to "keep their heads up and make their voice heard".[258]

Modern movement for the rights and freedoms of Circassians

In 2014, the Circassian movement culminated in the Circassian protests against the Sochi Olympics. In response to the actualization of the "Circassian issue"[259] Russia followed the usual path: suppression of Circassian protests, discrediting the Circassian movement by linking it to external factors - the interests of countries such as Georgia, the United States and Israel.[260][261]

In 2017, the Circassian national movement is experiencing a national upsurge, the readiness of Circassians to defend their own identity has increased. The large-scale events that took place on May 21, 2017 simultaneously in several regions of Russia are unconditional proof of this. Tens of thousands of Circassians in Adygea, Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia took part in mourning events dedicated to the anniversary of the end of the Russian-Caucasian War. The multi-million diaspora of Circassians abroad was not left aside, for example, there was a mass procession with national banners of Circassia through the central streets of Turkish cities. For the first time in the history of post-war Circassia, which today exists only in the historical memory of Circassians, commemorative events dedicated to the victims of the Russian-Caucasian war were held in schools, higher educational institutions, and in cities with a compact population of Circassians.[262]

As a result of the Tsarist exile (1864), 90% of the Circassian people are diaspora (about 6 million people, including 1.5 million citizens of Turkey). However, this does not prevent Circassian activists from advocating for the revival and development of their native language and the creation of a separate Circassian national republic in the North Caucasus. Russian officials have already expressed concern that the influx of Circassians from abroad will change the ethnic balance in the republic, strengthen the common Circassian identity, and encourage calls to restore statehood and independence.[263]

In March 2019, Circassian activists formed the Coordinating Council of the Circassian Community. The activists seek international recognition of the 1860s genocide and defend their language and the ability to receive education in it. In 2021, Circassian demonstrations were held in several cities despite government repression. The largest rally was held in Nalchik, attended by about 2,000 people. In September 2021, two new independent Circassian organizations were established - the Circassian (Adygean) Historical and Geographical Society and the United Circassian Media Space. Their plans include the study and defense of Circassian history, the return of Circassian topographic names, and the preservation and multiplication of the Circassian language and identity. Circassian activists are focusing on the 2021 census by launching a petition calling on large communities to declare themselves Circassians (indigenous Adygs). Such an initiative encourages rediscovery of Circassian history and the revitalization of Circassian identity, which was divided and distorted by the Tsarist, Soviet, and Russian regimes. On October 3, 2021, leaders of eight Circassian organizations appealed to their brethren across the North Caucasus to use their own self-designation in the census, rather than the alien one imposed on them by Moscow.[264]

Contemporary Struggle for Circassian Language and Culture

In June 2018, a law promoting Russification was passed: the study of all non-Russian languages in schools became voluntary, while the study of Russian remained compulsory. Circassians (Adygs) consider the de facto abolition of indigenous languages as a continuation of the Russian extermination and expulsion of the Circassian population from the North Caucasus, which began in 1864 with deportation and genocide.[265]

Aslan Beshto, chairman of the Kabarda Congress, believes that the main task for Circassians today is to preserve their native language, which is the key to their ethnic identity.[266]

Circassian activists say that Circassian culture is still practically not presented to the public, in particular, there are very few books in the Circassian language.[267]

Asker Sokht, chairman of the public organization Adyge Khase in Krasnodar Krai, also believes that "the main tasks facing Circassians as an ethnic group are the preservation of their language and culture". In 2014, he was detained and sentenced to eight days of arrest. Soht's detention was related to his criticism of the Sochi Olympics, as well as his active public activities.[268]

Since the beginning of 2022, the authorities have been working systematically and systematically to cancel Circassian (Adyghe) commemorative and festive events. Under far-fetched pretexts, they banned the celebration of the Circassian flag day, and later banned the procession that had become traditional in honor of the mourning day of May 21.[269]

Persecution of Circassian activists

In May 2014, on the eve of the tragic date (May 21), Beslan Teuvazhev, one of the organizers of a campaign to make commemorative ribbons for the 150th anniversary of the Russian-Caucasian War, was detained by Moscow police officers. More than 70 thousand ribbons were seized from him. Later Teuvazhev was released, but the ribbons were not returned, having found signs of extremism in the inscriptions printed on them. Circassian activists call such an act "a continuation of the policy of oppression of national minorities" of the times of the empire.[270]

In November 2014, the representative of the movement "Patriots of Circassia" Adnan Huade and the coordinator of the public movement "Circassian Union" Ruslan Kesh were among the signatories of the appeal of activists of Circassian public organizations to the leadership of Poland with a request to recognize the genocide of Circassians in the XIX century. In 2015, the activists were subjected to searches and detentions by law enforcement officials.[271][272]

In spring 2017, a court in the Lazarevsky district of Krasnodar Krai sentenced seventy-year-old Circassian activist Ruslan Gvashev for his participation in the May 21, 2017 mourning events dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Russian-Caucasian War. Ruslan Gvashev is a well-known Circassian activist in the region, head of the Shapsug Khase, chairman of the Congress of Adyg-Shapsugs of the Black Sea region, vice-president of the Confederation of Peoples of the Caucasus and the International Circassian Association. Nevertheless, the court found the defendant guilty of organizing an unauthorized rally and imposed a fine of 10,000 rubles on Ruslan Gvashev. Due to the disability of the accused (Ruslan Gvashev has one leg amputated), the court released him directly from the courtroom. The Circassian activist, who does not agree with the offensive, in his opinion, charge, sought help from the Kabardino-Balkarian Human Rights Center in order to obtain a review of his case and recognition of the Circassians' right to hold memorial events.[273][274][275]

Numerous facts of harassment of activists, commissioned trials against the most prominent figures of the Circassian national movement make it necessary to seek a fair solution in international courts.

Thus, the European Court of Human Rights accepted the complaints of Circassian activists accused of extremism by the Russian Themis. The year-long attempt of civil activists from the organization "Circassian Congress" to shed the label of "extremism" ended with an appeal to the European Court. Before seeking justice outside Russia, the activists spent 4 years trying to get justice in Russian courts. All this time, as the activists themselves say, they and their families were under pressure - they received threats from FSB and Interior Ministry officers. The case of civil activists from the Circassian Congress is far from being an isolated one.[276]

The reprisals by the Russian authorities against national minorities and activists of Circassian public organizations defending the rights of these minorities in the North Caucasus have taken on an unprecedented scale.[277]

The danger of the Circassian national movement for Russia lies in its great potential: Circassians are the titular ethnic group in three regions of the North Caucasus - Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachay-Cherkessia and Adygea. Another circumstance makes the "Circassian issue" particularly alarming for Russia. This is the presence of a multi-million diaspora in the Middle East, which is returning to the North Caucasus due to the horrific war in Syria. According to human rights activists, the increasing cases of persecution of Circassian activists are directly related to the growth of the Circassian movement in virtually all republics of the Russian North Caucasus. This is the largest ethnic group in the region, supported by a multi-million diaspora in the Middle East, including Syria.[278]

Commemoration

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ubykh: tsʼətsʼakʷʼən, цӀыцӀэкӀун.[11]
  2. ^ This word is used by the Circassians to refer to the events and originates from Ubykh. When asked the full meaning, Tevfik Esenç, the last speaker of Ubykh, stated that it means "a massacre so evil that only Satan could think of it". The word comes from "tsʼətsʼa" (people) and "kʷʼə-" (to kill). According to a theory it comes from the surname of Pavel Tsitsianov, one of the first Russian generals in the Russo-Circassian War who used methods of massacre. However this theory seems like a folk etymology.
  3. ^ "between 95 percent and 97 percent of all Circassians were killed outright, died during Evdokimov's campaign, or were deported"[12]
  4. ^ Ninety-five to 97 percent of the entire Circassian population had been killed or deported in what contemporary Russian field reports referred to as an ochishchenie' ("cleansing")"[13]
  5. ^ "In the 1860s Russia killed 1.5 million Circassians, half of their population, and expelled the other half from their lands." Ahmed 2013, p. 357

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Sources

Further reading

circassian, genocide, tsitsekun, russian, empire, systematic, mass, murder, ethnic, cleansing, expulsion, circassian, population, resulting, million, deaths, during, final, stages, russo, circassian, peoples, planned, extermination, were, mainly, muslim, circa. The Circassian genocide 9 10 or Tsitsekun a b was the Russian Empire s systematic mass murder ethnic cleansing and expulsion of 95 97 c d of the Circassian population resulting in 1 to 1 5 million deaths 14 e during the final stages of the Russo Circassian War 15 16 17 The peoples planned for extermination were mainly the Muslim Circassians but other Muslim peoples of the Caucasus were also affected 16 Killing methods used by Russian forces during the genocide included impaling and tearing the bellies of pregnant women as means of intimidation of the Circassian population 15 18 Russian generals such as Grigory Zass described the Circassians as subhuman filth and glorified the mass murder of Circassian civilians 15 19 20 justified their use in scientific experiments 21 and allowed their soldiers to rape women 15 Circassian genocidePart of the Russo Circassian WarPainting depicting Circassians trying to evacuate their town in order to avoid Russian aggressionCircassian population remaining in Circassia after the genocide After the genocide only those forced into exile hiding in marshes and caves and in rare cases who could make agreements with the Russians survived Native nameUbykh CӀycӀekӀunLocationCircassia under Russian invasionDate1800 1870s systematic massacre of Circassians started by early 1800s surviving Circassian population was forcefully deported to the Ottoman Empire between 1864 and 1870s TargetCircassians and other Muslim peoples of the CaucasusAttack typeGenocidal massacres genocidal rape deportation torture death march ethnic cleansingDeathsKilled in Russian massacres 1 000 000 to 1 500 000 deaths 1 2 3 Lives lost during death march and fleeing 500 000 deaths 4 5 VictimsMinimum 1 000 000 1 500 000 forced deportations and expulsions 6 7 8 95 97 of the total Circassian population killed or expelled from the Caucasus PerpetratorsRussian EmpireMotiveImperialism Anti Muslim sentiment Russification ChristianizationThe Genocide is considered to have had its first steps in the deportation and or massacre of the Muslim Circassian population of the Russian Empire The Muslim Circassians were deported to the Muslim Ottoman Empire During the Russo Circassian War the Russian Empire employed a genocidal strategy of massacring Circassian civilians Only a small percentage who accepted Russification and resettlement within the Russian Empire were completely spared The remaining Circassian population who refused were variously dispersed or killed en masse 22 Circassian villages would be located and burnt systematically starved or their entire population massacred 23 Leo Tolstoy reported that Russian soldiers would attack village houses at night 24 William Palgrave a British diplomat who witnessed the events adds that their only crime was not being Russian 25 In 1864 A Petition from Circassian leaders to Her Majesty Queen Victoria was signed by the Circassians requesting humanitarian aid from the British Empire 26 27 28 In the same year mass deportation was launched against the surviving population before the end of the war in 1864 and it was mostly completed by 1867 29 Some died from epidemics or starvation among the crowds of deportees and were reportedly eaten by dogs after their death 25 Others died when the ships underway sank during storms 30 Calculations including taking into account the Russian government s own archival figures have estimated a loss of 94 97 31 32 33 of the Circassian population in the process that would be 2 to 3 5 million people The displaced people were settled primarily in the Ottoman Empire 15 Most sources state that as many as 1 to 1 5 million Circassians were forced to flee in total but only around half of them could make it to land 34 35 Ottoman archives show more than one million migrants entering their land from the Caucasus by 1879 with nearly half of them dying on the shores as a result of disease 4 If Ottoman archives are correct it would make this the biggest genocide of the 19th century 36 In confirmation of Ottoman archives Russian records documented only the presence of 106 798 Circassians in the region following the events of the genocide Other estimates by Russian historiographers are even lower with figures ranging from 40 400 to 65 900 12 The Russian census of 1897 recorded 150 000 Circassians still remaining in the now conquered region 37 38 As of 2023 update Georgia is the only country to recognize the Circassian genocide 39 Russia actively denies the Circassian genocide 40 41 42 and classifies the events as a migration Russian Cherkesskoe muhadzhirstvo lit Circassian migrationism Some Russian nationalists in the Caucasus region continue to celebrate the day when the Circassian deportation was launched 21 May O S each year as a holy conquest day Circassians commemorate 21 May every year as the Circassian Day of Mourning commemorating the Circassian genocide 43 On 21 May Circassians all over the world protest against the Russian government especially in cities with large Circassian populations such as Kayseri and Amman as well as other large cities such as Istanbul 44 45 Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude Russo Circassian War 2 1 Start of conflicts with Circassia 2 2 Methods of massacre 3 Genocide and ethnic cleansing 1860s 3 1 Conditions during the deportation process 3 2 Transport vessels 4 Demographic changes 4 1 Repopulation of affected lands 5 International reactions 5 1 Ottoman Empire 5 2 United Kingdom 5 2 1 Scotland 6 Advocacy and relief efforts 7 Resettlement 7 1 Areas settled by Circassians 7 1 1 Balkans 7 1 2 Anatolia and Iraq 7 1 3 Levant 8 Proposed return 9 Consequences 9 1 Ethnic tensions in the Ottoman Empire 10 Numbers of refugees 11 Genocide classification 11 1 Political positions 11 1 1 Russia 11 1 1 1 Boris Yeltsin 11 1 2 Circassian Organizations 11 1 3 Georgia 11 1 4 Turkey 11 1 5 Appeals to world governments by Circassians 11 2 Scholarly viewpoints 12 Modern movement for the rights and freedoms of Circassians 12 1 Contemporary Struggle for Circassian Language and Culture 12 2 Persecution of Circassian activists 13 Commemoration 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 16 1 Sources 17 Further readingBackgroundMain article Russian conquest of the Caucasus In the late 18th and early 19th centuries although it was already making attempts in the early 18th century the Russian Empire began actively seeking to expand its territory to the south at the expense of the neighboring Ottoman Empire and Qajar Iran and thus aimed to incorporate the Caucasus into its domain Some areas proved easier to incorporate than others largely depending on the nature of local political structures Eastern Georgia for example comprising the most powerful and dominant Georgian regions of Kartli and Kakheti had been under intermittent Iranian suzerainty since 1555 Russia eventually found itself able through instability in the geopolitical situation of Georgia within Qajar Iran to annex eastern Georgia in the early 19th century ratified in the 1803 Treaty of Gulistan 46 Russia endeavored to bring the entire Caucasus region under its control conquering Armenia Caucasian Azerbaijan and southern Dagestan while co opting the nobility of other areas such as Lower Kabardia and parts of Dagestan Although the Russians faced considerable resistance to incorporation in Dagestan and Georgia as well as military resistance by the local government of Imereti the regions they felt most difficult of all to incorporate were those that had not been conquered by foreign empires and did not have any local monopolies of power which was the state of most Circassian territories where resistance to absorption into the Russian Empire was most tenacious 47 The decision to launch the genocide was driven by anti Muslim sentiments and the Russian Empire s messianic self image as the champion of Eastern Orthodoxy against non Christian inhabitants in its territories Russian Tsars viewed the Circassian tribes in the Caucasus as primitive humans to either be forcibly converted to Christianity or exterminated and expelled Imperial army generals further regarded Circassia as a strategic territory to advance Russian expansionism in the Caucasus and surrounding lands 48 Prelude Russo Circassian WarStart of conflicts with Circassia Main article Russo Circassian War Circassians Christianised through Byzantine influence between the 5th and 6th centuries were generally allied with Georgians 49 From the 16th century it entered into alliance with Georgia Georgians and Circassians regarded themselves as constituting a single Christian island in the Black Sea and jointly appealed to Russia for protection 49 Although there had previously been a small Muslim presence in Circassia significant conversions came after 1717 when Sultan Murad IV ordered the Crimeans to spread Islam among the Circassians with the Ottomans seeing success in converting members of the aristocracy who would then ultimately spread the religion to their dependents Islam gained much more ground later as conversion came to be used to cement defensive alliances to protect their independence against Russian expansion 50 49 During the reign of Catherine II the Russian army started entering Circassian soil and erecting forts in an attempt at quick annexation In 1763 Russian forces occupied the town of Mezdeug modern day Mozdok in Eastern Circassia turning it into a Russian fortress Thus began the first hostilities between Circassians and the Russian Empire In 1764 Circassian prince Misost Bematiqwa started the Circassian resistance in Eastern Circassia 51 Bematiqwa s resistance was strengthened when on October 18 1768 the Ottoman sultan who had declared war on Russia sent a letter to Bematiqwa stating that he as caliph ordered all Muslim peoples of the Caucasus to officially make war against Russia 52 The Ottoman Empire lost its protector status with the Crimean Khanate with the 1774 Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca Following these events Russian presence in the region increased and the Circassians requested help and alliance from the Ottomans 53 The Russians introduced courts in Kabarda Eastern Circassia in the early 1790s and declared that the Adyghe Xabze the Circassian law has been removed greatly angering Circassians 54 Methods of massacre In 1799 Russian general Fyodor Bursak organized several raids against the Western Circassians and ordered his men to burn Circassian villages including those loyal to the Russian Empire 23 From 1802 to 1806 General Pavel Tsitsianov led campaigns in Circassia and targeted Circassian villages He referred to the Circassians as untrustworthy swine 23 to show how insignificant they are compared to Russia 55 In 1805 a plague struck Kabardia Using this as an excuse General Glazenap ordered his forces to burn down 80 villages to terrorize the people into submission and to wreak vengeance upon the Kabardians 54 A village burning campaign started in which the Circassian population were burnt without separation First the Russian army would enter and loot a Circassian village then they would kill those who resist or complain and finally they would set fire to the village and make sure all inhabitants were killed In 1810 about 200 villages were burned Between 1805 and 1807 General Bulgakov s army alone burned more than 280 villages 56 The population of Kabarda which was 350 000 in 1763 was only 37 000 in 1817 57 In 1808 a Russian commission decided that in order to end Circassian resistance against the Russian Empire the Circassians would need to be eliminated from their homeland 58 20 In February 1810 General Fyodor Bursak s forces entered a Circassian village near the Sop River and proceeded to burn the village They decided to postpone their plans to attack the next village when the river began to overflow 20 59 In December the same methods were applied in the Shapsug region and several villages were burnt After some civilians deserted to the forests forests in the region were burnt down 59 In 1811 petitions were sent to St Petersburg in Russia appealing for the basic rights of Circassians in the occupied areas 54 In 1817 Russian veteran general Aleksey Yermolov arrived in the Caucasus Deciding that Circassians would not surrender willingly General Yermolov concluded that terror as an official strategy would be effective 60 Although terror methods were already in use they were only officialized after Yermolov s orders Russian generals began to destroy Circassian villages and towns and slaughter people as part of an official duty to shock the population into surrender 61 62 60 Under Yermolov Russian troops retaliated by destroying villages where resistance fighters were thought to hide as well as employing assassinations kidnappings and the execution of whole families 61 Because the resistance was relying on sympathetic villages for food the Russian military also systematically destroyed crops and livestock and killed Circassian civilian farmers 62 60 Circassians responded by creating a tribal federation encompassing all tribes of the area 60 In May 1818 the village of Tram was surrounded burnt and its inhabitants killed by Russian forces under the command of General Ivan Petrovich Delpotso who took orders from Yermolov and who then wrote to the Circassian forces 63 This time I am limiting myself on this In the future I will have no mercy for the guilty brigands their villages will be destroyed properties taken wives and children will be slaughtered Ivan Petrovich Delpotso The complete destruction of villages with everything within them became a standard action by the Russian army and Cossack units Nevertheless the Circassian resistance continued Villages that had previously accepted Russian rule were found resisting again much to the ire of Russian commanders 64 In September 1820 Russian forces began to forcibly resettle inhabitants of Eastern Circassia Military forces were sent into Kabardia killing cattle and causing large numbers of inhabitants to flee into the mountains with the land these inhabitants had once lived on being acquired for the Kuban Cossacks The entirety of Kabardia Eastern Circassia was then declared property of the Russian government 65 General Yermolov accelerated his efforts in Kabardia with the month of March 1822 alone seeing 14 villages being destroyed as Yermolov led expeditions 63 In February 1824 the Russian army led by General Vlasov attacked the Circassian villages of Jambut Aslan Morza and Tsab Dadhika and completely destroyed them along with the inhabitants despite the villages being at peace with the Russian Empire 59 In 1828 General Emanuel destroyed 6 Natukhaj Circassian villages and many more Shapsug Circassian villages He then passed the Kuban and burned 210 more villages The Treaty of Adrianople was signed on 14 September 1829 66 According to the document Circassia was given by the Ottoman Empire to Russia The Circassians considered it invalid arguing that because their territory had been independent of the Ottomans Istanbul had no right to cede it 67 Circassian ambassadors were sent to England France and Ottoman lands announcing that they denied the treaty under all conditions In 1831 the Russian government considered the destruction of the Natukhaj tribe in favor of populating their land on the northern coast of the Black Sea with Cossacks In late 1831 in retaliation for Circassian attacks against Cossack military bases Russian General Frolov and his task force destroyed several villages 59 Beginning the night of November 20 a horror campaign was started in which villages were surrounded by artillery and bombarded The targets were local homes as well as mosques The operation was described in a report 59 In this affair the Russians lost 10 soldiers and had one officer and 16 soldiers wounded At the scene of the battle there were more than 150 bodies of Circassians killed by bayonets and up to 50 women and children killed from the action of the Russian artillery In another report General Rosen described how in December 1831 381 Circassians were captured by his forces and boasted about taking them prisoner and firing at villages leaving 100 men and 50 women dead He goes on to detail how when setting fire to a village a Russian soldier named Midvideiv killed a Circassian who tried to stop him from burning down a mosque 68 The Russians countered the heavy Circassian resistance by modifying the terrain They laid down a network of roads and cleared the forests around these roads destroyed native villages and often settled new farming communities of Russians or other Orthodox Slavic people In this increasingly bloody situation the wholesale destruction of villages became a standard tactic 69 nbsp Russian military and Circassian representatives meet for discussions 1855General Yermolov remarked that We need the Circassian lands but we don t have any need of the Circassians themselves 70 Russian military commanders such as Yermolov and Bulgakov acting in their own interests to attain glory on the battlefield and riches through conquest which would be much more difficult to attain on the Western front than in the Caucasus often deceived the central administration and obscured the attempts of Circassian groups to establish peace with Russia 23 In 1833 Colonel Grigory Zass was appointed commander of a part of the Kuban Military Line with headquarters in the Batalpashinsk fortress Colonel Zass received wide authority to act as he saw fit He was a racist who considered Circassians to be inferior 23 71 The only way to deal with the Circassians in his opinion was to scare them away just like wild animals Zass advocated ruthless military methods predicated on this notion including burning people alive cutting off heads with show burning populated villages to the ground spreading epidemics on purpose and mass rape of children 72 failed verification 73 He kept a box under his bed with his collection of severed Circassian body parts 19 He operated on all areas of Circassia Zass main strategy was to intercept and retain the initiative terrorize the Circassians and destroy Circassian settlements After a victory he would usually burn several villages and seize cattle and horses to show off acts which he proudly admitted In his reports he frequently boasted about the destruction of villages and glorified the mass murder of civilians 19 In August 1833 Zass led his first expedition into Circassian territory with the goal being destroying as many villages and towns as possible He attacked the Besleney region between November and December destroying most villages including the village of the double agent Aytech Qanoqo He continued to exterminate the Circassian population between 1834 and 1835 particularly in the Abdzakh Besleney Shapsug and Kabardian regions Zass forces referred to all Circassian elderly children women and men as savages bandits plunderers or thieves and the Russian Empire s forces were commanded by officers who commanded political dissidents and criminals 57 74 75 76 77 78 79 In 1834 Zass sent a report to Rosen detailing his campaign into Circassia He talks about how he killed three Circassian civilians on their way to fetch grass 80 I captured three Circassians from carriages that were on their way to fetch grass other than the thirteen we already had who did not wish to surrender to us voluntarily so I ordered to kill them He then talks about how he destroyed a neighborhood 80 The savages panicked and started fleeing from their homes leaving their weapons behind attempting to escape to the forest but most of them were killed by the Cossacks with the soldiers lined up ready to fight the cleansing continued with artillery shells and I sent there two infantry brigades but they could only capture 11 more people and since the fire was in flames in many places the rest were either killed or burned after attempting to escape by hiding on the roofs of their homes or by the manure So like this we destroyed and destructed clarification needed the neighborhood Reportedly Zass would pick random Circassian males from the towns he attacked and burn them alive as a form of entertainment He did not stop at burning women he also cut the pregnant women s bellies with a bayonet 19 He sent severed Circassian heads to friends in Berlin who were professors and used them to study anatomy 81 The Decembrist Nikolai Ivanovich Lorer said that Zass cleaned and boiled the flesh off the heads after storing them under his bed in his tent He also had Circassian heads outside of his tent impaled on lances on a hill Circassian men s corpses were decapitated by Russian Cossack women on the battlefield after the battles were over for the heads to be sent to Zass for collection 82 83 84 85 nbsp Russian Tsar Alexander II officially greenlit the extermination campaign of Circassians In 1861 he further ordered the large scale establishment of Russian Christian settlements in Circassian lands 86 87 Zass erected Circassian heads on poles outside of his tent and witnesses reported seeing wind blowing the beards Russian soldiers and Cossacks were paid for sending Circassian heads to General Zass 88 89 90 91 Besides cutting Circassian heads off and collecting them Zass employed a deliberate strategy of annihilating Circassians en masse burning entire Circassian villages with the people in them and encouraging violation of Circassian women and children 92 93 Zass is depicted as the Devil or Satan in Circassian folklore In 1842 Zass was removed from service due to his methods being deemed too cruel by St Petersburg citation needed In 1837 some Circassian leaders offered the Russians a white peace arguing that no more blood should be shed In response to this offer the Russian army under the command of General Yermolov burnt 36 Circassian villages 70 In the negotiations to formulate the 1856 Treaty of Paris the British representative the Earl of Clarendon defended the Circassians rights but was thwarted The final treaty also extended amnesty to nationals that had fought for enemy powers but since Circassia had never previously been under Russian control Circassians were exempt and thus Circassians were now placed under de jure Russian sovereignty by the treaty with Russia under no compulsion to grant Circassians the same rights as Russian citizens elsewhere effectively making them Russian property with which Russia could do whatever it wanted 94 95 96 Genocide and ethnic cleansing 1860s The state needed the Circassians land but had absolutely no need of them Military historian Rostislav Fadeyev summarising Russian policy towards Circassians 97 nbsp Russian general Count Nikolay Yevdokimov organized the operations of massacres and extermination of Circassian populations during the Russian military campaign 7 nbsp Dmitry Milyutin 1865 nbsp Commanders of Russian troops in the Western Caucasus Infantry General Count Nikolai Yevdokimov left Governor of the Caucasus and Grand Duke Mikhail Nikolayevich centre and Major General D I Svyatopolk Mirsky right at Qbaada 21 May 1864 In 1857 Dmitry Milyutin published the idea of mass expulsions of Circassian natives 98 Milyutin argued that the goal was not to simply move them so that their land could be settled by productive farmers but rather that eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself to cleanse the land of hostile elements 98 99 100 Tsar Alexander II endorsed the plans to exterminate Circassians 98 and in June 1861 ordered the launch of a settler colonial Russification and Christianization programme 87 Milyutin later had been appointed as the minister of war the same year and from the early 1860s massacres and ethnic cleansing began occurring in the Caucasus 98 99 101 Others among the Russian military class such as Rostislav Fadeyev characterized the Circassians as a barbaric people additionally expressing his view that they were incapable of being Russified Fadeyev argued that a re education of a people is a centuries long process and claimed that Russia was at a pivotal moment in its history towards the total assimilation of the Caucasus region into the Russian empire 60 87 Fadeyev supported the extermination of half the population stating that Russians intended to exterminate half the Circassian people in order to compel the other half to lay down their arms 60 Sentiments for expulsion existed among prominent Russian politicians such as Prince Kochubei 60 Kochubei said to Americans visiting the region that these Circassians are just like your American Indians as untamable and uncivilized and owning to their natural energy of character extermination only would keep them quiet 60 As Russian armies advanced in Circassia in the late 1850s and early 1860s Circassians were evicted from their lands so they could be settled by loyal Cossacks as the Russian military elite developed a belief that Circassians would have to be entirely expelled from regions for the security of Russian rule 102 Yermolov wrote that resettlement of intractable mountaineers to Turkey would be the easiest way to give freedom to those who prefer death to allegiance to the Russian government 103 The Circassian resettlement plan was eventually agreed upon at a meeting of the Russian Caucasus commanders in October 1860 in Vladikavkaz and officially approved on 10 May 1862 by Tsar Alexander II 104 and a flood of refugee movements began as Russian troops advanced in their final campaign 105 Although the order given by Tsar Alexander II was to deport the Circassians rather than to massacre them the Russian commanders instead preferred the idea of massacring large portions of the Circassian population Richmond has noted that reports abound of massacres in the final stages of the Caucasus campaign 97 In 1859 three years before the approval of the plan by the Russian government Russian officials began talks with the Ottomans about the migration of a limited number of emigrants 106 and in 1860 the two sides negotiated a treaty for the migration of 40 000 50 000 Circassians with the Ottoman side being eager for an increase in population 107 However Russia did not aim to limit the number of exilees to 50 000 as the plan was to exile the entire Circassian population With a gathering sense of emergency on 25 June 1861 leaders of all the Circassian tribes gathered in Sochi to jointly petition the Western powers for help 108 Ottoman and British delegations both promised recognition of an independent Circassia as well as recognition from Paris if they unified into a coherent state 109 and in response the Circassian tribes formed a national parliament in Sochi but Russian General Kolyobakin quickly overran Sochi and destroyed it 110 while there was no action to stop this by any major power s government 108 Russian geographer Mikhail Ivanovich Venyukov who was co operating with Russian military at that time for cartographic purposes was shocked by Yevdokimov s plans for exterminating the Circassians and other natives In his memoirs Venyukov reported that Count Yevdokimov pursued all means to sabotage communications between the Emperor and native tribal chiefs since he was determined to expel all the inhabitants from the region 111 Describing Count Yevdokimov s strategy of inflicting state terror and mass starvations on Circassian tribes Adolf Berzhe reports Evdokimov s plan was to base the conquest of the western Caucasus on the Kuban Caucasus Army and by means of military lines and new settlements continually pressure the mountain tribes until it became completely impossible for them to live in the mountains 87 In April 1862 a group of Russian soldiers slaughtered hundreds of Circassians who had run out of ammunition leaving the mountain covered with corpses of bayoneted enemies as reported by Ivan Drozdov 112 He tried to justify the extensive death and destruction that his army brought upon the Circassians Mankind has rarely experienced such disasters and to such extremes but only horror could have an effect on the hostile mountaineers and drive them from the impenetrable mountain thickets 113 For the most part the Imperial Russian army preferred to indiscriminately destroy areas where Circassians resided In September 1862 after attacking a Circassian village and seeing some of its inhabitants flee into the forest General Nikolay Yevdokimov bombarded that forest for six hours and ordered his men to kill on sight he then set the forest on fire to make sure no survivors were left 112 The war was conducted with implacable merciless severity We went forward step by step irrevocably cleansing the mountaineers to the last man from any land the soldiers set foot on The mountaineers auls were burned by the hundreds just as soon as the snow melted but before the leaves returned to the trees in February and March We trampled and destroyed their crops with our horses If we were able to capture the villagers by surprise we immediately sent them via convoy to the shore of the Black Sea and farther to Turkey there were atrocities bordering on barbarity Russian geographer Mikhail Ivanovich Venyukov describing the brutality of massacres against Circassians 114 Drozdov reported to have overheard numerous Circassian men taking oaths to fight the heavy artillery forces so as to allow their family and rest of their villages to escape and later more reports of groups of Circassians doing so were received 115 Leo Tolstoy reported that Russian soldiers would attack village houses at night 24 In October 1862 Yevdokimov ordered the de population and mass expulsion of all Circassians from Caucasus 116 By the fall of 1863 Russian operations had become methodical following a formula by which after the Circassians fled into the woods their village and any food that could be found would be burned then after a week or two they would search for and destroy any huts the Circassians might have made for shelter burn the forest and then this process would be repeated until General Yevdokimov was satisfied that all the natives in the area had died either by being shot starved or burned 117 By this period combat phase of the war was over and Russian military forces were simply engaging in systematic massacres torture and de population of unarmed civilians women and children 118 In the southeast Circassians prepared to resist and hold their last stand against Russian military advances and troops 119 With the refusal to surrender Circassian tribes were targeted one by one by the Russian military with thousands massacred and whole villages razed to the ground 60 On April 9 1864 A Petition from Circassian leaders to Her Majesty Queen Victoria was signed by the Circassians The document requested British military aid or at least humanitarian aid for the Circassian people 26 27 28 It reads In the name of God the Most Compassionate the Most Merciful Our most humble Petition to Her Magnificent Majesty the Queen and Emperor of England is to the effect that It is now more than eighty years since the Russian Government is unlawfully striving to subdue and annex to its dominions Circassia which since the creation of the world has been our home and our country It slaughters like sheep the children helpless women and old men that fall into its hands It rolls about their heads with the bayonet like melons and there is no act of oppression or cruelty which is beyond the pale of civilisation and humanity and which defies description that it has not committed We have not from father to son at the cost of our lives and properties refrained from opposing the tyrannical acts of that Government in defence of our country which is dearer to us than our lives But during the last year or two it has taken advantage of a famine caused by a drought with which the Almighty visited us as well as by its own ravages and it has occasioned us great distress by its severe attacks by sea and land Many are the lives which have been lost in battle from hunger in the mountains from destitution on the sea coast and from want of skill at sea We therefore invoke the mediation and precious assistance of the British Government and people the guardian of humanity and centre of justice in order to repel the brutal attacks of the Russian Government on our country and save our country and our nation together But if it is not possible to afford this help for the preservation of our country and race then we pray to be afforded facilities for removing to a place of safety our helpless and miserable children and women that are perishing by the brutal attacks of the enemy as well as by the effects of famine and if neither of these two requests are taken into consideration and if in our helpless condition we are utterly annihilated notwithstanding our appeals to the mercy and grace of the Governments then we shall not cease to invoke our right in the presence of the Lord of the Universe of Him who has confided to Your Majesty sovereignty strength and power for the purpose of protecting the weak We beg Your Excellency Sir Henry Bulwer to be the medium of making known to the great British Government and to the glorious British nation our condition of helplessness and misery and we have therefore ventured to present to Your Excellency our most humble petition A copy of it has been submitted to the Sultan s Government and to the Embassies of other Powers Signed by the People of Circassia 29 Sheval 1280 April 7 1864 26 27 28 In 1864 in the valley of Khodz near Maikop the Ubykh population resisted Russian troops 120 121 During the battle the men were joined by women who disposed of their jewellery into the river and took up arms into a fight to the end 120 121 As part of Yevdokimov s strategy Russian Imperial Army blocked all exitways and bombarded the valley from all directions with heavy artillery indiscriminately killing men women and children for several days 7 Russians troops with heavy artillery and other modern weaponry killed all the men women and children in a scene that a Circassian chronicler Shauket who had witnessed the events described as a sea of blood 120 Describing his account of the mass murder in the valley Shauket outlined men and women were slaughtered mercilessly and blood flowed in rivers so that it was said that the bodies of the dead swam in a sea of blood Nevertheless the Russians were not content with what they had done but sought to satisfy their instincts by making children targets for their cannon shells 7 Another chronicler reported that all living inhabitants of Khodz valley were slaughtered by Russian military assaults and bombardments 7 In March 1864 a surrounded Circassian army refused to surrender and committed mass suicide Around the same time a final battle took place in Qbaada in 1864 between the Circassian army of 20 000 men and women consisting of local villagers and militia and a Russian army of 100 000 men consisting of Cossack and Russian horsemen infantry and artillery The Circassians were defeated and after the battle masses of Circassians were driven to Sochi where thousands died as they awaited deportation 122 The last Circassian resistance along with the coastal Abkhaz tribes of Pskhu Akhtsipsou Aibgo and Jigit were defeated and then killed en masse to the last man woman and child after which on 21 May Prince Mikhail Nikolayevich gathered the troops in a clearing in the area for a thanksgiving service 123 The Russian army began celebrating victory as a military religious parade was held and 100 Circassian warriors were publicly mutilated in a public execution in order to establish authority 124 After this the Russian army began increasing their efforts in raiding and burning Circassian villages destroying fields to prevent return cutting down trees and driving the people to the Black Sea coast In this year of 1864 a deed has been accomplished almost without precedent in history not one of the mountaineer inhabitants remains on their former places of residence and measures are being taken to cleanse the region in order to prepare it for the new Russian population Main Staff of the Caucasian Army 125 The Ottomans hoped to increase the proportion of Muslims in regions where there were large Christian populations Mountaineers were invited to go to Turkey where the Ottoman government would accept them with open arms and where their life would be incomparably better 126 nbsp Russian military outpost on the Circassian frontier 1845General Yevdokimov was entrusted with enforcing the Russian policy of mass Circassian migration to other parts of the Russian Empire or the Ottoman Empire 119 Although some Circassians went by land to the Ottoman Empire the majority went by sea and those tribes which had chosen deportation were marched to the ports along the Black Sea by Russian forces 127 Russian commanders and governors warned that if the order to leave was not carried out more forces would be sent 128 Conditions during the deportation process The situation of the Circassian and Abkhaz masses that had been driven into the coastal gorges prior to transport was dire A Russian historian of the time Adolph Petrovich Berzhe who witnessed the events regarding the departure of the Circassians described the following 129 I shall never forget the overwhelming impression made on me by the mountaineers in Novorossiisk Bay where about seventeen thousand of them were gathered on the shore The late inclement and cold time of the year the almost complete absence of means of subsistence and the epidemic of typhus and small pox raging among them made their situation desperate And indeed whose heart would be touched on seeing for example the already stiff corpse of a young Circassian woman lying in rags on the damp ground under the open sky with two infants one struggling in his death throes while the other sought to assuage his hunger at his dead mother s breast And I saw not a few such scenes Adolph Petrovich Berzhe Ahmed 2013 pp 162 163 nbsp Circassian refugeesIvan Drozdov a Russian officer who witnessed the scene in May 1864 as the other Russians were celebrating their victory remarked On the road our eyes were met with a staggering image corpses of women children elderly persons torn to pieces and half eaten by dogs deportees emaciated by hunger and disease almost too weak to move their legs collapsing from exhaustion and becoming prey to dogs while still alive Ivan Drozdov 130 An unknown number of deportees perished during the process Some died from epidemics among crowds of deportees both while awaiting departure and while languishing in their Ottoman Black Sea ports of arrival Others perished when ships underway sank during storms 30 or due to cases where profit minded transporters overloaded their ships to maximize profit 131 To pay for the voyage Circassians sometimes were forced to sell their cattle belongings or even themselves into slavery 132 133 nbsp Circassians leaving their villagesThe operation was not done with any degree of efficiency by the Russians forcing the Circassians typically to leave using unchartered vessels thus opening themselves up to abuses by the captains of such vessels 134 In some cases as many as 1 800 refugees were packed into one ship which would also carry livestock and household possessions When the ships did not sink such crowded environments proved suitable for the spread of diseases and dehydration and when the ships arrived at their destinations they contained only remnants of their original human cargo For this reason they were referred to by contemporary observers as floating graveyards 135 with decks swarming with the dead and dying 136 Abuses in the transport of refugees between Turkish cities were also noted with one particular incident concerning a ship bound for Cyprus in which mutilated and decapitated bodies were found washed ashore compounded by accounts of refugees being tied up and tossed overboard while still alive On this particular Cyprus bound ship only one third of the refugees who had boarded survived 137 Another Russian observer Olshevsky also noted abuses by Turkish skippers as well as bribes paid by Circassians to get onto departing ships but he blamed most of all the Russian command under Yevdokimov for the situation Why did it happen that the Abzakhs and Shapsugs who were being driven from their homeland suffered such horrific sufferings and deaths It was exclusively because of the hurried and premature movement of our troops to the sea prior to the spring equinox Had the Dakhovsky Detachment moved a month or two weeks later this would not have happened 138 Despite the conditions Russian forces under Yevdokimov kept driving Circassians to the coast In January he annihilated Ubykh villages leaving the Ubykhs without shelter in the severe winter and in March the crowd of refugees at the Circassian port of Tuapse approached twenty thousand 139 Only a portion of those who had left the Circassian coast actually made it to Ottoman ports 26 Of the portion that made it to Ottoman shores many more would die there soon after while they were quarantined on either beach the vessels that had carried them or in lazarettos and many more died in makeshift accommodations or in the process of being transported a second time to their final destinations 140 One British eyewitness recalled that Dense masses of ragged men women and children literally covered the seashore All looked wan and hungry Many were all but naked Several lay dying 141 In 1864 the Ottoman Porte repeatedly asked the Russian government to stop the deportations on humanitarian grounds in light of the human disaster unfolding on their shores but the Ottoman requests were repeatedly refused as Yevdokimov argued with urgency that the deportations should instead be accelerated When October 1864 was chosen as a cutoff point for the departures Yevdokimov successfully postponed it two weeks after which he ignored the deadline and deported Circassians without stop even as winter set in again 142 Later in 1867 Grand Prince Mikhail Nikolaevich stated that the cleansing had had to be accelerated in light of a possible European coalition 143 Transport vessels As Russia made it clear that it would not try hard to keep deported Circassians alive and provide few ships for the effort the Ottomans sent their navy to carry the Circassians As the deportations increased there were not enough Ottoman vessels to carry all the deportees even when warships were recruited for the job and the situation began taking a heavy toll on the Ottoman treasury as it bore the brunt of the cost 144 Initially on 17 May 1863 Tsar Alexander II ruled that those who chose to emigrate should pay their own way 142 Later the Russians offered financial incentives for vessels to take the Circassians to Ottoman ports but forced the Circassians themselves to pay In some cases Circassians were forced to sell their cattle or their belongings to pay in others one of every thirty Circassians were sold into slavery to pay 132 133 These funds ultimately ended up in the hands of the transporters including Russian military officiers 142 Many vessels refused to carry Circassians because of the disease that was present among them as many of the ships that had been carrying Circassians had had their crews fall ill while others that did agree tried to make as much profit out of it as possible by overloading their vessels with refugees ultimately causing many transport boats to sink killing their human cargo 131 In April 1864 after one Russian crew was entirely wiped out by disease Russian vessels stopped offering themselves for transport dumping the entire process onto the burden of the Ottomans and Yevdokimov made no effort to make provisions for food water or medical help 145 The Russian consul based in the Ottoman Black Sea port of Trabzon reported the arrival of 240 000 Circassians with 19 000 dying shortly thereafter with the death rate being around 200 people per day 146 On 25 May 1864 Henry Bulwer the British ambassador in Istanbul argued that the British government charter some of its own vessels for the purpose because the Ottomans simply did not have enough on their own and innocent civilians would be left to rot the vessels were not forthcoming but British government ships provided assistance at various points and British steamships also helped 147 On 29 May eight Greek vessels were reported to be helping with the transportation of Circassians as were one Moldavian one German and one British vessel 148 149 Demographic changesAffected tribes Population in Circassia before the genocide Population in Circassia after the genocideKabardians 500 000 34 730Shapsugs 300 000 1 983Abzakhs 260 000 14 660Natukhajs 240 000 175Hatuqway and Zhaney 100 000 0Temirgoys 80 000 3 140Ubykhs 74 000 0Bzhedugs 60 000 15 263Khegayk 20 000 0Hakuchey 15 000 0Mamkhegh 15 000 1 204Ademey 5 000 0Chebsin 4 000 0Chebsin Guaye Khatuq and Cherchenay 3 000 0Total 1 661 000 71 155 nbsp Parade by Russian troops symbolizing the end of the Caucasian War at a military encampment in Qbaada 21 May 1864Among the main peoples that moved to Turkey were Adyghe Ubykhs and Muslim Abkhazians hence the reference in the name to the deportation being of Circassians The Shapsugh tribe which had numbered some 300 000 was reduced to the 3 000 people who managed to flee into the forests and plains 60 The 140 Shapsugh that remained were sent to Siberia 60 Overall calculations including those taking into account the Russian government s own archival figures as well as Ottoman figures have estimated a loss of 90 150 39 94 151 or 95 97 32 of the Circassian nation in the process One of the biggest population changes came in the Circassian capital city of Sochi which previously had a population of around 100 000 and according to Russian sources was reduced to 98 after the events 20 152 153 154 155 Most sources state that as many as 1 to 1 5 million Circassians were forced to flee in total but only around half of them could make it to land 156 35 Ottoman archives show nearly one million migrants entering their land from the Caucasus by 1879 with nearly half of them dying on the shores as a result of diseases If Ottoman archives are correct it would make it the biggest genocide of the 19th century and indeed in support of the Ottoman archives the Russian census of 1897 records only 150 000 Circassians one tenth of the original number still remaining in the now conquered region 23 157 30 37 38 nbsp Resettlement of Circassians in the Ottoman EmpireGenocides and mass expulsions of Caucasian natives and Crimean Tatars were perpetrated by the Russian empire during the latter half of 19th century as it expanded southwards and launched extermination campaigns against Circassians Chechens Crimean Tatars etc while also intensifying pogroms against Jews 158 These extermination campaigns were part of Tsarist Russia s brosok na yug throw to the south settler colonial policy of Russification in the Caucasus and surrounding regions Following the Crimean war Russian empire forcibly expelled millions of Crimean Tatars and sent Russian settlers to the Crimean peninsula During the 1860s Russian imperial army conquered Circassia and launched a scorched earth campaign of state terror aimed at the extermination or complete expulsion of all Circassian natives from the Caucasus region 159 the cleansing of the latter canyons of natives required a large number of soldiers Through all these actions of the Dakhovsky Detachment the entire mountainous and inaccessible areas between the sources of the Belaya and Pshekha rivers were cleansed of natives In order to further squeeze this population and cleanse the land of the natives as much as possible on the fifteenth of November three columns advanced to the mouth of the Defan On the first second third and fourth of December several columns went from the source of the Defan along the upper and middle reaches of the rivers annihilating the population after which having ascended along the Shapsugo and crossed over into Psekups Basin they cleansed the left bank of this river of natives Russian general Nikolay Yevdokimov deploying the terms ochistit lit to cleanse and ochishchenie lit cleansing to refer to the massacres and ethnic cleansing of Circassians 160 13 Although Circassians were the main and most notorious victims the expulsions also gravely affected other peoples in the region It was estimated that 80 of the Ingush left Ingushetia for the Middle East in 1865 161 162 In 1865 Tsarist Russia expanded its extermination campaigns against the Chechen people 163 Lowland Chechens as well were evicted in large numbers and while many came back the former Chechen lowlands lacked their historical Chechen populations for a long period until Chechens were settled in the region during the return from their 1944 1957 deportation to Siberia The Arshtins at that time a debatably separate people were completely wiped out as a distinct group according to official documents 1 366 Arshtin families disappeared i e either fled or were killed and only 75 families remained 164 165 Additionally in 1860 1861 the Russian army forced a series of evictions of lands in the Central Caucasus forcing about 10 000 Circassians 22 000 Chechens and additionally a significant number of Muslim Ossetians out and to Turkey 166 Two other Muslim peoples in the northwest Caucasus the Karachay and the Balkars were not deported in large numbers during the process as they were loyal to Russia since the beginning Abkhazia meanwhile lost 60 of its ethnic Abkhaz population by the end of the 19th century 167 Whether sources treat the evictions of these non Circassian peoples as a part of the same process varies most sources include the evictions and massacres of the Ubykh considered by many to be part of the Circassian ethnos despite having a different language 168 and Abazin populations as part of the same operation against the neighboring ethnic Circassian populations 23 and some sources also include the Abkhaz in counts of the evicted 169 while others group the expulsions of Chechens Ingush Arshtins 165 164 170 and Ossetians 166 with those of Kabardins and also some include the earlier and less systematic expulsions of Nogai 171 172 The 1861 order by Yevdokimov to relocate populations of Circassians including Ubykhs to the swamps also included the Nogais and Abazas 173 174 Shenfield has argued that those that died in the ensuing catastrophe were probably more than a million likely approaching 1 5 million 175 Imperial Russian Army constantly deployed the terms ochistit lit to cleanse and ochishchenie lit cleansing to refer to its military operations that inflicted mass killings and ethnic cleansing of Circassians This was part of Russian Empire s settler colonial policy of expansionism in Caucasus which involved the de populating of its inhabitants The genocide culminated in the deaths and forced expulsions of 95 97 of Circassian natives from Caucasus 176 177 Repopulation of affected lands On 25 June 1861 Tsar Alexander II signed an imperial rescript titled Settlement of the North Caucasus reading as follows Now with God s help the matter of complete conquest of the Caucasus is near to conclusion A few years of persistent efforts are remaining to utterly force out the hostile mountaineers from the fertile countries they occupy and settle on the latter a Russian Christian population forever The honor of accomplishing this deed belongs mainly to the Cossacks of the Kubanski armed forces 178 To speed up the process Alexander offered monetary compensation and various privileges From the spring of 1861 to 1862 35 Cossack stanitsas were established with 5 480 families newly settling the land In 1864 seventeen new Cossack stanitsas were established in the Transkuban region 179 International reactionsOttoman Empire With regard to Ottoman policy overall Fabio Grassi argues that the Ottoman policy was quite successful with respect to the conditions at hand He states that the Ottomans saw Circassians as fellow Muslims who were in hard times but they could not do anything to help them 25 Rosser Owen portrays the Ottomans as having been constrained by pragmatic concerns and at a loss for what to do about the flood of refugees and he notes the hardships suffered by British consular staff as they tried to help the Circassian refugees as well as the improvement of Ottoman policy toward accommodating the refugees over time so that by 1867 when the final Abkhaz refugees were transported there were many fewer deaths in the process 180 Others however disagree historian Walter Richmond accuses the Ottoman government of playing a double game gross irresponsibility and being either unconcerned with or oblivious to the consequences immigration would have for the refugees by having at various points encouraged Circassian population movement in its previous statements having earlier encouraged immigration urging the Circassians to stay and fight in late 1863 and promising the arrival of an international coalition force and then encouraging another wave of immigration as late as June 1864 when the human costs were beyond clear 181 while Shenfield also describes the Ottoman response to the crisis as grossly inadequate 182 and Marc Pinson accuses the Ottoman government of not trying to formulate a coherent policy toward the refugees 183 United Kingdom Richmond also argues that the British despite serious discussion of the possibility of military intervention to alleviate the situation in Circassia were ultimately concerned only with their own geopolitical interests and deserting Circassia to its fate 184 He further argues that Western European indignation at the unfolding situation in Circassia arose only after Russia leveraged the Ottomans to gain special rights in the Dardanelles thus threatening their trade interests 185 William Palgrave a British diplomat who witnessed the events of the genocide stated regarding the victims that their only crime was not being Russian 25 Scotland Rosser Owen emphasizes that the philanthropic efforts of British organizations and that the concern for the well being of Circassians was most intense in Scotland where Circassian struggles were compared to past traumas in then recent Scottish history 186 Advocacy and relief effortsIn 1862 the Circassians sent a delegation of leaders to major cities in Britain which had been covertly helping the Circassians with tactics and with organizing their resistance visiting major English and Scottish cities including London Manchester Edinburgh and Dundee to advocate for their cause 187 The visits caused a swelling of public support for the Circassians and outrage directed at Russia with sympathies particularly intense in Scotland perhaps owing to the recent Highland Clearances 188 and sparked lobbying for intervention by the Dundee Foreign Affairs Committee calls to arms for the defense of Circassia the founding of the Circassian Aid Committee in London and constant reporting on the issue by various newspapers such as The Scotsman 187 Politicians and newspapers began taking up the Circassian cause and calling for intervention to save Circassia from decimation and at one point Parliament came close to going to war with Russia and attempting to establish a protectorate over struggling Circassia 185 Although such initiatives failed to change British government policy the Circassian Aid Committee organized by many individuals who were angry at inaction by London managed to gather 2 067 for the provision of mattresses blankets pillows woolens and clothing especially for Circassian orphans in Istanbul while Russophobic commentary by some of its members has been attributed for its closing in March 1865 189 British consuls became involved with relief patterns and the organization of resettlement for Circassians with various British consuls and consular staff catching illnesses from plague ridden Circassian refugees and a few died from such illnesses 190 In the initial stages of the process relief efforts were also made by the Ottoman population both by Muslims and Christians In Vidin in Bulgaria the Muslim and Christian inhabitants volunteered to increase their grain production and send it to the local Circassian refugees while in Cyprus the Muslim population sheltered Circassian orphans The Ottoman government built mosques for them and provided them with teachers while the Sultan donated 50 000 from his Privy Purse although there were some reports in the British press that most of this money did not actually end up helping Circassian refugees having been embezzled by Ottoman officials at various steps along the way 191 As the burden of the refugees increased however sentiments against the refugees particularly among the Bulgarian and Turkish populations grew and tensions began to develop between the Bulgarian and Turkish natives and the Circassian refugees 192 ResettlementSee also Muhacir nbsp Present day Inner AnatoliaThe Ottoman authorities often failed to offer any support to the newly arrived They were settled in the inhospitable mountainous regions of Inner Anatolia and were given menial and exhausting jobs 193 Imam Shamil s son Muhamed Shafi was appalled by the conditions the migrants had faced upon their arrival to Anatolia and went to investigate the situation I will write to Turkish sultan Abdulmecid that he should stop fooling mountaineers The government s cynicism could not be more pronounced The Turks triggered the resettlement by their proclamations probably hoping to use refugees for military ends but after facing the avalanche of refugees they turned turtle and shamefully condemned to slow death those people who were ready to die for Turkey s glory 194 In 1864 alone about 220 000 people disembarked in Anatolia Between 6 March and 21 May 1864 the entire Ubykh nation had departed the Caucasus for Turkey leading to the extinction of the Ubykh language in 1992 By the end of the movement more than 400 000 Circassians as well as 200 000 Abkhazians and Ajars fled to Turkey The term Cerkes Circassians became the blanket term for them in Turkey because the majority were Circassians Adyghe Some other Circassian refugees fled to the border areas of the Danube Vilayet where Ottomans had expanded their military forces to defend the new province and some Circassians enrolled in military service while others settled in the region 195 The Ottoman authorities often opted to settle Circassians in Christian majority regions that were beginning to clamor for independence as a loyal counterweight population to the rebellious natives These places had just recently taken on large numbers of around a hundred thousand Crimean Tatar refugees in a previous resettlement operation that had also seen widespread complications and problems 196 In Varna it was reported that the situation was particularly bad with 80 000 Circassians settled on the outskirts of the city in camps of death where they were unprotected from weather or disease and left without food When Circassians tried to beg for bread Turkish soldiers chased them out for fear of the diseases they carried It was reported that the Turks were unable to keep up with burying Circassian corpses and recruited convicts to do the work as well one Circassian wrote to the Governor General We rather go to Siberia than live in this Siberia one can die not live on the indicated place 197 Areas settled by Circassians nbsp Distribution of Circassian populations in historic Circassia and the diaspora 21st centuryBalkans Main articles Circassians in Bulgaria Circassians in Romania and Circassians in Kosovo In 1861 1862 alone in the Danube Vilayet there were 41 000 Circassian refugee families 198 By the end of the process there were around 250 000 Circassians in the Balkans accounting for 5 to 7 percent of the total Balkan population on top of the earlier arrival of 100 000 Crimean Tatars that Balkan populations had just recently had to absorb 199 200 Kadir Natho notes that a net of Circassian settlements enveloped practically all the European part of the Ottoman Empire Very large numbers of Circassians were settled in Bulgaria Istoria Bulgarii reports that about 6 000 families were transferred through Burgas and settled in Thrace 13 000 families through Varna and Shumen to Silistra and Vidin 12 000 families to Sofia and Nish The remainder 10 000 families were distributed in Svishtovsk Nikipolsk Oriskhovsk and other outskirts There was a chain of Circassian settlements stretching from Dobruja see Circassians in Romania to the Serbian border with an additional cluster of 23 settlements in the Kosovo field Circassians also settled in a few mostly Greek areas particularly in the southern part of Epirus Cyprus and one colony at Panderma in the Sea of Marmara 198 Russians raped Circassian girls during the 1877 Russo Turkish war from the Circassian refugees who were settled in the Ottoman Balkans 201 Circassian girls were sold into Turkish harems by their relatives 202 203 Circassians in the Ottoman army also raped and murdered Bulgarians during the 1877 Russo Turkish war 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 Anatolia and Iraq Main articles Circassians in Turkey and Circassians in Iraq Kadir Natho lists the following areas as having notable concentrations of Circassian refugee settlements in spacious Anatolia near Amasya Samsun Cilicia Mesopotamia on the Charshamba peninsula along the Aegean Sea in Turkish Armenia Adapazar Duzge Eskisehir and Balikesir From Trebizond the mountaineers were directly sent to Kars and Erzincan many exiles were distributed in the vilayet of Sivas on the extensive desert between Tokat and Sivas 198 Levant This section is empty You can help by adding to it April 2023 Proposed returnMany Circassian households petitioned the Russian embassy in Constantinople for their resettlement back in the Caucasus 211 By the end of the century the Russian consulates all over the Ottoman Empire were deluged with such petitions Later re emigration was sanctioned only on a limited scale as mostly large villages up to 8 500 inhabitants applied for re emigration and their relocation posed formidable difficulties to the imperial authorities Perhaps more importantly Alexander II suspected that the British and Ottoman governments had instructed Circassians to seek return with the purpose of sparking a new war against their Russian overlords 212 As a consequence he was known to personally decline such petitions Consequences nbsp Site of Circassian village established in 1860 in the Ottoman Levant abandoned soon after due to malariaFurther information Circassians Adyghe people The Diaspora and Ubykh people The overall resettlement was accompanied by hardships for the common people A significant number died of starvation many Turks of Adyghe descent still do not eat fish today in memory of the tremendous number of their kinfolk that they lost during the passage across the Black Sea Some of the deportees and their descendants did well and they would eventually earn high positions within the Ottoman Empire A significant number of Young Turks had Caucasian origins All nationals of Turkey are considered Turkish for official purposes However there are several hundred villages which are considered purely Circassian whose total Circassian population is estimated to be 1 000 000 although there is no official data in this respect and the estimates are based on informal surveys The Circassians in question may not always speak the languages of their ancestors and Turkey s center right parties often with varying tones of Turkish nationalism generally do well in localities where they are known to constitute sizable parts of the population such as in Akyazi Along with Turkey s aspirations to join the European Union population groups with specificities vague started receiving more attention on the basis of their ethnicity or culture In Middle Eastern countries which were created from the dismembered Ottoman Empire and were initially under an Allied protectorate the fate of the ethnos was better The Al Jeish al Arabi Arab Legion created in Trans Jordan under the influence of Lawrence of Arabia in significant part consisted of Chechens arguably because the Bedouin were reluctant to serve under the centralized command In addition the modern city of Amman was born after Circassians settled there in 1887 Apart from substantial numbers of Kabardian Circassians consisting of qalang tribes small communities of mountainous Circassians nang tribes remained in their original homeland under Russian rule that were separated from among one another within an area heavily resettled by Russian Cossacks Slavs and other settlers 146 For example the capital of the Shapsugh tribe was renamed after the Russian general that committed atrocities in the region along with the erection of a victory statue to him 146 In the Caucasus some 217 000 Circassians remained in 1897 146 Ethnic tensions in the Ottoman Empire This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2017 nbsp Circassians are settled in the house of an evicted Bulgarian family painting in the 1870sMisha Glenny notes that the settlement of the Circassian deportees played a major role in destabilizing the Ottoman Balkans especially Bulgaria Their arrival helped spread starvation and epidemics including smallpox in the Balkan territories and worse the Porte ordered that Christians be evicted en masse from their homes in certain areas in order to accommodate the need to house the deportees This and the outbreak of armed conflict between the Circassians and the Christian and Muslim natives accelerated the growth of nationalist sentiments in the Balkans 213 Kadir Natho argues that the Ottomans coopted the Circassians into a police force in the Balkans as well as for settling them to increase the local Muslim population with Circassians being made to take arms against rebellions even those Circassians that had not settled in affected regions 198 The local Balkan peoples having just taken on large numbers of Crimean Tatar refugees an operation which had caused the deaths of thousands of refugees and natives alike due to disease and starvation were sometimes loath to take in more Muslim refugees expelled by the Russians 196 and some Bulgarians in particular were convinced that Circassians had been placed into scattered Bulgarian villages in order to paralyze any kind of liberation and independence Slavic movement 198 While in many areas Bulgarian Christians had initially been very hospitable to the Circassian refugees including by producing extra resources to support them the collapsing humanitarian situation combined with the political instability caused relations between the two groups to spiral downward In many cases lands were assigned to North Caucasian refugees by the Ottoman government but the locals refused to give up their homes causing outbreaks of fighting between Circassians and Chechens on one side and the Bulgarian Serbian Arab Bedouin Druze Armenian Turkish and Kurdish natives on the other leading to armed conflict In Uzun Aile between Kayseri and Sivas Circassians ultimately pushed the local Kurdish population out and to this day the Kurds with roots in that region recall in a folk song how a cruel fair haired and blue eyed people with sheep skin hats drove them from their homes 214 Traumatized desperate and having lived for many decades previously in a situation where Circassians and Russians would regularly raid each other Circassians sometimes resorted to raiding the native populations ultimately causing a reputation for the Circassians as being particularly barbaric to spread throughout the Empire 215 nbsp Circassian raid by Franz RoubaudEventually fear of the Circassians due to the diseases they spread and the stereotype of them as either beggars or bandits became so great that Christian and Muslim communities alike would protest upon hearing that Circassians were to be settled near them 199 Later in the 1870s war again struck in the Balkans where most Circassians had made their homes and they were deported by Russian and Russian allied forces a second time 216 Numbers of refugeesAlan Fisher notes that accurate counts of the refugees were difficult to impossible to obtain because Most of those leaving the Caucasus did it in a hurry in a disorganised fashion without passing any official border point where they might have been counted or officially noted 217 however estimates have been made primarily based on the available documents 218 including Russian archival documents 219 as well as Ottoman documents 220 1852 1858 Abkhaz population declined from 98 000 to 89 866 221 1858 1860 Over 30 000 Nogais left 221 1860 1861 10 000 Kabardians left 222 1861 1863 4 300 Abaza 4 000 Natukhais 2 000 Temirgoi 600 Beslenei and 300 Bzhedugs families were exiled 222 by 1864 600 000 Circassians have left for the Ottoman Empire with more leaving afterwards 223 1865 5 000 Chechen families were sent to Turkey 222 1863 1864 470 703 people left the West Caucasus according to G A Dzidzariia 224 1863 1864 312 000 people left the West Caucasus according to N G Volkova 224 Between November 1863 and August 1864 over 300 000 Circassians seek refuge in the Ottoman Empire over two thirds die 225 226 1858 1864 398 000 people left the Kuban oblast according to N G Volkova 224 1858 1864 493 194 people left according to Adol f Berzhe 224 1863 1864 400 000 people left according to N I Voronov 224 1861 1864 418 000 people left according to the Main Staff of the Caucasus Army 224 Genocide classificationIn recent times scholars and Circassian activists have proposed that the deportations and mass killings can certainly be considered as a manifestation of the modern day concept of genocide though the term had not been in use in the 19th century Noting the systematic massacre of villages by Russian soldiers 227 that was accompanied by the Russian colonization of these lands Circassian activists claim it is certainly and undeniably a genocide 228 Scholars estimate that some 90 percent of Circassians estimated at more than one million 229 had vanished from the territories occupied by Russia During these events at least hundreds of thousands of people were killed or starved to death 230 Anssi Kulberg has asserted that the Russian Empire played a central role in formulating the strategy of modern ethnic cleansing and genocide during its systematic extermination campaigns against Crimean Tatars and Circassians 231 Political positions Russia In Russia a presidential commission has been set up when to try and deny the Circassian genocide with respect to the events of the 1860s 122 There is concern by the Russian government that acknowledging the events as genocide would entail possible claims of financial compensation in addition to efforts toward repatriating diaspora Circassians back to Circassia 232 Boris Yeltsin Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin s May 1994 statement stated that Circassian resistance to the Tsarist forces was legitimate and that there were sad casualties but he did not recognize the guilt of the tsarist government for the genocide 233 Circassian Organizations In 1997 and 1998 the leaders of Kabardino Balkaria and Adygea sent appeals to the Duma to reconsider the situation and to issue an apology to date there has been no response from Moscow In October 2006 the Adygeyan public organizations of Russia Turkey Israel Jordan Syria the United States Belgium Canada and Germany have sent the president of the European Parliament a letter with the request to recognize the genocide against Adygean Circassian people 234 On 5 July 2005 the Circassian Congress an organization that unites representatives of the various Circassian peoples in the Russian Federation has called on Moscow first to acknowledge and then to apologize for tsarist policies that Circassians say constituted a genocide 232 Their appeal pointed out that according to the official tsarist documents more than 400 000 Circassians were killed 497 000 were forced to flee abroad to Turkey and only 80 000 were left alive in their native area 233 The Russian parliament Duma rejected the petition in 2006 in a statement that acknowledged past actions of the Soviet and previous regimes while referring to in overcoming multiple contemporary problems and issues in the Caucasus through cooperation 232 Georgia On 21 May 2011 the Parliament of Georgia passed a resolution stating that pre planned mass killings of Circassians by Imperial Russia accompanied by deliberate famine and epidemics should be recognized as genocide and that those deported during those events from their homeland should be recognized as refugees Georgia has made outreach efforts to North Caucasian ethnic groups since the 2008 Russo Georgian War 39 Following a consultation with academics human rights activists and Circassian diaspora groups and parliamentary discussions in Tbilisi in 2010 and 2011 Georgia became the first country to use the word genocide to refer to the events 39 235 236 237 On 20 May 2011 the parliament of the Republic of Georgia declared in its resolution 238 that the mass annihilation of the Cherkess Adyghe people during the Russian Caucasian war and thereafter constituted genocide as defined in the Hague Convention of 1907 and the UN Convention of 1948 The next year on the same day of 21 May a monument was erected in Anaklia Georgia to commemorate the suffering of the Circassians 239 Turkey nbsp Circassian march calling for the recognition of the Circassian genocide TurkeyCircassians in Turkey have made multiple attempts to get Turkey to recognize the genocide 240 There are multiple monuments in Turkey erected to commemorate the Circassian genocide 241 Turkish politicians have referenced the events multiple times Every year on 21 May Turkish politicians and major political parties post Tweets commemorating the events while referring to it as an exile including Recep Tayyip Erdogan 242 Some political parties such as the Pluralist Democracy Party CDP Labour Party EMEP and Peoples Democratic Party HDP have called on Turkey to recognize the genocide 243 Appeals to world governments by Circassians On 1 December 2015 in the Great Union Day the national day of Romania a large number of Circassian representatives sent a request to the Romanian government asking it to recognize the Circassian genocide The letter was specifically sent to the President Klaus Iohannis the Prime Minister Dacian Cioloș the President of the Senate Călin Popescu Tăriceanu and the President of the Chamber of Deputies Valeriu Zgonea The document included 239 signatures and was written in Arabic English Romanian and Turkish Similar requests had already been sent earlier by Circassian representatives to Estonia Lithuania Moldova Poland and Ukraine 244 245 In the case of Moldova the request was sent on 27 August of the same year 2015 on the Moldovan Independence Day to the President Nicolae Timofti the Prime Minister Valeriu Streleț and the President of the Parliament Andrian Candu The request was also redacted in Arabic English Romanian and Turkish languages and included 192 signatures 246 247 Scholarly viewpoints nbsp Professor Doctor Ilber OrtayliMost scholars today agree that the term genocide is justified to define the events except some Russian scholars in the minority Some scholarly views include Alexander Ohtov says the term genocide is justified in his Kommersant interview Yes I believe that the word genocide is justified To understand why we are talking about the genocide you have to look at history During the Russian Caucasian war Russian generals not only expelled the Circassians but also destroyed them physically Not only killed them in combat but burned hundreds of villages with civilians Spared neither children nor women nor the elderly They killed and tortured them with no separation The entire fields of ripe crops were burned the orchards cut down people burnt alive so that the Circassians could not return to their habitations A destruction of civilian population on a massive scale is it not a genocide 248 Scholar Anssi Kullberg states that the Russian suppression of the Caucasus directed at the Crimean Tatars and Circassians resulted in the Russian state inventing the strategy of modern ethnic cleansing and genocide 249 Paul Henze credits the events of the 1860s in Circassia with inspiring the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire 250 Walter Richmond also argues the term genocide is appropriate considering the events of 1864 to have been one of the first examples of modern social engineering Citing international law which holds that genocidal intent applies to acts of destruction that are not the specific goal but are predictable outcomes or by products of a policy which could have been avoided by a change in that policy he considers the events to have been genocide on the grounds that the ensuing demographic transformation of Circassia to a predominantly ethnically Russian region was viewed as desirable by the Russian authorities 251 and that the Russian commanders were fully aware of the huge number of deaths by starvation that their methods in the war and the expulsion would bring as they viewed them as necessary for their supreme goal that Circassia be firmly and permanently Russian territory all the while viewing Circassia s native inhabitants as little more than a pestilence to be removed 252 Michael Ellman meanwhile in a book review of Richmond s Circassian Genocide agrees that the term s use is justified under the UN definition as referring to actions intending to destroy in whole or in part an ethnic group with the part referring to those Circassians whom St Petersberg thought could not accept its rule 253 According to the Italian historian Fabio Grassi the word exile would unquestionably underestimate the scale of the events and the word massacre can be used to describe it 254 French historian Robert Mantran used the term Circassian Exile and Genocide to describe the events in volume 3 of his book Ottoman History 255 Turkish historian Server Tanilli used the term Great Circassian Exile Genocide and Massacre for the events in his work The Reality and Heritage of Centuries 256 The events were described as an exile to certain death by the Turkish historian Ilber Ortayli 257 In May 2021 Ortayli attended a KAFFED conference dedicated to the Circassian genocide where he advised the Circassians to keep their heads up and make their voice heard 258 Modern movement for the rights and freedoms of CircassiansIn 2014 the Circassian movement culminated in the Circassian protests against the Sochi Olympics In response to the actualization of the Circassian issue 259 Russia followed the usual path suppression of Circassian protests discrediting the Circassian movement by linking it to external factors the interests of countries such as Georgia the United States and Israel 260 261 In 2017 the Circassian national movement is experiencing a national upsurge the readiness of Circassians to defend their own identity has increased The large scale events that took place on May 21 2017 simultaneously in several regions of Russia are unconditional proof of this Tens of thousands of Circassians in Adygea Kabardino Balkaria and Karachay Cherkessia took part in mourning events dedicated to the anniversary of the end of the Russian Caucasian War The multi million diaspora of Circassians abroad was not left aside for example there was a mass procession with national banners of Circassia through the central streets of Turkish cities For the first time in the history of post war Circassia which today exists only in the historical memory of Circassians commemorative events dedicated to the victims of the Russian Caucasian war were held in schools higher educational institutions and in cities with a compact population of Circassians 262 As a result of the Tsarist exile 1864 90 of the Circassian people are diaspora about 6 million people including 1 5 million citizens of Turkey However this does not prevent Circassian activists from advocating for the revival and development of their native language and the creation of a separate Circassian national republic in the North Caucasus Russian officials have already expressed concern that the influx of Circassians from abroad will change the ethnic balance in the republic strengthen the common Circassian identity and encourage calls to restore statehood and independence 263 In March 2019 Circassian activists formed the Coordinating Council of the Circassian Community The activists seek international recognition of the 1860s genocide and defend their language and the ability to receive education in it In 2021 Circassian demonstrations were held in several cities despite government repression The largest rally was held in Nalchik attended by about 2 000 people In September 2021 two new independent Circassian organizations were established the Circassian Adygean Historical and Geographical Society and the United Circassian Media Space Their plans include the study and defense of Circassian history the return of Circassian topographic names and the preservation and multiplication of the Circassian language and identity Circassian activists are focusing on the 2021 census by launching a petition calling on large communities to declare themselves Circassians indigenous Adygs Such an initiative encourages rediscovery of Circassian history and the revitalization of Circassian identity which was divided and distorted by the Tsarist Soviet and Russian regimes On October 3 2021 leaders of eight Circassian organizations appealed to their brethren across the North Caucasus to use their own self designation in the census rather than the alien one imposed on them by Moscow 264 Contemporary Struggle for Circassian Language and Culture In June 2018 a law promoting Russification was passed the study of all non Russian languages in schools became voluntary while the study of Russian remained compulsory Circassians Adygs consider the de facto abolition of indigenous languages as a continuation of the Russian extermination and expulsion of the Circassian population from the North Caucasus which began in 1864 with deportation and genocide 265 Aslan Beshto chairman of the Kabarda Congress believes that the main task for Circassians today is to preserve their native language which is the key to their ethnic identity 266 Circassian activists say that Circassian culture is still practically not presented to the public in particular there are very few books in the Circassian language 267 Asker Sokht chairman of the public organization Adyge Khase in Krasnodar Krai also believes that the main tasks facing Circassians as an ethnic group are the preservation of their language and culture In 2014 he was detained and sentenced to eight days of arrest Soht s detention was related to his criticism of the Sochi Olympics as well as his active public activities 268 Since the beginning of 2022 the authorities have been working systematically and systematically to cancel Circassian Adyghe commemorative and festive events Under far fetched pretexts they banned the celebration of the Circassian flag day and later banned the procession that had become traditional in honor of the mourning day of May 21 269 Persecution of Circassian activists In May 2014 on the eve of the tragic date May 21 Beslan Teuvazhev one of the organizers of a campaign to make commemorative ribbons for the 150th anniversary of the Russian Caucasian War was detained by Moscow police officers More than 70 thousand ribbons were seized from him Later Teuvazhev was released but the ribbons were not returned having found signs of extremism in the inscriptions printed on them Circassian activists call such an act a continuation of the policy of oppression of national minorities of the times of the empire 270 In November 2014 the representative of the movement Patriots of Circassia Adnan Huade and the coordinator of the public movement Circassian Union Ruslan Kesh were among the signatories of the appeal of activists of Circassian public organizations to the leadership of Poland with a request to recognize the genocide of Circassians in the XIX century In 2015 the activists were subjected to searches and detentions by law enforcement officials 271 272 In spring 2017 a court in the Lazarevsky district of Krasnodar Krai sentenced seventy year old Circassian activist Ruslan Gvashev for his participation in the May 21 2017 mourning events dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Russian Caucasian War Ruslan Gvashev is a well known Circassian activist in the region head of the Shapsug Khase chairman of the Congress of Adyg Shapsugs of the Black Sea region vice president of the Confederation of Peoples of the Caucasus and the International Circassian Association Nevertheless the court found the defendant guilty of organizing an unauthorized rally and imposed a fine of 10 000 rubles on Ruslan Gvashev Due to the disability of the accused Ruslan Gvashev has one leg amputated the court released him directly from the courtroom The Circassian activist who does not agree with the offensive in his opinion charge sought help from the Kabardino Balkarian Human Rights Center in order to obtain a review of his case and recognition of the Circassians right to hold memorial events 273 274 275 Numerous facts of harassment of activists commissioned trials against the most prominent figures of the Circassian national movement make it necessary to seek a fair solution in international courts Thus the European Court of Human Rights accepted the complaints of Circassian activists accused of extremism by the Russian Themis The year long attempt of civil activists from the organization Circassian Congress to shed the label of extremism ended with an appeal to the European Court Before seeking justice outside Russia the activists spent 4 years trying to get justice in Russian courts All this time as the activists themselves say they and their families were under pressure they received threats from FSB and Interior Ministry officers The case of civil activists from the Circassian Congress is far from being an isolated one 276 The reprisals by the Russian authorities against national minorities and activists of Circassian public organizations defending the rights of these minorities in the North Caucasus have taken on an unprecedented scale 277 The danger of the Circassian national movement for Russia lies in its great potential Circassians are the titular ethnic group in three regions of the North Caucasus Kabardino Balkaria Karachay Cherkessia and Adygea Another circumstance makes the Circassian issue particularly alarming for Russia This is the presence of a multi million diaspora in the Middle East which is returning to the North Caucasus due to the horrific war in Syria According to human rights activists the increasing cases of persecution of Circassian activists are directly related to the growth of the Circassian movement in virtually all republics of the Russian North Caucasus This is the largest ethnic group in the region supported by a multi million diaspora in the Middle East including Syria 278 Commemoration nbsp Monument in Maykop Adygea mourning the Circassian genocide nbsp A monument dedicated to the Circassian genocide Republic of Adygea nbsp Circassian Day of Mourning Annual remembrance marches of the Circassian genocide by Circassian diaspora Turkey nbsp Poster in Sukhumi Abkhazia mourning the Circassian genocideSee also nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Circassian genocide Circassians Circassian Slave Trade Persecution of Muslims Circassian diaspora Circassian nationalism Circassian Day of Mourning Chechen genocide List of genocides by death tollNotes Ubykh tsʼetsʼakʷʼen cӀycӀekӀun 11 This word is used by the Circassians to refer to the events and originates from Ubykh When asked the full meaning Tevfik Esenc the last speaker of Ubykh stated that it means a massacre so evil that only Satan could think of it The word comes from tsʼetsʼa people and kʷʼe to kill According to a theory it comes from the surname of Pavel Tsitsianov one of the first Russian generals in the Russo Circassian War who used methods of massacre However this theory seems like a folk etymology between 95 percent and 97 percent of all Circassians were killed outright died during Evdokimov s campaign or were deported 12 Ninety five to 97 percent of the entire Circassian population had been killed or deported in what contemporary Russian field reports referred to as an ochishchenie cleansing 13 In the 1860s Russia killed 1 5 million Circassians half of their population and expelled the other half from their lands Ahmed 2013 p 357References Circassian Genocide on its 159th Anniversary Human Rights Association 21 May 2023 Archived from the original on 22 August 2023 Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 09160 0 Levene Mark 2005 6 Declining Powers Genocide in the Age of the Nation State Volume II The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide 175 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10010 p 301 ISBN 1 84511 057 9 anything between 1 and 1 5 million Circassians perished either directly or indirectly as a result of the Russian military campaign a b Neumann Karl Friedrich 1840 Russland und die Tscherkessen Russia and the Circassians in German Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press p 69 ISBN 0 299 09160 0 Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press pp 68 69 ISBN 0 299 09160 0 a b c d e Levene Mark 2005 6 Declining Powers Genocide in the Age of the Nation State Volume II The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide 175 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10010 p 300 ISBN 1 84511 057 9 Shenfield Stephen D Levene Roberts Mark Penny 1999 7 The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide In Levene ed The Massacre in History New York NY 10038 USA Berghahn Books pp 153 154 ISBN 1 57181 935 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Richmond 2013 p page needed Shenfield 1999 p 154 King 2008 Jones 2016 p 109 UNPO The Circassian Genocide unpo org Retrieved 26 September 2020 Javakhishvili Niko 20 December 2012 Coverage of The tragedy public Thought later half of the 19th century justicefornorthcaucasus info Tbilisi State University Retrieved 1 June 2015 Postanovleniye Verkhovnogo Soveta K BSSR ob osuzhdenii genotsida cherkesov ot 7 fevralya 1992 g N 977 XII B Postanovlenie Verhovnogo Soveta K BSSR ob osuzhdenii genocida cherkesov ot 7 fevralya 1992 g N 977 XII B Decree of the Supreme Council of the K BSSR on the condemnation of the genocide of the Circassians of February 7 1992 N 977 XII B elot ru Archived from the original on 15 July 2012 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Postanovleniye Parlamenta Kabardino Balkarskoy Respubliki ot 12 05 1994 21 P P ob obrashchenii v Gosdumu s voprosom priznaniya genotsida cherkesov Nedostupnaya ssylka Postanovlenie Parlamenta Kabardino Balkarskoj Respubliki ot 12 05 1994 21 P P ob obrashenii v Gosdumu s voprosom priznaniya genocida cherkesov Nedostupnaya ssylka Decree of the Parliament of the Kabardino Balkarian Republic of May 12 1994 No 21 P P on applying to the State Duma with the issue of recognizing the genocide of the Circassians Unavailable link parlament kbr ru in Russian September 2021 permanent dead link Postanovlenie GS Hase Respubliki Adygeya ot 29 04 1996 64 1 Ob obrashenii k Gosudarstvennoj Dume Federalnogo Sobraniya Rossijskoj Federacii Decree of the State Council Khase of the Republic of Adygea dated April 29 1996 No 64 1 On Appeal to the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation pravoteka ru in Russian Zumysyzhme ushhehuitsh Zhyneps Gazete in Kabardian 20 May 2020 Retrieved 12 February 2022 a b Richmond 2013 p 132 a b Jones 2016 p 110 Sources Levene Roberts Mark Penny 1999 7 The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide In Shenfield Stephen D ed The Massacre in History New York Berghahn Books pp 149 162 ISBN 1 57181 935 5 The number who died in the Circassian catastrophe of the 1860s could hardly therefore have been fewer than one million and may well have been closer to one and a half million a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Richmond 2013 King 2008 Cataliotti Joseph 22 October 2023 Circassian Genocide Overview amp History Study com Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Circassian Genocide on its 159th Anniversary Human Rights Association 21 May 2023 Archived from the original on 22 August 2023 a b c d e Richmond 2013 back cover a b Yemelianova Galina April 2014 Islam nationalism and state in the Muslim Caucasus Caucasus Survey 1 2 3 doi 10 1080 23761199 2014 11417291 Gecmisten gunumuze Kafkaslarin trajedisi uluslararasi konferans 21 Mayis 2005 The tragedy of the Caucasus from past to present international conference 21 May 2005 in Turkish Kafkas Vakfi Yayinlari 2006 ISBN 978 975 00909 0 5 via Google Books Gazetesi Aziz Ustel Soykirim mi iste Cerkes soykirimi Yazarlar Aziz USTEL Is it genocide here is the Circassian genocide Authors Aziz USTEL star com tr in Turkish Retrieved 26 September 2020 a b c d Donmez Yilmaz 31 May 2018 General Zass in Kizinin Adigeler Tarafindan Kacirilisi Kidnapping of General Zass s Daughter by the Adygs CERKES FED in Turkish Archived from the original on 14 January 2021 Retrieved 13 August 2021 a b c d Capobianco Michael 2012 Blood on the Shore The Circassian Genocide Gazetesi Jineps 2 September 2013 Velyaminov Zass ve insan kafasi biriktirme hobisi Velyaminov Zass and his hobby of collecting human heads Jineps Gazetesi in Turkish Retrieved 26 September 2020 King 2008 p 95 a b c d e f g Richmond 2013 p page needed a b Cerkesler in Kesilen Baslarini Berlin e Gondermisler They Sent the Cut Heads of Circassians to Berlin Haberler in Turkish 29 April 2015 Retrieved 4 March 2022 a b c d Grassi 2018 a b c d Rosser Owen 2007 a b c Burnaby Frederick 2007 On Horseback Through Asia Minor a b c Enclosed in Despatch No 3 From Sir Henry Bulwer to Earl Russell Constantinople April 12 1864 FO 881 1259 Kazemzadeh Firuz 1974 Russian penetration of the Caucasus In Hunczak Taras ed Russian Imperialism from Ivan the Great to the revolution Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 0737 8 a b c King 2008 Grassi 2018 Shenfield 1999 p 154 a b Richmond 2013 p 132 If we assume that Berzhe s middle figure of 50 000 was close to the number who survived to settle in the lowlands then between 95 percent and 97 percent of all Circassians were killed outright died during Evdokimov s campaign or were deported Rosser Owen 2007 p 16 with one estimate showing that the indigenous population of the entire north western Caucasus was reduced by a massive 94 percent Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press p 69 ISBN 0 299 09160 0 a b Levene Mark 2005 6 Declining Powers Genocide in the Age of the Nation State Volume II The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide 175 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10010 pp 300 301 ISBN 1 84511 057 9 Leitzinger Antero October 2000 The Circassian Genocide The Eurasian Politician No 2 Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b Abzakh Edris Circassian History University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences 1996 Retrieved 11 March 2007 a b The Circassian Genocide Unrepresented Nations and People Organisation UNPO 14 December 2004 Retrieved April 4 2007 a b c d Barry Ellen 20 May 2011 Georgia Says Russia Committed Genocide in 19th Century The New York Times Archived from the original on 14 March 2017 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Georgia Recognizes Russian Genocide Of Ethnic Circassians Radio Free Europe May 2011 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Georgia Recognizes Circassian Genocide Eurasianet Retrieved 15 January 2021 Bodio Tadeusz Sieradzan Przemyslaw J 15 December 2012 Zrodla nacjonalizmu czerkieskiego i jego konsekwencje polityczne Sources of Circassian nationalism and its political consequences Srodkowoeuropejskie Studia Polityczne in Polish 4 47 74 doi 10 14746 ssp 2012 4 03 ISSN 1731 7517 145th Anniversary of the Circassian Genocide and the Sochi Olympics Issue Reuters 22 May 2009 Archived from the original on 8 September 2012 Retrieved 28 November 2009 Cerkesler soykirim yuruyusu yapti Circassians marched on genocide Denizhaber in Turkish May 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Kayseri DHA May 2017 Cerkeslerden anma yuruyusu Circassian memorial march Sozcu in Turkish Retrieved 15 January 2021 Dowling Timothy C 2 December 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond ABC CLIO pp 728 729 ISBN 978 1598849486 via Google Books King 2008 pp 37 39 Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press p 67 ISBN 0 299 09160 0 a b c Shenfield 1999 p 150 Natho Kadir I Circassian History pp 123 124 Malbahov B K Kabarda na etapah politicheskoj istorii seredina XVI pervaya chetvert XIX veka Moskva Pomatur 2002 S 293 ISBN 5 86208 106 2 Malbahov B K Kabarda na etapah politicheskoj istorii seredina XVI pervaya chetvert XIX veka Moskva Pomatur 2002 S 302 ISBN 5 86208 106 2 Gen Ismail Berkok Tarihte Kafkasya Istanbul 1958 s 371 a b c Jaimoukha Amjad A Brief History of Kabarda from the Seventh Century AD p 19 Potto Valisii Kavkazskaya voina 1 171 Baddeley 1908 p 73 a b Richmond 2013 p 56 Hatk Isam Russian Circassian War 1763 21 May 1864 Al Waha Oasis 51 1992 10 15 a b c d e F A Cherbin The History of Cossack Kuban Forces a b c d e f g h i j k Ahmed 2013 p 161 a b King 2008 pp 47 49 This in turn demanded above all the stomach to carry the war to the highlanders themselves including putting aside any scruples about destroying forests and any other place where raiding parties might seek refuge Targeted assassinations kidnappings the killing of entire families and the disproportionate use of force became central to Russian operations a b King 2008 p 74 a b Natho Kadir 2005 The Russo Circassian War Archived from the original on 12 May 2022 Retrieved 13 March 2022 King 2008 pp 93 94 Baddeley 1908 p 135 John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton 1907 The Cambridge Modern History Macmillan amp Co p 202 King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus pp 92 93 Rosen Baron Letter to Chionchev 12 December 1831 P Boutkov Materials for the New History of the Caucasus Part I King The Ghost of Freedom pp 73 76 The hills forests and uptown villages where highland horsemen were most at home were cleared rearranged or destroyed to shift the advantage to the regular army of the empire Into these spaces Russian settlers could be moved or pacified highlanders resettled a b Natho Kadir I Circassian History p 357 Velyaminov Zass ve insan kafasi biriktirme hobisi Velyaminov Zass and hobbies of collecting human heads Jineps Gazetesi in Turkish 2 September 2013 Archived from the original on 13 October 2020 Retrieved 26 September 2020 Jembulat Bolotoko The Prince of Princes Part One Jamestown Archived from the original on 25 October 2020 Retrieved 5 January 2021 Natho Kadir I Circassian History p 420 Bashqawi Adel 2017 Circassia Born to Be Free Xlibris Corporation ISBN 978 1543447651 Bashqawi Adel 2019 The Circassian Miracle the Nation Neither Tsars nor Commissars nor Russia Could Stop Xlibris Corporation ISBN 978 1796076851 Kingston William Henry Giles 2020 The Circassian Chief A Romance of Russia Library of Alexandria ISBN 978 1465593184 Kingston William Henry G 1854 The Circassian chief Vol 101 p 192 Family Herald The definitive visual guide Vol 17 George Biggs 1859 p 287 Burnaby Fred 1877 On Horseback Through Asia Minor Vol 2 2 ed S Low Marston Searle amp Rivington p 88 a b Colonel Grigory Zass Letter to Baron Rosen 25 Feb 1834 P Boutkov Materials for the New History of the Caucasus Part I Bashqawi Adel 2017 Circassia Born to Be Free Xlibris Corporation ISBN 978 1543447651 via Google Books The Reports and the Testimonies About Russian Circassian War and the Circassian Genocide Circassian World Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2021 Richmond 2013 p 55 Bullough Oliver 2010 Let Our Fame Be Great Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus Basic Books p 60 ISBN 978 0465022571 via Google Books Treisman Daniel 2011 The Return Russia s Journey from Gorbachev to Medvedev Simon and Schuster p 455 ISBN 978 1416560722 via Google Books King 2008 p 95 96 a b c d Richmond 2013 p 96 Mamedov Mikail Going Native in the Caucasus Problems of Russian Identity 1801 64 The Russian Review vol 67 no 2 2008 pp 275 295 Accessed 28 May 2021 Tlis Fatima 1 August 2008 Moscow s Favoritism Towards Cossacks Mocks Circassian History North Caucasus Weekly 9 30 Zhemukhov Sufian 9 November 2011 Jembulat Bolotoko The Prince of Princes Part Two Eurasia Daily Monitor 8 207 Golovin Ivan 1954 The Caucasus PDF Trubner amp Co Sykes Heather 2016 The Sexual and Gender Politics of Sport Mega Events Roving Colonialism Routledge Critical Studies in Sport Taylor amp Francis p 124 ISBN 978 1317690016 Khodarkovsky Michael 2011 Bitter Choices Loyalty and Betrayal in the Russian Conquest of the North Caucasus Cornell University Press p 134 ISBN 978 0801462900 via Google Books Richmond 2013 p 63 Baumgart Peace of Paris pp 111 112 Conacher Britain and the Crimea pp 203 215 217 a b Richmond 2013 p 76 a b c d King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Page 94 In a policy memorandum in of 1857 Dmitri Milyutin chief of staff to Bariatinskii summarized the new thinking on dealing with the northwestern highlanders The idea Milyutin argued was not to clear the highlands and coastal areas of Circassians so that these regions could be settled by productive farmers but Rather eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself to cleanse the land of hostile elements Tsar Alexander II formally approved the resettlement plan Milyutin who would eventually become minister of war was to see his plans realized in the early 1860s a b L V Burykina Pereselenskoye dvizhenie na severo zapagni Kavakaz Reference in King Richmond 2008 p 79 In his memoirs Milutin who proposed deporting Circassians from the mountains as early as 1857 recalls the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population Tanner A The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries East West Books 2004 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 15 16 As it advanced the Russian Army began systematically clearing the Circassian highlands of their indigenous inhabitants often in particularly brutal and destructive ways and replacing them with settlements of Cossacks who they deemed to be more reliable subjects there was a general feeling within Russian military circles that the Circassians would have to be entirely removed from these areas in order to fully secure them Berzhe 1882 342 343 in Russian Richmond Defeat and Deportation Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine University of Southern California 1994 Rosser Owen 2007 p 16 Rosser Owen 2007 p 15 Although the Russian Government did not give the plan official sanction until May 1862 in 1859 they had already started talks with the Ottomans to provide for a limited number of Circassian migrants Rosser Owen 2007 p 20 a b Richmond 2013 p 72 Kasumov and Kasumov Genotsid Adygov p 140 Esadze Pokorenie p 352 Richmond 2013 p 65 66 71 74 75 a b Richmond 2013 p 77 Richmond 2013 Richmond 2013 p 80 Drozdov Ivan Poslednaia Borjba pp 434 437 441 444 Cited in Richmond Walter The Circassian Genocide p 77 Richmond 2013 p 78 79 Field notes of Evdokimov for June December 1863 available from the Georgian State Archives Tbilisi f 416 op 3 doc 1177 100 190 passim Richmond 2013 p 79 a b Shenfield 1999 p 151 a b c Ahmed 2013 p 162 a b Shenfield 1999 p 152 a b Richmond 2013 p 2 Trakho cited in Shenfield 1999 p 152 Kafkasya Bulteni 19 Mayis 1864 Jersild 2002 p 12 Kumykov T H Vyselenie adygov v Turciyu posledstvie Kavkazskoj vojny Nalchik 1994 Str 93 94 Rosser Owen 2007 p 22 Natho Kadir I 2009 Circassian History p 365 Ahmed 2013 pp 162 163 Drozdov Ivan Posledniaia Bor ba s Gortsami na Zapadnom Kavkaze pp 456 457 a b Rosser Owen 2007 p 24 a b Rosser Owen 2007 pp 23 24 a b The Circassian Slave Trade The Scotsman August 30 1864 p 4 Cited in Rosser Owen 2007 Rosser Owen 2007 p 22 The deportations were not conducted with any kind of efficiency on the part of the Russians with the Circassians often left to find unchartered transports which also left them open to abuses by the captains of the vessels King 2008 pp 96 97 The Circassian Exodus The Times May 9 1864 p 11 Cited in Rosser Owen 2007 p 24 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 38 39 Olshevsky quoted in Walter Richmond 2013 Circassian Genocide p 87 Richmond 2013 p 87 Rosser Owen 2007 p 25 The Circassian Exodus a letter to the Editor of The Times June 17 1864 p 7 Cited in Rosser Owen 2007 p 26 a b c Richmond 2013 p 88 Mikhail Nikolaevich to Novikov 20 September OS 1867 Georgian State Archive Tbilisi f 416 op 3 doc 160 2 Rosser Owen 2007 p 23 Richmond 2013 p 86 Not only refugees but entire crews were wiped out After a Russian captain and crew met this fate in April the Russians refused to transport any more on state owned ships and left the rest of the deportation to the Turks and private vessels Evdokimov investigated the possibility of hiring ships to transport the Circassians but his quibbling over fees delayed the exploitation of private boats for several months However he apparently requested no food water or medical help a b c d Ahmed 2013 p 163 Rosser Owen 2007 p 23 As the deportations increased Russian Ottoman and even British vessels were chartered to convey the refugees in what must have itself been a massive operation the burden of the operation landed on the shoulders of the Ottoman Government and the transporting of refugees took a huge toll on Ottoman finances leading to a suggestion by Sir Henry Bulwer British Ambassador at Istanbul that the British Government either allocate a loan or agree to charter British merchant steamers to be used for this purpose In footnote Neither the loan nor the transports were forthcoming on this occasion although the British did provide transports at various points and independent steamers also transported refugees Richmond 2013 p 89 Unsigned report 17 May OS 1864 Georgian State Archive Tbilisi f 416 op 3 doc 146 1 2 145th Anniversary of the Circassian Genocide and the Sochi Olympics Issue Reuters 22 May 2009 Archived from the original on 2 July 2012 Retrieved 28 November 2009 Rosser Owen 2007 p 16 with one estimate showing that the indigenous population of the entire north western Caucasus was reduced by a massive 94 per cent Text of citation The estimates of Russian historian Narochnitskii in Richmond ch 4 p 5 Stephen Shenfield notes a similar rate of reduction with less than 10 per cent of the Circassians including the Abkhazians remaining Stephen Shenfield The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide in The Massacre in History p 154 Population of Russian Federation by cities towns and districts as of January 1 2007 Rosstat Moscow 2007 Polovinkina T V Sochinskoe Prichernomore Nalchik 2006 pp 216 218 ISBN 588195775X 4 Naselenie R 04 doc in Rossijskij statisticheskij ezhegodnik 2011 www gks ru ISBN 978 5 89476 319 4 Sochi Great Soviet Encyclopedia in Russian Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 09160 0 Shenfield 1999 p 154 Kulberg Anssi 2004 1 The Crimean Tatars In Tanner Arno ed The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries Helsinki Finland East West Books pp 18 21 ISBN 978 0 8135 6068 7 the Russian Empire ended up inventing the strategy of modern ethnic cleansing and genocide with Crimean Tatars and Circassians as the first victims of massive territorial extermination in the 1860s An unprecedented genocide and wave of terror aimed at emptying the whole Caucasus from Circassians Also in Circassia Russia started a mass expulsion in 1860 with catastrophic consequences The careful timing planning and systematic organization of the ethnic cleansings and genocide against Crimean Tatars Caucasian Muslims and Jews indicate that imperial Russia even during the reigns of different monarchs did not follow a random strategy in her southward expansion regarding the more general history of the time the systematic use of ethnic cleansing pogroms and genocide as a means of imperial expansion and colonization marked the beginning of a novel and sinister trend in imperial politics What was launched by Russia s brosok na yug with their first victims being the Crimean Tatars and Circassians was continued against the Jews Kulberg Anssi 2004 1 The Crimean Tatars In Tanner Arno ed The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries Helsinki Finland East West Books pp 20 21 ISBN 978 0 8135 6068 7 Richmond 2013 p 97 Gnolidze Swanson Manana 2003 Activity of the Russian Orthodox Church Among the Muslim Natives of the Caucasus in Imperial Russia PDF Caucasus and Central Asia Newsletter University of California Berkeley 4 9 20 Archived PDF from the original on 27 February 2008 Chechnya Chaos of Human Geography in the North Caucasus 484 BC 1957 AD Biot Report 479 November 2007 Archived from the original on 20 December 2010 Kulberg Anssi 2004 1 The Crimean Tatars In Tanner Arno ed The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries Helsinki Finland East West Books p 21 ISBN 978 0 8135 6068 7 a b Anchabadze George The Vainakhs p 29 a b Jaimoukha Amjad The Chechens A Handbook p 259 a b Ozdemir Ozbay Dunden Bugune Kuzey Kafkasya Ankara 1999 s 165 Istoriya narodov Severnogo Kavkaza p 206 207 Viacheslav A Chirikba Abkhaz p 6 Richmond 2013 p 3 Shenfield 1999 Natho Kadir I Circassian History pp 367 391 403 Natho Kadir I Circassian History p 367 Rosser Owen Sarah A S Isla 2007 The First Circassian Exodus Richmond 2013 p 66 Mal bakhov Kabarda v Period ot Petra I do Yermolova p 237 Shenfield 1999 p 154 The number who died in the Circassian catastrophe of the 1860s could hardly therefore be less than one million and may well have been closer to one and a half million Richmond 2013 p 97 132 Jones 2016 p 109 110 Quoted in Natho Kadir I 2009 Circassian History Page 361 Natho Kadir I 2009 Circassian History Xlibris Foundation 9 December 2009 p 365 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 34 52 Richmond 2013 pp 90 91 Shenfield 1999 p 153 Pinson Marc Ottoman Colonization of the Circassians in Rumili after the Crimean War Etudes Balkaniques 3 Academie Bulgare des Sciences Sofia 1972 Page 72 Richmond 2013 p 12 a b Richmond 2013 p 33 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 45 49 a b Rosser Owen 2007 p 46 Rosser Owen 2007 p 46 With the Highland Clearances still fresh in the minds of many the Circassian issue seems to have generated particular sympathy in Scotland One frustrated letter sent in to The Scotsman reflects this sentiment The Scotchmen whose ancestors fought and bled for their national liberty over and over are they to meet and talk and do nothing at the call of both freedom and humanity or instead of being first to be last If they are they are unworthy of the blessings they themselves enjoy why not call a public meeting and appoint a committee to receive contributions Rosser Owen 2007 pp 47 49 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 49 52 Rosser Owen 2007 p 38 One private letter sent to The Spectator magazine from Dr Sandwith in Gratz claimed that out of the 50 000 given for the aid of the refugees only 1 000 had actually reached them accusing Ottoman officials of having each stolen a share along the way The author notes later that the figure of 49 000 embezzled is probably not a reliable estimate Rosser Owen 2007 pp 35 37 Napso D A Chekmenov S A Op cit Str 113 114 Quoted from Aliev U Ocherk istoricheskogo razvitiya gorcev Kavkaza i chuzhezemnogo vliyaniya na nih islama carizma i pr Rostov n D 1927 Str 109 110 Glenny Misha 2000 The Balkans 1804 1999 Nationalism War and the Great Powers Granta Books p 96 ISBN 978 1 86207 073 8 a b Richmond 2013 p 99 Natho Kadir I Circassian History p 375 a b c d e Natho Kadir I Circassian History p 380 a b Richmond 2013 p 103 Pinson Mark Ottoman Colonization of the Circassians in Rumili after the Crimean War Etudes Balcaniques 3 1972 pp 78 79 Richmond 2013 p 107 Tlostanova Madina 2010 Gender Epistemologies and Eurasian Borderlands Comparative Feminist Studies illustrated ed Palgrave Macmillan p 85 ISBN 978 0230108424 via Google Books Byrne Donn 1929 Field of Honor large print ed Century Company p 125 via Google Books Reid James J 2000 Crisis of the Ottoman Empire Prelude to Collapse 1839 1878 Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte des ostlichen Europa Vol 57 Franz Steiner Verlag p 148 ISBN 3515076875 ISSN 0170 3595 via Google Books Thompson Ewa Majewska 2000 Imperial Knowledge Russian Literature and Colonialism illustrated ed Greenwood Press p 68 ISBN 0313313113 ISSN 0738 9345 via Google Books Still Judith 2012 Derrida and Hospitality reprint ed Edinburgh University Press p 211 ISBN 978 0748687275 via Google Books Gibson Sarah 2016 Molz Jennie Germann ed Mobilizing Hospitality The Ethics of Social Relations in a Mobile World reprint ed Routledge ISBN 978 1317094951 via Google Books Culbertson Ely 1940 The Strange Lives of One Man An Autobiography Winston p 55 Magnusson Eirikr 1891 National Life and Thought of the Various Nations Throughout the World A Series of Addresses T F Unwin p 8 via Google Books The New Review Vol 1 Longmans Green and Company 1889 p 309 via Google Books Dumanov H M Vdali ot Rodiny tr Far from the Motherland Nalchik 1994 Page 98 Dzidzariya G A Mahadzhirstvo i problemy istorii Abhazii XIX stoletiya 2 e izd tr Makhadzhirstvo and problems of the history of Abkhazia in the 19th century 2nd ed supplement dopol Suhumi 1982 Pp 238 240 241 246 Glenny Misha The Balkans Nationalism War and the Great Powers 1804 1999 pp 96 97 Natho Kadir I Circassian History Pages 445 446 Richmond 2013 p 100 Richmond 2013 p 1 Fisher Alan Emigration of Muslims from the Russian Empire in the Years after the Crimean War Population History of the Middle East and the Balkans p 179 Rosser Owen 2007 pp 20 21 Richmond 2013 pp 89 132 Karpat Kemal H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 Demographic and social characteristics USA University of Wisconsin Press p 69 ISBN 0 299 09160 0 a b Jersild 2002 p 23 a b c Jersild 2002 p 24 McCarthy Justin Factors in the Analysis of the Population of Anatolia in Population History of the Middle East and the Balkan a b c d e f Jersild 2002 p 26 Rosser Owen 2007 p 33 Panzac Vingt ans au service de la medecine turque p 110 A new war in the Caucasus Review of book Bourdieu s Secret Admirer in the Caucasus by Georgi M Derluguian The Times 1 February 2006 Andrei Smirnov September 13 2006 Disputable anniversary could provoke new crisis in Adygeya Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume 3 Number 168 Jamestown Foundation Kullberg Anssi Jokinen Christian 19 July 2004 From Terror to Terrorism the Logic on the Roots of Selective Political Violence The Eurasian Politician Archived from the original on 22 December 2007 The Circassian Genocide Archived 9 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Eurasian Politician Issue 2 October 2000 Kulberg Anssi 2004 1 The Crimean Tatars In Tanner Arno ed The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The History and Today of Selected Ethnic Groups in Five Countries Helsinki Finland East West Books p 19 ISBN 978 0 8135 6068 7 a b c Richmond 2008 p 172 a b Goble Paul 15 July 2005 Circassians demand Russian apology for 19th century genocide Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Vol 8 no 23 Circassia Adygs Ask European Parliament to Recognize Genocide Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization Hildebrandt Amber 14 August 2012 Russia s Sochi Olympics awakens Circassian anger CBC News Retrieved 15 August 2012 Georgia Recognizes Circassian Genocide Archived 18 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Civil Georgia 20 May 2011 Georgia Recognizes Russian Genocide Of Ethnic Circassians Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 20 May 2011 Gruziya priznala genocid cherkesov v carskoj Rossii Lenta RU Georgian Diaspora Calendar www diaspora gov ge Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Gazetesi Evrensel Cerkes gencleri Soykirimin getirdigi acilari unutturmamaya kararliyiz Circassian youth We are determined not to let the suffering brought by the genocide be forgotten Evrensel net in Turkish Retrieved 22 April 2022 Cerkes soykirim ve surgun aniti Beyli kduzu nde acildi Circassian genocide and exile monument unveiled in Beylikduzu www beylikduzu istanbul in Turkish Retrieved 22 April 2022 Bozdogan Kaan 2020 Cumhurbaskani Erdogan dan Cerkes Surgunu nun 156 yilina iliskin mesaj Message from President Erdogan on the 156th anniversary of the Circassian Exile in Turkish Recognize Circassian Genocide grant Circassians their rights Bianet 2021 Cherkesskiye aktivisty napravili v Rumyniyu pros bu priznat genotsid cherkesov Rossiyey Cherkesskie aktivisty napravili v Rumyniyu prosbu priznat genocid cherkesov Rossiej Circassian activists sent a request to Romania to recognize the genocide of the Circassians by Russia Natpress in Russian 1 December 2015 A requisition is sent to Romania for recognizing the Circassian genocide cherkessia net 1 December 2015 Cherkesskaya obshchestvennost obratilas za priznaniyem genotsida ikh predkov k Moldove Cherkesskaya obshestvennost obratilas za priznaniem genocida ih predkov k Moldove Circassian community appealed to Moldova for recognition of the genocide of their ancestors Natpress in Russian 3 September 2015 A requisition is sent to Moldova for recognizing the Circassian genocide cherkessia net 31 August 2015 Eto namerennoye unichtozheniye naroda Eto namerennoe unichtozhenie naroda This is the deliberate destruction of the people Kommersant in Russian 6 June 2011 Kullberg Anssi 2004 The Crimean Tatars In Tanner Arno ed The Forgotten Minorities of Eastern Europe The history and today of selected ethnic groups in five countries East West Books ISBN 9789529168088 via Google Books Henze Paul Circassian Resistance p 111 Kumykov Tugan 2003 Arkhivnye Materialy o Kavkazskoi Voine i Vyselenii Cherkesov Adygov v Turtsiiu Arhivnye Materialy o Kavkazskoj Vojne i Vyselenie Cherkesov Adygov v Turciyu Archival Materials about the Caucasian War and the Deportation of the Circassians Adygs to Turkey Nalchik in Russian p 80 Richmond 2013 pp 92 97 Ellman Michael The Circassian Genocide Neizvestnaya Kavkazkaya voina Byl li genotsid adygov 26 January 2015 Review of Walter Richmond 2013 The Circassian Genocide Fabio L Grassi ile 156 Yilinda Cerkeslerin Surgunu The Exile of the Circassians in its 156th Anniversary with Fabio L Grassi YouTube in Turkish Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Mantran Robert 1989 Histoire de l Empire Ottoman History of the Ottoman Empire in French Fayard ISBN 978 2 213 01956 7 via Google Books Tanilli Server 1987 Yuzyillarin gercegi ve mirasi insanlik tarihine giris Truth and legacy of centuries an introduction to human history in Turkish Say ISBN 9789754680010 via Google Books Ilber Ortayli in Turkish Archived from the original on 27 November 2020 Retrieved 18 October 2020 Kaffed KAFFED 21 Mayis Konferanslari Kaffed KAFFED May 21 Conferences www kaffed org in Turkish Retrieved 25 September 2021 Renewed Circassian Mobilization in the North Caucasus 20 years after the Fall of the Soviet Union Russian Olympics clouded by 19th century deaths Cherkesy napomnili o genocide in Russian Cherkesy demonstriruyut nebyvalyj nacionalnyj podem in Russian Bugajski Janusz 2022 FAILED STATE A Guide to Russia s Rupture PDF pp 181 184 224 Bugajski Janusz 2022 FAILED STATE A Guide to Russia s Rupture PDF pp 222 225 Bugajski Janusz 2022 FAILED STATE A Guide to Russia s Rupture PDF pp 148 149 Unambitious state backed Circassian groups hide a growing nationalism in young Circassians Im Blut der Tscherkessen in German Komu pomeshal Asker Soht in Russian Cherkesy mezhdu proshlym i budushim in Russian O cherkesah zelenyh lentochkah i Kavkazskoj vojne in Russian Circassian Activists in Russia Become a Serious Force Cherkesskij aktivist Adnan Huade zayavil ob obyskah na rabote i doma in Russian Krasnodar court upholds fine against Circassian activist Gvashev Circassian leader ends hunger strike Prigovor cherkesskomu aktivistu vlasti priravnyali traurnye meropriyatiya k nesankcionirovannym mitingam in Russian Ne vremya cherkesov in Russian Circassian Activists Toughen Rhetoric Regarding Putin Regime Cherkesy mezhdu proshlym i budushim in Russian Sources Grassi Fabio L 2018 A new homeland The Massacre of The Circassians Their Exodus To The Ottoman Empire and Their Place In Modern Turkey Aydin University International ISBN 9781642261349 Jersild Austin 2002 Orientalism and Empire North Caucasus Mountain Peoples and the Georgian Frontier 1845 1917 McGill Queen s Press ISBN 9780773523296 JSTOR j ctt8018p OCLC 123470225 Jones Adam 2016 Genocide A Comprehensive Introduction Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 53386 3 via Google Books King Charles 2008 The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517775 6 Rosser Owen Sarah A S Isla 1 October 2007 The First Circassian Exodus to the Ottoman Empire 1858 1867 and the Ottoman Response Based on the Accounts of Contemporary British Observers Thesis University of London Shenfield Stephen D 1999 The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide In Levene Mark Roberts Penny eds The Massacre in History New York Berghahn Books pp 149 162 ISBN 978 1 57181 935 2 Further readingAhmed Akbar 2013 The Thistle and the Drone Washington D C Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 2379 0 Baddeley John F 1908 The Russian conquest of the Caucasus London Longmans Green and Co ISBN 0 7007 0634 8 OL 3428695M Richmond Walter 2013 The Circassian Genocide Genocide Political Violence Human Rights Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 6069 4 Retrieved 3 May 2016 Richmond Walter 2008 The Northwest Caucasus Past Present Future London Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 00249 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circassian genocide amp oldid 1207370805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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