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Great Eastern Crisis

Great Eastern Crisis (1875–1878)
Part of the rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire and of the Great Game

Serbian soldiers attacking the Ottoman army at Mramor, 1877
Date19 June 1875 – 13 July 1878
(3 years, 3 weeks and 3 days)
Location
Result

Ottoman defeat

Territorial
changes
  • Reestablishment of the Bulgarian state
  • De jure independence of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro from the Ottoman Empire
  • Kars and Batum Oblasts become part of the Russian Empire
  • Belligerents
    Supported by: Supported by:
    Commanders and leaders
    Strength
    • 185,000 in the Army of the Danube, 75,000 in the Caucasian Army[1]
      • Finland: 1,000
    • 66,000
    • 12,000, 190 cannons
    • 81,500
    • 45,000
    • 15,000
    281,000[2]
    Casualties and losses
    • 15,567 killed, 56,652 wounded, 6,824 died from wounds[3]
    • 4,302 killed and missing, 3,316 wounded, 19,904 sick [4]
    • 2,456 dead and wounded[5]
    • 2,400 dead and wounded[5]
    30,000 killed,[6] 90,000 died from wounds and diseases[6]

    The Great Eastern Crisis of 1875–1878 began in the Ottoman Empire's territories on the Balkan peninsula in 1875, with the outbreak of several uprisings and wars that resulted in the intervention of international powers, and was ended with the Treaty of Berlin in July 1878.

    It is also called Serbo-Croatian: Velika istočna kriza; Turkish: Şark Buhranı ("Eastern Crisis", for the crisis in general), Turkish: Ramazan Kararnamesi ("Decree of Ramadan", for the sovereign default declared on 30 October 1875) and Turkish: 93 Harbi ("War of 93", for the wars on the Balkan peninsula between 1877 and 1878, referring in particular to the Russo-Turkish War, the year 1293 on the Islamic Rumi calendar corresponding to the year 1877 on the Gregorian calendar).

    Background edit

     
    The empire in 1875 right before the crisis
     
    The Batak massacre carried out by Ottoman irregular troops in Bulgaria in 1876
     
    The Avenger: An Allegorical War Map for 1877 by Fred. W. Rose, 1872: This map reflects the "Great Eastern Crisis" and the subsequent Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78.

    The state of Ottoman administration in the Balkans continued to deteriorate throughout the 19th century, with the Sublime Porte occasionally losing control over whole provinces. Reforms imposed by European powers did little to improve the conditions of the Christian population, while at the same time managing to dissatisfy a sizable portion of the Muslim population. Bosnia suffered at least two waves of rebellion by the local Muslim population, the most recent in 1850.[7] Austria consolidated after the turmoil of the first half of the century and sought to reinvigorate its longstanding policy of expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. Meanwhile, the nominally autonomous, de facto independent principalities of Serbia and Montenegro also sought to expand into regions inhabited by their compatriots. Nationalist and irredentist sentiments were strong and were encouraged by Russia and its agents.

    Ottoman economic crisis and default edit

    On 24 August 1854,[8][9][10][11] during the Crimean War, the Ottoman Empire took its first foreign loans.[12][13] The empire entered into subsequent loans, partly to finance the construction of railways and telegraph lines, and partly to finance deficits between revenues and the lavish expenditures of the imperial court, such as the construction of new palaces on the Bosphorus strait in Constantinople.[14] Some financial commentators have noted that the terms of these loans were exceptionally favourable to the British and French banks (owned by the Rothschild family) which facilitated them, whereas others have noted that the terms reflected the imperial administration's willingness to constantly refinance its debts.[14][15] A large amount of money was also spent for building new ships for the Ottoman Navy during the reign of Sultan Abdülaziz (r. 1861–1876). In 1875, the Ottoman Navy had 21 battleships and 173 warships of other types, which formed the third largest naval fleet in the world after those of the British and French navies. All of these expenditures, however, put a huge strain on the Ottoman treasury. In the meantime, a severe drought in Anatolia in 1873 and flooding in 1874 caused famine and widespread discontent in the heart of the empire. The agricultural shortages precluded the collection of necessary taxes, which forced the Ottoman government to declare a sovereign default on its foreign loan repayments on 30 October 1875 and increase taxes in all of its provinces, including the Balkans.[13][14]

    Uprisings and wars in the Balkans edit

    The decision to increase taxes for paying the Ottoman Empire's debts to foreign creditors resulted in outrage in the Balkan provinces, which culminated in the Great Eastern Crisis and ultimately the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78) that provided independence or autonomy for the Christian nations in the empire's Balkan territories, with the subsequent Treaty of Berlin in 1878. The war, however, was disastrous for the already struggling Ottoman economy and the Ottoman Public Debt Administration was established in 1881, which gave the control of the Ottoman state revenues to foreign creditors.[14][16] This made the European creditors bondholders, and assigned special rights to the OPDA for collecting various types of tax and customs revenues.[14]

    Aftermath edit

    After the Treaty of Berlin in 1878, Austria-Hungary stationed military garrisons in the Ottoman Vilayet of Bosnia and Ottoman Sanjak of Novi Pazar, which formally (de jure) continued to be Ottoman territories. Taking advantage of the chaos that occurred during the Young Turk Revolution in 1908, Bulgaria declared its formal independence on 5 October 1908. The following day, Austria-Hungary unilaterally annexed Bosnia on 6 October 1908, but pulled its military forces out of Novi Pazar in order to reach a compromise with the Ottoman government and avoid a war (the Ottoman Empire lost the Sanjak of Novi Pazar with the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913.)

    In 1881, France occupied the Ottoman Beylik of Tunisia, with the excuse that Tunisian troops had crossed the border into their colony of Algeria, which also formerly belonged to the Ottoman Empire until 1830. A year later, in 1882, the British Empire occupied the Ottoman Khedivate of Egypt, with the pretext of giving military assistance to the Ottomans for putting down the Urabi Revolt (Britain later declared Egypt a British protectorate on 5 November 1914, in response to the Ottoman government's decision to join World War I on the side of the Central Powers.[17]) It is worth noting that the Ottoman government had frequently declared the tax revenues from Egypt as a surety for borrowing loans from British and French banks.[9][13] The Ottoman government had earlier leased Cyprus to Britain in 1878, in exchange for British support at the Congress of Berlin in the same year (Cyprus was later annexed by Britain on 5 November 1914, for the same aforementioned reason regarding the Ottoman participation in World War I.[18]) By obtaining Cyprus and Egypt, Britain gained an important foothold in the East Mediterranean and control over the Suez Canal; while France increased its lands in the West Mediterranean coast of North Africa by adding Tunisia to its empire as a French protectorate.

    Historian Maroš Melichárek writes that the Great Eastern Crisis could not have been fully resolved without Serbia.[19]

    Chronology of the Great Eastern Crisis and its aftermath edit

    Treaties edit

    Aftermath edit

    References edit

    1. ^ Timothy C. Dowling. Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond. ABC-CLIO, 2014. p. 748
    2. ^ Mernikov, A. G.; Spektor, A. A. (2005). Всемирная история войн [World History of Wars] (in Russian). Minsk, Belarus: Харвест.
    3. ^ Urlanis, Boris (1960). Войны в период домонополистического капитализма [Wars during the period of pre-monopoly capitalism]. Войны и народонаселение Европы. Людские потери вооруженных сил европейских стран в войнах XVII—XX вв. (Историко-статистическое исследование) [Wars and population of Europe: Human losses of the armed forces of European countries in the wars of the 17th—20th centuries (Historical and statistical research)] (in Russian). Minsk: Sotsekgiz. pp. 104–105, 129 § 4.
    4. ^ Scafes, Cornel, et al., Armata Romania in Razvoiul de Independenta 1877–1878 [The Romanian Army in the War of Independence 1877–1878]. Bucuresti, Editura Sigma, 2002, p. 149 (Romence)
    5. ^ a b Boris Urlanis, Войны и народонаселение Европы [Wars and population of Europe], Part II, Chapter II
    6. ^ a b Mernikov, A. G.; Spektor, A. A. (2005). Всемирная история войн [World History of Wars] (in Russian). Minsk, Belarus: Харвест. ISBN 985-13-2607-0.
    7. ^ Dixon, Jeffrey S.; Sarkees, Meredith Reid (2015). A Guide to Intra-state Wars: An Examination of Civil, Regional, and Intercommunal Wars, 1816-2014. CQ Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-1506300818. Retrieved 25 December 2019.
    8. ^ Dünya Bülteni: "Osmanlı Devleti ilk kez dış borç aldı"
    9. ^ a b Derin Strateji: "Osmanlı Borçları ve Düyun-u Umumiye İdaresi"
    10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-06-15. Retrieved 2016-09-17.
    11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-07-24. Retrieved 2014-08-28.
    12. ^ Douglas Arthur Howard: "The History of Turkey", page 71.
    13. ^ a b c Mevzuat Dergisi, Yıl: 9, Sayı: 100, Nisan 2006: "Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda ve Türkiye Cumhuriyeti'nde Borçlanma Politikaları ve Sonuçları"
    14. ^ a b c d e Niall Ferguson (2 January 2008). "An Ottoman warning for indebted America". Financial Times. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
    15. ^ Gold for the Sultan: Western Bankers and Ottoman Finance, 1856–1881, by Christopher Clay, London, 2001, p. 30.
    16. ^ Krasner, Stephen D. "Sovereignty: Organized Hypocrisy". Retrieved 26 August 2014.
    17. ^ Articles 17, 18 and 19 of the Treaty of Lausanne (1923)
    18. ^ Articles 20 and 21 of the Treaty of Lausanne (1923)
    19. ^ Melichárek, Maroš (January 2019). "Srbské nádeje a sklamania: Jovan Ristić a Berlínsky kongres /Serbia's Hopes and Disillusions: Jovan Ristić and the Congress of Berlin/". Od moravských luk k balkánským horám: Václavu Štěpánkovi k šedesátinám.

    Further reading edit

    • "Unprinted documents: Russo-British relations during the Eastern Crisis (VIII. The eve of the armistice)". The Slavonic and East European Review. 25 (64). November 1946.
    • "Unprinted documents: Russo-British relations during the Eastern Crisis (VIII. On the edge of war)". The Slavonic and East European Review. 25 (65). April 1947.
    • Anderson, M.S. The Eastern Question, 1774–1923: A Study in International Relations (1966) online
    • Branković, Slobodan (1998). Great eastern crisis and Serbia, 1875-1878. Svetska srpska zajednica, Institut srpskog naroda.
    • Goldfrank, David M. (2003). "Berlin, Congress of". In Millar, James R. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Russian History. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 978-0028656939.
    • Király, Béla K.; Rothenberg, Gunther Erich (1985). War and Society in East Central Europe: Insurrections wars and the eastern crisis in the 1870s. Brooklyn College Press. ISBN 978-0-88033-090-9.
    • Langer, William L. European Alliances and Alignments: 1871-1890 (1950) pp 151–70. Online
    • Millman, Richard (1979). Britain and the Eastern question, 1875–1878. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-822379-5.
    • Medlicott, W. N. (1963). The Congress of Berlin and After: A Diplomatic History of the Near East Settlement, 1878–1880 (Second ed.). London: Frank Cass., Focus on the aftermath.
    • Munro, Henry F. The Berlin congress (1918) online free, 41pp of text, 600 pp of documents
    • Taylor, A. J. P. (1954). The struggle for mastery in Europe: 1848–1918. Oxford University Press.[permanent dead link]
    • Yavuz, M. Hakan; Sluglett, Peter, eds. (2012). War and Diplomacy: The Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Treaty of Berlin. University of Utah Press. ISBN 978-1-60781-150-3.

    great, eastern, crisis, 1875, 1878, part, rise, nationalism, under, ottoman, empire, great, gameserbian, soldiers, attacking, ottoman, army, mramor, 1877date19, june, 1875, july, 1878, years, weeks, days, locationbalkans, caucasusresultottoman, defeat, treaty,. Great Eastern Crisis 1875 1878 Part of the rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire and of the Great GameSerbian soldiers attacking the Ottoman army at Mramor 1877Date19 June 1875 13 July 1878 3 years 3 weeks and 3 days LocationBalkans CaucasusResultOttoman defeat Treaty of BerlinTerritorialchangesReestablishment of the Bulgarian state De jure independence of Romania Serbia and Montenegro from the Ottoman Empire Kars and Batum Oblasts become part of the Russian EmpireBelligerents Russia Grand Duchy of FinlandRomaniaBulgaria MontenegroSerbia Austria HungaryGreek rebels Supported by Germany France Ottoman Empire Supported by United KingdomCommanders and leadersAlexander IIGrand Duke Nicholas NikolaevichGrand Duke Michael NikolaevichMikhail Loris MelikovMikhail SkobelevIosif GurkoIvan LazarevCarol I of RomaniaAlexander of BattenbergPrince NikolaKosta ProticStjepan Jovanovic Kosmas DoumpiotisAbdul Hamid IIAhmed PashaOsman PashaSuleiman PashaMehmed PashaAbdulkerim Nadir PashaAhmed Eyub PashaMehmed Riza PashaStrength185 000 in the Army of the Danube 75 000 in the Caucasian Army 1 Finland 1 00066 00012 000 190 cannons81 50045 00015 000281 000 2 Casualties and losses15 567 killed 56 652 wounded 6 824 died from wounds 3 4 302 killed and missing 3 316 wounded 19 904 sick 4 2 456 dead and wounded 5 2 400 dead and wounded 5 30 000 killed 6 90 000 died from wounds and diseases 6 The Great Eastern Crisis of 1875 1878 began in the Ottoman Empire s territories on the Balkan peninsula in 1875 with the outbreak of several uprisings and wars that resulted in the intervention of international powers and was ended with the Treaty of Berlin in July 1878 It is also called Serbo Croatian Velika istocna kriza Turkish Sark Buhrani Eastern Crisis for the crisis in general Turkish Ramazan Kararnamesi Decree of Ramadan for the sovereign default declared on 30 October 1875 and Turkish 93 Harbi War of 93 for the wars on the Balkan peninsula between 1877 and 1878 referring in particular to the Russo Turkish War the year 1293 on the Islamic Rumi calendar corresponding to the year 1877 on the Gregorian calendar Contents 1 Background 1 1 Ottoman economic crisis and default 1 2 Uprisings and wars in the Balkans 2 Aftermath 3 Chronology of the Great Eastern Crisis and its aftermath 3 1 Treaties 3 2 Aftermath 4 References 5 Further readingBackground editFurther information Eastern Question nbsp The empire in 1875 right before the crisis nbsp The Batak massacre carried out by Ottoman irregular troops in Bulgaria in 1876 nbsp The Avenger An Allegorical War Map for 1877 by Fred W Rose 1872 This map reflects the Great Eastern Crisis and the subsequent Russo Turkish War of 1877 78 The state of Ottoman administration in the Balkans continued to deteriorate throughout the 19th century with the Sublime Porte occasionally losing control over whole provinces Reforms imposed by European powers did little to improve the conditions of the Christian population while at the same time managing to dissatisfy a sizable portion of the Muslim population Bosnia suffered at least two waves of rebellion by the local Muslim population the most recent in 1850 7 Austria consolidated after the turmoil of the first half of the century and sought to reinvigorate its longstanding policy of expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire Meanwhile the nominally autonomous de facto independent principalities of Serbia and Montenegro also sought to expand into regions inhabited by their compatriots Nationalist and irredentist sentiments were strong and were encouraged by Russia and its agents Ottoman economic crisis and default edit On 24 August 1854 8 9 10 11 during the Crimean War the Ottoman Empire took its first foreign loans 12 13 The empire entered into subsequent loans partly to finance the construction of railways and telegraph lines and partly to finance deficits between revenues and the lavish expenditures of the imperial court such as the construction of new palaces on the Bosphorus strait in Constantinople 14 Some financial commentators have noted that the terms of these loans were exceptionally favourable to the British and French banks owned by the Rothschild family which facilitated them whereas others have noted that the terms reflected the imperial administration s willingness to constantly refinance its debts 14 15 A large amount of money was also spent for building new ships for the Ottoman Navy during the reign of Sultan Abdulaziz r 1861 1876 In 1875 the Ottoman Navy had 21 battleships and 173 warships of other types which formed the third largest naval fleet in the world after those of the British and French navies All of these expenditures however put a huge strain on the Ottoman treasury In the meantime a severe drought in Anatolia in 1873 and flooding in 1874 caused famine and widespread discontent in the heart of the empire The agricultural shortages precluded the collection of necessary taxes which forced the Ottoman government to declare a sovereign default on its foreign loan repayments on 30 October 1875 and increase taxes in all of its provinces including the Balkans 13 14 Uprisings and wars in the Balkans edit The decision to increase taxes for paying the Ottoman Empire s debts to foreign creditors resulted in outrage in the Balkan provinces which culminated in the Great Eastern Crisis and ultimately the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 that provided independence or autonomy for the Christian nations in the empire s Balkan territories with the subsequent Treaty of Berlin in 1878 The war however was disastrous for the already struggling Ottoman economy and the Ottoman Public Debt Administration was established in 1881 which gave the control of the Ottoman state revenues to foreign creditors 14 16 This made the European creditors bondholders and assigned special rights to the OPDA for collecting various types of tax and customs revenues 14 Aftermath editAfter the Treaty of Berlin in 1878 Austria Hungary stationed military garrisons in the Ottoman Vilayet of Bosnia and Ottoman Sanjak of Novi Pazar which formally de jure continued to be Ottoman territories Taking advantage of the chaos that occurred during the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 Bulgaria declared its formal independence on 5 October 1908 The following day Austria Hungary unilaterally annexed Bosnia on 6 October 1908 but pulled its military forces out of Novi Pazar in order to reach a compromise with the Ottoman government and avoid a war the Ottoman Empire lost the Sanjak of Novi Pazar with the Balkan Wars of 1912 1913 In 1881 France occupied the Ottoman Beylik of Tunisia with the excuse that Tunisian troops had crossed the border into their colony of Algeria which also formerly belonged to the Ottoman Empire until 1830 A year later in 1882 the British Empire occupied the Ottoman Khedivate of Egypt with the pretext of giving military assistance to the Ottomans for putting down the Urabi Revolt Britain later declared Egypt a British protectorate on 5 November 1914 in response to the Ottoman government s decision to join World War I on the side of the Central Powers 17 It is worth noting that the Ottoman government had frequently declared the tax revenues from Egypt as a surety for borrowing loans from British and French banks 9 13 The Ottoman government had earlier leased Cyprus to Britain in 1878 in exchange for British support at the Congress of Berlin in the same year Cyprus was later annexed by Britain on 5 November 1914 for the same aforementioned reason regarding the Ottoman participation in World War I 18 By obtaining Cyprus and Egypt Britain gained an important foothold in the East Mediterranean and control over the Suez Canal while France increased its lands in the West Mediterranean coast of North Africa by adding Tunisia to its empire as a French protectorate Historian Maros Melicharek writes that the Great Eastern Crisis could not have been fully resolved without Serbia 19 Chronology of the Great Eastern Crisis and its aftermath edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Eastern Crisis 1875 78 Herzegovina uprising 1875 1877 Stara Zagora Uprising 1875 April Uprising 1876 Razlovtsi insurrection 1876 On June 30 1876 Montenegro and Serbia declared war on the Ottoman Empire Serbian Ottoman Wars 1876 1878 Montenegrin Ottoman War 1876 1878 First Constitutional Era 1876 1878 Constantinople Conference 1876 1877 Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Romanian War of Independence Provisional Russian Administration in Bulgaria Treaty of San Stefano 1878 Expulsion of the Albanians 1877 1878 Congress of Berlin 1878 Kumanovo uprising 1878 1878 Greek Macedonian rebellion Epirus Revolt of 1878 Cretan revolt 1878 Austro Hungarian campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878 Kresna Razlog uprising 1878 Treaties edit Reichstadt Agreement 1876 Budapest Convention of 1877 Treaty of San Stefano 1878 Cyprus Convention 1878 Treaty of Berlin 1878 Aftermath edit Armenian Question League of Prizren 1878 1881 Battles for Plav and Gusinje 1879 1880 Pact of Halepa 1878 Dual Alliance 1879 ʻUrabi revolt 1879 1882 Brsjak revolt 1880 1881 French conquest of Tunisia 1881 Austro Serbian Alliance of 1881 Convention of Constantinople 1881 Herzegovina Uprising 1882 British Occupation of Egypt 1882 Austro Hungarian German Romanian alliance 1883 Timok Rebellion 1883 Bulgarian Crisis 1885 1888 References edit Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond ABC CLIO 2014 p 748 Mernikov A G Spektor A A 2005 Vsemirnaya istoriya vojn World History of Wars in Russian Minsk Belarus Harvest Urlanis Boris 1960 Vojny v period domonopolisticheskogo kapitalizma Wars during the period of pre monopoly capitalism Vojny i narodonaselenie Evropy Lyudskie poteri vooruzhennyh sil evropejskih stran v vojnah XVII XX vv Istoriko statisticheskoe issledovanie Wars and population of Europe Human losses of the armed forces of European countries in the wars of the 17th 20th centuries Historical and statistical research in Russian Minsk Sotsekgiz pp 104 105 129 4 Scafes Cornel et al Armata Romania in Razvoiul de Independenta 1877 1878 The Romanian Army in the War of Independence 1877 1878 Bucuresti Editura Sigma 2002 p 149 Romence a b Boris Urlanis Vojny i narodonaselenie Evropy Wars and population of Europe Part II Chapter II a b Mernikov A G Spektor A A 2005 Vsemirnaya istoriya vojn World History of Wars in Russian Minsk Belarus Harvest ISBN 985 13 2607 0 Dixon Jeffrey S Sarkees Meredith Reid 2015 A Guide to Intra state Wars An Examination of Civil Regional and Intercommunal Wars 1816 2014 CQ Press p 265 ISBN 978 1506300818 Retrieved 25 December 2019 Dunya Bulteni Osmanli Devleti ilk kez dis borc aldi a b Derin Strateji Osmanli Borclari ve Duyun u Umumiye Idaresi Yazarport Kirim Savasi ve Ilk Dis Borclanma 1854 1855 Archived from the original on 2018 06 15 Retrieved 2016 09 17 History of the Ottoman public debt Archived from the original on 2012 07 24 Retrieved 2014 08 28 Douglas Arthur Howard The History of Turkey page 71 a b c Mevzuat Dergisi Yil 9 Sayi 100 Nisan 2006 Osmanli Imparatorlugu nda ve Turkiye Cumhuriyeti nde Borclanma Politikalari ve Sonuclari a b c d e Niall Ferguson 2 January 2008 An Ottoman warning for indebted America Financial Times Retrieved 4 February 2016 Gold for the Sultan Western Bankers and Ottoman Finance 1856 1881 by Christopher Clay London 2001 p 30 Krasner Stephen D Sovereignty Organized Hypocrisy Retrieved 26 August 2014 Articles 17 18 and 19 of the Treaty of Lausanne 1923 Articles 20 and 21 of the Treaty of Lausanne 1923 Melicharek Maros January 2019 Srbske nadeje a sklamania Jovan Ristic a Berlinsky kongres Serbia s Hopes and Disillusions Jovan Ristic and the Congress of Berlin Od moravskych luk k balkanskym horam Vaclavu Stepankovi k sedesatinam Further reading edit Unprinted documents Russo British relations during the Eastern Crisis VIII The eve of the armistice The Slavonic and East European Review 25 64 November 1946 Unprinted documents Russo British relations during the Eastern Crisis VIII On the edge of war The Slavonic and East European Review 25 65 April 1947 Anderson M S The Eastern Question 1774 1923 A Study in International Relations 1966 online Brankovic Slobodan 1998 Great eastern crisis and Serbia 1875 1878 Svetska srpska zajednica Institut srpskog naroda Goldfrank David M 2003 Berlin Congress of In Millar James R ed Encyclopedia of Russian History Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 978 0028656939 Kiraly Bela K Rothenberg Gunther Erich 1985 War and Society in East Central Europe Insurrections wars and the eastern crisis in the 1870s Brooklyn College Press ISBN 978 0 88033 090 9 Langer William L European Alliances and Alignments 1871 1890 1950 pp 151 70 Online Millman Richard 1979 Britain and the Eastern question 1875 1878 Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822379 5 Medlicott W N 1963 The Congress of Berlin and After A Diplomatic History of the Near East Settlement 1878 1880 Second ed London Frank Cass Focus on the aftermath Munro Henry F The Berlin congress 1918 online free 41pp of text 600 pp of documents Taylor A J P 1954 The struggle for mastery in Europe 1848 1918 Oxford University Press permanent dead link Yavuz M Hakan Sluglett Peter eds 2012 War and Diplomacy The Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 and the Treaty of Berlin University of Utah Press ISBN 978 1 60781 150 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Eastern Crisis amp oldid 1199684781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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