fbpx
Wikipedia

Khosrov bey Sultanov

Khosrov bey Alipasha bey oghlu Sultanov (Azerbaijani: Xosrov bəy Əlipaşa bəy oğlu Sultanov; 1879 – 1943), also spelled as Khosrow Sultanov, was an Azerbaijani statesman, General Governor of Karabakh and Minister of Defense of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic.[1]

Khosrov bey Sultanov
Xosrov bəy Sultanov
Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic
In office
May 27, 1918 – June 11, 1918
PresidentAlimardan Topchubashov (Chairman of Azerbaijani Parliament)
Preceded byoffice established
Succeeded byoffice eliminated and re-established on November 7, 1918 to be led by Fatali Khan Khoyski
Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur
In office
January 15, 1919 – April 16, 1920
Preceded byoffice established
Succeeded byoffice eliminated
Personal details
Born(1879-05-10)May 10, 1879
Kürdhacı, Zangezur uezd, Elizavetpol Governorate, Russian Empire
DiedJanuary 7, 1943 (1943-01-08) (aged 63)
Istanbul, Turkey
Military service
RankMajor General

Early life

Major General Sultanov was born on May 10, 1879 in Kürdhacı settlement of the Zangezur uezd of the Elizavetpol Governorate (present-day Lachin, Azerbaijan). Khosrov bey studied religion from early stages of his life. His father then sent him to school in Shusha. Sultanov first completed his education in Shusha and relocated to Yelisavetpol (Ganja) to study at a gymnasium. After completion of his secondary education, he moved to Odessa and studied at the Odessa Military School graduating with a degree in Medical Therapy.[1]

During World War I, Sultanov led the Baku Muslim Relief Foundation of the Council for Placement of Refugees from Caucasian Front, set up in Tiflis to help with accommodation and relief of the refugees.[2] In 1917, he joined Musavat Party and participated its first congress. He was also elected as a deputy to Transcaucasian Seim.[3]

Political career

Minister of Defense

Sultanov was one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in Tiflis on May 28, 1918.[1][4] He was appointed the Minister of Defense in the first government of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. Although the office of the Minister of Defense was not officially established on paper, Khosrov bey assumed the duties of the minister until June 11, 1918. The Ministry of Defense was officially established on October 23, 1918 and office of the Minister of Defense was formally inaugurated on November 7, 1918 when Fatali Khan Khoyski took the office.[5]

During his term as Defense Minister, Sultanov was to undertake the formation of the army. According to the parliament approved plan, the most important structures and divisions were to be established by November 1, 1919. Within the time given, two infantry divisions consisting of three regiments, artillery division, special telegraph, cavalry and machine gun platoons, railway battalions were to be created.[5] Sultanov frequently visited the army units and checked the progress of army establishment.[6]

Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur

In January 1919, the British forces commander General William M. Thomson approved Sultanov's appointment as provisional Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur (control over the latter was ultimately never established), pending a final decision at the Paris Peace Conference. This decision was strenuously opposed by the local Armenian community, led by the Karabakh Council, which favored unification with the Democratic Republic of Armenia, the Armenian government itself, as well as a number of American diplomats and relief officials working in the region, who cited his past collaboration with the Ottoman armies that had occupied the area in 1918.[7][8] In response to criticism of Armenian leaders, Thomson said: "The fact is that in Azerbaijan some Armenians are much disappointed that the British occupation is not an opportunity for revenge. They are reluctant to accept it that the peace conference is going to decide and not military forces."[9]

In mid-April 1919, conflicts in the Zangezur uezd began as Armenians and Muslim inhabitants clashed.[10] The fighting resulted in the expulsion of the Muslims of central Zangezur down to steppes in the east and across the river to Persia. Sultanov requested his government to act and the de facto provisional Azerbaijani rule over Karabakh under Sultanov was recognized by the Allies.[11][12]

Tension in Karabakh

Sultanov, however, was a widely hated figure by the Armenians of Karabakh, objected to his threats to compel them to fully submit to Azerbaijani rule.[13][14] Tensions reached a high point on June 3, when Sultanov ordered his troops to encircle the Armenian quarter of Shusha and demanded that the members of the Karabakh Council and the Armenian militiamen holed up there to surrender. The Armenian barricades and the British military mission came under fire, but Sultanov's troops were unable to dislodge the defenders.[15] Although the Karabakh Council relented on June 4, the next day Sultanov called on the cavalry commanded by his brother, Sultan, to attack the nearby Armenian villages of Khaibalikend, Krkejan, Pahliul, Jamillu, leaving at least six hundred Armenians dead and the settlements in ruins.[16] Amid protests by Armenians and American relief officials, Sultanov was recalled to Baku. Conflicting reasons are given for this: the Azerbaijani government insisted that they had recalled him for consultations; the British command in Tiflis announced that he had been deprived of his position and was facing charges; while American reports stated that he had been arrested and imprisoned.[17]

Though Sultanov denied any wrongdoing, an investigation carried out by the British military concluded that he had instigated the massacres to take place.[18] But by the end of June, Sultanov had returned to his post to resume his activities, presumably with the support of Colonel D.I. Shuttleworth, Thomson's successor; seeing that further resistance was futile, the Karabakh Armenians agreed to submit to provisional Azerbaijani rule in the region in exchange for their cultural and civic rights. Among other things, the compact stipulated that Sultanov establish a joint Armeno-Muslim administrative council which would limit the movement of the Azerbaijani forces in the region.[19] The agreement was signed on August 22, 1919.[20] Sultanov, in turn, appointed an Armenian as his assistant in civil affairs in addition to three Armenians who were to serve on the council established by the agreement. The earlier blockades to Armenian areas were also lifted.

Although relations started to normalize, enmity between the communities remained with Armenian nationalist resentment towards the Karabakh leadership and Azerbaijani desire for permanent rule rising.[21] Despite the agreement, Sultanov almost immediately violated all these terms; he increased the sizes of Azerbaijani garrisons in Shusha and Khankendi and moved his forces without the council's approval.[22]

In the beginning of 1920, Sultanov intensified his efforts to bring control of the region under Azerbaijani rule by issuing an ultimatum to the Armenian National Council. In early 1920, the Paris Peace Conference had recognized Azerbaijan's de facto claim to Karabakh.[23] But since the conference had ended without issuing a conclusive decision on Karabakh, Sultanov advocated for a local solution, one which demanded that the region be incorporated into Azerbaijan. He bolstered the size of the garrisons at Khankendi and continued to move his troops around, once more without the required consent of his administrative council.[24] Ethnic tension in Karabakh heightened once more, as Azerbaijani troops lynched and killed several Armenians in Khankendi and pillaged the surrounding areas in February of that year.[25] In early March, after a delegation of Karabakh Armenians met in the village of Shosh and rejected the possibility of union with Azerbaijan, Sultanov sought to tighten his control of Karabakh: he forbade Armenians from leaving Shusha without permission, stationed Azerbaijani troops in Armenian homes, ordered Armenian veterans of the former Russian Army to register so that they may not partake in military activities, and drew up plans to destroy several Armenian villages to sever the link between Armenians in Karabakh and the region of Zangezur.[26] In March 1920, mass killings of the Armenian population took place in the Shusha massacre.[27][28]

Post-sovietization

In late April 1920, the 11th Red Army effortlessly entered Azerbaijan and proclaimed it a Soviet republic. Upon hearing this, Sultanov abandoned his loyalty to the Musavat Party, declared himself the chairman of the "Karabagh Revolutionary Committee" and extended felicitations to the Azerbaijani Revkom leader Nariman Narimanov in Baku.[29] He claimed that "revolutionary Karabagh" was now waiting impatiently for the establishment of Soviet order and desired to unite with Soviet Azerbaijan. Narimanov, however, was not convinced by Sultanov's declarations, and on May 14 he appointed Dadash Bunyadzade as extraordinary commissar for Karabakh and ordered him to liquidate Sultanov's self-styled Revkom.[30]

Later years

Following persecution by the Bolsheviks, Sultanov managed to flee to Turkey in 1923 and from then on, lived in Iran, France and Germany. In Germany, he was a professor at a medical university. In 1941–1945, during World War II, he played a significant role in bringing Azerbaijani prisoners of war back to Azerbaijan.[31] After long time in Europe, Sultanov went back to Turkey in 1936 and died in Istanbul in 1943.[32]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "Azərbaycan Demokratik Cümhuriyyətinin ilk qəhrəman hərbi naziri – Xosrov bəy Sultanovun doğum günüdür" [Birthday of the first Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic - Khosrov bey Sultanov]. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
  2. ^ "Azərbaycanda xeyriyyəçilik hərəkatı və Həsən bəy Zərdabi" [Charity movement in Azerbaijan and Hasan bey Zardabi]. Retrieved 2010-07-19.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Dilqəm Əhməd "Bir ildən yüz ilə"
  4. ^ "Şərqdə ilk demokratik respublika" [First republic on the east]. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
  5. ^ a b Elbrus Seyfullayev (2010-06-28). [A strong army is the guarantor of national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan]. Azeri Press Agency. Archived from the original on 2010-07-12. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
  6. ^ [Dedicated to the army]. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
  7. ^ Cornell, Svante (2001). Small nations and great powers: a study of ethnopolitical conflict in the Caucasus. England: Curzon Press. p. 72. ISBN 0-7007-1162-7. Retrieved July 19, 2010.
  8. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1971). The Republic of Armenia: The First Year, 1918-1919. Berkeley: University of California. pp. 162ff, 178–180. ISBN 0-520-01984-9.
  9. ^ Altstadt, Audrey (1992). The Azerbaijani Turks: power and identity under Russian rule. San Diego, California: Stanford University. p. 94. ISBN 0-8179-9181-6. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  10. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, p. 194
  11. ^ Malik, Hafeez (1994). Central Asia: its strategic importance and future prospects. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 146. ISBN 0-312-16452-1. Retrieved July 19, 2010.
  12. ^ Tadeusz, Swietochowski (1995). Russia and Azerbaijan: a borderland in transition. United States: Columbia University Press. p. 76. ISBN 0-231-07068-3. Retrieved July 19, 2010.
  13. ^ De Waal, Thomas (2003). Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War. New York: New York University Press, p. 128. ISBN 0-8147-1945-7.
  14. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, p. 162.
  15. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, pp. 175-176. One sepoy from the British military mission was killed and another was wounded by the Azeris during the firefight: Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, p. 176, note 50.
  16. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, pp. 176-177.
  17. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, p. 180.
  18. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, p. 181.
  19. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1996) The Republic of Armenia: From London to Sevres, February - August 1920, Vol. 3. Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 132. ISBN 0-520-08803-4.
  20. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. I, pp. 181-187.
  21. ^ Croissant, Michael (1998). The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict: causes and implications. Westport, CN: Praeger. p. 17. ISBN 0-275-96241-5. In an attempt to combat .
  22. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, pp. 132–133
  23. ^ Tim, Potier (2001). Conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia: a legal appraisal. The Hague: Kluwer Law International. p. 2. ISBN 90-411-1477-7.
  24. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, pp. 139-140
  25. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, p. 142.
  26. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, pp. 145-147
  27. ^ (in Russian) A. Zubov, Политическое будущее Кавказа: опыт ретроспективно-сравнительного анализа (Political future of the Caucasus),"Znamiya" journal, 2000, #4 "Британская администрация почему-то передала населенные армянами уезды Елизаветпольской губернии под юрисдикцию Азербайджана. Британский администратор Карабаха полковник Шательворт не препятствовал притеснениям армян, чинимым татарской администрацией губернатора Салтанова. Межнациональные трения завершились страшной резней, в которой погибла большая часть армян города Шуши. Бакинский парламент отказался даже осудить свершителей Шушинской резни, и в Карабахе вспыхнула война."
    "British administrator of Karabakh colonel Shuttleworth didn't impede the discrimination of Armenians by Tatarian administration of governor Saltanov. The national clashes ended by the terrible massacres in which the most of Armenians in Shusha town perished. The Parliament in Baku refused even condemn the accomplishers of the massacres in Shusha and the war was started in Karabakh."
  28. ^ S. Neil MacFarlane, Oliver Thränert,, Balancing hegemony: the OSCE in the CIS, Centre for International Relations, 1997, p. 71 "Another event of the period was the massacre in March 1920 of Armenians in Shusha, the historic centre of Karabakh, which shifted its ethnic status from an Armenian-dominated town to an Azeri-dominated one."
  29. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, pp. 193-194
  30. ^ Hovannisian. Republic of Armenia, Vol. 3, pp. 195-196
  31. ^ [Major General Khosrov bey Sultanov]. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
  32. ^ İlk hərbi nazirimizin məzarı tapılıb

khosrov, sultanov, khosrov, alipasha, oghlu, sultanov, azerbaijani, xosrov, bəy, əlipaşa, bəy, oğlu, sultanov, 1879, 1943, also, spelled, khosrow, sultanov, azerbaijani, statesman, general, governor, karabakh, minister, defense, azerbaijani, democratic, republ. Khosrov bey Alipasha bey oghlu Sultanov Azerbaijani Xosrov bey Elipasa bey oglu Sultanov 1879 1943 also spelled as Khosrow Sultanov was an Azerbaijani statesman General Governor of Karabakh and Minister of Defense of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic 1 Khosrov bey SultanovXosrov bey SultanovMinister of Defense of Azerbaijan Democratic RepublicIn office May 27 1918 June 11 1918PresidentAlimardan Topchubashov Chairman of Azerbaijani Parliament Preceded byoffice establishedSucceeded byoffice eliminated and re established on November 7 1918 to be led by Fatali Khan KhoyskiGovernor General of Karabakh and ZangezurIn office January 15 1919 April 16 1920Preceded byoffice establishedSucceeded byoffice eliminatedPersonal detailsBorn 1879 05 10 May 10 1879Kurdhaci Zangezur uezd Elizavetpol Governorate Russian EmpireDiedJanuary 7 1943 1943 01 08 aged 63 Istanbul TurkeyMilitary serviceRankMajor General Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Minister of Defense 2 2 Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur 2 2 1 Tension in Karabakh 2 3 Post sovietization 3 Later years 4 See also 5 NotesEarly life EditMajor General Sultanov was born on May 10 1879 in Kurdhaci settlement of the Zangezur uezd of the Elizavetpol Governorate present day Lachin Azerbaijan Khosrov bey studied religion from early stages of his life His father then sent him to school in Shusha Sultanov first completed his education in Shusha and relocated to Yelisavetpol Ganja to study at a gymnasium After completion of his secondary education he moved to Odessa and studied at the Odessa Military School graduating with a degree in Medical Therapy 1 During World War I Sultanov led the Baku Muslim Relief Foundation of the Council for Placement of Refugees from Caucasian Front set up in Tiflis to help with accommodation and relief of the refugees 2 In 1917 he joined Musavat Party and participated its first congress He was also elected as a deputy to Transcaucasian Seim 3 Political career EditMinister of Defense Edit Sultanov was one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in Tiflis on May 28 1918 1 4 He was appointed the Minister of Defense in the first government of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Although the office of the Minister of Defense was not officially established on paper Khosrov bey assumed the duties of the minister until June 11 1918 The Ministry of Defense was officially established on October 23 1918 and office of the Minister of Defense was formally inaugurated on November 7 1918 when Fatali Khan Khoyski took the office 5 During his term as Defense Minister Sultanov was to undertake the formation of the army According to the parliament approved plan the most important structures and divisions were to be established by November 1 1919 Within the time given two infantry divisions consisting of three regiments artillery division special telegraph cavalry and machine gun platoons railway battalions were to be created 5 Sultanov frequently visited the army units and checked the progress of army establishment 6 Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur Edit In January 1919 the British forces commander General William M Thomson approved Sultanov s appointment as provisional Governor General of Karabakh and Zangezur control over the latter was ultimately never established pending a final decision at the Paris Peace Conference This decision was strenuously opposed by the local Armenian community led by the Karabakh Council which favored unification with the Democratic Republic of Armenia the Armenian government itself as well as a number of American diplomats and relief officials working in the region who cited his past collaboration with the Ottoman armies that had occupied the area in 1918 7 8 In response to criticism of Armenian leaders Thomson said The fact is that in Azerbaijan some Armenians are much disappointed that the British occupation is not an opportunity for revenge They are reluctant to accept it that the peace conference is going to decide and not military forces 9 In mid April 1919 conflicts in the Zangezur uezd began as Armenians and Muslim inhabitants clashed 10 The fighting resulted in the expulsion of the Muslims of central Zangezur down to steppes in the east and across the river to Persia Sultanov requested his government to act and the de facto provisional Azerbaijani rule over Karabakh under Sultanov was recognized by the Allies 11 12 Tension in Karabakh Edit Sultanov however was a widely hated figure by the Armenians of Karabakh objected to his threats to compel them to fully submit to Azerbaijani rule 13 14 Tensions reached a high point on June 3 when Sultanov ordered his troops to encircle the Armenian quarter of Shusha and demanded that the members of the Karabakh Council and the Armenian militiamen holed up there to surrender The Armenian barricades and the British military mission came under fire but Sultanov s troops were unable to dislodge the defenders 15 Although the Karabakh Council relented on June 4 the next day Sultanov called on the cavalry commanded by his brother Sultan to attack the nearby Armenian villages of Khaibalikend Krkejan Pahliul Jamillu leaving at least six hundred Armenians dead and the settlements in ruins 16 Amid protests by Armenians and American relief officials Sultanov was recalled to Baku Conflicting reasons are given for this the Azerbaijani government insisted that they had recalled him for consultations the British command in Tiflis announced that he had been deprived of his position and was facing charges while American reports stated that he had been arrested and imprisoned 17 Though Sultanov denied any wrongdoing an investigation carried out by the British military concluded that he had instigated the massacres to take place 18 But by the end of June Sultanov had returned to his post to resume his activities presumably with the support of Colonel D I Shuttleworth Thomson s successor seeing that further resistance was futile the Karabakh Armenians agreed to submit to provisional Azerbaijani rule in the region in exchange for their cultural and civic rights Among other things the compact stipulated that Sultanov establish a joint Armeno Muslim administrative council which would limit the movement of the Azerbaijani forces in the region 19 The agreement was signed on August 22 1919 20 Sultanov in turn appointed an Armenian as his assistant in civil affairs in addition to three Armenians who were to serve on the council established by the agreement The earlier blockades to Armenian areas were also lifted Although relations started to normalize enmity between the communities remained with Armenian nationalist resentment towards the Karabakh leadership and Azerbaijani desire for permanent rule rising 21 Despite the agreement Sultanov almost immediately violated all these terms he increased the sizes of Azerbaijani garrisons in Shusha and Khankendi and moved his forces without the council s approval 22 In the beginning of 1920 Sultanov intensified his efforts to bring control of the region under Azerbaijani rule by issuing an ultimatum to the Armenian National Council In early 1920 the Paris Peace Conference had recognized Azerbaijan s de facto claim to Karabakh 23 But since the conference had ended without issuing a conclusive decision on Karabakh Sultanov advocated for a local solution one which demanded that the region be incorporated into Azerbaijan He bolstered the size of the garrisons at Khankendi and continued to move his troops around once more without the required consent of his administrative council 24 Ethnic tension in Karabakh heightened once more as Azerbaijani troops lynched and killed several Armenians in Khankendi and pillaged the surrounding areas in February of that year 25 In early March after a delegation of Karabakh Armenians met in the village of Shosh and rejected the possibility of union with Azerbaijan Sultanov sought to tighten his control of Karabakh he forbade Armenians from leaving Shusha without permission stationed Azerbaijani troops in Armenian homes ordered Armenian veterans of the former Russian Army to register so that they may not partake in military activities and drew up plans to destroy several Armenian villages to sever the link between Armenians in Karabakh and the region of Zangezur 26 In March 1920 mass killings of the Armenian population took place in the Shusha massacre 27 28 Post sovietization Edit In late April 1920 the 11th Red Army effortlessly entered Azerbaijan and proclaimed it a Soviet republic Upon hearing this Sultanov abandoned his loyalty to the Musavat Party declared himself the chairman of the Karabagh Revolutionary Committee and extended felicitations to the Azerbaijani Revkom leader Nariman Narimanov in Baku 29 He claimed that revolutionary Karabagh was now waiting impatiently for the establishment of Soviet order and desired to unite with Soviet Azerbaijan Narimanov however was not convinced by Sultanov s declarations and on May 14 he appointed Dadash Bunyadzade as extraordinary commissar for Karabakh and ordered him to liquidate Sultanov s self styled Revkom 30 Later years EditFollowing persecution by the Bolsheviks Sultanov managed to flee to Turkey in 1923 and from then on lived in Iran France and Germany In Germany he was a professor at a medical university In 1941 1945 during World War II he played a significant role in bringing Azerbaijani prisoners of war back to Azerbaijan 31 After long time in Europe Sultanov went back to Turkey in 1936 and died in Istanbul in 1943 32 See also EditAzerbaijani Army Ministers of Defense of Azerbaijan Republic List of massacres in AzerbaijanNotes Edit a b c Azerbaycan Demokratik Cumhuriyyetinin ilk qehreman herbi naziri Xosrov bey Sultanovun dogum gunudur Birthday of the first Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Khosrov bey Sultanov Retrieved 2010 07 19 Azerbaycanda xeyriyyecilik herekati ve Hesen bey Zerdabi Charity movement in Azerbaijan and Hasan bey Zardabi Retrieved 2010 07 19 permanent dead link Dilqem Ehmed Bir ilden yuz ile Serqde ilk demokratik respublika First republic on the east Retrieved 2010 07 19 a b Elbrus Seyfullayev 2010 06 28 Guclu ordu Azerbaycanin milli tehlukesizliyinin musteqilliyinin ve erazi butovluyunun qarantidir A strong army is the guarantor of national security sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan Azeri Press Agency Archived from the original on 2010 07 12 Retrieved 2010 07 19 Nacionalnoj armii posvyashaetsya Dedicated to the army Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2010 07 19 Cornell Svante 2001 Small nations and great powers a study of ethnopolitical conflict in the Caucasus England Curzon Press p 72 ISBN 0 7007 1162 7 Retrieved July 19 2010 Hovannisian Richard G 1971 The Republic of Armenia The First Year 1918 1919 Berkeley University of California pp 162ff 178 180 ISBN 0 520 01984 9 Altstadt Audrey 1992 The Azerbaijani Turks power and identity under Russian rule San Diego California Stanford University p 94 ISBN 0 8179 9181 6 Retrieved July 21 2010 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I p 194 Malik Hafeez 1994 Central Asia its strategic importance and future prospects New York St Martin s Press p 146 ISBN 0 312 16452 1 Retrieved July 19 2010 Tadeusz Swietochowski 1995 Russia and Azerbaijan a borderland in transition United States Columbia University Press p 76 ISBN 0 231 07068 3 Retrieved July 19 2010 De Waal Thomas 2003 Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War New York New York University Press p 128 ISBN 0 8147 1945 7 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I p 162 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I pp 175 176 One sepoy from the British military mission was killed and another was wounded by the Azeris during the firefight Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I p 176 note 50 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I pp 176 177 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I p 180 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I p 181 Hovannisian Richard G 1996 The Republic of Armenia From London to Sevres February August 1920 Vol 3 Berkeley University of California Press p 132 ISBN 0 520 08803 4 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol I pp 181 187 Croissant Michael 1998 The Armenia Azerbaijan conflict causes and implications Westport CN Praeger p 17 ISBN 0 275 96241 5 In an attempt to combat Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 pp 132 133 Tim Potier 2001 Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh Abkhazia and South Ossetia a legal appraisal The Hague Kluwer Law International p 2 ISBN 90 411 1477 7 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 pp 139 140 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 p 142 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 pp 145 147 in Russian A Zubov Politicheskoe budushee Kavkaza opyt retrospektivno sravnitelnogo analiza Political future of the Caucasus Znamiya journal 2000 4 Britanskaya administraciya pochemu to peredala naselennye armyanami uezdy Elizavetpolskoj gubernii pod yurisdikciyu Azerbajdzhana Britanskij administrator Karabaha polkovnik Shatelvort ne prepyatstvoval pritesneniyam armyan chinimym tatarskoj administraciej gubernatora Saltanova Mezhnacionalnye treniya zavershilis strashnoj reznej v kotoroj pogibla bolshaya chast armyan goroda Shushi Bakinskij parlament otkazalsya dazhe osudit svershitelej Shushinskoj rezni i v Karabahe vspyhnula vojna British administrator of Karabakh colonel Shuttleworth didn t impede the discrimination of Armenians by Tatarian administration of governor Saltanov The national clashes ended by the terrible massacres in which the most of Armenians in Shusha town perished The Parliament in Baku refused even condemn the accomplishers of the massacres in Shusha and the war was started in Karabakh S Neil MacFarlane Oliver Thranert Balancing hegemony the OSCE in the CIS Centre for International Relations 1997 p 71 Another event of the period was the massacre in March 1920 of Armenians in Shusha the historic centre of Karabakh which shifted its ethnic status from an Armenian dominated town to an Azeri dominated one Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 pp 193 194 Hovannisian Republic of Armenia Vol 3 pp 195 196 General mayor XOSROV BEY SULTANOV Major General Khosrov bey Sultanov Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2010 07 19 Ilk herbi nazirimizin mezari tapilib Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khosrov bey Sultanov amp oldid 1119492753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.