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Nagorno-Karabakh

Nagorno-Karabakh (/nəˈɡɔːrn kɑːrəˈbɑːk/ nə-GOR-noh kar-ə-BAHK[3]), also referred to as Artsakh by Armenians, is a landlocked region in the South Caucasus, within the mountainous range of Karabakh, lying between Lower Karabakh and Syunik, and covering the southeastern range of the Lesser Caucasus mountains. The region is mostly mountainous and forested.

Nagorno-Karabakh
(Upper Karabakh)
Location and extent of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (lighter color)
Area
• Total
4,400 km2 (1,700 sq mi)
• Water (%)
negligible
Population
• 2013 estimate
146,573[1]
• 2010 census
141,400[2]
• Density
29/km2 (75.1/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+4

Nagorno-Karabakh is a disputed territory, internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan,[4][5] but most of it is governed by the unrecognised Republic of Artsakh (also known as the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR)) since the first Nagorno-Karabakh War. Since the end of the war in 1994, representatives of the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group on the region's disputed status.[6]

The region is usually equated with the administrative borders of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, comprising 4,400 square kilometres (1,700 sq mi). The historical area of the region, however, encompasses approximately 8,223 square kilometres (3,175 sq mi).[7][8]

On 27 September 2020, a new war erupted in Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding territories, which saw both the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia report military and civilian casualties.[9] Azerbaijan made significant gains during the war, regaining most of the occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh and large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the culturally significant city of Shusha. The war ended on 10 November 2020, when a trilateral ceasefire agreement was signed between Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia, which forced Armenia to return all the remaining occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh.

Etymology

 
June 2001 NASA photograph of the snow-covered Lesser Caucasus in the south of the Greater Caucasus. Around the year 1800, the Karabakh Khanate was based in the southeast corner of the Lesser Caucasus. It extended east into the lowlands, hence the name Nagorno- or "Highland-" Karabagh for the western part.

The prefix Nagorno- derives from the Russian attributive adjective nagorny (нагорный), which means "highland". The Azerbaijani names of the region include the similar adjectives dağlıq (mountainous) or yuxarı (upper). Such words are not used in the Armenian name, but appeared in the region's official name during the Soviet era as Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast. Other languages apply their own wording for mountainous, upper, or highland; for example, the official name used by the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic in French is Haut-Karabakh, meaning "Upper Karabakh".

The names for the region in the various local languages all translate to "mountainous Karabakh", or "mountainous black garden":

Armenians living in the area often call Nagorno-Karabakh Artsakh (Armenian: Արցախ), the name of the 10th province of the ancient Kingdom of Armenia. Urartian inscriptions (9th–7th centuries BC) use the name Urtekhini for the region. Ancient Greek sources called the area Orkhistene.[10]

History

Antiquity and Early Middle Ages

 
The Amaras Monastery, founded in the 4th century by St Gregory the Illuminator. In the 5th century, Mesrop Mashtots, inventor of the Armenian alphabet, established at Amaras the first school to use his script.[11][12]
 
The monastery at Gandzasar was commissioned by the House of Khachen and completed in 1238

Nagorno-Karabakh falls within the lands occupied by peoples known to modern archaeologists as the Kura-Araxes culture, who lived between the two rivers Kura and Araxes.

The ancient population of the region consisted of various autochthonous local and migrant tribes who were mostly non-Indo-Europeans.[13] According to the prevailing western theory, these natives intermarried with Armenians who came to the region after its inclusion into Armenia in the 2nd or possibly earlier, the 4th century BC.[14] Other scholars suggest that the Armenians settled in the region as early as the 7th century BC.[15]

In around 180 BC, Artsakh became one of the 15 provinces of the Armenian Kingdom and remained so until the 4th century.[16] While formally having the status of a province (nahang), Artsakh possibly formed a principality on its own — like Armenia's province of Syunik. Other theories suggest that Artsakh was a royal land, belonging directly to the king of Armenia.[17] King Tigran the Great of Armenia (ruled from 95 to 55 BC) founded in Artsakh one of four cities named "Tigranakert" after himself.[18] The ruins of the ancient Tigranakert, located 50 km (30 mi) north-east of Stepanakert, are being studied by a group of international scholars.

In 387 AD, after the partition of Armenia between the Roman Empire and Sassanid Persia, two Armenian provinces, Artsakh and Utik, became part of the Sassanid satrapy of Caucasian Albania, which, in turn, came under strong Armenian religious and cultural influence.[19][20] At the time the population of Artsakh and Utik consisted of Armenians and several Armenized tribes.[13]

Armenian culture and civilization flourished in the early medieval Nagorno-Karabakh. In the 5th century, the first-ever Armenian school was opened on the territory of modern Nagorno-Karabakh at Amaras Monastery by the efforts of St. Mesrop Mashtots, the inventor of the Armenian alphabet.[21] St. Mesrop was very active in preaching the Gospel in Artsakh and Utik. Overall, Mesrop Mashtots made three trips to Artsakh and Utik, ultimately reaching pagan territories at the foothills of the Greater Caucasus.[22] The 7th-century Armenian linguist and grammarian Stephanos Syunetsi stated in his work that Armenians of Artsakh had their own dialect, and encouraged his readers to learn it.[23]

High Middle Ages

Around the mid 7th century, the region was conquered by the invading Muslim Arabs through the Muslim conquest of Persia. Subsequently, it was ruled by local governors endorsed by the Caliphate. According to some sources, in 821, the Armenian[24] prince Sahl Smbatian revolted in Artsakh and established the House of Khachen, which ruled Artsakh as a principality until the early 19th century.[25] According to other sources, Sahl Smbatian "was of the Zamirhakan family of kings," and in the year 837–838, he acquired sovereignty over Armenia, Georgia, and Albania.[26][27] The name "Khachen" originated from Armenian word "khach," which means "cross".[28] By 1000 the House of Khachen proclaimed the Kingdom of Artsakh with John Senecherib as its first ruler.[29] Initially Dizak, in southern Artsakh, formed also a kingdom ruled by the ancient House of Aranshahik, descended of the earliest Kings of Caucasian Albania. In 1261, after the daughter of the last king of Dizak married the king of Artsakh, Armenian[30] prince Hasan Jalal Dola, the two states merged into one[25] Armenian[31] Principality of Khachen. Subsequently, Artsakh continued to exist as a de facto independent principality.

Late Middle Ages

 
The Shusha fortress, built by the Karabakh Khanate ruler Panah Ali Khan in the 18th century
 
The semi-independent Five Principalities (Armenian: Խամսայի Մելիքություններ) of Karabakh (Gyulistan, Jraberd, Khachen, Varanda, and Dizak), widely considered to be the last relic of Armenian statehood (15th–19th century).[32][33]

In the 15th century, the territory of Karabakh was part of the states ruled subsequently by the Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkic tribal confederations. According to Abu Bakr Tihrani, during the period of Jahan Shah (1438–1468), the ruler of Kara Koyunlu, Piri bey Karamanli held the governorship of Karabakh.[34] However, according to Robert H. Hewsen, the Turkoman lord Jahan Shah (1437–67) assigned the governorship of upper Karabakh to local Armenian princes, allowing a native Armenian leadership to emerge consisting of five noble families led by princes who held the titles of meliks.[25] These dynasties represented the branches of the earlier House of Khachen and were the descendants of the medieval kings of Artsakh. Their lands were often referred to as the Country of Khamsa (five in Arabic). In a Charter (2 June 1799) of the Emperor Paul I titled "About their admission to Russian suzerainty, land allocation, rights and privileges", it was noted that the Christian heritage of the Karabakh region and all their people were admitted to the Russian suzerainty.[35] However, according to Robert Hewsen, the Russian Empire recognized the sovereign status of the five princes in their domains by the charter of Emperor Paul I dated 2 June 1799.[36]

The Armenian meliks were granted supreme command over neighbouring Armenian principalities and Muslim khans in the Caucasus by the Iranian king Nader Shah, in return for the meliks' victories over the invading Ottoman Turks in the 1720s.[37] These five principalities[38][39] in Karabakh were ruled by Armenian families who had received the title Melik (prince) and were the following:

  • Principality of Gulistan – under the leadership of the Melik-Beglarian family
  • Principality of Jraberd – under the leadership of the Melik-Israelian family
  • Principality of Khachen – under the leadership of the Hasan-Jalalian family
  • Principality of Varanda – under the leadership of the Melik-Shahnazarian family
  • Principality of Dizak – under the leadership of the Melik-Avanian family

From 1501 to 1736, during the existence of the Safavid Empire, the province of Karabakh was governed by Ziyadoglu Gajar's dynasty. Ziyadoglu Gajar's dynasty ruled the province of Karabakh until Nader Shah took over Karabakh from their rule.[40] The Armenian meliks maintained full control over the region until the mid-18th century.[citation needed] In the early 18th century, Iran's Nader Shah took Karabakh out of control of the Ganja khans in punishment for their support of the Safavids, and placed it under his own control[41][42] In the mid-18th century, as internal conflicts between the meliks led to their weakening, the Karabakh Khanate was formed. The Karabakh khanate, one of the largest khanates under Iranian suzerainty,[43] was headed by Panah-Ali khan Javanshir. For the reinforcement of the power of Karabakh khanate, Khan of Karabakh, Panah-Ali khan Javanshir, built up “the fortress of Panahabad (today Shusha)” in 1751. During that time, Otuziki, Javanshir, Kebirli, and other Turkic tribes constituted the majority of the overall population.

Modern era

 
Palace of the former ruler (khan) of Shusha. Taken from a postcard from the late 19th–early 20th century.
 
Aftermath of the Shusha massacre: Armenian half of Shusha destroyed by Azerbaijani armed forces in 1920, with the defiled Armenian Cathedral of the Holy Savior in the background.

Karabakh (including modern-day Nagorno-Karabakh), became a protectorate of the Russian Empire by the Kurekchay Treaty, signed between Ibrahim Khalil Khan of Karabakh and general Pavel Tsitsianov on behalf of Tsar Alexander I in 1805, according to which the Russian monarch recognized Ibrahim Khalil Khan and his descendants as the sole hereditary rulers of the region.[44][45][46] However, its new status was only confirmed following the outcome of the Russo-Persian War (1804-1813), when through the loss in the war, Persia formally ceded Karabakh to the Russian Empire per the Treaty of Gulistan (1813),[47][48][49][50] before the rest of Transcaucasia was incorporated into the Empire in 1828 by the Treaty of Turkmenchay, which came as an outcome of the Russo-Persian War (1826-1828).

In 1822, 9 years after it passed from Iranian to Russian control, the Karabakh Khanate was dissolved and the area became part of the Elisabethpol Governorate within the Russian Empire. In 1823 the five districts corresponding roughly to modern-day Nagorno-Karabakh were 90.8% Armenian-populated.[51][52]

Soviet era

 
Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast in the Soviet era.
 
Ethnic make-up of Nagorno-Karabakh in the late Soviet era.

After the Russian Revolution of 1917, Karabakh became part of the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic, but this soon dissolved into separate Armenian, Azerbaijani, and Georgian states. Over the next two years (1918–1920), there were a series of short wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan over several regions, including Karabakh. In July 1918, the First Armenian Assembly of Nagorno-Karabakh declared the region self-governing and created a National Council and government.[53] Later, Ottoman troops entered Karabakh, meeting armed resistance by Armenians.

After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I, British troops occupied Karabakh. The British command provisionally affirmed Khosrov bey Sultanov (appointed by the Azerbaijani government) as the governor-general of Karabakh and Zangezur, pending a final decision by the Paris Peace Conference.[54] The decision was opposed by Karabakh Armenians. In February 1920, the Karabakh National Council preliminarily agreed to Azerbaijani jurisdiction, while Armenians elsewhere in Karabakh continued guerrilla fighting, never accepting the agreement.[53] The agreement itself was soon annulled by the Ninth Karabagh Assembly, which declared union with Armenia in April.[53][55]

In April 1920, while the Azerbaijani army was locked in Karabakh fighting local Armenian forces, Azerbaijan was taken over by Bolsheviks. On 10 August 1920, Armenia signed a preliminary agreement with the Bolsheviks, agreeing to a temporary Bolshevik occupation of these areas until final settlement would be reached.[56] In 1921, Armenia and Georgia were also taken over by the Bolsheviks. After the Sovietization of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Kavbiuro (Caucasian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik)) decided that Karabakh would remain within Azerbaijan SSR with broad regional autonomy, with the administrative centre in the city of Shusha (the administrative center was later moved to Stepanakert).[57] The oblast's borders were drawn to include Armenian villages and to exclude as much as possible Azerbaijani villages.[58] The resulting district ensured an Armenian majority.

With the Soviet Union firmly in control of the region, the conflict over the region died down for several decades until the beginning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when the question of Nagorno-Karabakh re-emerged. Accusing the Azerbaijani SSR government of conducting forced Azerification of the region, the majority Armenian population, with ideological and material support from the Armenian SSR, started a movement to have the autonomous oblast transferred to the Armenian SSR.[59] In August 1987, Karabakh Armenians sent a petition for union with Armenia with tens of thousands of signatures to Moscow.[60]

War and secession

 
A restored Armenian T-72, knocked out of commission while attacking Azeri positions in Askeran District, serves as a war memorial on the outskirts of Stepanakert.

On 13 February 1988, Karabakh Armenians began demonstrating in Stepanakert, in favour of unification with the Armenian republic. Six days later they were joined by mass marches in Yerevan. On 20 February, the Soviet of People's Deputies in Karabakh voted 110 to 17 to request the transfer of the region to Armenia. This unprecedented action by a regional Soviet brought out tens of thousands of demonstrations both in Stepanakert and Yerevan, but Moscow rejected the Armenians' demands. On 20 February 1988, 2 Azeri girls had been raped in Stepanakert, this caused wide outrage in the Azeri town of Aghdam, where the first direct confrontation of the conflict occurred as a large group of Azeris marched from Agdam to the Armenian populated town of Askeran. The confrontation between the Azeris and the police near Askeran degenerated into the Askeran clash, which left two Azeris dead, one of them allegedly killed by an Azeri police officer, as well as 50 Armenian villagers and an unknown number of Azeris and police injured.[61][62][63] Large numbers of refugees left Armenia and Azerbaijan as violence began against the minority populations of the respective countries.[64] On 7 July 1988, the European Parliament passed a resolution that condemned the violence employed against Armenian demonstrators in Azerbaijan, and supported the demand of the Armenians for reunification with the Soviet Republic of Armenia.[65]

On 29 November 1989, direct rule in Nagorno-Karabakh was ended and the region was returned to Azerbaijani administration.[66] The Soviet policy backfired, however, when a joint session of the Armenian Supreme Soviet and the National Council, the legislative body of Nagorno-Karabakh, proclaimed the unification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia.[citation needed] On 26 November 1991 Azerbaijan abolished the status of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, rearranging the administrative division and bringing the territory under direct control of Azerbaijan.[67]

On 10 December 1991, in a referendum boycotted by local Azerbaijanis,[63] Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh approved the creation of an independent state. A Soviet proposal for enhanced autonomy for Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan satisfied neither side and a full-scale war subsequently erupted between Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh, with the latter receiving support from Armenia.[68][69][70][71] According to Armenia's former president, Levon Ter-Petrossian, the Karabakh leadership approach was maximalist and "they thought they could get more."[72][73][74]

The struggle over Nagorno-Karabakh escalated after both Armenia and Azerbaijan attained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. In the post-Soviet power vacuum, military action between Azerbaijan and Armenia was heavily influenced by the Russian military. Furthermore, both the Armenian and Azerbaijani military employed a large number of mercenaries from Ukraine and Russia.[75] Between fifteen and twenty-five hundred Afghan mujahideen, along with fighters from Chechnya, participated in the fighting on Azerbaijan's side,[63] as well heavy artillery and tanks provided to Armenia by Russia.[63] Many survivors from the Azerbaijani side found shelter in 12 emergency camps set up in other parts of Azerbaijan to cope with the growing number of internally displaced people due to the first Nagorno-Karabakh war.[76]

By the end of 1993, the conflict had caused about 30,000 casualties[77] and created hundreds of thousands of refugees on both sides.[citation needed] By May 1994, the Armenians were in control of 14% of the territory of Azerbaijan.[78] At that stage, for the first time during the conflict, the Azerbaijani government recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as a third party in the war and started direct negotiations with the Karabakh authorities. As a result, a ceasefire was reached on 12 May 1994 through Russian mediation.

Post-1994 ceasefire

 
The final borders of the conflict after the Bishkek Protocol. Armenian forces of Nagorno-Karabakh controlled almost 9% of Azerbaijan's territory outside the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast,[63] while Azerbaijani forces control Shahumian and the eastern parts of Martakert and Martuni.
 

Despite the ceasefire, fatalities due to armed conflicts between Armenian and Azerbaijani soldiers continued.[79] On 25 January 2005, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) adopted PACE Resolution 1416, which condemned ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijanis.[80][81] On 15–17 May 2007 the 34th session of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of Islamic Conference adopted resolution No. 7/34-P, considering the occupation of Azerbaijani territory as the aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan and recognizing the actions against Azerbaijani civilians as a crime against humanity, and condemning the destruction of archaeological, cultural and religious monuments in the occupied territories.[82] The 11th session of the summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference held on 13–14 March 2008 in Dakar adopted resolution No. 10/11-P (IS). In the resolution, OIC member states condemned the occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenian forces and Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan, ethnic cleansing against the Azeri population, and charged Armenia with the "destruction of cultural monuments in the occupied Azerbaijani territories".[83] On 14 March of the same year the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution No. 62/243 which "demands the immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of all Armenian forces from all occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan".[84] On 18–20 May 2010, the 37th session of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of Islamic Conference in Dushanbe adopted another resolution condemning the aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan, recognizing the actions against Azerbaijani civilians as a crime against humanity and condemning the destruction of archaeological, cultural, and religious monuments in occupied territories.[85] On 20 May of the same year, the European Parliament in Strasbourg adopted the resolution on "The need for an EU Strategy for the South Caucasus" on the basis of the report by Evgeni Kirilov, the Bulgarian member of the Parliament.[86][87] The resolution states in particular that "the occupied Azerbaijani regions around Nagorno-Karabakh must be cleared as soon as possible".[88] On 26 January 2016, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) adopted Resolution 2085, which deplored the fact that the occupation by Armenia of Nagorno-Karabakh and other adjacent areas of Azerbaijan creates humanitarian and environmental problems for the citizens of Azerbaijan, condemned ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijanis and Assembly requested immediate withdrawal of Armenian armed forces from the region concerned.[89][90][91]

Several[quantify] world leaders have met with the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan over the years, but efforts to maintain the ceasefire have failed.[92]

On 2 April 2016 Azerbaijani and Armenian forces again clashed in the region.[citation needed] The Armenian Defense Ministry alleged that Azerbaijan launched an offensive to seize territory in the region. At least 30 soldiers were killed during the fighting and a Mil Mi-24 helicopter and tank were also destroyed, with 12 of the fallen soldiers belonging to the Azerbaijani forces and the other 18 belonging to the Armenian forces, as well as an additional 35 Armenian soldiers reportedly wounded.[93][94]

2020 war and ceasefire agreement

On 27 September 2020, a new war erupted in Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding territories.[9] The United Nations strongly condemned the conflict and called on both sides to deescalate tensions and resume meaningful negotiations without delay.[95]

Azerbaijan made significant gains during the war, regaining most of the occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh and large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the culturally significant city of Shusha.[96]

The war ended on 10 November 2020, when a trilateral ceasefire agreement was signed between Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia, which forced Armenia to return all the remaining occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh.[97]

Geography

 
A view of the forested mountains of Nagorno-Karabakh

Nagorno-Karabakh has a total area of 4,400 square kilometres (1,699 sq mi).[98] Approximately half of Nagorno-Karabakh terrain is over 950 metres (3,120 ft) above sea level.[99] The borders of Nagorno-Karabakh resemble a kidney bean with the indentation on the east side. It has tall mountain ridges along the northern edge and along the west and mountainous south. The part near the indentation of the kidney bean itself is a relatively flat valley, with the two edges of the bean, the districts of Martakert and Martuni, having flatlands as well. Other flatter valleys exist around the Sarsang reservoir, Hadrut, and the south. The entire region lies, on average, 1,100 metres (3,600 ft) above sea level.[99] Notable peaks include the border mountain Murovdag and the Great Kirs mountain chain in the junction of Shusha and Hadrut districts. The territory of modern Nagorno-Karabakh forms a portion of the historic region of Karabakh, which lies between the rivers Kura and Araxes, and the modern Armenia-Azerbaijan border. Nagorno-Karabakh in its modern borders is part of the larger region of Upper Karabakh.

Nagorno-Karabakh does not directly border Armenia but is connected to the latter through the Lachin corridor, a mountain pass under the control of the Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The major cities of the region are Stepanakert, which serves as the capital of the unrecognised Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, and Shusha, which lies partially in ruins. Vineyards, orchards, and mulberry groves for silkworms are developed in the valleys.[100]

Environment

Nagorno-Karabakh's environment vary from steppe on the Kura lowland through dense forests of oak, hornbeam, and beech on the lower mountain slopes to birchwood and alpine meadows higher up. The region possesses numerous mineral springs and deposits of zinc, coal, lead, gold, marble, and limestone.[101]

Demographics

 
Ethnic groups of the region in 1995, after the deportations of Armenians and Azerbaijanis. (See entire map)

Antiquity – 1918

Historically, the inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh—then part of the province of Artsakh—were confirmed by Ancient Greek and Roman sources "long before our era" to be Armenian.[102][better source needed] In the early 15th century, German traveller Johann Schiltberger after visiting the region stated that "although the Muslims had taken possession of Karabagh, there were still Armenian villages in the region".[103] Historian Victor Schnirelmann writes that "In the mid-18th century, … Turkic tribes … gained access to the highland territories [of Karabakh] and began to settle in Shusha … by the end of the 18th century, a substantial number of its former Armenian inhabitants had left Nagorny Karabagh. Just at the turn of the 19th century, the Turkic population significantly outnumbered the local Armenians, but this only lasted … [until the] end of the 1820s, [when] the Armenians began to come back to Karabagh, and they accounted for the majority of its population by the mid-19th century".[104] Edmund Herzig and Marina Kurkchiyan present an alternative view that "Armenians had already been a majority in some areas such as mountainous Karabagh", compared to the Yerevan province which had "regained an Armenian majority for the first time in several hundred years."[105]

According to an 1823 Russian survey published in Tiflis (present-day Tbilisi) in 1866,[103] Armenians made up 97 percent of the population in the five districts (mahals) of Nagorno-Karabakh,[106] thus proving, contrary to claims in Azerbaijani historiography, that Armenians formed an overwhelming majority of Nagorno-Karabakh prior to 1828. Historian George Bournoutian writes that Russian statistics from 1810 show that Armenians made up 21 percent of the Karabakh region's population; In 1823, the Armenian population of Karabakh had increased by 30 percent "after the return of those who had fled the region", and by 1832, the Armenian population had increased to one-third of Karabakh. Moreover, the "one-third" of the population of Karabakh composed of Armenians resided in one-third of the territory of Karabakh, the mountainous territory (i.e. Nagorno-Karabakh), where they "constituted an overwhelming majority of the population."[103]

1918–1920

According to Armenian sources, the "historical Nagorno-Karabakh" region had a population of 300,000–330,000 in 1918–1920, rising to 700,000–800,000 by 1988. As a result of "Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression", the region's population declined by 20 percent in 1918–1920.[107] In this period, Azerbaijani forces carried out massacres against Armenians in Ghaibalishen, Jamilli, Karkijahan, and Pahlul (600–700 dead[108]), Stepanakert (several hundred dead[109]), and Shusha (several hundred[110] to 12,000 dead[111]). As a result of the Shusha massacre, 5,000–6,000 Armenians were displaced to the regions of Varanda and Dizak.[112] By 11 April 1920, some thirty villages in Nagorno-Karabakh had been "devastated" by Azerbaijani forces as a result of the uprising, leaving 25,000 homeless (including nearly 6,000 refugees from Shusha).[113]

1921–1987

1923 statistics indicate that the NKAO was 94.8 percent Armenian, numbering 149,600, whilst the Azerbaijani population numbered 7,700. Historian Cory Welt writes of a "discrepancy" of the Armenian population jumping by over 25,000 individuals between the 1921 and 1923 censuses, also pointing out that the Armenian population declined to 111,700 in 1926, thus indicating an "unexplained drop" of 38,000 individuals.[114] In the 1920s, the NKAO had a population of 131,500 people, 94.4 percent (124,136) of whom were ethnic Armenians and only 5.6 percent (7,364) of whom were ethnic Azerbaijanis.[105] In 1933, Nagorno-Karabakh had a population of 147,308, 10,751 (7.3 percent) of whom were urban dwellers, and 136,557 (92.7 percent) of whom were rural residents.[115] On 1 January 1973, the oblast had a population of 153,000.[116]

Discrimination and stagnation

Whilst the region was a part of the Azerbaijan SSR, the Armenian share of the population dropped from 94.7 to 76.9 percent, whilst the Azerbaijani share of the population quadrupled from 5.1 to 21.5 percent[105] as a result of "migratory influx"[107]—indicative of the socio-economic difficulties local Armenians experienced under Soviet Azerbaijani leadership which led them to emigrate from Karabakh.[105] Emeritus professor of law M. Cherif Bassiouni writes of the stagnation of the Armenian population "due to the discriminatory policies of Azerbaijani authorities that compelled Armenians to emigrate"; also adding that 600,000 Armenians from Karabakh reside in Armenia and the countries of the CIS.[107] Stuart J. Kaufman, a professor of political science and international relations,[117] writes of the difficulties of Karabakh Armenians:

In Mountainous Karabagh, Armenian-language education was not easily available, Armenian history was not taught at all, and those who went to Armenia for training were discriminated against in competing for jobs in the province, since even routine hiring had to be cleared with Baku. Underinvestment in the region—also blamed on Baku—meant less economic development and poor infrastructure even by Soviet standards, and therefore fewer jobs overall, especially for Armenians. Cultural ties with Armenia were strangled in red tape in Baku, and a decision to make Armenian-language television available in the region was left unimplemented. One result of these policies was a continuing exodus of Armenians from Karabagh in search of greener pastures.[118]

1988 – present

Following the Sumgait pogrom and the exodus of Azerbaijanis from Armenia, Azerbaijanis in Stepanakert and Armenians in Shusha were expelled in September 1988. As local Armenian forces gained possession of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding districts (amounting to 14 percent of the internationally recognised territory of Azerbaijan) during the First Nagorno-Karabakh war, hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis were expelled from their lands.[63] During the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, Azerbaijan regained control over the surrounding districts and southern parts of the former NKAO, thus displacing approximately 70,000 Armenians.[119]

Historical ethnic composition of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast in 1921–1989
Ethnic group 1921[114][120] 1923[102][114] 1925[102] 1926[102][121] 1939[102][122] 1959[102][123] 1970[102][124] 1979[102][125] 1989[126]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Armenians 122,426 94.73 149,600 94.8 142,470 90.28 111,694 89.24 132,800 88.04 110,053 84.39 121,068 80.54 123,076 75.89 145,450 76.92
Azerbaijanis[a] 6,550 5.07 7,700 4.9 15,261 9.67 12,592 10.06 14,053 9.32 17,995 13.80 27,179 18.08 37,264 22.98 40,688 21.52
Russians 267 0.21 500 0.3 46 0.03 596 0.48 3,174 2.10 1,790 1.37 1,310 0.87 1,265 0.78 1,922 1.02
Ukrainians 30 0.02 35 0.03 436 0.29 238 0.18 193 0.13 140 0.09 416 0.22
Belarusians 12 0.01 11 0.01 32 0.02 35 0.02 37 0.02 79 0.04
Greeks 68 0.05 74 0.05 67 0.05 33 0.02 56 0.03 72 0.04
Tatars 6 0.00 29 0.02 36 0.03 25 0.02 41 0.03 64 0.03
Georgians 5 0.00 25 0.02 16 0.01 22 0.01 17 0.01 57 0.03
Others 151 0.12 235 0.16 179 0.14 448 0.30 285 0.18 337 0.18
TOTAL 129,243[b] 100.00 157,800 100.0 157,807 100.00 125,159 100.00 150,837 100.00 130,406 100.00 150,313 100.00 162,181 100.00 189,085 100.00

Transport

Location ICAO DAFIF IATA Airport name Coordinates
Stepanakert UBBS UB13 Stepanakert Airport[127] 39°54′05″N 46°47′13″E / 39.90139°N 46.78694°E / 39.90139; 46.78694 (Stepanakert Air Base)

During the rule of the Soviet Union, the YevlakhAghdamStepanakert line connected the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region with the main part of Azerbaijan. After the Nagorno-Karabakh war and the abandonment of Ağdam, the line's service was cut back to service only between Yevlax and Kətəlparaq, without any present section at the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. The former railway line between Kətəlparaq and Stepanakert has been almost completely destroyed.

The (TbilisiGyumri–)YerevanNakhchivanHoradizShirvan(–Baku) main railway was also dismantled from the NKR between Ordubad and Horadiz, as well as a by-line from Mincivan to the Armenian city of Kapan. Currently, the Azerbaijani trains only travel to Horadiz. The Ordubad–Horadiz section has been demolished, leaving the NKR with no intact, active railway line in their territory. The railway at the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic still operates, but it is separated from the main Azerbaijani lines, and only has a connection to Iran.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Until 1936, Azerbaijanis were known as "Tatars" or "Turkish-Tatars".
  2. ^ With the city of Shusha included, the NKAO's total population was 138,466, the adjusted ethnic composition is as follows:
    • Armenians – 122,715 (88.62%)
    • Azerbaijanis – 15,444 (11.15%)
    • Others – 307 (0.22%)

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Bibliography

  • Ali; Ekinciel (1 August 2015). Karabakh Diary (1 ed.). Russia: Sage. ISBN 9786059932196.

Further reading

  • Tsibenko, Veronika (2018). "Karabakh, Nagorno". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Stewart, Devin J. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Torres, Ricardo Juan (2022). "The role of Nagorno-Karabakh in the shaping of Armenian and Azeri identity". Consejo Argentino para las Relaciones Internacionales (CARI). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

External links

  • Articles and Photography on Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) from UK Photojournalist Russell Pollard
  • All UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh, courtesy U.S. State department
  • Nagorno-Karabakh Agreement of 2 November 2008 and country profile from BBC News Online
  • The conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region dealt with by the OSCE Minsk Conference — Report by rapporteur David Atkinson presented to Political Affairs Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
  • also key texts & agreements and chronology (in English & Russian)
  • Independence of Kosovo and the Nagorno-Karabakh Issue
  • Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty. Nagorno-Karabakh: Timeline Of The Long Road To Peace
  • from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
  • , by Patricia Carley, Publication of the United States Institute of Peace (USIP)
  • by Galina Starovoitova, Publication of the United States Institute of Peace (USIP)
  • Photo Series Nagorno-Karabakh 2008–2011 – daily life, front line, mine clearance, culture, religion.

nagorno, karabakh, facto, independent, state, formerly, named, republic, republic, artsakh, ɔːr, ɑːr, ɑː, bahk, also, referred, artsakh, armenians, landlocked, region, south, caucasus, within, mountainous, range, karabakh, lying, between, lower, karabakh, syun. For the de facto independent state formerly named Nagorno Karabakh Republic see Republic of Artsakh Nagorno Karabakh n e ˈ ɡ ɔːr n oʊ k ɑːr e ˈ b ɑː k ne GOR noh kar e BAHK 3 also referred to as Artsakh by Armenians is a landlocked region in the South Caucasus within the mountainous range of Karabakh lying between Lower Karabakh and Syunik and covering the southeastern range of the Lesser Caucasus mountains The region is mostly mountainous and forested Nagorno Karabakh Upper Karabakh Location and extent of the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast lighter color Area Total4 400 km2 1 700 sq mi Water negligiblePopulation 2013 estimate146 573 1 2010 census141 400 2 Density29 km2 75 1 sq mi Time zoneUTC 4Nagorno Karabakh is a disputed territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan 4 5 but most of it is governed by the unrecognised Republic of Artsakh also known as the Nagorno Karabakh Republic NKR since the first Nagorno Karabakh War Since the end of the war in 1994 representatives of the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group on the region s disputed status 6 The region is usually equated with the administrative borders of the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast comprising 4 400 square kilometres 1 700 sq mi The historical area of the region however encompasses approximately 8 223 square kilometres 3 175 sq mi 7 8 On 27 September 2020 a new war erupted in Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding territories which saw both the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia report military and civilian casualties 9 Azerbaijan made significant gains during the war regaining most of the occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh and large parts of Nagorno Karabakh including the culturally significant city of Shusha The war ended on 10 November 2020 when a trilateral ceasefire agreement was signed between Azerbaijan Armenia and Russia which forced Armenia to return all the remaining occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Antiquity and Early Middle Ages 2 2 High Middle Ages 2 3 Late Middle Ages 2 4 Modern era 2 5 Soviet era 2 6 War and secession 2 7 Post 1994 ceasefire 2 8 2020 war and ceasefire agreement 3 Geography 4 Environment 5 Demographics 5 1 Antiquity 1918 5 2 1918 1920 5 3 1921 1987 5 3 1 Discrimination and stagnation 5 4 1988 present 6 Transport 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology June 2001 NASA photograph of the snow covered Lesser Caucasus in the south of the Greater Caucasus Around the year 1800 the Karabakh Khanate was based in the southeast corner of the Lesser Caucasus It extended east into the lowlands hence the name Nagorno or Highland Karabagh for the western part For the etymology of Karabakh see Karabakh Etymology The prefix Nagorno derives from the Russian attributive adjective nagorny nagornyj which means highland The Azerbaijani names of the region include the similar adjectives dagliq mountainous or yuxari upper Such words are not used in the Armenian name but appeared in the region s official name during the Soviet era as Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast Other languages apply their own wording for mountainous upper or highland for example the official name used by the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in French is Haut Karabakh meaning Upper Karabakh The names for the region in the various local languages all translate to mountainous Karabakh or mountainous black garden Armenian Լեռնային Ղարաբաղ transliterated Leṙnayin Ġarabaġ IPA lɛrnɑˈjin ʁɑɾɑˈbɑʁ listen help info Azerbaijani Dagliq Qarabag Daglyg Garabag mountainous Karabakh IPA dɑɣˈlɯɣ ɡɑˈɾɑbɑɣ listen help info or Yuxari Qarabag Јuhary Garabag upper Karabakh IPA juxɑˈɾɯ ɡɑˈɾɑbɑɣ listen help info Russian Nagornyj Karabah transliterated Nagorny Karabakh IPA nɐˈɡornɨj kerɐˈbax Armenians living in the area often call Nagorno Karabakh Artsakh Armenian Արցախ the name of the 10th province of the ancient Kingdom of Armenia Urartian inscriptions 9th 7th centuries BC use the name Urtekhini for the region Ancient Greek sources called the area Orkhistene 10 HistoryAntiquity and Early Middle Ages Main article History of Artsakh The Amaras Monastery founded in the 4th century by St Gregory the Illuminator In the 5th century Mesrop Mashtots inventor of the Armenian alphabet established at Amaras the first school to use his script 11 12 The monastery at Gandzasar was commissioned by the House of Khachen and completed in 1238 Nagorno Karabakh falls within the lands occupied by peoples known to modern archaeologists as the Kura Araxes culture who lived between the two rivers Kura and Araxes The ancient population of the region consisted of various autochthonous local and migrant tribes who were mostly non Indo Europeans 13 According to the prevailing western theory these natives intermarried with Armenians who came to the region after its inclusion into Armenia in the 2nd or possibly earlier the 4th century BC 14 Other scholars suggest that the Armenians settled in the region as early as the 7th century BC 15 In around 180 BC Artsakh became one of the 15 provinces of the Armenian Kingdom and remained so until the 4th century 16 While formally having the status of a province nahang Artsakh possibly formed a principality on its own like Armenia s province of Syunik Other theories suggest that Artsakh was a royal land belonging directly to the king of Armenia 17 King Tigran the Great of Armenia ruled from 95 to 55 BC founded in Artsakh one of four cities named Tigranakert after himself 18 The ruins of the ancient Tigranakert located 50 km 30 mi north east of Stepanakert are being studied by a group of international scholars In 387 AD after the partition of Armenia between the Roman Empire and Sassanid Persia two Armenian provinces Artsakh and Utik became part of the Sassanid satrapy of Caucasian Albania which in turn came under strong Armenian religious and cultural influence 19 20 At the time the population of Artsakh and Utik consisted of Armenians and several Armenized tribes 13 Armenian culture and civilization flourished in the early medieval Nagorno Karabakh In the 5th century the first ever Armenian school was opened on the territory of modern Nagorno Karabakh at Amaras Monastery by the efforts of St Mesrop Mashtots the inventor of the Armenian alphabet 21 St Mesrop was very active in preaching the Gospel in Artsakh and Utik Overall Mesrop Mashtots made three trips to Artsakh and Utik ultimately reaching pagan territories at the foothills of the Greater Caucasus 22 The 7th century Armenian linguist and grammarian Stephanos Syunetsi stated in his work that Armenians of Artsakh had their own dialect and encouraged his readers to learn it 23 High Middle Ages Main article Principality of Khachen Around the mid 7th century the region was conquered by the invading Muslim Arabs through the Muslim conquest of Persia Subsequently it was ruled by local governors endorsed by the Caliphate According to some sources in 821 the Armenian 24 prince Sahl Smbatian revolted in Artsakh and established the House of Khachen which ruled Artsakh as a principality until the early 19th century 25 According to other sources Sahl Smbatian was of the Zamirhakan family of kings and in the year 837 838 he acquired sovereignty over Armenia Georgia and Albania 26 27 The name Khachen originated from Armenian word khach which means cross 28 By 1000 the House of Khachen proclaimed the Kingdom of Artsakh with John Senecherib as its first ruler 29 Initially Dizak in southern Artsakh formed also a kingdom ruled by the ancient House of Aranshahik descended of the earliest Kings of Caucasian Albania In 1261 after the daughter of the last king of Dizak married the king of Artsakh Armenian 30 prince Hasan Jalal Dola the two states merged into one 25 Armenian 31 Principality of Khachen Subsequently Artsakh continued to exist as a de facto independent principality Late Middle Ages Main articles Karabakh Khanate and Melikdoms of Karabakh The Shusha fortress built by the Karabakh Khanate ruler Panah Ali Khan in the 18th century The semi independent Five Principalities Armenian Խամսայի Մելիքություններ of Karabakh Gyulistan Jraberd Khachen Varanda and Dizak widely considered to be the last relic of Armenian statehood 15th 19th century 32 33 In the 15th century the territory of Karabakh was part of the states ruled subsequently by the Kara Koyunlu and Ak Koyunlu Turkic tribal confederations According to Abu Bakr Tihrani during the period of Jahan Shah 1438 1468 the ruler of Kara Koyunlu Piri bey Karamanli held the governorship of Karabakh 34 However according to Robert H Hewsen the Turkoman lord Jahan Shah 1437 67 assigned the governorship of upper Karabakh to local Armenian princes allowing a native Armenian leadership to emerge consisting of five noble families led by princes who held the titles of meliks 25 These dynasties represented the branches of the earlier House of Khachen and were the descendants of the medieval kings of Artsakh Their lands were often referred to as the Country of Khamsa five in Arabic In a Charter 2 June 1799 of the Emperor Paul I titled About their admission to Russian suzerainty land allocation rights and privileges it was noted that the Christian heritage of the Karabakh region and all their people were admitted to the Russian suzerainty 35 However according to Robert Hewsen the Russian Empire recognized the sovereign status of the five princes in their domains by the charter of Emperor Paul I dated 2 June 1799 36 The Armenian meliks were granted supreme command over neighbouring Armenian principalities and Muslim khans in the Caucasus by the Iranian king Nader Shah in return for the meliks victories over the invading Ottoman Turks in the 1720s 37 These five principalities 38 39 in Karabakh were ruled by Armenian families who had received the title Melik prince and were the following Principality of Gulistan under the leadership of the Melik Beglarian family Principality of Jraberd under the leadership of the Melik Israelian family Principality of Khachen under the leadership of the Hasan Jalalian family Principality of Varanda under the leadership of the Melik Shahnazarian family Principality of Dizak under the leadership of the Melik Avanian familyFrom 1501 to 1736 during the existence of the Safavid Empire the province of Karabakh was governed by Ziyadoglu Gajar s dynasty Ziyadoglu Gajar s dynasty ruled the province of Karabakh until Nader Shah took over Karabakh from their rule 40 The Armenian meliks maintained full control over the region until the mid 18th century citation needed In the early 18th century Iran s Nader Shah took Karabakh out of control of the Ganja khans in punishment for their support of the Safavids and placed it under his own control 41 42 In the mid 18th century as internal conflicts between the meliks led to their weakening the Karabakh Khanate was formed The Karabakh khanate one of the largest khanates under Iranian suzerainty 43 was headed by Panah Ali khan Javanshir For the reinforcement of the power of Karabakh khanate Khan of Karabakh Panah Ali khan Javanshir built up the fortress of Panahabad today Shusha in 1751 During that time Otuziki Javanshir Kebirli and other Turkic tribes constituted the majority of the overall population Modern era Palace of the former ruler khan of Shusha Taken from a postcard from the late 19th early 20th century Aftermath of the Shusha massacre Armenian half of Shusha destroyed by Azerbaijani armed forces in 1920 with the defiled Armenian Cathedral of the Holy Savior in the background Karabakh including modern day Nagorno Karabakh became a protectorate of the Russian Empire by the Kurekchay Treaty signed between Ibrahim Khalil Khan of Karabakh and general Pavel Tsitsianov on behalf of Tsar Alexander I in 1805 according to which the Russian monarch recognized Ibrahim Khalil Khan and his descendants as the sole hereditary rulers of the region 44 45 46 However its new status was only confirmed following the outcome of the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 when through the loss in the war Persia formally ceded Karabakh to the Russian Empire per the Treaty of Gulistan 1813 47 48 49 50 before the rest of Transcaucasia was incorporated into the Empire in 1828 by the Treaty of Turkmenchay which came as an outcome of the Russo Persian War 1826 1828 In 1822 9 years after it passed from Iranian to Russian control the Karabakh Khanate was dissolved and the area became part of the Elisabethpol Governorate within the Russian Empire In 1823 the five districts corresponding roughly to modern day Nagorno Karabakh were 90 8 Armenian populated 51 52 Soviet era Main article Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast in the Soviet era Ethnic make up of Nagorno Karabakh in the late Soviet era After the Russian Revolution of 1917 Karabakh became part of the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic but this soon dissolved into separate Armenian Azerbaijani and Georgian states Over the next two years 1918 1920 there were a series of short wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan over several regions including Karabakh In July 1918 the First Armenian Assembly of Nagorno Karabakh declared the region self governing and created a National Council and government 53 Later Ottoman troops entered Karabakh meeting armed resistance by Armenians After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I British troops occupied Karabakh The British command provisionally affirmed Khosrov bey Sultanov appointed by the Azerbaijani government as the governor general of Karabakh and Zangezur pending a final decision by the Paris Peace Conference 54 The decision was opposed by Karabakh Armenians In February 1920 the Karabakh National Council preliminarily agreed to Azerbaijani jurisdiction while Armenians elsewhere in Karabakh continued guerrilla fighting never accepting the agreement 53 The agreement itself was soon annulled by the Ninth Karabagh Assembly which declared union with Armenia in April 53 55 In April 1920 while the Azerbaijani army was locked in Karabakh fighting local Armenian forces Azerbaijan was taken over by Bolsheviks On 10 August 1920 Armenia signed a preliminary agreement with the Bolsheviks agreeing to a temporary Bolshevik occupation of these areas until final settlement would be reached 56 In 1921 Armenia and Georgia were also taken over by the Bolsheviks After the Sovietization of Armenia and Azerbaijan the Kavbiuro Caucasian Bureau of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party Bolshevik decided that Karabakh would remain within Azerbaijan SSR with broad regional autonomy with the administrative centre in the city of Shusha the administrative center was later moved to Stepanakert 57 The oblast s borders were drawn to include Armenian villages and to exclude as much as possible Azerbaijani villages 58 The resulting district ensured an Armenian majority With the Soviet Union firmly in control of the region the conflict over the region died down for several decades until the beginning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s and early 1990s when the question of Nagorno Karabakh re emerged Accusing the Azerbaijani SSR government of conducting forced Azerification of the region the majority Armenian population with ideological and material support from the Armenian SSR started a movement to have the autonomous oblast transferred to the Armenian SSR 59 In August 1987 Karabakh Armenians sent a petition for union with Armenia with tens of thousands of signatures to Moscow 60 War and secession Main article First Nagorno Karabakh War A restored Armenian T 72 knocked out of commission while attacking Azeri positions in Askeran District serves as a war memorial on the outskirts of Stepanakert On 13 February 1988 Karabakh Armenians began demonstrating in Stepanakert in favour of unification with the Armenian republic Six days later they were joined by mass marches in Yerevan On 20 February the Soviet of People s Deputies in Karabakh voted 110 to 17 to request the transfer of the region to Armenia This unprecedented action by a regional Soviet brought out tens of thousands of demonstrations both in Stepanakert and Yerevan but Moscow rejected the Armenians demands On 20 February 1988 2 Azeri girls had been raped in Stepanakert this caused wide outrage in the Azeri town of Aghdam where the first direct confrontation of the conflict occurred as a large group of Azeris marched from Agdam to the Armenian populated town of Askeran The confrontation between the Azeris and the police near Askeran degenerated into the Askeran clash which left two Azeris dead one of them allegedly killed by an Azeri police officer as well as 50 Armenian villagers and an unknown number of Azeris and police injured 61 62 63 Large numbers of refugees left Armenia and Azerbaijan as violence began against the minority populations of the respective countries 64 On 7 July 1988 the European Parliament passed a resolution that condemned the violence employed against Armenian demonstrators in Azerbaijan and supported the demand of the Armenians for reunification with the Soviet Republic of Armenia 65 On 29 November 1989 direct rule in Nagorno Karabakh was ended and the region was returned to Azerbaijani administration 66 The Soviet policy backfired however when a joint session of the Armenian Supreme Soviet and the National Council the legislative body of Nagorno Karabakh proclaimed the unification of Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia citation needed On 26 November 1991 Azerbaijan abolished the status of Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast rearranging the administrative division and bringing the territory under direct control of Azerbaijan 67 On 10 December 1991 in a referendum boycotted by local Azerbaijanis 63 Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh approved the creation of an independent state A Soviet proposal for enhanced autonomy for Nagorno Karabakh within Azerbaijan satisfied neither side and a full scale war subsequently erupted between Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh with the latter receiving support from Armenia 68 69 70 71 According to Armenia s former president Levon Ter Petrossian the Karabakh leadership approach was maximalist and they thought they could get more 72 73 74 The struggle over Nagorno Karabakh escalated after both Armenia and Azerbaijan attained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 In the post Soviet power vacuum military action between Azerbaijan and Armenia was heavily influenced by the Russian military Furthermore both the Armenian and Azerbaijani military employed a large number of mercenaries from Ukraine and Russia 75 Between fifteen and twenty five hundred Afghan mujahideen along with fighters from Chechnya participated in the fighting on Azerbaijan s side 63 as well heavy artillery and tanks provided to Armenia by Russia 63 Many survivors from the Azerbaijani side found shelter in 12 emergency camps set up in other parts of Azerbaijan to cope with the growing number of internally displaced people due to the first Nagorno Karabakh war 76 By the end of 1993 the conflict had caused about 30 000 casualties 77 and created hundreds of thousands of refugees on both sides citation needed By May 1994 the Armenians were in control of 14 of the territory of Azerbaijan 78 At that stage for the first time during the conflict the Azerbaijani government recognized Nagorno Karabakh as a third party in the war and started direct negotiations with the Karabakh authorities As a result a ceasefire was reached on 12 May 1994 through Russian mediation Post 1994 ceasefire Further information Madrid Principles Prague Process Armenian Azerbaijani negotiations Nagorno Karabakh Declaration Astrakhan Declaration Land mine situation in Nagorno Karabakh 2016 Nagorno Karabakh conflict and Second Nagorno Karabakh War The final borders of the conflict after the Bishkek Protocol Armenian forces of Nagorno Karabakh controlled almost 9 of Azerbaijan s territory outside the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast 63 while Azerbaijani forces control Shahumian and the eastern parts of Martakert and Martuni Ilham Aliyev Dmitry Medvedev and Serzh Sargsyan in Moscow on 2 November 2008 Despite the ceasefire fatalities due to armed conflicts between Armenian and Azerbaijani soldiers continued 79 On 25 January 2005 the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe PACE adopted PACE Resolution 1416 which condemned ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijanis 80 81 On 15 17 May 2007 the 34th session of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of Islamic Conference adopted resolution No 7 34 P considering the occupation of Azerbaijani territory as the aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan and recognizing the actions against Azerbaijani civilians as a crime against humanity and condemning the destruction of archaeological cultural and religious monuments in the occupied territories 82 The 11th session of the summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference held on 13 14 March 2008 in Dakar adopted resolution No 10 11 P IS In the resolution OIC member states condemned the occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenian forces and Armenian aggression against Azerbaijan ethnic cleansing against the Azeri population and charged Armenia with the destruction of cultural monuments in the occupied Azerbaijani territories 83 On 14 March of the same year the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution No 62 243 which demands the immediate complete and unconditional withdrawal of all Armenian forces from all occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan 84 On 18 20 May 2010 the 37th session of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of Islamic Conference in Dushanbe adopted another resolution condemning the aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan recognizing the actions against Azerbaijani civilians as a crime against humanity and condemning the destruction of archaeological cultural and religious monuments in occupied territories 85 On 20 May of the same year the European Parliament in Strasbourg adopted the resolution on The need for an EU Strategy for the South Caucasus on the basis of the report by Evgeni Kirilov the Bulgarian member of the Parliament 86 87 The resolution states in particular that the occupied Azerbaijani regions around Nagorno Karabakh must be cleared as soon as possible 88 On 26 January 2016 the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe PACE adopted Resolution 2085 which deplored the fact that the occupation by Armenia of Nagorno Karabakh and other adjacent areas of Azerbaijan creates humanitarian and environmental problems for the citizens of Azerbaijan condemned ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijanis and Assembly requested immediate withdrawal of Armenian armed forces from the region concerned 89 90 91 Several quantify world leaders have met with the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan over the years but efforts to maintain the ceasefire have failed 92 On 2 April 2016 Azerbaijani and Armenian forces again clashed in the region citation needed The Armenian Defense Ministry alleged that Azerbaijan launched an offensive to seize territory in the region At least 30 soldiers were killed during the fighting and a Mil Mi 24 helicopter and tank were also destroyed with 12 of the fallen soldiers belonging to the Azerbaijani forces and the other 18 belonging to the Armenian forces as well as an additional 35 Armenian soldiers reportedly wounded 93 94 2020 war and ceasefire agreement Main articles 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war and 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement On 27 September 2020 a new war erupted in Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding territories 9 The United Nations strongly condemned the conflict and called on both sides to deescalate tensions and resume meaningful negotiations without delay 95 Azerbaijan made significant gains during the war regaining most of the occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh and large parts of Nagorno Karabakh including the culturally significant city of Shusha 96 The war ended on 10 November 2020 when a trilateral ceasefire agreement was signed between Azerbaijan Armenia and Russia which forced Armenia to return all the remaining occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh 97 Geography The Sarsang Reservoir A view of the forested mountains of Nagorno Karabakh Nagorno Karabakh has a total area of 4 400 square kilometres 1 699 sq mi 98 Approximately half of Nagorno Karabakh terrain is over 950 metres 3 120 ft above sea level 99 The borders of Nagorno Karabakh resemble a kidney bean with the indentation on the east side It has tall mountain ridges along the northern edge and along the west and mountainous south The part near the indentation of the kidney bean itself is a relatively flat valley with the two edges of the bean the districts of Martakert and Martuni having flatlands as well Other flatter valleys exist around the Sarsang reservoir Hadrut and the south The entire region lies on average 1 100 metres 3 600 ft above sea level 99 Notable peaks include the border mountain Murovdag and the Great Kirs mountain chain in the junction of Shusha and Hadrut districts The territory of modern Nagorno Karabakh forms a portion of the historic region of Karabakh which lies between the rivers Kura and Araxes and the modern Armenia Azerbaijan border Nagorno Karabakh in its modern borders is part of the larger region of Upper Karabakh Nagorno Karabakh does not directly border Armenia but is connected to the latter through the Lachin corridor a mountain pass under the control of the Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno Karabakh The major cities of the region are Stepanakert which serves as the capital of the unrecognised Nagorno Karabakh Republic and Shusha which lies partially in ruins Vineyards orchards and mulberry groves for silkworms are developed in the valleys 100 EnvironmentNagorno Karabakh s environment vary from steppe on the Kura lowland through dense forests of oak hornbeam and beech on the lower mountain slopes to birchwood and alpine meadows higher up The region possesses numerous mineral springs and deposits of zinc coal lead gold marble and limestone 101 Demographics Ethnic groups of the region in 1995 after the deportations of Armenians and Azerbaijanis See entire map Antiquity 1918 Historically the inhabitants of Nagorno Karabakh then part of the province of Artsakh were confirmed by Ancient Greek and Roman sources long before our era to be Armenian 102 better source needed In the early 15th century German traveller Johann Schiltberger after visiting the region stated that although the Muslims had taken possession of Karabagh there were still Armenian villages in the region 103 Historian Victor Schnirelmann writes that In the mid 18th century Turkic tribes gained access to the highland territories of Karabakh and began to settle in Shusha by the end of the 18th century a substantial number of its former Armenian inhabitants had left Nagorny Karabagh Just at the turn of the 19th century the Turkic population significantly outnumbered the local Armenians but this only lasted until the end of the 1820s when the Armenians began to come back to Karabagh and they accounted for the majority of its population by the mid 19th century 104 Edmund Herzig and Marina Kurkchiyan present an alternative view that Armenians had already been a majority in some areas such as mountainous Karabagh compared to the Yerevan province which had regained an Armenian majority for the first time in several hundred years 105 According to an 1823 Russian survey published in Tiflis present day Tbilisi in 1866 103 Armenians made up 97 percent of the population in the five districts mahals of Nagorno Karabakh 106 thus proving contrary to claims in Azerbaijani historiography that Armenians formed an overwhelming majority of Nagorno Karabakh prior to 1828 Historian George Bournoutian writes that Russian statistics from 1810 show that Armenians made up 21 percent of the Karabakh region s population In 1823 the Armenian population of Karabakh had increased by 30 percent after the return of those who had fled the region and by 1832 the Armenian population had increased to one third of Karabakh Moreover the one third of the population of Karabakh composed of Armenians resided in one third of the territory of Karabakh the mountainous territory i e Nagorno Karabakh where they constituted an overwhelming majority of the population 103 1918 1920 According to Armenian sources the historical Nagorno Karabakh region had a population of 300 000 330 000 in 1918 1920 rising to 700 000 800 000 by 1988 As a result of Turkish Azerbaijani aggression the region s population declined by 20 percent in 1918 1920 107 In this period Azerbaijani forces carried out massacres against Armenians in Ghaibalishen Jamilli Karkijahan and Pahlul 600 700 dead 108 Stepanakert several hundred dead 109 and Shusha several hundred 110 to 12 000 dead 111 As a result of the Shusha massacre 5 000 6 000 Armenians were displaced to the regions of Varanda and Dizak 112 By 11 April 1920 some thirty villages in Nagorno Karabakh had been devastated by Azerbaijani forces as a result of the uprising leaving 25 000 homeless including nearly 6 000 refugees from Shusha 113 1921 1987 1923 statistics indicate that the NKAO was 94 8 percent Armenian numbering 149 600 whilst the Azerbaijani population numbered 7 700 Historian Cory Welt writes of a discrepancy of the Armenian population jumping by over 25 000 individuals between the 1921 and 1923 censuses also pointing out that the Armenian population declined to 111 700 in 1926 thus indicating an unexplained drop of 38 000 individuals 114 In the 1920s the NKAO had a population of 131 500 people 94 4 percent 124 136 of whom were ethnic Armenians and only 5 6 percent 7 364 of whom were ethnic Azerbaijanis 105 In 1933 Nagorno Karabakh had a population of 147 308 10 751 7 3 percent of whom were urban dwellers and 136 557 92 7 percent of whom were rural residents 115 On 1 January 1973 the oblast had a population of 153 000 116 Discrimination and stagnationWhilst the region was a part of the Azerbaijan SSR the Armenian share of the population dropped from 94 7 to 76 9 percent whilst the Azerbaijani share of the population quadrupled from 5 1 to 21 5 percent 105 as a result of migratory influx 107 indicative of the socio economic difficulties local Armenians experienced under Soviet Azerbaijani leadership which led them to emigrate from Karabakh 105 Emeritus professor of law M Cherif Bassiouni writes of the stagnation of the Armenian population due to the discriminatory policies of Azerbaijani authorities that compelled Armenians to emigrate also adding that 600 000 Armenians from Karabakh reside in Armenia and the countries of the CIS 107 Stuart J Kaufman a professor of political science and international relations 117 writes of the difficulties of Karabakh Armenians In Mountainous Karabagh Armenian language education was not easily available Armenian history was not taught at all and those who went to Armenia for training were discriminated against in competing for jobs in the province since even routine hiring had to be cleared with Baku Underinvestment in the region also blamed on Baku meant less economic development and poor infrastructure even by Soviet standards and therefore fewer jobs overall especially for Armenians Cultural ties with Armenia were strangled in red tape in Baku and a decision to make Armenian language television available in the region was left unimplemented One result of these policies was a continuing exodus of Armenians from Karabagh in search of greener pastures 118 1988 present Following the Sumgait pogrom and the exodus of Azerbaijanis from Armenia Azerbaijanis in Stepanakert and Armenians in Shusha were expelled in September 1988 As local Armenian forces gained possession of Nagorno Karabakh and surrounding districts amounting to 14 percent of the internationally recognised territory of Azerbaijan during the First Nagorno Karabakh war hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis were expelled from their lands 63 During the Second Nagorno Karabakh War Azerbaijan regained control over the surrounding districts and southern parts of the former NKAO thus displacing approximately 70 000 Armenians 119 Historical ethnic composition of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast in 1921 1989 Ethnic group 1921 114 120 1923 102 114 1925 102 1926 102 121 1939 102 122 1959 102 123 1970 102 124 1979 102 125 1989 126 Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Armenians 122 426 94 73 149 600 94 8 142 470 90 28 111 694 89 24 132 800 88 04 110 053 84 39 121 068 80 54 123 076 75 89 145 450 76 92Azerbaijanis a 6 550 5 07 7 700 4 9 15 261 9 67 12 592 10 06 14 053 9 32 17 995 13 80 27 179 18 08 37 264 22 98 40 688 21 52Russians 267 0 21 500 0 3 46 0 03 596 0 48 3 174 2 10 1 790 1 37 1 310 0 87 1 265 0 78 1 922 1 02Ukrainians 30 0 02 35 0 03 436 0 29 238 0 18 193 0 13 140 0 09 416 0 22Belarusians 12 0 01 11 0 01 32 0 02 35 0 02 37 0 02 79 0 04Greeks 68 0 05 74 0 05 67 0 05 33 0 02 56 0 03 72 0 04Tatars 6 0 00 29 0 02 36 0 03 25 0 02 41 0 03 64 0 03Georgians 5 0 00 25 0 02 16 0 01 22 0 01 17 0 01 57 0 03Others 151 0 12 235 0 16 179 0 14 448 0 30 285 0 18 337 0 18TOTAL 129 243 b 100 00 157 800 100 0 157 807 100 00 125 159 100 00 150 837 100 00 130 406 100 00 150 313 100 00 162 181 100 00 189 085 100 00TransportLocation ICAO DAFIF IATA Airport name CoordinatesStepanakert UBBS UB13 Stepanakert Airport 127 39 54 05 N 46 47 13 E 39 90139 N 46 78694 E 39 90139 46 78694 Stepanakert Air Base During the rule of the Soviet Union the Yevlakh Aghdam Stepanakert line connected the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Region with the main part of Azerbaijan After the Nagorno Karabakh war and the abandonment of Agdam the line s service was cut back to service only between Yevlax and Ketelparaq without any present section at the Nagorno Karabakh Republic The former railway line between Ketelparaq and Stepanakert has been almost completely destroyed The Tbilisi Gyumri Yerevan Nakhchivan Horadiz Shirvan Baku main railway was also dismantled from the NKR between Ordubad and Horadiz as well as a by line from Mincivan to the Armenian city of Kapan Currently the Azerbaijani trains only travel to Horadiz The Ordubad Horadiz section has been demolished leaving the NKR with no intact active railway line in their territory The railway at the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic still operates but it is separated from the main Azerbaijani lines and only has a connection to Iran See also Geography portal Europe portalTimeline of Artsakh history Community for Democracy and Rights of Nations List of active separatist movements in Europe Janapar the hiking trail across Nagorno Karabakh Outline of Nagorno Karabakh Post Soviet states YekbunNotes Until 1936 Azerbaijanis were known as Tatars or Turkish Tatars With the city of Shusha included the NKAO s total population was 138 466 the adjusted ethnic composition is as follows Armenians 122 715 88 62 Azerbaijanis 15 444 11 15 Others 307 0 22 References Population of NKR as of 01 01 2013 NKR 1 January 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2014 Official Statistics of the NKR Official site of the President of the NKR President nkr am 1 January 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2012 Nagorno Karabakh Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Armenians Rage Against Last Minute Peace Deal Foreign Policy 10 November 2020 Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 8 June 2022 General Assembly adopts resolution reaffirming territorial integrity of Azerbaijan demanding withdrawal of all Armenian forces United Nations 14 March 2008 Retrieved 30 August 2015 Tensions mount as Armenia and Azerbaijan continue fighting Dawn com Associated Press 29 September 2020 Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Robert H Hewsen The Meliks of Eastern Armenia A Preliminary Study Revue des etudes Armeniennes NS IX 1972 pp 288 Robert H Hewsen 2001 Armenia A Historical Atlas The University of Chicago Press p 264 ISBN 978 0 226 33228 4 a b Fighting erupts between Armenia Azerbaijan over disputed region Al Jazeera 27 September 2020 Retrieved 27 September 2020 Strabo ed H C Hamilton Esq W Falconer M A Geography The Perseus Digital Library 11 14 4 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Viviano Frank March 2004 The Rebirth of Armenia National Geographic Magazine John Noble Michael Kohn Danielle Systermans Georgia Armenia and Azerbaijan Lonely Planet 3 edition 1 May 2008 p 307 a b Hewsen Robert H 1982 Ethno History and the Armenian Influence upon the Caucasian Albanians In Samuelian Thomas J ed Classical Armenian Culture Influences and Creativity Chicago Scholars Press pp 27 40 ISBN 0 89130 565 3 Hewsen Robert H Armenia a Historical Atlas Chicago IL University of Chicago Press 2001 p 32 33 map 19 shows the territory of modern Nagorno Karabakh as part of the Orontids Kingdom of Armenia R Schmitt M L Chaumont Armenia and Iran Encyclopaedia Iranica Hewsen Robert H The Kingdom of Artsakh in T Samuelian amp M Stone eds Medieval Armenian Culture Chico CA 1983 Hewsen Armenia pp 100 103 ISTORIYa IMPERATORA IRAKLA Sochinene episkopa Sebeosa pisatelya VII veka Per s armyanskogo K Patkanyana vehi net Evgeny Dmitrievich Silaev Azerbaijan Encyclopaedia Britannica Walker Christopher J 1991 Armenia and Karabagh The Struggle for Unity Minority Rights Group Publications p 10 Viviano Frank The Rebirth of Armenia National Geographic Magazine March 2004 p 18 Movses Kalankatuatsi History of the Land of Aluank Book I chapters 27 28 and 29 Book II chapter 3 N Adonc Dionisij Frakijskij i armyanskie tolkovateli Pg 1915 181 219 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press 1975 vol 4 p 506 He was handed to Afshin s troops by Sahl b Sunbadh an Armenian prince in 222 836 7 and executed in Samarra 223 837 while his brother and assistant Abd Allah was delivered to the prince of Tabaristan Ibn Sharvin who had him put to death in Baghdad a b c Robert H Hewsen Armenia A Historical Atlas The University of Chicago Press 2001 pp 119 155 163 264 65 Movses Dasxuranci translated by C J F Dowsett 1961 The History of the Caucasian Albanians By Movses Dasxuranci London Oxford University Press p 217 Ter Grigoryan T I Neizdannye stranicy Istorii Albanskoj strany Moiseya Kalankajtukskogo Arhiv In ta istorii AN Azerb SSR 1386 l 18 Christopher Walker The Armenian presence in Mountainous Karabakh in John F R Wright et al Transcaucasian Boundaries SOAS GRC Geopolitics 1995 p 93 Hewsen Robert H The Kingdom of Artsakh in T Samuelian amp M Stone eds Medieval Armenian Culture Chico CA 1983 Arḡun Aqa Encyclopaedia Iranica P Jackson It can only have caused resentment among the Muslims and the Christian author Kirakos in stark contrast with Jovayni has nothing favorable to say concerning Arḡun s exactions his harsh treatment of certain Armenian princes such as Jalal of Ḵacen whom he had executed in 659 1261 made him especially hateful Armenia Geography Population Map Religion amp History Encyclopaedia Britannica A few native Armenian rulers survived for a time in the Kiurikian kingdom of Lori the Siuniqian kingdom of Baghq or Kapan and the principates of Khachen Artzakh and Sasun Robert H Hewsen Russian Armenian relations 1700 1828 Society of Armenian Studies N4 Cambridge Massachusetts 1984 p 37 George A Bournoutian 1994 A History of Qarabagh An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi s Tarikh e Qarabagh Mazda Publishers ISBN 1 56859 011 3 Abu Bakr Ṭihrani Kitab i Diyarbakriyya original کتاب دیاربکریه از تواریخ قراقوینلو و چغاتای ویسنده ابوبکر طهرانی به تصحیح و اهتمام نجاتی لوغال فاروق سومه تهران کتابخانه طهوری ۱۳۵۶ p 138 Polnoe Sobranie Zakonov Rossijskoj Imperii c 1649 goda Tom XXV 1798 1799 SPb Pechatano v Tipografii II Otdeleniya Sobstvennoj Ego Imperatorskogo Velichestva Kancelyarii 1830 18 990 c 674 675 Complete Collection of Laws of the Russian Empire since 1649 Volume XXV 1798 1799 SPb Printed at the Printing House of the II Branch of His Imperial Majesty s Own Office 1830 No 18 990 p 674 675 Robert H Hewsen Russian Armenian relations 1700 1828 Society of Armenian Studies N4 Cambridge Massachusetts 1984 p 37 Walker Christopher J Armenia Survival of a Nation London Routledge 1990 p 40 ISBN 0 415 04684 X Raffi The History of Karabagh s Meliks Vienna 1906 in Armenian In English Raffi The Five Melikdoms of Karabagh translated by Ara Stepan Melkonian Garod Books Ltd 2010 London ISBN 9781903656570 Pavlova I K Hronika vremen Sefevidov Soch Muhammad Masuma Isfahani Hulasat as sijar M Nauka 1993 c 59 61 in Russian Abbas gulu Aga Bakikhanov Golestan i Iram according to an 18th century local Turkic Muslim writer Mirza Adigezal bey Nadir shah placed Karabakh under his own control while a 19th century local Turkic Muslim writer Abbas gulu Aga Bakikhanov states that the shah placed Karabakh under the control of the governor of Tabriz MIRZA ADIGEZAL BEK gt KARABAG NAME gt GLAVY 1 6 www vostlit info Bournoutian George A 2016 The 1820 Russian Survey of the Khanate of Shirvan A Primary Source on the Demography and Economy of an Iranian Province prior to its Annexation by Russia Gibb Memorial Trust p xvii ISBN 978 1909724808 Serious historians and geographers agree that after the fall of the Safavids and especially from the mid eighteenth century the territory of the South Caucasus was composed of the khanates of Ganja Kuba Shirvan Baku Talesh Sheki Karabagh Nakhchivan and Yerevan all of which were under Iranian suzerainty KM RU novosti ekonomika avtomobili nauka i tehnika kino muzyka sport igry anekdoty kursy valyut KM RU www km ru Archived from the original on 13 June 2003 Muriel Atkin The Strange Death of Ibrahim Khalil Khan of Qarabagh Iranian Studies Vol 12 No 1 2 Winter Spring 1979 pp 79 107 George A Bournoutian A History of Qarabagh An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi s Tarikh e Qarabagh Mazda Publishers 1994 ISBN 1 56859 011 3 978 1 568 59011 0 Tim Potier M1 Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh Abkhazia and South Ossetia A Legal Appraisal Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 2001 p 2 ISBN 90 411 1477 7 Leonidas Themistocles Chrysanthopoulos Caucasus Chronicles Nation building and Diplomacy in Armenia 1993 1994 Gomidas Institute 2002 p 8 ISBN 1 884630 05 7 The British and Foreign Review J Ridgeway and sons 1838 p 422 Taru Bahl M H Syed Encyclopaedia of the Muslim World Anmol Publications PVT 2003 p 34 ISBN 81 261 1419 3 Description of the Karabakh province prepared in 1823 according to the order of the governor in Georgia Yermolov by state advisor Mogilevsky and colonel Yermolov 2nd Russian Opisaniye Karabakhskoy provincii sostavlennoye v 1823 g po rasporyazheniyu glavnoupravlyayushego v Gruzii Yermolova deystvitelnim statskim sovetnikom Mogilevskim i polkovnikom Yermolovim 2 m Tbilisi 1866 Bournoutian George A A History of Qarabagh An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi s Tarikh E Qarabagh Costa Mesa CA Mazda Publishers 1994 page 18 a b c The Nagorno Karabagh Crisis A Blueprint for Resolution PDF New England Center for International Law amp Policy Circular by colonel D I Shuttleworth of the British Command Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh Abkhazia and South Ossetia A Legal Appraisal by Tim Potier ISBN 90 411 1477 7 Walker The Survival of a Nation pp 285 90 Q amp A with Arsene Saparov No Evidence that Stalin gave Karabakh to Azerbaijan armenian usc edu 10 December 2018 Of all the documents I have seen there is no direct evidence of Stalin doing or saying something in those 12 days in the summer of 1921 that resulted in this decision on Karabakh A lot of people just assume that since Stalin was an evil person it would be typical of someone evil to take a decision like that Potier Tim 2001 Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh Abkhazia and South Ossetia A Legal Appraisal The Hague Netherlands Kluwer Law International p 5 ISBN 9041114777 Audrey L Altstadt The Azerbaijani Turks power and identity under Russian rule Hoover Press 1992 ISBN 0817991824 9780817991821 Black Garden Thomas de Waal page 292 Black Garden Thomas de Waal p 15 Elizabeth Fuller Nagorno Karabakh The Death and Casualty Toll to Date RL 531 88 14 December 1988 pp 1 2 a b c d e f de Waal Thomas 2003 Black Garden Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 1945 7 Lieberman Benjamin 2006 Terrible Fate Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe Chicago Ivan R Dee pp 284 92 ISBN 1 5666 3646 9 RESOLUTION on the situation in Soviet Armenia page 21 The Encyclopedia of World History Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2001 p 906 Roeder Philip G 2007 Where nation states come from institutional change in the age of nationalism Princeton University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 691 13467 3 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Human Rights Watch Playing the Communal Card Communal Violence and Human Rights By early 1992 full scale fighting broke out between Nagorno Karabakh Armenians and Azerbaijani authorities Karabakh Armenian forces often with the support of forces from the Republic of Armenia conducted large scale operations Because 1993 witnessed unrelenting Karabakh Armenian offensives against the Azerbaijani provinces surrounding Nagorno Karabakh Since late 1993 the conflict has also clearly become internationalized in addition to Azerbaijani and Karabakh Armenian forces troops from the Republic of Armenia participate on the Karabakh side in fighting inside Azerbaijan and in Nagorno Karabakh Human Rights Watch The former Soviet Union Human Rights Developments In 1992 the conflict grew far more lethal as both sides the Azerbaijani National Army and free lance militias fighting along with it and ethnic Armenians and mercenaries fighting in the Popular Liberation Army of Artsakh began United States Institute of Peace Nagorno Karabakh Searching for a Solution Foreword Archived 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Nagorno Karabakh s armed forces have not only fortified their region but have also occupied a large swath of surrounding Azeri territory in the hopes of linking the enclave to Armenia United States Institute of Peace Sovereignty after Empire Self Determination Movements in the Former Soviet Union Hopes and Disappointments Case Studies Archived 1 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Meanwhile the conflict over Nagorno Karabakh was gradually transforming into a full scale war between Azeri and Karabakh irregulars the latter receiving support from Armenia Azerbaijan s objective advantage in terms of human and economic potential has so far been offset by the superior fighting skills and discipline of Nagorno Karabakh s forces After a series of offensives retreats and counteroffensives Nagorno Karabakh now controls a sizable portion of Azerbaijan proper including the Lachin corridor By Giving Karabakh Lands to Azerbaijan Conflict Would Have Ended in 97 Says Ter Petrosian Asbarez Asbarez 19 April 2011 Ter Petrosyan on the BBC Karabakh conflict could have been resolved by giving certain territories to Azerbaijan ArmeniaNow ArmeniaNow 19 April 2011 Archived from the original on 19 May 2011 Retrieved 21 May 2011 Pervyj prezident Armenii o raspade SSSR i Karabahe BBC BBC 18 April 2011 Human Rights Watch Seven Years of Conflict in Nagorno Karabakh December 1994 p xiii ISBN 1 56432 142 8 citing Natsional nyi Sostav Naseleniya SSSR po dannym Vsesoyuznyi Perepisi Naseleniya 1989 g Moskva Finansy i Statistika Azerbaijan closes last of emergency camps UNHCR Armenia Azerbaijan clash as ceasefire fails to stick Dawn com Agence France Presse 12 October 2020 Retrieved 8 June 2022 de Waal Thomas 2003 Black Garden PDF New York University Press p 3 No End in Sight to Fighting in Nagorno Karabakh by Ivan Watson National Public Radio Weekend Edition Sunday 23 April 2006 Proekt zayavleniya po Nagornomu Karabahu ozhidaet odobreniya parlamentskih sil Armenii Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2010 Rezolyuciya PASE po Karabahu chto dalshe BBC Russian Resolutions on Political Affairs Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Thirty Fourth Session of the Islamic Conference of Foreign Ministers Resolutions on Political Affairs Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Islamic Summit Conference 13 14 May 2008 A RES 62 243 E A RES 62 243 Desktop undocs org Resolutions on Political Issues Adopted by the Council of Foreign Ministers Session of Shared Vision of a More Secure and Prosperous Islamic World Dushanbe Republic of Tajikistan 4 6 Jamadul Thani 1431H 18 20 May 2010 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 FM Azerbaijan welcomes resolution Need for EU Strategy for South Caucasus adopted by European Parliament Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Trend az 21 May 2010 EU s Ashton Says Nagorno Karabakh Elections Illegal RFE RL 21 May 2010 Bulgarian MEPs Urge EU to Be Proactive in South Caucasus Inhabitants of frontier regions of Azerbaijan are deliberately deprived of water Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe PACE Adopts Anti Armenian Measure Rejects Another Armenian Weekly Resolution Inhabitants of frontier regions of Azerbaijan are deliberately deprived of water sarsang org Archived from the original on 15 March 2017 Azerbaijan military threat to Armenia The Daily Telegraph 22 November 2009 Retrieved 23 November 2009 Hodge Nathan 2 April 2016 A Dozen Dead in Heavy Fighting Reported in Nagorno Karabakh Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2 April 2016 Dozens killed in Nagorno Karabakh clashes www aljazeera com Retrieved 3 April 2016 UN Security Council calls for immediate end to fighting in Nagorno Karabakh France 24 30 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Ethnic Armenian forces confirm loss of Karabakh s second city say enemy nearing capital Reuters 9 November 2020 Retrieved 9 November 2020 Russia Steps In To End War Between 2 Former Soviet Republics NPR org Retrieved 10 November 2020 Nagorno Karabakh Republic Country Overview www nkrusa org a b Zurcher Christoph 2007 The post Soviet wars rebellion ethnic conflict and nationhood in the Caucasus NYU Press p 184 ISBN 978 0814797099 Nagorno Karabakh Britannica Retrieved 30 November 2010 DeRouen Karl R ed 2007 Civil wars of the world major conflicts since World War II Volume 2 ABC CLIO p 150 ISBN 978 1851099191 a b c d e f g h Beglaryan Ashot The population of Nagorno Karabakh for a year Union of Armenians of Russia Nagorno Karabakh Republic Excursion into history losevskaya ru Stepanakert Archived from the original on 31 October 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 a b c Javanshir Mirza Jamal Adigozal Beg Mirza 2004 Two Chronicles On The History of Karabagh PDF Introduction and annotated translation by George A Bournoutian Costa Mesa California Mazda Publishers pp 6 21 amp 24 ISBN 1 56859 179 9 Shnirelman Victor A 2001 The Value of the Past Myths Identity and Politics in Transcaucasia PDF Senri Ethnological Studies Osaka National Museum of Ethnology 57 153 Archived PDF from the original on 25 March 2022 a b c d Herzig Edmund Kurkchiyan Marina 2005 The Armenians Past and Present in the Making of National Identity London RoutledgeCurzon pp 66 amp 121 ISBN 0 203 00493 0 OCLC 229988654 Bournoutian George 2017 The Population of the South Caucasus according to the 1897 General Census of the Russian Empire Iran amp the Caucasus 21 3 330 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20170307 ISSN 1609 8498 JSTOR 26548902 a b c Bassiouni M Cherif ed 2010 The Pursuit of International Criminal Justice A World Study on Conflicts Victimization and Post conflict Justice Vol 2 Antwerp Intersentia p 839 ISBN 978 94 000 0017 9 OCLC 497573622 Wright John F R 1996 Transcaucasian Boundaries Psychology Press p 99 ISBN 9780203214473 Libaridian Gerard J ed 1988 The Karabagh File PDF 1st ed Toronto Cambridge p 29 ISBN 0 916431 26 6 Archived PDF from the original on 20 February 2022 Cory D Welt 2004 Explaining ethnic conflict in the South Caucasus Mountainous Karabagh Abkhazia and South Ossetia PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology p 77 OCLC 59823134 Archived PDF from the original on 11 September 2022 Out of a population of approximately 20 000 at least several hundred were killed the rest were forced to flee In the fighting that followed several nearby villages were also razed a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Shushinskaya reznya 1920 goda Shusha massacre of 1920 lazarevsky club 13 March 2020 Archived from the original on 14 November 2022 Retrieved 15 November 2022 Bagdasaryan Gegam March 2015 Tri neraskrytyh obstoyatelstva rezni armyan v Shushi Three unsolved circumstances of the massacre of Armenians in Shushi theanalyticon com in Russian Stepanakert Archived from the original on 14 November 2022 Retrieved 15 November 2022 Hovannisian Richard G 1996 The Republic of Armenia Vol 3 Berkeley University of California Press pp 157 158 ISBN 0 520 01805 2 a b c Cory D Welt 2004 Explaining ethnic conflict in the South Caucasus Mountainous Karabagh Abkhazia and South Ossetia PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology p 116 OCLC 59823134 Archived PDF from the original on 11 September 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Administrativnoe delenie ASSR 1 Rajony selsovety spiski naselennyh mest s ukazaniem chislennosti naseleniya nacionalnogo sostava chisla hozyajstv po sostoyaniyu na 1 1 1933 g 2 Spisok kolhozov sovhozov MTS i MTF 3 Karty rajonov na tyurk i rus yaz otdelno Azerbajdzhanskaya SSR Upravlenie narodno hozyajstvennogo ucheta in Russian 1933 Great Soviet Encyclopedia Vol 17 New York Macmillan 1973 p 301 Stuart Kaufman University of Delaware Archived from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 22 November 2022 Kaufman Stuart J 2001 Modern Hatreds The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War Ithaca New York pp 58 59 ISBN 978 1 5017 0199 3 OCLC 1160511946 Nagorno Karabakh Armenia and Azerbaijan shaky ceasefire in force BBC News 10 October 2020 Archived from the original on 10 October 2020 Retrieved 10 October 2020 Perepis naseleniya AzSSR v 1921 g Census of the population of the AzSSR in 1921 karabagh am Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 26 June 2022 Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1926 goda Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya po regionam respublik SSSR Demoskop Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1939 goda Raspredelenie gorodskogo i selskogo naseleniya oblastej soyuznyh respublik po nacionalnosti i polu Demoskop Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1959 goda Gorodskoe i selskoe naselenie oblastej respublik SSSR krome RSFSR po polu i nacionalnosti Demoskop Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1970 goda Gorodskoe i selskoe naselenie oblastej respublik SSSR krome RSFSR po polu i nacionalnosti Demoskop Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1979 goda Gorodskoe i selskoe naselenie oblastej respublik SSSR krome RSFSR po polu i nacionalnosti Demoskop Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 goda Raspredelenie gorodskogo i selskogo naseleniya oblastej respublik SSSR po polu i nacionalnosti Demoskop Airports in Azerbaijan Worldaerodata com Archived from the original on 4 August 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2013 BibliographyAli Ekinciel 1 August 2015 Karabakh Diary 1 ed Russia Sage ISBN 9786059932196 Further readingTsibenko Veronika 2018 Karabakh Nagorno In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Stewart Devin J eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Torres Ricardo Juan 2022 The role of Nagorno Karabakh in the shaping of Armenian and Azeri identity Consejo Argentino para las Relaciones Internacionales CARI a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help External linksNagorno Karabakh at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Articles and Photography on Artsakh Nagorno Karabakh from UK Photojournalist Russell Pollard All UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno Karabakh courtesy U S State department Nagorno Karabakh Agreement of 2 November 2008 and country profile from BBC News Online Article on the 10 December Referendum from Russia Profile The conflict over the Nagorno Karabakh region dealt with by the OSCE Minsk Conference Report by rapporteur David Atkinson presented to Political Affairs Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Conciliation Resources Accord issue The limits of leadership Elites and societies in the Nagorny Karabakh peace process also key texts amp agreements and chronology in English amp Russian Independence of Kosovo and the Nagorno Karabakh Issue Interview with Thomas De Waal Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Nagorno Karabakh Timeline Of The Long Road To Peace Resolution 1416 from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe USIP Nagorno Karabakh Searching for a Solution Key points by Patricia Carley Publication of the United States Institute of Peace USIP USIP Sovereignty after Empire Self Determination Movements in the Former Soviet Union Case Studies Nagorno Karabakh by Galina Starovoitova Publication of the United States Institute of Peace USIP Photo Series Nagorno Karabakh 2008 2011 daily life front line mine clearance culture religion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nagorno Karabakh amp oldid 1151352808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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