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Ottoman casualties of World War I

Ottoman casualties of World War I were the civilian and military casualties sustained by the Ottoman Empire during the First World War. Almost 1.5% of the Ottoman population, or approximately 300,000 people of the Empire's 21 million population in 1914,[1] were estimated to have been killed during the war. Of the total 300,000 casualties, 250,000 are estimated to have been military fatalities, with civilian casualties numbering over 50,000. In addition to the 50,000 civilian deaths, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians, 750,000 Greeks, and 300,000 Assyrians were systematically targeted and killed by Turkish authorities either via the military or Kurdish gangs.[2] Likewise, starting in 1916, Ottoman authorities forcibly displaced an estimated 700,000 Kurdish people westward, and an estimated 350,000 died from hunger, exposure, and disease.[3]

"Hunger Map of Europe", published in December 1918, indicates serious food shortages in most of the territories of the Ottoman Empire, and famine in the eastern parts.

The post-war partitioning of the Ottoman Empire, as well as the mass migrations that occurred during and after World War I,[3] made it difficult to estimate the exact number of civilian casualties. However, the figure of military casualties is generally accepted as stated in Edward J. Erickson's Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War.

Disparity exists between Western and Turkish estimations of casualty figures. Analysis of Ottoman statistics by Turkish Dr Kamer Kasim suggests that the total percentage of Ottoman casualties amounted to 26.9% of the Empire's 1914 population. This estimate, however, is greater than numbers reported by Western sources.[4] Kasim has suggested that an additional 399,000 civilian casualties have not been accounted for by Western estimations.

Millets Prewar Civilian Military Post-War
% 1914 census[5] Other sources Military perished Civilian perished Total perished Survived
Armenian 16.1% 1,229,227 Unknown[6][7]
Greeks 19.4% 1.792.206
Jews .9% 187,073[5]
Assyrian 3%
Others .9% 186,152[5]
Muslim 59.7% 12,522,280[5] 9,876,580 2,800,000 (18.6%)[2] 507,152 (5.1% of its group)[2]
Total: millets 100% 20,975,345[5] 507,152 (2.4% of its group)[2] 4,492,848 5,000,000[1]

Ottoman military casualties edit

Until World War I, Istanbul's civilian Muslim population and non-Muslim millets (minorities for some sources) were exempt from the conscription[8] Making exception of the indirect effects of often perennial arrangements, such as those that existed for the labor force of the arsenal and the dockyards. Full conscription was applied in İstanbul for the first time during World War I, and a lasting phraseology describes the Dardanelles Campaign as Turkey having "buried a university in Çanakkale". Non-Muslim Millets (minorities for some sources) were also issued a general call to serve in the military for the first time during World War I in the history of the Empire; but they did not participate in action and served behind the lines.[8] At the end of the war, many families were left with the elderly, children and young widows, see the figure widowhood in Anatolia. Given that the Ottoman Empire was engaged in nearly eight years of continuous warfare (1911–1918 Italo-Turkish War, Balkan Wars, World War I) social disintegration was inevitable.[9]

H. G. Dwight relates witnessing an Ottoman Military burial in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) and took pictures of it. H. G. Dwight says that the soldiers were from every nation (ethnicity), but they were only distinguished by their religion, in groups of "Mohammedans" and "Christians". The sermons were performed as based on the count of Bibles, Korans, and Tanakhs in provenance of the battlefield. This is what the caption of one slide reads (on the right):

One officer was left, who made to the grave-diggers and spectators a speech of a moving simplicity. "Brothers," he said, "here are men of every nation – Turks, Albanians, Greeks, Bulgarians, Jews; but they died together, on the same day, fighting under the same flag. Among us, too, are men of every nation, both Mohammedan and Christian; but we also have one flag and we pray to one God. Now, I am going to make a prayer, and when I pray let each one of you pray also, in his own language, in his own way.

When war was declared in Europe in 1914, there was only one military hospital in Van, Turkey, which was soon overcrowded with wounded and sick people.[10] The conditions were extremely bad; There were only two surgeons and no nurses, only male soldiers helping.[10] The conditions on the whole in the Ottoman army were almost bad beyond description. Soldiers, even at the front and who received the best care in comparative terms, were often (a) undernourished, (b) underclothed; troops deployed at high altitude in the mountains of Eastern Anatolia often had only summer clothes; Ottoman soldiers in Palestine often took great risks just to rob the British dead of their boots and even clothing; and (c) largely suffering from diseases (primarily cholera and typhus), which took many more lives than the actual fighting.[11] The German general Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein, in a report he wrote to army group headquarters on 20 October 1917, describes how a division (the 24th) that departed from Istanbul-Haydarpaşa Terminal with 10,057 men arrived at the Palestinian Front with only 4,635. 19% of the men had to be admitted to hospitals since they were suffering from various diseases, 24% had deserted and 8% were allocated on the way to various local needs.[12][13]

Category Totals[2]
Total number of conscripts and officers mobilized 2,873,000
Killed in action 175,220
Missing in action 61,487
Died of wounds 68,378
Perished from diseases and epidemics 466,759
Dead: Killed in action and other causes 771,844
Seriously wounded (permanent loss, including died of wounds) 303,150
Total wounded in action 763,753
Prisoners of War (combined from all theaters of war) 145,104
Absent without leave 500,000

Civilian casualties edit

 
Distribution of widows is used in finding out males perished[14]

Armenians edit

Assyrians edit

The Assyrian Genocide was the massacre of the Assyrian population in the Ottoman Empire, which were in the regions of southeastern Turkey and the Urmia region of Iran, were deported and massacred by Ottoman and Kurdish armies in 1914 and 1920. Sources have put the death tolls at around 300,000.

Greeks edit

The Ottoman Empire under the Young Turks, committed genocide against their Greek citizens from 1914 to 1918, killing approximately 750,000 Greeks, 353,000 of whom were Pontic Greeks from the Black Sea area.

Muslims edit

The closest estimate of Muslim civilian casualties in this period is around 500,000.

After the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire, for reliability reasons, the data regarding the Muslim casualties had to be collected by region. The records regarding the Muslim civilians were sealed at the time of the Paris Peace Conference, and there is very little literature review on the Muslim millet, compared to Christian millet of the Empire (see: Armenian casualties).

One plausible explanation that needs further study may be attributable to productivity patterns of the Muslim millet, which could have dropped beyond sustainable levels since most of the men were under arms.

The Anatolian refugees included people who had migrated from war zones and immediate vicinity attempting, by doing so, to escape persecution. For World War I, the relatively most reliable sources can be found for Anatolia, especially in relation to the Caucasus Campaign. There is a total number reached and reported by the Ottoman Empire at the end of 1916. On the basis of previous Ottoman census, the Turkish historian Kamer Kasim (Manchester University, PhD), arrives at the conclusion that the movements of refugees from the Caucasus war zone had reached 1.500.000 people who were relocated in the Mediterranean region and Central Anatolia under very difficult conditions.[4] Kamer Kasım's number or any other number on this issue has not been reported in western sources.

The most horrible cases originate from the current region of Syria, a part of Ottoman Empire until the end of the war. The civilian casualties of Syria was covered in a detailed article (the whole of Greater Syria, and thus including Akkar) by Linda Schatkowski Schilcher.[15] Contributing to as many as 500,000 deaths of the civilians living in this region in the 1915–1917 period, the study lists eight basic factors: (a) the Entente powers' total blockage of the Syrian coast; (b) the inadequacy of the Ottoman supply strategy; deficient harvest and inclement weather; (c) diversion of supplies from Syria as a consequence of the Arab revolt; (d) the speculative frenzy of a number of unscrupulous local grain merchants; the callousness of German military official in Syria, and systematic hoarding by the population at large.[15] In a series of graphs and charts discovered in the Ottoman archives that date to 1915, Zachary J. Foster has shown that hundreds of Lebanese were starving to death or dying from starvation-related diseases (between 156 and 784) everyone month of the war from the fall 1915 onwards.[16]

See also edit

External links edit

  • Baş, Mehmet Fatih: War Losses (Ottoman Empire/Middle East), in: 1914–1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b James L. Gelvin The Israel-Palestine Conflict: One Hundred Years of War, Publisher: Cambridge University Press ISBN 978-0521618045 p. 77
  2. ^ a b c d e Edward J. Erickson (2001). Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War. General Huseyin Kivrikoglu (forward). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 211. ISBN 978-0313315169.
  3. ^ a b S.C Josh (1999), "Sociology of Migration and Kinship" Anmol Publications PVT. LTD. p. 55
  4. ^ a b Kamer Kasim, Ermeni Arastirmalari, Sayı 16–17, 2005, p. 205.
  5. ^ a b c d e Stanford Jay Shaw, Ezel Kural Shaw "History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey" Cambridge University pp. 239–241
  6. ^ *File:US State Department document on Armenian Refugess in 1921.jpg
  7. ^ McCarthy, Justin (1983), Muslims and minorities: the population of Ottoman Anatolia and the end of the empire, New York: New York University press, ISBN 978-0871509635
  8. ^ a b Nur Bilge CRISS, Istanbul under Allied Occupation 1918–1923, 1999 Brill Academic Publishers, ISBN 9004112596 p. 22
  9. ^ Nur Bilge CRISS, Istanbul under Allied Occupation 1918–1923, 1999 Brill Academic Publishers, ISBN 9004112596 p. 21
  10. ^ a b Grace H. Knapp; Clarence D. Ussher (1915). The Mission at Van: In Turkey in War Time. Privt. Print. [Prospect Press]. pp. 41–43.
  11. ^ Erik-Jan Zürcher, "The Ottoman conscription system in theory and practice, 1844–1918", in: Erik Jan Zürcher (ed.), Arming the State: Military Conscription in the Middle East and Central Asia, London: I.B. Tauris, 1999, 88.
  12. ^ Hans Kannengiesser, The campaign in gallipoli, London Hutchinson, 1927, p.266
  13. ^ Erik Jan Zürcher, "Between Death and Desertion. The Experience of the Ottoman Soldier in World War I", Turcica 28 (1996), pp. 235–258.
  14. ^ Webster, Donald Everett (1935) The Turkey of Ataturk Philadelphia.[ISBN missing][page needed]
  15. ^ a b "The famine of 1915–1918 in greater Syria", in John Spagnolo, ed., Problems of the Modern Middle East in Historical Perspective (Reading, 1992), pp. 234–254.
  16. ^ Zachary Foster, "4 Beautiful yet Horrifying Graphs of Death from Ottoman Lebanon, 1915–6," MidAfternoonMap.com' 16 February, 2015.

ottoman, casualties, world, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, neutrality, this, article, introduction, disputed, r. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article s introduction is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ottoman casualties of World War I were the civilian and military casualties sustained by the Ottoman Empire during the First World War Almost 1 5 of the Ottoman population or approximately 300 000 people of the Empire s 21 million population in 1914 1 were estimated to have been killed during the war Of the total 300 000 casualties 250 000 are estimated to have been military fatalities with civilian casualties numbering over 50 000 In addition to the 50 000 civilian deaths an estimated 1 5 million Armenians 750 000 Greeks and 300 000 Assyrians were systematically targeted and killed by Turkish authorities either via the military or Kurdish gangs 2 Likewise starting in 1916 Ottoman authorities forcibly displaced an estimated 700 000 Kurdish people westward and an estimated 350 000 died from hunger exposure and disease 3 Hunger Map of Europe published in December 1918 indicates serious food shortages in most of the territories of the Ottoman Empire and famine in the eastern parts The post war partitioning of the Ottoman Empire as well as the mass migrations that occurred during and after World War I 3 made it difficult to estimate the exact number of civilian casualties However the figure of military casualties is generally accepted as stated in Edward J Erickson s Ordered to Die A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War Disparity exists between Western and Turkish estimations of casualty figures Analysis of Ottoman statistics by Turkish Dr Kamer Kasim suggests that the total percentage of Ottoman casualties amounted to 26 9 of the Empire s 1914 population This estimate however is greater than numbers reported by Western sources 4 Kasim has suggested that an additional 399 000 civilian casualties have not been accounted for by Western estimations Millets Prewar Civilian Military Post War 1914 census 5 Other sources Military perished Civilian perished Total perished SurvivedArmenian 16 1 1 229 227 Unknown 6 7 Greeks 19 4 1 792 206Jews 9 187 073 5 Assyrian 3 Others 9 186 152 5 Muslim 59 7 12 522 280 5 9 876 580 2 800 000 18 6 2 507 152 5 1 of its group 2 Total millets 100 20 975 345 5 507 152 2 4 of its group 2 4 492 848 5 000 000 1 Contents 1 Ottoman military casualties 2 Civilian casualties 2 1 Armenians 2 2 Assyrians 2 3 Greeks 2 4 Muslims 3 See also 4 External links 5 NotesOttoman military casualties editSee also Conscription in the Ottoman Empire Until World War I Istanbul s civilian Muslim population and non Muslim millets minorities for some sources were exempt from the conscription 8 Making exception of the indirect effects of often perennial arrangements such as those that existed for the labor force of the arsenal and the dockyards Full conscription was applied in Istanbul for the first time during World War I and a lasting phraseology describes the Dardanelles Campaign as Turkey having buried a university in Canakkale Non Muslim Millets minorities for some sources were also issued a general call to serve in the military for the first time during World War I in the history of the Empire but they did not participate in action and served behind the lines 8 At the end of the war many families were left with the elderly children and young widows see the figure widowhood in Anatolia Given that the Ottoman Empire was engaged in nearly eight years of continuous warfare 1911 1918 Italo Turkish War Balkan Wars World War I social disintegration was inevitable 9 H G Dwight relates witnessing an Ottoman Military burial in Constantinople modern day Istanbul and took pictures of it H G Dwight says that the soldiers were from every nation ethnicity but they were only distinguished by their religion in groups of Mohammedans and Christians The sermons were performed as based on the count of Bibles Korans and Tanakhs in provenance of the battlefield This is what the caption of one slide reads on the right One officer was left who made to the grave diggers and spectators a speech of a moving simplicity Brothers he said here are men of every nation Turks Albanians Greeks Bulgarians Jews but they died together on the same day fighting under the same flag Among us too are men of every nation both Mohammedan and Christian but we also have one flag and we pray to one God Now I am going to make a prayer and when I pray let each one of you pray also in his own language in his own way When war was declared in Europe in 1914 there was only one military hospital in Van Turkey which was soon overcrowded with wounded and sick people 10 The conditions were extremely bad There were only two surgeons and no nurses only male soldiers helping 10 The conditions on the whole in the Ottoman army were almost bad beyond description Soldiers even at the front and who received the best care in comparative terms were often a undernourished b underclothed troops deployed at high altitude in the mountains of Eastern Anatolia often had only summer clothes Ottoman soldiers in Palestine often took great risks just to rob the British dead of their boots and even clothing and c largely suffering from diseases primarily cholera and typhus which took many more lives than the actual fighting 11 The German general Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein in a report he wrote to army group headquarters on 20 October 1917 describes how a division the 24th that departed from Istanbul Haydarpasa Terminal with 10 057 men arrived at the Palestinian Front with only 4 635 19 of the men had to be admitted to hospitals since they were suffering from various diseases 24 had deserted and 8 were allocated on the way to various local needs 12 13 Category Totals 2 Total number of conscripts and officers mobilized 2 873 000Killed in action 175 220Missing in action 61 487Died of wounds 68 378Perished from diseases and epidemics 466 759Dead Killed in action and other causes 771 844Seriously wounded permanent loss including died of wounds 303 150Total wounded in action 763 753Prisoners of War combined from all theaters of war 145 104Absent without leave 500 000Civilian casualties edit nbsp Distribution of widows is used in finding out males perished 14 Armenians edit Assyrians edit Main article Assyrian genocide The Assyrian Genocide was the massacre of the Assyrian population in the Ottoman Empire which were in the regions of southeastern Turkey and the Urmia region of Iran were deported and massacred by Ottoman and Kurdish armies in 1914 and 1920 Sources have put the death tolls at around 300 000 Greeks edit Main article Greek genocide The Ottoman Empire under the Young Turks committed genocide against their Greek citizens from 1914 to 1918 killing approximately 750 000 Greeks 353 000 of whom were Pontic Greeks from the Black Sea area Muslims edit The closest estimate of Muslim civilian casualties in this period is around 500 000 After the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire for reliability reasons the data regarding the Muslim casualties had to be collected by region The records regarding the Muslim civilians were sealed at the time of the Paris Peace Conference and there is very little literature review on the Muslim millet compared to Christian millet of the Empire see Armenian casualties One plausible explanation that needs further study may be attributable to productivity patterns of the Muslim millet which could have dropped beyond sustainable levels since most of the men were under arms The Anatolian refugees included people who had migrated from war zones and immediate vicinity attempting by doing so to escape persecution For World War I the relatively most reliable sources can be found for Anatolia especially in relation to the Caucasus Campaign There is a total number reached and reported by the Ottoman Empire at the end of 1916 On the basis of previous Ottoman census the Turkish historian Kamer Kasim Manchester University PhD arrives at the conclusion that the movements of refugees from the Caucasus war zone had reached 1 500 000 people who were relocated in the Mediterranean region and Central Anatolia under very difficult conditions 4 Kamer Kasim s number or any other number on this issue has not been reported in western sources The most horrible cases originate from the current region of Syria a part of Ottoman Empire until the end of the war The civilian casualties of Syria was covered in a detailed article the whole of Greater Syria and thus including Akkar by Linda Schatkowski Schilcher 15 Contributing to as many as 500 000 deaths of the civilians living in this region in the 1915 1917 period the study lists eight basic factors a the Entente powers total blockage of the Syrian coast b the inadequacy of the Ottoman supply strategy deficient harvest and inclement weather c diversion of supplies from Syria as a consequence of the Arab revolt d the speculative frenzy of a number of unscrupulous local grain merchants the callousness of German military official in Syria and systematic hoarding by the population at large 15 In a series of graphs and charts discovered in the Ottoman archives that date to 1915 Zachary J Foster has shown that hundreds of Lebanese were starving to death or dying from starvation related diseases between 156 and 784 everyone month of the war from the fall 1915 onwards 16 See also editWorld War I casualties Persecution of Ottoman MuslimsExternal links editBas Mehmet Fatih War Losses Ottoman Empire Middle East in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Notes edit a b James L Gelvin The Israel Palestine Conflict One Hundred Years of War Publisher Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521618045 p 77 a b c d e Edward J Erickson 2001 Ordered to Die A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War General Huseyin Kivrikoglu forward Greenwood Publishing Group p 211 ISBN 978 0313315169 a b S C Josh 1999 Sociology of Migration and Kinship Anmol Publications PVT LTD p 55 a b Kamer Kasim Ermeni Arastirmalari Sayi 16 17 2005 p 205 a b c d e Stanford Jay Shaw Ezel Kural Shaw History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University pp 239 241 File US State Department document on Armenian Refugess in 1921 jpg McCarthy Justin 1983 Muslims and minorities the population of Ottoman Anatolia and the end of the empire New York New York University press ISBN 978 0871509635 a b Nur Bilge CRISS Istanbul under Allied Occupation 1918 1923 1999 Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 9004112596 p 22 Nur Bilge CRISS Istanbul under Allied Occupation 1918 1923 1999 Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 9004112596 p 21 a b Grace H Knapp Clarence D Ussher 1915 The Mission at Van In Turkey in War Time Privt Print Prospect Press pp 41 43 Erik Jan Zurcher The Ottoman conscription system in theory and practice 1844 1918 in Erik Jan Zurcher ed Arming the State Military Conscription in the Middle East and Central Asia London I B Tauris 1999 88 Hans Kannengiesser The campaign in gallipoli London Hutchinson 1927 p 266 Erik Jan Zurcher Between Death and Desertion The Experience of the Ottoman Soldier in World War I Turcica 28 1996 pp 235 258 Webster Donald Everett 1935 The Turkey of Ataturk Philadelphia ISBN missing page needed a b The famine of 1915 1918 in greater Syria in John Spagnolo ed Problems of the Modern Middle East in Historical Perspective Reading 1992 pp 234 254 Zachary Foster 4 Beautiful yet Horrifying Graphs of Death from Ottoman Lebanon 1915 6 MidAfternoonMap com 16 February 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ottoman casualties of World War I amp oldid 1206132620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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