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Russo-Persian Wars

The Russo-Persian Wars or Russo-Iranian Wars (Persian: جنگ‌های ایران و روسیه, romanizedJanghâye Irân va Russī-ye) were a series of conflicts between 1651 and 1828, concerning Persia and the Russian Empire. Russia and Persia fought these wars over disputed governance of territories and countries in the Caucasus. The main territories disputed were Aran, Georgia and Armenia, as well as much of Dagestan – generally referred to as Transcaucasia[1] – and considered part of the Safavid Iran prior to the Russo-Persian Wars. Over the course of the five Russo-Persian Wars, the governance of these regions transferred between the two empires. Between the Second and Third Russo-Persian Wars, there was an interbellum period in which a number of treaties were drawn up between the Russian and the Persian Empires, as well as between both parties and the Ottoman Empire. Ottoman interest in these territories further complicated the wars, with both sides forming alliances with the Ottoman Empire at different points throughout the wars. Following the Treaty of Turkmenchay, which concluded the Fifth Russo-Persian War, Persia ceded much of its Transcaucasian territory to the Russian Empire.

Russo-Persian Wars
Date1651–1653, 1722–1723, 1796, 1804–1813, 1826–1828
Location
Transcaucasia
Result Russian victory
Territorial
changes
Persia cedes Transcaucasian territory to Russia
Belligerents
Tsardom of Russia
 Russian Empire
Kingdom of Kartli (1722–1723)
Safavid Iran
Qajar Iran
Shamkhalate of Tarki
Commanders and leaders
Alexis of Russia
Peter the Great
Vakhtang VI
Catherine the Great
Alexander I
Nicholas I
Abbas II
Khosrow Khan
Shamkhal of Kumukh
Ruler (Utsmi) of the Kara Qaytaq
Tahmasp II
Agha Mohammad Khan
Fath Ali Shah Qajar
Abbas Mirza

Pre-war relations edit

Economic relations edit

The earliest records of official relations between Russia and Persia show that in 1521, Shah Ismail I of the Safavid dynasty sent a diplomatic envoy to Tsar Vasili III of Muscovy.[2] Commercial relations, however, were infrequent, and often involved Tatars acting as merchant intermediaries.[3]

 
Shah Tahmasp I of Persia

In 1514, the Ottoman Empire instated a commercial blockade against Persia.[3] In order to reduce this pressure from the Ottomans, Shah Abbas I attempted to establish alternate overland trade routes through Russia.[4] An Ottoman attempt to capture Shirvan caused Shah Tahmasp I to send a diplomatic envoy to Moscow in 1552.[3] In 1580, the Ottomans occupied Shirvan and parts of Khartli-Kakheti, including Tiflis.[3] Ottoman forces also threatened Astrakhan, which was key to an important trade route and a Russian commercial centre.[3] Shah Mohammed Khodabanda promised to cede Derbent and Baku to Russia following the liberation of these cities from the Ottoman Empire.[3]

Russia annexed the Kazan and Astrakhan khanates in 1552 and 1556 respectively,[5] to extend the Volga trade route to the Caucasus and the Caspian Sea.[3][6] Significant points along this trade route were Gilan and Derbent, as the origins of the maritime and overland trade routes between Russia and Persia respectively,[3] and the commercial centres of Astrakhan[7] and Shamakhi.[8] Shamakhi in particular was the site of much merchant trade from Russia: silks, leather, metal wares, furs, wax and tallow.[3] Persian merchants traded in Russia, additionally, reaching as far as Nizhny Novgorod and Kazan, which developed into trade centres.[3] In 1555, the Muscovy, or Russia Company was created for the sole purpose of overland trade with Persia.[9]

In 1562, the province of Shirvan sent an envoy to Russia to establish official trade relations.[3] Shamakhi subsequently did the same in 1653.[3] The first Persians to engage in commercial trade with Russia were Armenians from Julfa, in northern Persia.[3] Julfa was an important link in the Russo-Persian trade route originating in Gilan.[3] In 1604, Shah Abbas I resettled a significant population of Armenians from Julfa to his newly established capital, Isfahan, giving them commercial rights.[10] Shah Abbas extended credit, lowered taxes, and granted religious freedom to this Armenian population.[4]

Throughout the sixteenth century, Persian diplomatic relations were often accompanied by commercial envoys, sending silk and metal wares to Russia.[2] In return, Russia sent furs, falcons and wild animals.[2] In fact, velvet, taffeta and silk from Kashan, Isfahan and Yazd made up over seventy percent of the goods transported to Russia in the sixteenth century.[3]

In 1616, a diplomatic mission to Moscow assured promises of protection over Persian merchants trading in Russia.[3] Persian merchants in Russia often accompanied diplomatic envoys.[3] However, Russian merchants were regularly harassed in Gilan and Ardabil, and Yusuf Khan, the governor of Shamakhi, refused to grant protection to Russian merchants.[3]

 
Map showing the location of Astrakhan

Exports of silk remained high in the early seventeenth century. In 1623, over 2,000 kg of silk was shipped from Astrakhan to cities across the Russian empire.[3] Under Shah Safi I, however, the official exports decreased and were replaced by private merchant trade.[4][3] In 1634, no trade was recorded, and no wares transported. Two years later, trade was once more brought to a halt, by plague,[3] but trade resumed and grew significantly. In 1676, 41,000 kg of silk was exported from Persia to Russia.[11]

Political relations edit

 
Shah Abbas I of Persia

From 1464 to 1465, Tsar Ivan III sent an envoy to Shamakhi seeking an anti-Ottoman coalition.[3] This interest in an anti-Ottoman alliance continued into the sixteenth century, and during the reign of Shah Abbas I, Persia maintained a strong anti-Ottoman foreign policy.[2][12]

The breakdown of Muscovy in the Time of Troubles preceding the Romanov family’s accession to the Russian throne in 1613[6] weakened Russia such that Persia turned its foreign policy focus to Western Europe for an anti-Ottoman coalition.[2] Shah Abbas I kept contact with the Habsburgs of Austria in hope of an anti-Ottoman alliance in Hungary .[12]

In the late sixteenth century Russia began a campaign against the Shamkhalate of Tarki, which ruled northern Dagestan and was a nominal vassal of Persia.[3] Russian forces occupied Derbent, Dagestan and Baku, and built fortresses south of the Terek River.[3] The Persians, however, were cautious about challenging these territorial claims in fear of jeopardising an anti-Ottoman coalition.[3]

Between 1598 and 1618, the Russians sent many envoys to Persia in response to requests for military aid against the Ottoman Empire.[10]

In 1612, Shah Abbas I signed the Treaty of Nasuh Pasha with the Ottoman Empire to end the Ottoman-Persian wars.[2] This treaty stipulated Persian neutrality on Russian-Ottoman relations.[3] Trading in Shamakhi decreased sharply following the signature of this treaty, as the Safavid victory over Ottomans in 1618 negated the need for Russian assistance.[3]

In the 1630s there were renewed hostilities between Persia and the Ottoman Empire[3] until the signing of the Peace of Zuhab in 1639, which resulted in diplomatic caution from the Persians, out of a desire to not antagonise the Ottoman Empire.[4][3]

First Russo-Persian War (1651–1653) edit

In 1645, there was unrest between the Russian Cossacks and the Lezgins, who were considered Persian subjects.[2] These tensions were centred primarily along the Georgian-Dagestani border.[13] A Russian-supported candidate gained leadership of Dagestan over a Persian candidate.[2]

In 1647, Khosrow Khan, the governor of the Shirvan province, complained to the governor of Astrakhan[5] that Cossacks from Astrakhan and Tarki had committed a series of robberies.[2] He threatened to confiscate the goods of Russian merchants in Shamakhi, the capital of the Shirvan province, and to pursue military action against the Cossacks.[2] Russian authorities protested this action, and requested the shah punish Khosrow Khan.[2] The shah took no action and in 1649, Khosrow Khan sent another letter restating his warning.[2] The tension between the countries escalated when, in 1650, Cossacks robbed a caravan carrying wares from Shirvan and Dagestan, and several people were killed.[2]

The Russians expanded a garrison on the Sulak River, and constructed several more on the Terek River, including one garrison in support of the deposed ruler of Khartli-Kakheti, Teimuraz.[2] This expansion into Persian territory and support for Teimuraz angered Shah Abbas II,[2] as Teimuraz had been deposed by the shah.[10]

In 1653, the shah ordered the governors of Ardabil, Erivan, Karabakh, Astarabad and parts of Azerbaijan to send troops to the aid of Khosrow Khan.[2] Further troops were contributed by the governor of Derbent, the Shamkhalate of Tarki and the ruler of the Kara Qaytaq.[2] These troops drove the Russians from the fortress[2] and set fire to it.[10]

That same year, an envoy led by Prince Ivan Lobanov-Rostovsky of Russia travelled to Persia[7] to request that the governor of Shamakhi not meddle in Dagestani affairs, that compensation be given for the losses suffered, and that all Russian merchants be released.[2]

This conflict over Georgia and Dagestan affected trade relations between the countries. In 1651, 138 bales of Persian silk were in storage in Astrakhan due to a lack of demand.[3]

Treaty of 1717 edit

Artemy Petrovich Volynsky was sent as an envoy to Isfahan to conclude a commercial treaty[10][4] that would give Russia a monopoly on the Persian silk trade.[14][6] This mission also gathered intelligence about Persian resources, geography, infrastructure, military and other strengths.[6][14][10] He was further instructed to highlight Russia as Persia's ally and the Ottoman Empire as their enemy.[14]

The Persians became hostile to the envoy party when a Russian expedition led by Prince Bekovich-Cherkassky landed on the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea[14] at Khiva.[6]

Volynsky reported to the tsar that Persia was on the verge of collapse.[14] He furthermore recommended that the provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran and Astarabad be annexed by Russia due to their capacity for silk production.[6]

Second Russo-Persian War (1722–1723) edit

 
Map showing Safavid Persian territory prior to the Second Russo-Persian War (1722–1723)

In January 1721 the Pashtun Afghans, led by Mirwais Hotak[13] and subsequently Mahmud Hotak,[15] began a campaign against the Persians over the ruling of Qandahar.[13][16] The Afghans, with an army of 25,000 men, invaded Persia and attempted to seize Kerman.[15][17] They were unable to hold the city and were similarly unable to capture the nearby city of Yazd.[15] Mahmud subsequently moved to camp outside the city of Gulnabad, ten miles from the Persian capital, Isfahan.[15][17]

Daud Khan, the Sunni Muslim chieftain of the Lezgin tribe, had been detained in Derbent for inciting rebellion, but was released in August 1721[18] following the initial attack by the Afghans[14] in the hope that he would raise an army to support the shah.[16] Daud Khan and his Lezgin followers sacked the city of Shamakhi in August 1721,[19][16][18] killing thousands of Shia Muslims and killing several wealthy Russian merchants.[14] Artemy Volynsky, who was now the governor of Astrakhan, urged Tsar Peter I to send troops to intervene in the rebellion.[14] Vakhtang VI, ruler of the Persian vassal state and East Georgian kingdom of Khartli-Kakheti, contacted Peter to give his support for Russian advances into the Caucasian territories.[20][18][14] Daud Khan then sought the protection of the Ottoman sultan.[16][18]

Following the Afghan victory over the Persians at the Battle of Gulnabad on 8 March 1722, Mahmud Hotak and his army besieged Isfahan.[17][15] Mirza Tahmasp, the son of Shah Husayn, escaped Isfahan with 600 men[15] and fled to Qazvin.[13] From Qazvin, Tahmasp then was forced to flee to Resht, followed by Afghan forces. The governor of Resht contacted Tsar Peter requesting aid, as did Tahmasp, who sent an envoy, Ismail Beg, to Astrakhan.[16]

Tsar Peter and the Russian troops arrived in Astrakhan on 29 June 1722.[18][6][14] An envoy was sent to inform Shah Husayn that the Russian forces were there to aid in subduing the rebels, rather than to declare war.[14] Peter proposed to render aid in subduing the Afghans and the Lezgin rebellion, and to ensure that the Ottoman Empire did not take advantage of the situation and invade.[16] The envoy was also instructed to inform Shah Husayn that this aid would only be given provided Persia ceded certain provinces to Russia.[14][18] The envoy, however, did not pass on the message concerning the cessation of these provinces.[14]

Vakhtang VI supplied 30,000 men to the army, and the Armenians sent 10,000 more.[14] From Astrakhan, the troops then proceeded to attack Persian fortresses on the western coast of the Caspian Sea, and occupied the fortress at Derbent.[14][18][21] The Russians then seized Baku and Salyan in the Shirvan province, Lankaran in the Talesh province, and Anzali in the Gilan province, which were significant provinces in the silk production industry.[19][2]

The Ottoman sultan sent an emissary to Peter warning that further incursion on Persian territory would constitute grounds for declaring war on Russia.[16]

In September 1722, many Russian ships were lost in a storm, and an epidemic killed a significant portion of the horses in the Russian cavalry.[18][16][14] Russian troops withdrew to Astrakhan, with a few garrisons remaining in the Shamkhalate of Tarki, Baku and Derbent.[14][16][18][21] The Georgian and Armenian troops were left to subdue the rebels.[18][16][14]

On 23 October 1722, Shah Husayn surrendered Isfahan to the Afghans,[17] and abdicated in favour of Mahmud Hotak.[6][15][22] Peter offered to aid Tahmasp in gaining back his throne from Mahmud.[16]

On 3 November 1722, 14 ships sailed from Astrakhan to Anzali, a port near Resht.[6][16] Russian forces entered Resht[19][21] under the pretext of helping the city.[14] In 1723, the governor of Resht requested Russian troops leave as aid was not required.[18] The troops did not leave, however, and were besieged in their barracks.[14] On 28 March 1723, a company of Russian troops escaped the siege and the Persians besieging the barracks were attacked from both sides, with over 1,000 men killed.[14][21][18]

Ismail Beg, Tahmasp II’s envoy, arrived in St Petersburg on 30 July 1723 to inform Peter of Tahmasp's ascension to the throne, and to request aid against the rebels and the Afghans.[16]

Interbellum treaties edit

Treaty of St Petersburg edit

The Treaty of St Petersburg was signed between the Russian Empire and the Persian Empire on 23 September 1723 to conclude the Second Russo-Persian War.[18] Under the terms of the treaty, the tsar would accord the shah friendship, and aid in fighting against rebels.[14][18] In return, Persia would cede Derbent, Baku, and the provinces of Mazandaran, Gilan, Shirvan and Astarabad.[6][13][18][21] Ismail Beg, Tahmasp's ambassador in Russia, signed the treaty but the shah refused to ratify it when the text of the treaty was sent to him in April 1724.[6][14][18][21]

Treaty of Constantinople edit

The Treaty of Constantinople was signed between the Ottoman Empire and the Russian Empire on 24 June 1724, in order to mitigate the political crisis caused between the two empires following the signature of the Treaty of St Petersburg.[18] The Ottoman Empire was ceded Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia under the terms of the treaty,[23] and Russia was permitted to retain Mazandaran, Gilan and Astarabad.[18][21]

It was specified that should Persia refuse to acknowledge the treaty, both Russia and the Ottoman Empire would take action to enforce the treaty by installing a puppet ruler on the throne of Persia.[18][21]

Treaty of Hamedan edit

The Treaty of Hamedan was signed between the Ottoman Empire and the Afghan Hotaki dynasty in October 1727.[24] The Hotaks agreed to cede Zanjan, Sultaniyah, Abher, Teheran to the Ottomans in exchange for Ashraf Hotak being declared as Shah of Persia.[13][24]

Treaty of Resht edit

The Treaty of Resht, signed by the Russian Empire and Safavid Persia on 21 January 1732,[25] gave Persia a portion of territories ceded in 1723 in the Treaty of St Petersburg.[10] Russia ceded the Astarabad, Gilan[6] and Mazandaran provinces to Persia.[19][21] Under the terms of the treaty it was also specified that in the case that Ottomans relinquished Caucasian territories back to Russia, Russia would also cede Derbent and Baku.[19] The treaty also ensured free trade for Russian merchants in Persia, and that the Russian ambassador was permitted to reside in Persia.[19]

Treaty of Ganja edit

The Treaty of Ganja was signed in March 1735 between the Russian Empire and Persia.[25] The treaty gave Persia the remainder of territories ceded in 1723:[13] Derbent, Baku[6] and the surrounding Shirvan province, and Tarki.[10][21] Furthermore, it marked the Terek River as the boundary between Russia and Persia.[6]

Third Russo-Persian War (1796) edit

 
Agha Mohammed Khan of Persia

In 1781, a Russian commander, Count Voinovich, led a flotilla[20] intended to wrest the islands and port city of the Astarabad province from Agha Mohammed Khan and the Persians.[21][10] However, Agha Mohammed Khan arrested and deported all parties involved in the expedition.[21]

In 1783, Erekle II of Khartli-Kakheti agreed to become a vassal state of the Russian Empire[6][10] in return for Russian protection.[21] This was formalised in the Treaty of Georgievsk[21][26] on 24 July 1783.[27] Persia still considered Khartli-Kakheti to be its vassal state.[21] Following the signature of the Treaty of Georgievsk, the Vladikavkaz fortress was built on the Terek River.[6]

The governor of the Gilan province, Hedayatollah, sought Russian support against Agha Mohammed Khan, and Russia stipulated the vassalage of Anzali in return for this support.[10] Russia supported Morteza Qoli Khan, the brother and rival of Agha Mohammed Khan,[13] on the proviso that following his ascension to the throne he would cede Anzali, Gilan, Mazandaran and Astarabad to the Russians.[16]

Agha Mohammed Khan viewed the Treaty of Georgievsk as defiance on the part of Erekle II and Khartli-Kakheti and moved toward Tiflis in 1795[6][26] in an attempt to restore Persian dominion.[21] Agha Mohammed Khan raised an army of 60,000 men, intending also to retake Karabakh, Ganja, Shirvan and Khartli-Kakheti.[27] He divided his force into three, simultaneously attacking Shirvan, Erivan, and the fortress at Shusha.[13][27] At Shusha, the siege lasted from 8 July to 9 August 1795.[27] The governor of Shusha eventually surrendered, however denied the army entry to Shusha. Agha Mohammed Khan negotiated with the governor to gain access to the road to Tiflis through Shusha.[27] Agha Mohammed Khan subsequently moved from Shusha to occupy Ganja.[27] 40,000 men marched from Ganja to Tiflis on 10 September 1795 and took the city.[27]

By the end of 1795, Agha Mohammed Khan had captured Tiflis[13] and dominated northern Persia.[16] In the invasion, thousands of Georgians were massacred, and 15,000 citizens taken into captivity and sent as slaves to Persia.[21][27] Erekle II fled from Tiflis.[13]

Tsarina Catherine II of Russia began a campaign in 1796 to overthrow Agha Mohammed Khan in favour of Morteza Qoli Khan.[16][20][21] Russian forces, consisting of 20,000 men,[6] began to march from Kizlyar in April 1796 to Derbent, which was seized on 10 May 1796.[21] Russian troops occupied Talesh, Salyan, Derbent,[27] Baku, Shamakhi and Ganja by June 1796.[21] Following the death of Catherine II, Tsar Paul I recalled all troops from the Caucasus.[16][20][21]

Fourth Russo-Persian War (1804–1813) edit

 
The kingdom of Khartli-Kakheti in the 18th century

On 18 January 1801, it was agreed that Khartli-Kakheti would become a protectorate of Russia.[28] On 12 September 1801, Tsar Alexander formally announced the decision to annex Khartli-Kakheti[6][28] after Persia attempted to reassert suzerainty.[18][21][29] In 1804, following civil unrest, Fath Ali Shah had new silver and gold coins minted in Erivan, Ganja and Nukha to show proof of suzerainty over these provinces.[26]

From 1802 to 1804, Russian forces captured and subdued the Georgian kingdom of Imereti, an Ottoman vassal state, in addition to Mingrelia, Guria, and many of the khanates surrounding Georgia.[18][21] Ganja was occupied[6][13] and sacked, and 3,000 citizens were killed.[21] Persia considered the khanates surrounding Georgia to be its vassal states, and Fath Ali Shah took the Russian progression into these territories as justification for the declaration of war.[18][21]

On 23 May 1804, Fath Ali Shah demanded Russian troops be withdrawn from Persian territory in the Caucasus.[21] This request was refused, precipitating a declaration of war from Persia.[21] The Russian troops proceeded to march to the Erivan province and besieged the capital, Erivan[6][21] on 1 July.[30] The siege of Erivan, however, failed as the Russian forces ran out of provisions.[6] Subsequently, the Persians suffered defeats at Leninakan and Erivan, and they retreated to regroup.[21][18]

In 1805, the khanates of Shaki, Shirvan and Karabakh formally recognised Russian authority.[6][18][21] Russian forces also attacked Baku, Resht,[18][21] Quba and Talesh.[28] In 1806, Russian forces defeated a Persian attack in Karabakh,[13] and captured Derbent and Baku.[6]

Following these losses, the Persian troops were defeated in many significant locations in the ensuing years. In 1806, Russian forces captured Karakapet, and then Karababa in 1808.[18][21] They also occupied Ganja in 1809, and Akhalkalaki[31] in 1810.[18][21]

In 1810, the Persians, allied with the Ottomans, attacked Tiflis from Nakhichevan but failed to capture the city.[6] Their retreat was hindered by the Russian occupation of Megri on the Aras River.[6]

On 12 August 1812, 20,000 Persian men captured the fortress of Lankaran in the Talesh province and proceeded to the Aras River, attacking Russian troops positioned there in October.[6][10] The Russians defeated the Persians in October 1812 at Aslanduz, in the Ardabil province,[10][30] when the Persian artillery was destroyed and Persian forces were forced to retreat to Tauris.[6] The Persians were later defeated also at Lankaran on 13 January 1813.[18][21]

Treaty of Gulistan edit

 
Map of Persia in 1814, following the Treaty of Gulistan

The Treaty of Gulistan was signed on 24 October 1813 between the Russian Empire and Persia as a conclusion to the Fourth Russo-Persian War.[24] Persia ceded all territories north of the Aras River,[32] including Dagestan, Mingrelia, Abkhazia, Derbent, Baku,[33]: 274  Shaki, Quba, Talesh, Shirvan, Karabakh and Ganja.[20] The treaty additionally permitted Russia exclusive military rights to the Caspian Sea[10] and trade rights within Persia.[21][30]

Fifth Russo-Persian War (1826–1828) edit

The death of Tsar Alexander in 1825 led to the false belief in Persia that civil war had broken out in Russia and that the Caucasian kingdoms and tribes had rebelled.[10] In May 1826, Russia occupied Mirak, in the Erivan province of Persia. This action stood in opposition to the Treaty of Gulistan.[18][21]

In July 1826, Abbas Mirza ordered an attack on Russian territories in the Caucasus, besieging Shusha and Ganja (renamed Elisavetpol by Russia[20]), and proceeding toward Tiflis. A second force also attacked Gyumri.[6] Persia invaded the Karabakh and Talesh[20] provinces, which had been ceded to Russia in the Treaty of Gulistan.[18][21] Citizens in these provinces surrendered the cities of Lankaran, Quba and Baku to Persia.[18][21] A Russian attack subsequently defeated the Persians at the Shamkhor River and Ganja in September 1826[18][21] and they retreated to Tauris.[6]

In October 1826, Russian forces besieged Erivan.[18][21][6] Following this, they successively seized Nakhichevan, Abbasabad, Meren,[6] Urmiya, and Ardabil in 1827.[6][18][21] The Russians defeated the Persians in 1827 when they captured Erivan and Tauris and the Persians were forced to sue for peace.[10]

Treaty of Turkmenchay edit

 
First page of the Treaty of Turkmenchay

The Treaty of Turkmenchay was signed on 21 February 1828 between the Russian Empire and Persia.[6] Under the treaty, Persia ceded the Erivan,[34] Talesh and Nakhichevan[6][20] khanates. The Aras River was established as the new border between the countries.[18] Persia was also required to pay 20 million rubles in silver in indemnification.[6] The treaty continued to allow Russia an exclusive right to a naval presence on the Caspian Sea and exempted Russian subjects from Persian jurisdiction.[18][21]

Post-war relations edit

 
Persian territorial losses following the Treaty of Gulistan (1814) and the Treaty of Turkmenchay (1828)

Following the signature of the Treaty of Turkmenchay, Persia experienced considerable instability. Alexander Sergeyevich Griboedov, a Russian envoy, was murdered in Tehran in 1829.[10] In 1830, Fath Ali Shah sent a diplomatic mission to Russia to apologise formally.[10]

In 1831, there was unrest in Yazd and Kerman, and in 1832, several chieftains rebelled in Quchan and Turbat-i Haidari in 1832.[26] Following the death of Fath Ali Shah in 1834, there were increased concerns over the possibility of civil war.[27] Rival claimants to the throne stirred up further discontent in the early reign of Mohammed Shah.[26] In 1839 and 1840, Isfahan experienced serious unrest after high-ranking officials questioned and inhibited the central government's authority.[26]

Over the course of the 19th century, Qajar Persia largely fell into the sphere of influence of Russia, who jostled control over Iran and Afghanistan with Britain during the Great Game. The Romanovs shifted to a policy of 'informal support' for the weakened Qajar dynasty — continuing to place pressure with advances in the largely nomadic Turkestan, a crucial frontier territory of the Qajars — this Russian domination of Persia continued for nearly a century.[35][36] The Persian monarchy became more of a symbolic concept in which Russian diplomats were themselves powerbrokers in Iran and the monarchy was dependent on Russian and British loans for funds.[35] The Russian Empire backed Persian sieges of Herat in 1837–1838 and 1856, as part of the Great Game. For Persia, the expansion into Afghanistan was an attempt to compensate for the lost territories to Russia in the Caucasus.

Russia became concerned with silk production in the Caucasus.[28] Merchants in Elisavetpol (formerly Ganja) expressed interest in assuming control of the Caucasian silk industry.[28] Russian authorities also attempted to reallocate the lands of Azerbaijani nobles among Russian landlords, an action which proved unsuccessful.[28] T.B. Armstrong, a traveller in the region, noted that the new Russian domination of the Caucasus was resented in Zanjan and parts of Azerbaijan.[10]

By 1860, fifty thousand Persians had settled in the Caucasian region.[37] Trade continued between Russia and Persia, consisting of sugar and petroleum exported to Persia, and cotton, rice, wool, dried fruit exported to Russia.[37] In 1897, exports into Russia totalled 18,649,669 rubles, and imports into Persia were 16,036,032 rubles.[37]

In 1879, the establishment of the Cossack Brigade by Russian officers gave the Russian Empire influence over the modernization of the Qajar army. This influence was especially pronounced because the Persian monarchy's legitimacy was predicated on an image of military prowess.[35][38] By the 1890s, Russian tutors, doctors and officers were prominent at the Shah's court, influencing policy personally.[35][39] In 1907 the Russian Empire, alongside the British Empire, partitioned Iran into spheres of influence with the Anglo-Russian Convention. Russian forces would also enter Persia during the Russian involvement in the Persian Constitutional Revolution.

List of conflicts edit

No: Name Result
1 First Russo-Persian War Persian victory. Safavids destroy the Russian fortress on the Persian side of the Terek River and expel its garrison.[2][3][10]
2 Second Russo-Persian War Russian victory. Russia gains possession of Derbent, Baku, Shirvan and the modern provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran and Astarabad, but returns all territories to Persia in the Treaties of Resht and Ganja.[6][21]
3 Third Russo-Persian War Status quo ante bellum.[40]
4 Fourth Russo-Persian War Russian victory. Treaty of Gulistan[41] – Persia cedes what is now Georgia, Dagestan, parts of northern Armenia and most of what now comprises modern Azerbaijan to Russia.[42][43]
5 Fifth Russo-Persian War Russian victory. Treaty of Turkmenchay[44] – Persia cedes all of what is now Armenia, Nakhichevan and Azerbaijan to Russia.[45]
6 Russian intervention (1909) Russian victory[46][47]
  • occupation of Tabriz
  • Russia fulfilled its peacemaking goal as a great power and defended the foreign embassies in Tabriz by defeating the army of constitutionalists[48]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Multiple Authors. "Caucasus and Iran". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Matthee, Rudi (2013). "Rudeness and Revilement: Russian-Iranian Relations in the Mid-Seventeenth Century". Iranian Studies. 46 (3): 333–357. doi:10.1080/00210862.2012.758500. S2CID 145596080.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Matthee, Rudi (1994). "Anti-Ottoman Politics and Transit Rights: The Seventeenth-Century Trade in Silk between Safavid Iran and Muscovy". Cahiers du Monde russe. 35 (4): 739–761. doi:10.3406/cmr.1994.2405. JSTOR 20170927.
  4. ^ a b c d e Ferrier, Ronald (1973). "The Armenians and the East India Company in Persia in the Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries". The Economic History Review. 26 (1): 38–62. doi:10.2307/2594758. JSTOR 2594758.
  5. ^ a b Khodarkovsky, Michael (1999). "Of Christianity, Enlightenment, and Colonialism: Russia in the North Caucasus, 1550–1800". The Journal of Modern History. 71 (2): 394–430. doi:10.1086/235251. JSTOR 10.1086/235251. S2CID 155059616.
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russo, persian, wars, russo, iranian, wars, persian, جنگ, های, ایران, روسیه, romanized, janghâye, irân, russī, were, series, conflicts, between, 1651, 1828, concerning, persia, russian, empire, russia, persia, fought, these, wars, over, disputed, governance, t. The Russo Persian Wars or Russo Iranian Wars Persian جنگ های ایران و روسیه romanized Janghaye Iran va Russi ye were a series of conflicts between 1651 and 1828 concerning Persia and the Russian Empire Russia and Persia fought these wars over disputed governance of territories and countries in the Caucasus The main territories disputed were Aran Georgia and Armenia as well as much of Dagestan generally referred to as Transcaucasia 1 and considered part of the Safavid Iran prior to the Russo Persian Wars Over the course of the five Russo Persian Wars the governance of these regions transferred between the two empires Between the Second and Third Russo Persian Wars there was an interbellum period in which a number of treaties were drawn up between the Russian and the Persian Empires as well as between both parties and the Ottoman Empire Ottoman interest in these territories further complicated the wars with both sides forming alliances with the Ottoman Empire at different points throughout the wars Following the Treaty of Turkmenchay which concluded the Fifth Russo Persian War Persia ceded much of its Transcaucasian territory to the Russian Empire Russo Persian WarsDate1651 1653 1722 1723 1796 1804 1813 1826 1828LocationTranscaucasiaResultRussian victoryTerritorialchangesPersia cedes Transcaucasian territory to RussiaBelligerentsTsardom of Russia Russian Empire Kingdom of Kartli 1722 1723 Safavid Iran Qajar Iran Shamkhalate of TarkiCommanders and leadersAlexis of Russia Peter the Great Vakhtang VI Catherine the Great Alexander I Nicholas IAbbas II Khosrow Khan Shamkhal of Kumukh Ruler Utsmi of the Kara Qaytaq Tahmasp II Agha Mohammad Khan Fath Ali Shah Qajar Abbas Mirza Contents 1 Pre war relations 1 1 Economic relations 1 2 Political relations 2 First Russo Persian War 1651 1653 2 1 Treaty of 1717 3 Second Russo Persian War 1722 1723 4 Interbellum treaties 4 1 Treaty of St Petersburg 4 2 Treaty of Constantinople 4 3 Treaty of Hamedan 4 4 Treaty of Resht 4 5 Treaty of Ganja 5 Third Russo Persian War 1796 6 Fourth Russo Persian War 1804 1813 6 1 Treaty of Gulistan 7 Fifth Russo Persian War 1826 1828 7 1 Treaty of Turkmenchay 8 Post war relations 9 List of conflicts 10 See also 11 ReferencesPre war relations editEconomic relations edit The earliest records of official relations between Russia and Persia show that in 1521 Shah Ismail I of the Safavid dynasty sent a diplomatic envoy to Tsar Vasili III of Muscovy 2 Commercial relations however were infrequent and often involved Tatars acting as merchant intermediaries 3 nbsp Shah Tahmasp I of Persia In 1514 the Ottoman Empire instated a commercial blockade against Persia 3 In order to reduce this pressure from the Ottomans Shah Abbas I attempted to establish alternate overland trade routes through Russia 4 An Ottoman attempt to capture Shirvan caused Shah Tahmasp I to send a diplomatic envoy to Moscow in 1552 3 In 1580 the Ottomans occupied Shirvan and parts of Khartli Kakheti including Tiflis 3 Ottoman forces also threatened Astrakhan which was key to an important trade route and a Russian commercial centre 3 Shah Mohammed Khodabanda promised to cede Derbent and Baku to Russia following the liberation of these cities from the Ottoman Empire 3 Russia annexed the Kazan and Astrakhan khanates in 1552 and 1556 respectively 5 to extend the Volga trade route to the Caucasus and the Caspian Sea 3 6 Significant points along this trade route were Gilan and Derbent as the origins of the maritime and overland trade routes between Russia and Persia respectively 3 and the commercial centres of Astrakhan 7 and Shamakhi 8 Shamakhi in particular was the site of much merchant trade from Russia silks leather metal wares furs wax and tallow 3 Persian merchants traded in Russia additionally reaching as far as Nizhny Novgorod and Kazan which developed into trade centres 3 In 1555 the Muscovy or Russia Company was created for the sole purpose of overland trade with Persia 9 In 1562 the province of Shirvan sent an envoy to Russia to establish official trade relations 3 Shamakhi subsequently did the same in 1653 3 The first Persians to engage in commercial trade with Russia were Armenians from Julfa in northern Persia 3 Julfa was an important link in the Russo Persian trade route originating in Gilan 3 In 1604 Shah Abbas I resettled a significant population of Armenians from Julfa to his newly established capital Isfahan giving them commercial rights 10 Shah Abbas extended credit lowered taxes and granted religious freedom to this Armenian population 4 Throughout the sixteenth century Persian diplomatic relations were often accompanied by commercial envoys sending silk and metal wares to Russia 2 In return Russia sent furs falcons and wild animals 2 In fact velvet taffeta and silk from Kashan Isfahan and Yazd made up over seventy percent of the goods transported to Russia in the sixteenth century 3 In 1616 a diplomatic mission to Moscow assured promises of protection over Persian merchants trading in Russia 3 Persian merchants in Russia often accompanied diplomatic envoys 3 However Russian merchants were regularly harassed in Gilan and Ardabil and Yusuf Khan the governor of Shamakhi refused to grant protection to Russian merchants 3 nbsp Map showing the location of Astrakhan Exports of silk remained high in the early seventeenth century In 1623 over 2 000 kg of silk was shipped from Astrakhan to cities across the Russian empire 3 Under Shah Safi I however the official exports decreased and were replaced by private merchant trade 4 3 In 1634 no trade was recorded and no wares transported Two years later trade was once more brought to a halt by plague 3 but trade resumed and grew significantly In 1676 41 000 kg of silk was exported from Persia to Russia 11 Political relations edit nbsp Shah Abbas I of Persia From 1464 to 1465 Tsar Ivan III sent an envoy to Shamakhi seeking an anti Ottoman coalition 3 This interest in an anti Ottoman alliance continued into the sixteenth century and during the reign of Shah Abbas I Persia maintained a strong anti Ottoman foreign policy 2 12 The breakdown of Muscovy in the Time of Troubles preceding the Romanov family s accession to the Russian throne in 1613 6 weakened Russia such that Persia turned its foreign policy focus to Western Europe for an anti Ottoman coalition 2 Shah Abbas I kept contact with the Habsburgs of Austria in hope of an anti Ottoman alliance in Hungary 12 In the late sixteenth century Russia began a campaign against the Shamkhalate of Tarki which ruled northern Dagestan and was a nominal vassal of Persia 3 Russian forces occupied Derbent Dagestan and Baku and built fortresses south of the Terek River 3 The Persians however were cautious about challenging these territorial claims in fear of jeopardising an anti Ottoman coalition 3 Between 1598 and 1618 the Russians sent many envoys to Persia in response to requests for military aid against the Ottoman Empire 10 In 1612 Shah Abbas I signed the Treaty of Nasuh Pasha with the Ottoman Empire to end the Ottoman Persian wars 2 This treaty stipulated Persian neutrality on Russian Ottoman relations 3 Trading in Shamakhi decreased sharply following the signature of this treaty as the Safavid victory over Ottomans in 1618 negated the need for Russian assistance 3 In the 1630s there were renewed hostilities between Persia and the Ottoman Empire 3 until the signing of the Peace of Zuhab in 1639 which resulted in diplomatic caution from the Persians out of a desire to not antagonise the Ottoman Empire 4 3 First Russo Persian War 1651 1653 editSee also Russo Persian War 1651 1653 In 1645 there was unrest between the Russian Cossacks and the Lezgins who were considered Persian subjects 2 These tensions were centred primarily along the Georgian Dagestani border 13 A Russian supported candidate gained leadership of Dagestan over a Persian candidate 2 In 1647 Khosrow Khan the governor of the Shirvan province complained to the governor of Astrakhan 5 that Cossacks from Astrakhan and Tarki had committed a series of robberies 2 He threatened to confiscate the goods of Russian merchants in Shamakhi the capital of the Shirvan province and to pursue military action against the Cossacks 2 Russian authorities protested this action and requested the shah punish Khosrow Khan 2 The shah took no action and in 1649 Khosrow Khan sent another letter restating his warning 2 The tension between the countries escalated when in 1650 Cossacks robbed a caravan carrying wares from Shirvan and Dagestan and several people were killed 2 The Russians expanded a garrison on the Sulak River and constructed several more on the Terek River including one garrison in support of the deposed ruler of Khartli Kakheti Teimuraz 2 This expansion into Persian territory and support for Teimuraz angered Shah Abbas II 2 as Teimuraz had been deposed by the shah 10 In 1653 the shah ordered the governors of Ardabil Erivan Karabakh Astarabad and parts of Azerbaijan to send troops to the aid of Khosrow Khan 2 Further troops were contributed by the governor of Derbent the Shamkhalate of Tarki and the ruler of the Kara Qaytaq 2 These troops drove the Russians from the fortress 2 and set fire to it 10 That same year an envoy led by Prince Ivan Lobanov Rostovsky of Russia travelled to Persia 7 to request that the governor of Shamakhi not meddle in Dagestani affairs that compensation be given for the losses suffered and that all Russian merchants be released 2 This conflict over Georgia and Dagestan affected trade relations between the countries In 1651 138 bales of Persian silk were in storage in Astrakhan due to a lack of demand 3 Treaty of 1717 edit See also Russo Iranian treaty of 1717 Artemy Petrovich Volynsky was sent as an envoy to Isfahan to conclude a commercial treaty 10 4 that would give Russia a monopoly on the Persian silk trade 14 6 This mission also gathered intelligence about Persian resources geography infrastructure military and other strengths 6 14 10 He was further instructed to highlight Russia as Persia s ally and the Ottoman Empire as their enemy 14 The Persians became hostile to the envoy party when a Russian expedition led by Prince Bekovich Cherkassky landed on the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea 14 at Khiva 6 Volynsky reported to the tsar that Persia was on the verge of collapse 14 He furthermore recommended that the provinces of Gilan Mazandaran and Astarabad be annexed by Russia due to their capacity for silk production 6 Second Russo Persian War 1722 1723 editSee also Russo Persian War 1722 1723 nbsp Map showing Safavid Persian territory prior to the Second Russo Persian War 1722 1723 In January 1721 the Pashtun Afghans led by Mirwais Hotak 13 and subsequently Mahmud Hotak 15 began a campaign against the Persians over the ruling of Qandahar 13 16 The Afghans with an army of 25 000 men invaded Persia and attempted to seize Kerman 15 17 They were unable to hold the city and were similarly unable to capture the nearby city of Yazd 15 Mahmud subsequently moved to camp outside the city of Gulnabad ten miles from the Persian capital Isfahan 15 17 Daud Khan the Sunni Muslim chieftain of the Lezgin tribe had been detained in Derbent for inciting rebellion but was released in August 1721 18 following the initial attack by the Afghans 14 in the hope that he would raise an army to support the shah 16 Daud Khan and his Lezgin followers sacked the city of Shamakhi in August 1721 19 16 18 killing thousands of Shia Muslims and killing several wealthy Russian merchants 14 Artemy Volynsky who was now the governor of Astrakhan urged Tsar Peter I to send troops to intervene in the rebellion 14 Vakhtang VI ruler of the Persian vassal state and East Georgian kingdom of Khartli Kakheti contacted Peter to give his support for Russian advances into the Caucasian territories 20 18 14 Daud Khan then sought the protection of the Ottoman sultan 16 18 Following the Afghan victory over the Persians at the Battle of Gulnabad on 8 March 1722 Mahmud Hotak and his army besieged Isfahan 17 15 Mirza Tahmasp the son of Shah Husayn escaped Isfahan with 600 men 15 and fled to Qazvin 13 From Qazvin Tahmasp then was forced to flee to Resht followed by Afghan forces The governor of Resht contacted Tsar Peter requesting aid as did Tahmasp who sent an envoy Ismail Beg to Astrakhan 16 Tsar Peter and the Russian troops arrived in Astrakhan on 29 June 1722 18 6 14 An envoy was sent to inform Shah Husayn that the Russian forces were there to aid in subduing the rebels rather than to declare war 14 Peter proposed to render aid in subduing the Afghans and the Lezgin rebellion and to ensure that the Ottoman Empire did not take advantage of the situation and invade 16 The envoy was also instructed to inform Shah Husayn that this aid would only be given provided Persia ceded certain provinces to Russia 14 18 The envoy however did not pass on the message concerning the cessation of these provinces 14 Vakhtang VI supplied 30 000 men to the army and the Armenians sent 10 000 more 14 From Astrakhan the troops then proceeded to attack Persian fortresses on the western coast of the Caspian Sea and occupied the fortress at Derbent 14 18 21 The Russians then seized Baku and Salyan in the Shirvan province Lankaran in the Talesh province and Anzali in the Gilan province which were significant provinces in the silk production industry 19 2 The Ottoman sultan sent an emissary to Peter warning that further incursion on Persian territory would constitute grounds for declaring war on Russia 16 In September 1722 many Russian ships were lost in a storm and an epidemic killed a significant portion of the horses in the Russian cavalry 18 16 14 Russian troops withdrew to Astrakhan with a few garrisons remaining in the Shamkhalate of Tarki Baku and Derbent 14 16 18 21 The Georgian and Armenian troops were left to subdue the rebels 18 16 14 On 23 October 1722 Shah Husayn surrendered Isfahan to the Afghans 17 and abdicated in favour of Mahmud Hotak 6 15 22 Peter offered to aid Tahmasp in gaining back his throne from Mahmud 16 On 3 November 1722 14 ships sailed from Astrakhan to Anzali a port near Resht 6 16 Russian forces entered Resht 19 21 under the pretext of helping the city 14 In 1723 the governor of Resht requested Russian troops leave as aid was not required 18 The troops did not leave however and were besieged in their barracks 14 On 28 March 1723 a company of Russian troops escaped the siege and the Persians besieging the barracks were attacked from both sides with over 1 000 men killed 14 21 18 Ismail Beg Tahmasp II s envoy arrived in St Petersburg on 30 July 1723 to inform Peter of Tahmasp s ascension to the throne and to request aid against the rebels and the Afghans 16 Interbellum treaties editTreaty of St Petersburg edit See also Treaty of Saint Petersburg 1723 The Treaty of St Petersburg was signed between the Russian Empire and the Persian Empire on 23 September 1723 to conclude the Second Russo Persian War 18 Under the terms of the treaty the tsar would accord the shah friendship and aid in fighting against rebels 14 18 In return Persia would cede Derbent Baku and the provinces of Mazandaran Gilan Shirvan and Astarabad 6 13 18 21 Ismail Beg Tahmasp s ambassador in Russia signed the treaty but the shah refused to ratify it when the text of the treaty was sent to him in April 1724 6 14 18 21 Treaty of Constantinople edit See also Treaty of Constantinople 1724 The Treaty of Constantinople was signed between the Ottoman Empire and the Russian Empire on 24 June 1724 in order to mitigate the political crisis caused between the two empires following the signature of the Treaty of St Petersburg 18 The Ottoman Empire was ceded Azerbaijan Armenia and Georgia under the terms of the treaty 23 and Russia was permitted to retain Mazandaran Gilan and Astarabad 18 21 It was specified that should Persia refuse to acknowledge the treaty both Russia and the Ottoman Empire would take action to enforce the treaty by installing a puppet ruler on the throne of Persia 18 21 Treaty of Hamedan edit See also Treaty of Hamedan The Treaty of Hamedan was signed between the Ottoman Empire and the Afghan Hotaki dynasty in October 1727 24 The Hotaks agreed to cede Zanjan Sultaniyah Abher Teheran to the Ottomans in exchange for Ashraf Hotak being declared as Shah of Persia 13 24 Treaty of Resht edit See also Treaty of Resht The Treaty of Resht signed by the Russian Empire and Safavid Persia on 21 January 1732 25 gave Persia a portion of territories ceded in 1723 in the Treaty of St Petersburg 10 Russia ceded the Astarabad Gilan 6 and Mazandaran provinces to Persia 19 21 Under the terms of the treaty it was also specified that in the case that Ottomans relinquished Caucasian territories back to Russia Russia would also cede Derbent and Baku 19 The treaty also ensured free trade for Russian merchants in Persia and that the Russian ambassador was permitted to reside in Persia 19 Treaty of Ganja edit See also Treaty of Ganja The Treaty of Ganja was signed in March 1735 between the Russian Empire and Persia 25 The treaty gave Persia the remainder of territories ceded in 1723 13 Derbent Baku 6 and the surrounding Shirvan province and Tarki 10 21 Furthermore it marked the Terek River as the boundary between Russia and Persia 6 Third Russo Persian War 1796 editSee also Persian expedition of 1796 nbsp Agha Mohammed Khan of Persia In 1781 a Russian commander Count Voinovich led a flotilla 20 intended to wrest the islands and port city of the Astarabad province from Agha Mohammed Khan and the Persians 21 10 However Agha Mohammed Khan arrested and deported all parties involved in the expedition 21 In 1783 Erekle II of Khartli Kakheti agreed to become a vassal state of the Russian Empire 6 10 in return for Russian protection 21 This was formalised in the Treaty of Georgievsk 21 26 on 24 July 1783 27 Persia still considered Khartli Kakheti to be its vassal state 21 Following the signature of the Treaty of Georgievsk the Vladikavkaz fortress was built on the Terek River 6 The governor of the Gilan province Hedayatollah sought Russian support against Agha Mohammed Khan and Russia stipulated the vassalage of Anzali in return for this support 10 Russia supported Morteza Qoli Khan the brother and rival of Agha Mohammed Khan 13 on the proviso that following his ascension to the throne he would cede Anzali Gilan Mazandaran and Astarabad to the Russians 16 Agha Mohammed Khan viewed the Treaty of Georgievsk as defiance on the part of Erekle II and Khartli Kakheti and moved toward Tiflis in 1795 6 26 in an attempt to restore Persian dominion 21 Agha Mohammed Khan raised an army of 60 000 men intending also to retake Karabakh Ganja Shirvan and Khartli Kakheti 27 He divided his force into three simultaneously attacking Shirvan Erivan and the fortress at Shusha 13 27 At Shusha the siege lasted from 8 July to 9 August 1795 27 The governor of Shusha eventually surrendered however denied the army entry to Shusha Agha Mohammed Khan negotiated with the governor to gain access to the road to Tiflis through Shusha 27 Agha Mohammed Khan subsequently moved from Shusha to occupy Ganja 27 40 000 men marched from Ganja to Tiflis on 10 September 1795 and took the city 27 By the end of 1795 Agha Mohammed Khan had captured Tiflis 13 and dominated northern Persia 16 In the invasion thousands of Georgians were massacred and 15 000 citizens taken into captivity and sent as slaves to Persia 21 27 Erekle II fled from Tiflis 13 Tsarina Catherine II of Russia began a campaign in 1796 to overthrow Agha Mohammed Khan in favour of Morteza Qoli Khan 16 20 21 Russian forces consisting of 20 000 men 6 began to march from Kizlyar in April 1796 to Derbent which was seized on 10 May 1796 21 Russian troops occupied Talesh Salyan Derbent 27 Baku Shamakhi and Ganja by June 1796 21 Following the death of Catherine II Tsar Paul I recalled all troops from the Caucasus 16 20 21 Fourth Russo Persian War 1804 1813 editSee also Russo Persian War 1804 1813 nbsp The kingdom of Khartli Kakheti in the 18th century On 18 January 1801 it was agreed that Khartli Kakheti would become a protectorate of Russia 28 On 12 September 1801 Tsar Alexander formally announced the decision to annex Khartli Kakheti 6 28 after Persia attempted to reassert suzerainty 18 21 29 In 1804 following civil unrest Fath Ali Shah had new silver and gold coins minted in Erivan Ganja and Nukha to show proof of suzerainty over these provinces 26 From 1802 to 1804 Russian forces captured and subdued the Georgian kingdom of Imereti an Ottoman vassal state in addition to Mingrelia Guria and many of the khanates surrounding Georgia 18 21 Ganja was occupied 6 13 and sacked and 3 000 citizens were killed 21 Persia considered the khanates surrounding Georgia to be its vassal states and Fath Ali Shah took the Russian progression into these territories as justification for the declaration of war 18 21 On 23 May 1804 Fath Ali Shah demanded Russian troops be withdrawn from Persian territory in the Caucasus 21 This request was refused precipitating a declaration of war from Persia 21 The Russian troops proceeded to march to the Erivan province and besieged the capital Erivan 6 21 on 1 July 30 The siege of Erivan however failed as the Russian forces ran out of provisions 6 Subsequently the Persians suffered defeats at Leninakan and Erivan and they retreated to regroup 21 18 In 1805 the khanates of Shaki Shirvan and Karabakh formally recognised Russian authority 6 18 21 Russian forces also attacked Baku Resht 18 21 Quba and Talesh 28 In 1806 Russian forces defeated a Persian attack in Karabakh 13 and captured Derbent and Baku 6 Following these losses the Persian troops were defeated in many significant locations in the ensuing years In 1806 Russian forces captured Karakapet and then Karababa in 1808 18 21 They also occupied Ganja in 1809 and Akhalkalaki 31 in 1810 18 21 In 1810 the Persians allied with the Ottomans attacked Tiflis from Nakhichevan but failed to capture the city 6 Their retreat was hindered by the Russian occupation of Megri on the Aras River 6 On 12 August 1812 20 000 Persian men captured the fortress of Lankaran in the Talesh province and proceeded to the Aras River attacking Russian troops positioned there in October 6 10 The Russians defeated the Persians in October 1812 at Aslanduz in the Ardabil province 10 30 when the Persian artillery was destroyed and Persian forces were forced to retreat to Tauris 6 The Persians were later defeated also at Lankaran on 13 January 1813 18 21 Treaty of Gulistan edit See also Treaty of Gulistan nbsp Map of Persia in 1814 following the Treaty of Gulistan The Treaty of Gulistan was signed on 24 October 1813 between the Russian Empire and Persia as a conclusion to the Fourth Russo Persian War 24 Persia ceded all territories north of the Aras River 32 including Dagestan Mingrelia Abkhazia Derbent Baku 33 274 Shaki Quba Talesh Shirvan Karabakh and Ganja 20 The treaty additionally permitted Russia exclusive military rights to the Caspian Sea 10 and trade rights within Persia 21 30 Fifth Russo Persian War 1826 1828 editSee also Russo Persian War 1826 1828 The death of Tsar Alexander in 1825 led to the false belief in Persia that civil war had broken out in Russia and that the Caucasian kingdoms and tribes had rebelled 10 In May 1826 Russia occupied Mirak in the Erivan province of Persia This action stood in opposition to the Treaty of Gulistan 18 21 In July 1826 Abbas Mirza ordered an attack on Russian territories in the Caucasus besieging Shusha and Ganja renamed Elisavetpol by Russia 20 and proceeding toward Tiflis A second force also attacked Gyumri 6 Persia invaded the Karabakh and Talesh 20 provinces which had been ceded to Russia in the Treaty of Gulistan 18 21 Citizens in these provinces surrendered the cities of Lankaran Quba and Baku to Persia 18 21 A Russian attack subsequently defeated the Persians at the Shamkhor River and Ganja in September 1826 18 21 and they retreated to Tauris 6 In October 1826 Russian forces besieged Erivan 18 21 6 Following this they successively seized Nakhichevan Abbasabad Meren 6 Urmiya and Ardabil in 1827 6 18 21 The Russians defeated the Persians in 1827 when they captured Erivan and Tauris and the Persians were forced to sue for peace 10 Treaty of Turkmenchay edit See also Treaty of Turkmenchay nbsp First page of the Treaty of Turkmenchay The Treaty of Turkmenchay was signed on 21 February 1828 between the Russian Empire and Persia 6 Under the treaty Persia ceded the Erivan 34 Talesh and Nakhichevan 6 20 khanates The Aras River was established as the new border between the countries 18 Persia was also required to pay 20 million rubles in silver in indemnification 6 The treaty continued to allow Russia an exclusive right to a naval presence on the Caspian Sea and exempted Russian subjects from Persian jurisdiction 18 21 Post war relations edit nbsp Persian territorial losses following the Treaty of Gulistan 1814 and the Treaty of Turkmenchay 1828 Following the signature of the Treaty of Turkmenchay Persia experienced considerable instability Alexander Sergeyevich Griboedov a Russian envoy was murdered in Tehran in 1829 10 In 1830 Fath Ali Shah sent a diplomatic mission to Russia to apologise formally 10 In 1831 there was unrest in Yazd and Kerman and in 1832 several chieftains rebelled in Quchan and Turbat i Haidari in 1832 26 Following the death of Fath Ali Shah in 1834 there were increased concerns over the possibility of civil war 27 Rival claimants to the throne stirred up further discontent in the early reign of Mohammed Shah 26 In 1839 and 1840 Isfahan experienced serious unrest after high ranking officials questioned and inhibited the central government s authority 26 Over the course of the 19th century Qajar Persia largely fell into the sphere of influence of Russia who jostled control over Iran and Afghanistan with Britain during the Great Game The Romanovs shifted to a policy of informal support for the weakened Qajar dynasty continuing to place pressure with advances in the largely nomadic Turkestan a crucial frontier territory of the Qajars this Russian domination of Persia continued for nearly a century 35 36 The Persian monarchy became more of a symbolic concept in which Russian diplomats were themselves powerbrokers in Iran and the monarchy was dependent on Russian and British loans for funds 35 The Russian Empire backed Persian sieges of Herat in 1837 1838 and 1856 as part of the Great Game For Persia the expansion into Afghanistan was an attempt to compensate for the lost territories to Russia in the Caucasus Russia became concerned with silk production in the Caucasus 28 Merchants in Elisavetpol formerly Ganja expressed interest in assuming control of the Caucasian silk industry 28 Russian authorities also attempted to reallocate the lands of Azerbaijani nobles among Russian landlords an action which proved unsuccessful 28 T B Armstrong a traveller in the region noted that the new Russian domination of the Caucasus was resented in Zanjan and parts of Azerbaijan 10 By 1860 fifty thousand Persians had settled in the Caucasian region 37 Trade continued between Russia and Persia consisting of sugar and petroleum exported to Persia and cotton rice wool dried fruit exported to Russia 37 In 1897 exports into Russia totalled 18 649 669 rubles and imports into Persia were 16 036 032 rubles 37 In 1879 the establishment of the Cossack Brigade by Russian officers gave the Russian Empire influence over the modernization of the Qajar army This influence was especially pronounced because the Persian monarchy s legitimacy was predicated on an image of military prowess 35 38 By the 1890s Russian tutors doctors and officers were prominent at the Shah s court influencing policy personally 35 39 In 1907 the Russian Empire alongside the British Empire partitioned Iran into spheres of influence with the Anglo Russian Convention Russian forces would also enter Persia during the Russian involvement in the Persian Constitutional Revolution List of conflicts editNo Name Result 1 First Russo Persian War Persian victory Safavids destroy the Russian fortress on the Persian side of the Terek River and expel its garrison 2 3 10 2 Second Russo Persian War Russian victory Russia gains possession of Derbent Baku Shirvan and the modern provinces of Gilan Mazandaran and Astarabad but returns all territories to Persia in the Treaties of Resht and Ganja 6 21 3 Third Russo Persian War Status quo ante bellum 40 4 Fourth Russo Persian War Russian victory Treaty of Gulistan 41 Persia cedes what is now Georgia Dagestan parts of northern Armenia and most of what now comprises modern Azerbaijan to Russia 42 43 5 Fifth Russo Persian War Russian victory Treaty of Turkmenchay 44 Persia cedes all of what is now Armenia Nakhichevan and Azerbaijan to Russia 45 6 Russian intervention 1909 Russian victory 46 47 occupation of Tabriz Russia fulfilled its peacemaking goal as a great power and defended the foreign embassies in Tabriz by defeating the army of constitutionalists 48 See also editCaucasian War History of the Russo Turkish wars Russian conquest of the Caucasus History of the Caucasus North Caucasus Iran Russia relations Russian occupation of Tabriz Persian Campaign Persian Socialist Soviet Republic Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran Iran crisis of 1946References edit Multiple Authors Caucasus and Iran Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 3 September 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Matthee Rudi 2013 Rudeness and Revilement Russian Iranian Relations in the Mid Seventeenth Century Iranian Studies 46 3 333 357 doi 10 1080 00210862 2012 758500 S2CID 145596080 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Matthee Rudi 1994 Anti Ottoman Politics and Transit Rights The Seventeenth Century Trade in Silk between Safavid Iran and Muscovy Cahiers du Monde russe 35 4 739 761 doi 10 3406 cmr 1994 2405 JSTOR 20170927 a b c d e Ferrier Ronald 1973 The Armenians and the East India Company in Persia in the Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries The Economic History Review 26 1 38 62 doi 10 2307 2594758 JSTOR 2594758 a b Khodarkovsky Michael 1999 Of Christianity Enlightenment and Colonialism Russia in the North Caucasus 1550 1800 The Journal of Modern History 71 2 394 430 doi 10 1086 235251 JSTOR 10 1086 235251 S2CID 155059616 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Ledonne John 2008 Russia s Eastern Theater 1650 1850 Springboard or Strategic Backyard Cahiers du Monde russe 49 1 17 45 JSTOR 40419102 a b Ferrier Ronald 1986 Trade From the Mid 14th Century to the End of the Safavid Period The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 412 490 ISBN 9780521200943 Chenciner Robert Magomedkhanov Magomedkhan 1992 Persian Exports to Russia from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Century Iran 30 123 130 doi 10 2307 4299875 JSTOR 4299875 Lockhart Laurence 1986 European Contacts With Persia 1350 1736 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 373 410 ISBN 9780521200943 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Matthee Rudi 2012 Facing a Rude and Barbarous Neighbor Iranian Perceptions of Russia and the Russians from the Safavids to the Qajars Iran Facing Others Identity Boundaries in a Historical Perspective New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 99 124 ISBN 9780230102538 Herzig Edmund M 1992 The Volume of Iranian Raw Silk Exports in the Safavid Period Iranian Studies 25 1 2 61 79 doi 10 1080 00210869208701769 JSTOR 4310787 a b Spuler B 1977 Central Asia from the sixteenth century to the Russian conquests The Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 468 494 ISBN 9781139055024 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Brydges Harford Jones 1833 Dynasty of the Kajars London J Bohn a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Kazemzadeh F 1991 Iranian Relations with Russia and the Soviet Union to 1921 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 314 349 ISBN 9781139054997 a b c d e f g Tucker Spencer C 2010 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO LLC ISBN 9781851096725 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Mirfendereski Guive 2001 A Diplomatic History of the Caspian Sea Treaties Diaries and Other Stories New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780230107571 a b c d Quinn Sholeh 2010 Iran under Safavid Rule The New Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 201 238 ISBN 9781139056137 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Dowling Timothy C 2015 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquests to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO LLC ISBN 9781598849486 a b c d e f Rashtiani Goodarz 2018 Iranian Russian Relations in the Eighteenth Century Crisis Collapse Militarism and Civil War The History and Historiography of 18th Century Iran Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190250324 a b c d e f g h Shafiyev Farid 2018 Russian Conquest of the South Caucasus Resettling the Borderlands State Relocations and Ethnic Conflict in the South Caucasus Montreal Kingston London Chicago McGill Queen s University Press pp 16 42 ISBN 9780773553729 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Mikaberidze Alexander 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 2 Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO LLC ISBN 9781598843378 Roemer H 1986 The Safavid Period The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521200943 Atkin Muriel 1980 Russia and Iran 1780 1828 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 9780816609246 a b c Baumer Christoph 2018 The History of Central Asia The Age of Decline and Revival London New York I B Tauris amp Co Ltd ISBN 9781788310499 a b Avery Peter 1991 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp Nadir Shah and the Afsharid Legacy ISBN 9781139054997 a b c d e f Hambly Gavin 1991 Iran During the Reigns of Fath Ali Shah and Muhammed Shah The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781105394997 a b c d e f g h i j Hambly Gavin 1991 Agha Muhammed Khan and the Establishment of the Qajar Dynasty The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139054997 a b c d e f Mamedov Mikail 2014 From Civilising Mission to Defensive Frontier The Russian Empire s Changing Views of the Caucasus 1801 1864 Russian History 41 2 142 162 doi 10 1163 18763316 04102003 JSTOR 24667166 Tolan John Veinstein Gilles Laurens Henry 2013 The Eighteenth Century as a Turning Point Europe and the Islamic World Princeton Princeton University Press pp 259 276 ISBN 9781400844753 a b c Ansari Ali 2010 Iran to 1919 The New Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139056137 Baddeley John F 1908 The Russian Conquest of the Caucasus Longman Greens amp Co Vyvyan J 1965 Russia 1798 1825 The New Cambridge Modern History Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 495 524 ISBN 9781139055857 Frankopan Peter 2015 The Silk Roads A New History of the World London Bloomsbury Publishing Plc ISBN 9781408839980 Ritter Markus 2009 The Lost Mosque s in the Citadel of Qajar Yerevan Architecture and Identity Iranian andLocal Traditions in the Early 19th Century PDF Iran amp the Caucasus 13 2 239 279 doi 10 1163 157338410X12625876281109 JSTOR 25703805 a b c d Deutschmann Moritz 2013 All Rulers are Brothers Russian Relations with the Iranian Monarchy in the Nineteenth Century Iranian Studies 46 3 401 413 doi 10 1080 00210862 2012 759334 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 24482848 S2CID 143785614 Mojtahed Zadeh Pirouz 31 July 2004 The Small Players of the Great Game The Settlement of Iran s Eastern Borderlands and the Creation of Afghanistan Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 38378 8 a b c Rabino Joseph 1901 An Economist s Notes on Persia Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 64 2 265 291 doi 10 2307 2979943 JSTOR 2979943 Rabi Uzi Ter Oganov Nugzar 2009 The Russian Military Mission and the Birth of the Persian Cossack Brigade 1879 1894 Iranian Studies 42 3 445 463 doi 10 1080 00210860902907396 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 25597565 S2CID 143812599 Andreeva Elena RUSSIA v RUSSIANS AT THE COURT OF MOḤAMMAD ʿALI SHAH Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 19 May 2022 Hunczak Taras Kohn Hans eds 2000 Russian Imperialism from Ivan the Great to the Revolution 2 ed University Press of America p 250 ISBN 978 0761817086 Treaty of Gulistan Wars and Peace Treaties 1816 to 1891 Routledge 1992 67 Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond pp 728 729 ABC CLIO 2 Dec 2014 ISBN 978 1598849486 Mikaberidze Alexander Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO 22 Jul 2011 ISBN 978 1598843378 p 351 Zirisnky M Reza Shah s abrogation of capitulation 1927 1928 in The Making of Modern Iran State and Society Under Riza Shah 1921 1941 Stephanie Cronin ed London Routledge 2003 p 81 The context of this regime capitulations of course is that by the end of the reign of Fath Ali Shah 1798 1834 Iran could no longer defend its independence against the west For Iran this was a time of weakness humiliation and soul searching as Iranians sought to assert their dignity against overwhelming pressure from the expansionist west Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond pp 729 730 ABC CLIO 2 Dec 2014 ISBN 978 1598849486 Afary 1996 p 398 Carstvovanie Imperatora Nikolaya 2 Sergej Oldenburg M Centrpoligraf 2022 654 s ISBN 978 5 227 09905 1 Afary 1996 p 398 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russo Persian Wars amp oldid 1223926061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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