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Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774)

The Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774 was a major armed conflict that saw Russian arms largely victorious against the Ottoman Empire. Russia's victory brought the Yedisan between the rivers Bug and Dnieper, and Crimea into the Russian sphere of influence. Through a series of victories accrued by the Russian Empire led to substantial territorial conquests, including direct conquest over much of the Pontic–Caspian steppe, less Ottoman territory was directly annexed than might otherwise be expected due to a complex struggle within the European diplomatic system to maintain a balance of power that was acceptable to other European states and avoided direct Russian hegemony over Eastern Europe.[1]

Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774)

Allegory of Catherine's Victory over the Turks (1772),
by Stefano Torelli.
Date1768–1774
Location
Result Russian victory
Territorial
changes
Ottoman Empire cedes Kerch, Enikale and part of Yedisan to Russia.
Crimean Khanate becomes a Russian client state.
Belligerents
Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti
Kingdom of Imereti
Beylik of Egypt
Emirate of Palestine
Greek insurgents
Circassia
Bar Confederation
Commanders and leaders
Catherine II
Pyotr Rumyantsev
Vasily Dolgorukov-Krymsky
Alexey Orlov
Samuil Greig
Ivan Saltykov
Alexander Suvorov
Alexander Golitsyn
Mikhail Kamensky
Marko Voinovich
Fyodor Ushakov
Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben
Mikhail Kutuzov
Grigory Potemkin
Petro Kalnyshevsky
Erekle II
Solomon I
Ali Bey al-Kabir
Zahir al-Umar
Panagiotis Benakis
Mustafa III
(1768–1774)
Abdul Hamid I
(1774)
Ivazzade Halil Pasha
Mandalzade Hüsameddin Pasha
Qaplan II Giray
Karol Radziwiłł
Casimir Pulaski
Michał Jan Pac
Count Benyovszky

Nonetheless, Russia was able to take advantage of the weakened Ottoman Empire, the end of the Seven Years' War, and the withdrawal of France from Polish affairs to assert itself as one of the continent's primary military powers.[2] The war left the Russian Empire in a strengthened position to expand its territory and maintain hegemony over the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, eventually leading to the First Partition of Poland. Turkish losses included diplomatic defeats that saw its decline as a threat to Europe, loss over its exclusive control over the Orthodox millet, and the beginning of European bickering over the Eastern Question that would feature in European diplomacy until the Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in the aftermath of World War I.

Background edit

Russian war with Poland edit

The war followed internal tensions within Poland which indirectly challenged the security of the Ottoman Empire and its ally, the Crimean Khanate. The true power behind the Polish throne was the Russian ambassador Nicholas Repnin and the Imperial Russian Army, with King Stanisław August Poniatowski being elected due to his ties as former favourite to the Empress Catherine II of Russia. Repnin had forcefully passed the Perpetual Treaty of 1768 between Poland and Russia, which was disadvantageous to Poland geopolitically, challenged the political supremacy of Poland's Catholic faith, prevented reform of the liberum veto, and allowed Warsaw's occupation by Russian troops. Rising unrest led to the massive revolt of the Bar Confederation, which became an alliance of noble, Roman Catholic, and peasant rebels.[3] In the fortified town called Bar, near the Ottoman border, the Bar Confederation was created on 29 February 1768, led by a landed Polish noble named Casimir Pulaski.[4] While the Russian army heavily outnumbered the confederates and defeated them several times in direct battle in Podolia Ukraine, bands of rebels waged low scale guerrilla war throughout Ukraine and southern Poland. On 20 June 1768, the Russian Army captured the fortress of Bar but when one band of surviving confederates fled over to the Turkish border, pursuing troops including Zaporozhian Cossacks, clashed with janissary garrison troops.[5] Polish revolts would dog Russia throughout the war and make it impossible for Catherine II to keep control of Poland.[3]

Ottoman situation edit

 
Mustafa III in his royal robes
 
Europe before the war

In the Ottoman Empire, revolts were widespread. Many noble factions had risen against the power of Sultan Mustafa III and would proceed to break away from the Ottoman Empire. In addition to this decentralization of the Empire the Ottomans were also faced with the revival of a unified Persia, which rose to oppose the Turks in Iraq.[6]

Upon the outbreak of the war the Ottomans seemed to have the upper hand as Russia was suffering from financial strain as a consequence of involvement in the Seven Years' War.[7] The Ottoman Navy capitalized on the inferiority of the Imperial Russian Navy,[8] even though Russia employed British officers to resolve this weakness. The Ottomans dominated the Black Sea, giving it the advantage of shorter supply lines. The Ottomans were also able to levy troops from their vassal state, the Crimean Khanate, to fight the Russians,[9] but their effectiveness was undermined by constant Russian destabilization of the area. In the years preceding the war the Ottoman Empire had enjoyed the longest period of peace with Europe in its history (1739–1768). Nevertheless, the Ottoman Empire faced internal division, rebellion and corruption compounded by the re-emergence of a unified Persian leadership, under Nader Shah.[10] One clear advantage for the Ottomans was its superior numbers as the Ottoman army was three times the size of its Russian counterpart.[11] However, the new Grand Vizier Mehmed Emin Pasha would prove himself to be incompetent militarily.[12][page needed] The Russian army massed along the borders with Poland and the Ottoman Empire,[10] which made it difficult for Ottomans troops to make inroads into Russian territory.

Russian invasion edit

 
Equestrian portrait of Catherine in the uniform of the Preobrazhensky Regiment (by Vigilius Eriksen)

Not content to let the Polish enemy flee over the border, Cossacks followed them into the Ottoman Empire. In the summer of 1768, Mustafa III received reports that the town of Balta had been massacred by Russian paid Zaporozhian Cossacks.[13] Russia denied the accusations, but it was reported that the Cossacks "certainly razed Balta and killed whomever they found".[14] With the confederates of Poland and the French embassy pushing the sultan along, with many pro-war advisors, the sultan on October 6 imprisoned Aleksei Mikhailovich Obreskov and the entire Russian embassy's staff, marking the Ottoman's declaration of war on Russia.[15]

After her victories in the war, Catherine II was depicted in portraits dressed in the military uniforms of Great Britain, which was initially a willing ally to Russia because of the trade between the two countries. Great Britain needed bar iron to fuel its ongoing Industrial Revolution as well as other products such as sailcloth, hemp, and timber, for the construction and maintenance of its Navy, all of which Russia could provide.[16] When the tide of the conflict turned in Russia's favour, Britain limited its support, seeing Russia as a rising competitor in Far Eastern trade, rather than merely as a counterbalance to the French Navy in the Mediterranean. While Russia remained in a superior position in the Black Sea, the withdrawal of British support left Russia unable to do anything more than cut down its own supply lines and disrupt Turkish trade in the area.[10]

 
Battle of Kagul, Southern Bessarabia, 1770

In January 1769, Crimean Khan Qırım Giray invaded the Russian held territories in modern-day Ukraine. Crimean Tatars and Nogais ravaged New Serbia and took a significant number of prisoners.[17]

On September 17, 1769, the Russians began their initial campaign over the Dniester into Moldavia. The elite Ottoman Janissaries took heavy casualties from the Russians at Khotyn but managed to hold on; the remainder of the Ottoman army panicked and abandoned the field, and the Russians claimed the fortress. With the Ottomans in disarray the Russians took the capital of Moldavia (Jassy) on October 7. They continued the advance south into Wallachia, occupying its capital Bucharest on November 17.[12][page needed] From the capital of Bucharest, the Russians fanned out through the principality, only later being challenged by Grand Vizier Mehmed Emin Pasha at Kagul on Aug 1, 1770. The Russians routed the Grand Vizier's forces and allegedly one-third of the Ottoman troops drowned in the Danube trying to escape.[10]

Caucasian front edit

By now, Russia had some troops spread out north of the Caucasus. In 1769, as a diversion, the Russians sent Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben with a small expeditionary force south into Georgia. The Georgians defeated an Ottoman army at Aspindza in 1770. The Siege of Poti on the Black Sea coast by a joint Russo-Georgian force in 1771 failed and Russian troops were withdrawn in the spring of 1772. It was the first time Russian troops had crossed the Caucasus. On the steppes north of the mountains, the later-famous Matvei Platov and 2,000 men fought 25,000 Turks and Crimeans. The Cossack village of Naur was defended against 8,000 Turks and tribesmen.

Russian Mediterranean expedition edit

 
The destruction of the Turkish fleet in the Battle of Chesme, 1770

During the war, a Russian fleet, under Count Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov, entered the Mediterranean Sea for the first time in history. It was drawn from the Baltic Fleet and was intended to draw Ottoman naval forces out from the Black Sea.[18] In Ottoman Greece, Orlov's arrival sparked a Maniot revolt against the Ottoman authorities. However, the Ottoman vizier Muhsinzade Mehmed Pasha [tr] called on the provincial notables (ayans) of Ottoman Albania to mobilize irregular troops, which he used to crush the revolt in 1771.[19]

Just outside the city of Chesma on June 24, 1770, twelve Russian ships engaged twenty-two Turkish vessels and destroyed them with the use of fire ships. The defeat at Chesma demoralized the Ottomans, and bolstered Russian morale.[11] Catherine II used this and other victories over the Turks to consolidate her reign over Russia domestically by commissioning medals in honour of the battle. Despite their naval successes, the Russians were unable to capture Constantinople because of Ottoman fortifications as well as European concerns that victory would upset the balance of power.

 
War in the Mideast: Russian fleet movements denoted by red arrows

In 1771, Ali Bey al-Kabir, the Mamluk usurper of Egypt, allied with Zahir al-Umar, the autonomous sheikh of Acre, against their Ottoman overlords. The Egyptian general Abu al-Dhahab marched on Damascus, but the Ottoman governor, Uthman Pasha al-Kurji, convinced him to turn on his erstwhile master. Abu al-Dhahab then marched on Egypt and forced Ali Bey to flee to Zahir. Now, Count Orlov, with Catherine's approval, intervened and established friendly relations with the two anti-Ottoman rebels. The Russian fleet provided critical aid in the Battle of Sidon and it bombarded and occupied Beirut. The Russians surrendered Beirut to the pro-Ottoman emir of Mount Lebanon, Yusuf Shihab, only after being paid a large ransom.[18]

In 1773, Yusuf Shihab entrusted the strengthening of Beirut's defences to Ahmad al-Jazzar. When the latter began to act independently, Yusuf got into contact with Zahir al-Umar to remove him. Zahir suggested that they enlist the Russians. The Russian squadron, under Captain Ivan Kozhukov, blockaded and bombarded Beirut while Zahir negotiated Jazzar's withdrawal. The latter then entered Zahir's service, only to rebel against him after a few months. In consequence, the Russians occupied Beirut for a second time, for four months, to force Yusuf to pay a ransom.[18][20]

Mediation and ceasefire edit

Prussia, Austria, and Great Britain offered to mediate the dispute between Russia and the Ottomans to halt Russia's expansion.[21] Austria managed to turn the situation to its advantage by gaining Bukovina District from the Ottomans with a treaty on July 6, 1771. The Austrians maintained their increased military presence on their border with Moldavia and Wallachia, and they increased a subsidy to the cash-starved Ottomans, who had been dabbling in tax farming[22]) and offered unsubstantiated support to the Ottomans against Russia. Catherine II, wary of the proximity of the Austrian army to her own forces and fearing an all-out European war, accepted the loss of Poland and agreed to Frederick II’s plan to partition Poland. She secretly agreed to return the captured principalities back to the Ottomans, thereby removing Austria's fear of a powerful Russian Balkan neighbour. On April 8, 1772, Kaunitz, the Austrian equivalent of Minister of Foreign affairs, informed the Sublime Porte that Austria no longer considered the treaty of 1771 binding.[23]

A ceasefire between Russia and the Ottoman Empire commenced on May 30, 1772, but real negotiations did not begin until August 8. The peace talks broke down almost immediately over the Crimea, but the truce was extended until March 20, 1773.

Both parties had reasons to expand the negotiations, primarily to do with both sides wanting to keep fighting on a single front. The Ottomans were now quelling rebellions from Egypt and Syria and also faced incursions from Persia. The Russians were facing a revival of a centralized Sweden, which had undergone a coup from King Gustav III.

Final Russian offensive edit

On June 20, 1774, the Russian army, under the command of Alexander Suvorov, managed to rout the Ottoman army near Kozludzha. Russia used the victory to force the Ottoman Empire to acquiesce to Russia's preferences in the treaty.[24]

Peace treaty edit

On July 21, 1774, the Ottoman Empire had to sign perforce the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca.[25] The treaty did not overtly take away vast territories from the Ottomans – Poland had already paid the price of alienated territory. According to the treaty:[26]

  • The Crimean Khanate formally gained its independence from both powers (but in reality became dependent on Russia and in 1782 was directly annexed after bloody clashes between the Christian and Tatar populations).
  • Russia received war reparations of 4.5 million rubles[27]
  • The Ottoman Empire ceded to Russia two key seaports, Azov and Kerch, allowing the Russian Navy and merchant fleet direct access to the Black Sea
  • Russia gained the territory between the rivers Dnieper and Southern Bug
  • The Porte renounced Ottoman claims to Kabardia in the North Caucasus
  • Russia gained official status as protector of the Orthodox Christians living in the Ottoman Empire, which opened the door for future Russian expansion

As a consequence of the treaty, the Ottomans ceded the northwestern part of Moldavia (later known as Bukovina) to the Habsburg Empire.[28]

Russia quickly exploited Küçük Kaynarca for an easy excuse to go to war and take more territory from the Ottoman Empire.[29]

This war comprised but a small part of the continuous process of expansion of the Russian Empire southwards and eastwards during the 18th and 19th centuries.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Davies, Brian L. (2016). The Russo-Turkish War, 1768–1774. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-47250801-0.
  2. ^ Schroeder, Paul W. (1994). The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-19822119-3.
  3. ^ a b Herbert H. Kaplan, The First Partition of Poland, New York and London: Columbia University Press, pg 101.
  4. ^ Jan Stanislaw Kopczewski, Kosckiuszko and Pulaski, Warsaw: Interpress Publishers, pg 85
  5. ^ Jan Stanislaw Kopczewski, Kosckiuszko and Pulaski, Warsaw: Interpress Publishers, pg 87
  6. ^ Jay Shaw Stanford, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge University Press, pg 253–255.
  7. ^ Russian Overseas Commerce with Great Britain pg 3
  8. ^ Carolly Erickson, Great Catherine, New York: Crown Publishers, pg 277
  9. ^ Sicker, Martin, The Islamic World in Decline, Westport, Connecticut London: Praeger, pg 70
  10. ^ a b c d Jay Shaw Stanford, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge University Press, pg 2
  11. ^ a b Carolly Erickson, Great Catherine, New York: Crown Publishers, pg 2
  12. ^ a b Sicker, Martin, The Islamic World in Decline, Westport, Connecticut London: Praeger, pg
  13. ^ Sicker, Martin, The Islamic World in Decline, Westport, Connecticut London: Praeger, pp. 69–70
  14. ^ Sicker, Martin, The Islamic World in Decline, Westport, Connecticut London: Praeger, p. 100.
  15. ^ Herbert H. Kaplan, The First Partition of Poland, New York and London: Columbia University Press, p. 105.
  16. ^ Russian Overseas Commerce With Great Britain During the Reign of Catherine II
  17. ^ Lord Kinross, 'The Ottoman Centuries', page 397
  18. ^ a b c Michael F. Davie and Mitia Frumin, "Late 18th-century Russian Navy Maps and the First 3D Visualization of the Walled City of Beirut", e-Perimetron, 2, 2 (2007): 52–65.
  19. ^ Yuzo Nagata, “Greek Rebellion of 1770 in the Morea Peninsula: Some Remarks through the Turkish Historical Sources”, in Studies on the Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire (Izmir: Akademi Kitabevi, 1995), 111 – 116
  20. ^ For general accounts of the Russian occupations of Beirut, see William Persen, "The Russian occupations of Beirut, 1772–74", Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, 42, 3–4 (1955): 275–86, and Paul du Quenoy, "Arabs under Tsarist Rule: The Russian Occupation of Beirut, 1773–1774", Russian History, 41, 2 (2014): 128–41.
  21. ^ Herbert H. Kaplan, The First Partition of Poland, New York and London: Columbia University Press, pp. 119–20.
  22. ^ Jay Shaw Stanford, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge University Press, pp. 283. Jay Shaw Stanford, History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Cambridge University Press, p. 89
  23. ^ Sicker, Martin (2001). The Islamic World in Decline: From the Treaty of Karlowitz to the Disintegration of the Ottoman Empire. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-275-96891-5.
  24. ^ Sicker, Martin, The Islamic World in Decline, Westport, Connecticut London: Praeger, p. 73-
  25. ^ Weisband, Edward (2015-03-08). Turkish Foreign Policy, 1943–1945: Small State Diplomacy and Great Power Politics. Princeton University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-4008-7261-9.
  26. ^ "Treaty of Peace (Küçük Kaynarca), 1774". Empire in Asia: A New Global History. National University of Singapore. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  27. ^ Mikaberidze 2011, p. 492.
  28. ^ The Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774 and the Treaty of Kuciuk-Kainargi at historia.ro (in Romanian)
  29. ^ Schroeder, Paul W. (1994). The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198221193.

Sources edit

  • Aksan, Virginia. "The One-Eyed Fighting the Blind: Mobilization, Supply, and Command in the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774." International History Review 15#2 (1993): 221–238.
  • Aksan, Virginia. "Breaking the spell of the Baron de Tott: reframing the question of military reform in the Ottoman empire, 1760–1830." International History Review 24.2 (2002): 253–277.
  • De Madariaga, Isabel. Russia in the Age of Catherine the Great (1981) pp 205–14.
  • Mikaberidze, Alexander (2011). "Treaty of Kuchuk Kainardji (1774)". In Mikaberidze, Alexander (ed.). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO.

russo, turkish, 1768, 1774, russo, turkish, 1768, 1774, major, armed, conflict, that, russian, arms, largely, victorious, against, ottoman, empire, russia, victory, brought, yedisan, between, rivers, dnieper, crimea, into, russian, sphere, influence, through, . The Russo Turkish War of 1768 1774 was a major armed conflict that saw Russian arms largely victorious against the Ottoman Empire Russia s victory brought the Yedisan between the rivers Bug and Dnieper and Crimea into the Russian sphere of influence Through a series of victories accrued by the Russian Empire led to substantial territorial conquests including direct conquest over much of the Pontic Caspian steppe less Ottoman territory was directly annexed than might otherwise be expected due to a complex struggle within the European diplomatic system to maintain a balance of power that was acceptable to other European states and avoided direct Russian hegemony over Eastern Europe 1 Russo Turkish War 1768 1774 Allegory of Catherine s Victory over the Turks 1772 by Stefano Torelli Date1768 1774LocationEastern Europe Caucasus MediterraneanResultRussian victory Treaty of Kucuk KaynarcaTerritorialchangesOttoman Empire cedes Kerch Enikale and part of Yedisan to Russia Crimean Khanate becomes a Russian client state Belligerents Russian Empire Collegium of Little Russia Zaporozhian Host Kingdom of Kartli Kakheti Kingdom of Imereti Beylik of EgyptEmirate of PalestineGreek insurgentsOttoman Empire Crimean Khanate Emirate of Lebanon Circassia Bar ConfederationCommanders and leadersCatherine II Pyotr Rumyantsev Vasily Dolgorukov Krymsky Alexey Orlov Samuil Greig Ivan Saltykov Alexander Suvorov Alexander Golitsyn Mikhail Kamensky Marko Voinovich Fyodor Ushakov Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben Mikhail Kutuzov Grigory Potemkin Petro Kalnyshevsky Erekle II Solomon I Ali Bey al KabirZahir al UmarPanagiotis BenakisMustafa III 1768 1774 Abdul Hamid I 1774 Ivazzade Halil Pasha Mandalzade Husameddin Pasha Qaplan II Giray Karol Radziwill Casimir Pulaski Michal Jan Pac Count Benyovszky Nonetheless Russia was able to take advantage of the weakened Ottoman Empire the end of the Seven Years War and the withdrawal of France from Polish affairs to assert itself as one of the continent s primary military powers 2 The war left the Russian Empire in a strengthened position to expand its territory and maintain hegemony over the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth eventually leading to the First Partition of Poland Turkish losses included diplomatic defeats that saw its decline as a threat to Europe loss over its exclusive control over the Orthodox millet and the beginning of European bickering over the Eastern Question that would feature in European diplomacy until the Dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in the aftermath of World War I Contents 1 Background 1 1 Russian war with Poland 1 2 Ottoman situation 2 Russian invasion 3 Caucasian front 4 Russian Mediterranean expedition 5 Mediation and ceasefire 6 Final Russian offensive 7 Peace treaty 8 See also 9 References 10 SourcesBackground editRussian war with Poland edit See also Bar Confederation and Koliyivshchyna The war followed internal tensions within Poland which indirectly challenged the security of the Ottoman Empire and its ally the Crimean Khanate The true power behind the Polish throne was the Russian ambassador Nicholas Repnin and the Imperial Russian Army with King Stanislaw August Poniatowski being elected due to his ties as former favourite to the Empress Catherine II of Russia Repnin had forcefully passed the Perpetual Treaty of 1768 between Poland and Russia which was disadvantageous to Poland geopolitically challenged the political supremacy of Poland s Catholic faith prevented reform of the liberum veto and allowed Warsaw s occupation by Russian troops Rising unrest led to the massive revolt of the Bar Confederation which became an alliance of noble Roman Catholic and peasant rebels 3 In the fortified town called Bar near the Ottoman border the Bar Confederation was created on 29 February 1768 led by a landed Polish noble named Casimir Pulaski 4 While the Russian army heavily outnumbered the confederates and defeated them several times in direct battle in Podolia Ukraine bands of rebels waged low scale guerrilla war throughout Ukraine and southern Poland On 20 June 1768 the Russian Army captured the fortress of Bar but when one band of surviving confederates fled over to the Turkish border pursuing troops including Zaporozhian Cossacks clashed with janissary garrison troops 5 Polish revolts would dog Russia throughout the war and make it impossible for Catherine II to keep control of Poland 3 Ottoman situation edit nbsp Mustafa III in his royal robes nbsp Europe before the warIn the Ottoman Empire revolts were widespread Many noble factions had risen against the power of Sultan Mustafa III and would proceed to break away from the Ottoman Empire In addition to this decentralization of the Empire the Ottomans were also faced with the revival of a unified Persia which rose to oppose the Turks in Iraq 6 Upon the outbreak of the war the Ottomans seemed to have the upper hand as Russia was suffering from financial strain as a consequence of involvement in the Seven Years War 7 The Ottoman Navy capitalized on the inferiority of the Imperial Russian Navy 8 even though Russia employed British officers to resolve this weakness The Ottomans dominated the Black Sea giving it the advantage of shorter supply lines The Ottomans were also able to levy troops from their vassal state the Crimean Khanate to fight the Russians 9 but their effectiveness was undermined by constant Russian destabilization of the area In the years preceding the war the Ottoman Empire had enjoyed the longest period of peace with Europe in its history 1739 1768 Nevertheless the Ottoman Empire faced internal division rebellion and corruption compounded by the re emergence of a unified Persian leadership under Nader Shah 10 One clear advantage for the Ottomans was its superior numbers as the Ottoman army was three times the size of its Russian counterpart 11 However the new Grand Vizier Mehmed Emin Pasha would prove himself to be incompetent militarily 12 page needed The Russian army massed along the borders with Poland and the Ottoman Empire 10 which made it difficult for Ottomans troops to make inroads into Russian territory Russian invasion edit nbsp Equestrian portrait of Catherine in the uniform of the Preobrazhensky Regiment by Vigilius Eriksen Not content to let the Polish enemy flee over the border Cossacks followed them into the Ottoman Empire In the summer of 1768 Mustafa III received reports that the town of Balta had been massacred by Russian paid Zaporozhian Cossacks 13 Russia denied the accusations but it was reported that the Cossacks certainly razed Balta and killed whomever they found 14 With the confederates of Poland and the French embassy pushing the sultan along with many pro war advisors the sultan on October 6 imprisoned Aleksei Mikhailovich Obreskov and the entire Russian embassy s staff marking the Ottoman s declaration of war on Russia 15 After her victories in the war Catherine II was depicted in portraits dressed in the military uniforms of Great Britain which was initially a willing ally to Russia because of the trade between the two countries Great Britain needed bar iron to fuel its ongoing Industrial Revolution as well as other products such as sailcloth hemp and timber for the construction and maintenance of its Navy all of which Russia could provide 16 When the tide of the conflict turned in Russia s favour Britain limited its support seeing Russia as a rising competitor in Far Eastern trade rather than merely as a counterbalance to the French Navy in the Mediterranean While Russia remained in a superior position in the Black Sea the withdrawal of British support left Russia unable to do anything more than cut down its own supply lines and disrupt Turkish trade in the area 10 nbsp Battle of Kagul Southern Bessarabia 1770In January 1769 Crimean Khan Qirim Giray invaded the Russian held territories in modern day Ukraine Crimean Tatars and Nogais ravaged New Serbia and took a significant number of prisoners 17 On September 17 1769 the Russians began their initial campaign over the Dniester into Moldavia The elite Ottoman Janissaries took heavy casualties from the Russians at Khotyn but managed to hold on the remainder of the Ottoman army panicked and abandoned the field and the Russians claimed the fortress With the Ottomans in disarray the Russians took the capital of Moldavia Jassy on October 7 They continued the advance south into Wallachia occupying its capital Bucharest on November 17 12 page needed From the capital of Bucharest the Russians fanned out through the principality only later being challenged by Grand Vizier Mehmed Emin Pasha at Kagul on Aug 1 1770 The Russians routed the Grand Vizier s forces and allegedly one third of the Ottoman troops drowned in the Danube trying to escape 10 Caucasian front editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message By now Russia had some troops spread out north of the Caucasus In 1769 as a diversion the Russians sent Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben with a small expeditionary force south into Georgia The Georgians defeated an Ottoman army at Aspindza in 1770 The Siege of Poti on the Black Sea coast by a joint Russo Georgian force in 1771 failed and Russian troops were withdrawn in the spring of 1772 It was the first time Russian troops had crossed the Caucasus On the steppes north of the mountains the later famous Matvei Platov and 2 000 men fought 25 000 Turks and Crimeans The Cossack village of Naur was defended against 8 000 Turks and tribesmen Russian Mediterranean expedition edit nbsp The destruction of the Turkish fleet in the Battle of Chesme 1770During the war a Russian fleet under Count Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov entered the Mediterranean Sea for the first time in history It was drawn from the Baltic Fleet and was intended to draw Ottoman naval forces out from the Black Sea 18 In Ottoman Greece Orlov s arrival sparked a Maniot revolt against the Ottoman authorities However the Ottoman vizier Muhsinzade Mehmed Pasha tr called on the provincial notables ayans of Ottoman Albania to mobilize irregular troops which he used to crush the revolt in 1771 19 Just outside the city of Chesma on June 24 1770 twelve Russian ships engaged twenty two Turkish vessels and destroyed them with the use of fire ships The defeat at Chesma demoralized the Ottomans and bolstered Russian morale 11 Catherine II used this and other victories over the Turks to consolidate her reign over Russia domestically by commissioning medals in honour of the battle Despite their naval successes the Russians were unable to capture Constantinople because of Ottoman fortifications as well as European concerns that victory would upset the balance of power nbsp War in the Mideast Russian fleet movements denoted by red arrowsIn 1771 Ali Bey al Kabir the Mamluk usurper of Egypt allied with Zahir al Umar the autonomous sheikh of Acre against their Ottoman overlords The Egyptian general Abu al Dhahab marched on Damascus but the Ottoman governor Uthman Pasha al Kurji convinced him to turn on his erstwhile master Abu al Dhahab then marched on Egypt and forced Ali Bey to flee to Zahir Now Count Orlov with Catherine s approval intervened and established friendly relations with the two anti Ottoman rebels The Russian fleet provided critical aid in the Battle of Sidon and it bombarded and occupied Beirut The Russians surrendered Beirut to the pro Ottoman emir of Mount Lebanon Yusuf Shihab only after being paid a large ransom 18 In 1773 Yusuf Shihab entrusted the strengthening of Beirut s defences to Ahmad al Jazzar When the latter began to act independently Yusuf got into contact with Zahir al Umar to remove him Zahir suggested that they enlist the Russians The Russian squadron under Captain Ivan Kozhukov blockaded and bombarded Beirut while Zahir negotiated Jazzar s withdrawal The latter then entered Zahir s service only to rebel against him after a few months In consequence the Russians occupied Beirut for a second time for four months to force Yusuf to pay a ransom 18 20 Mediation and ceasefire editPrussia Austria and Great Britain offered to mediate the dispute between Russia and the Ottomans to halt Russia s expansion 21 Austria managed to turn the situation to its advantage by gaining Bukovina District from the Ottomans with a treaty on July 6 1771 The Austrians maintained their increased military presence on their border with Moldavia and Wallachia and they increased a subsidy to the cash starved Ottomans who had been dabbling in tax farming 22 and offered unsubstantiated support to the Ottomans against Russia Catherine II wary of the proximity of the Austrian army to her own forces and fearing an all out European war accepted the loss of Poland and agreed to Frederick II s plan to partition Poland She secretly agreed to return the captured principalities back to the Ottomans thereby removing Austria s fear of a powerful Russian Balkan neighbour On April 8 1772 Kaunitz the Austrian equivalent of Minister of Foreign affairs informed the Sublime Porte that Austria no longer considered the treaty of 1771 binding 23 A ceasefire between Russia and the Ottoman Empire commenced on May 30 1772 but real negotiations did not begin until August 8 The peace talks broke down almost immediately over the Crimea but the truce was extended until March 20 1773 Both parties had reasons to expand the negotiations primarily to do with both sides wanting to keep fighting on a single front The Ottomans were now quelling rebellions from Egypt and Syria and also faced incursions from Persia The Russians were facing a revival of a centralized Sweden which had undergone a coup from King Gustav III Final Russian offensive editOn June 20 1774 the Russian army under the command of Alexander Suvorov managed to rout the Ottoman army near Kozludzha Russia used the victory to force the Ottoman Empire to acquiesce to Russia s preferences in the treaty 24 Peace treaty editOn July 21 1774 the Ottoman Empire had to sign perforce the Treaty of Kucuk Kaynarca 25 The treaty did not overtly take away vast territories from the Ottomans Poland had already paid the price of alienated territory According to the treaty 26 The Crimean Khanate formally gained its independence from both powers but in reality became dependent on Russia and in 1782 was directly annexed after bloody clashes between the Christian and Tatar populations Russia received war reparations of 4 5 million rubles 27 The Ottoman Empire ceded to Russia two key seaports Azov and Kerch allowing the Russian Navy and merchant fleet direct access to the Black Sea Russia gained the territory between the rivers Dnieper and Southern Bug The Porte renounced Ottoman claims to Kabardia in the North Caucasus Russia gained official status as protector of the Orthodox Christians living in the Ottoman Empire which opened the door for future Russian expansionAs a consequence of the treaty the Ottomans ceded the northwestern part of Moldavia later known as Bukovina to the Habsburg Empire 28 Russia quickly exploited Kucuk Kaynarca for an easy excuse to go to war and take more territory from the Ottoman Empire 29 This war comprised but a small part of the continuous process of expansion of the Russian Empire southwards and eastwards during the 18th and 19th centuries See also editHistory of the Russo Turkish wars Greek PlanReferences edit Davies Brian L 2016 The Russo Turkish War 1768 1774 New York Bloomsbury Academic p 248 ISBN 978 1 47250801 0 Schroeder Paul W 1994 The Transformation of European Politics 1763 1848 New York Oxford University Press p 35 ISBN 0 19822119 3 a b Herbert H Kaplan The First Partition of Poland New York and London Columbia University Press pg 101 Jan Stanislaw Kopczewski Kosckiuszko and Pulaski Warsaw Interpress Publishers pg 85 Jan Stanislaw Kopczewski Kosckiuszko and Pulaski Warsaw Interpress Publishers pg 87 Jay Shaw Stanford History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press pg 253 255 Russian Overseas Commerce with Great Britain pg 3 Carolly Erickson Great Catherine New York Crown Publishers pg 277 Sicker Martin The Islamic World in Decline Westport Connecticut London Praeger pg 70 a b c d Jay Shaw Stanford History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press pg 2 a b Carolly Erickson Great Catherine New York Crown Publishers pg 2 a b Sicker Martin The Islamic World in Decline Westport Connecticut London Praeger pg Sicker Martin The Islamic World in Decline Westport Connecticut London Praeger pp 69 70 Sicker Martin The Islamic World in Decline Westport Connecticut London Praeger p 100 Herbert H Kaplan The First Partition of Poland New York and London Columbia University Press p 105 Russian Overseas Commerce With Great Britain During the Reign of Catherine II Lord Kinross The Ottoman Centuries page 397 a b c Michael F Davie and Mitia Frumin Late 18th century Russian Navy Maps and the First 3D Visualization of the Walled City of Beirut e Perimetron 2 2 2007 52 65 Yuzo Nagata Greek Rebellion of 1770 in the Morea Peninsula Some Remarks through the Turkish Historical Sources in Studies on the Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire Izmir Akademi Kitabevi 1995 111 116 For general accounts of the Russian occupations of Beirut see William Persen The Russian occupations of Beirut 1772 74 Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society 42 3 4 1955 275 86 and Paul du Quenoy Arabs under Tsarist Rule The Russian Occupation of Beirut 1773 1774 Russian History 41 2 2014 128 41 Herbert H Kaplan The First Partition of Poland New York and London Columbia University Press pp 119 20 Jay Shaw Stanford History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press pp 283 Jay Shaw Stanford History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press p 89 Sicker Martin 2001 The Islamic World in Decline From the Treaty of Karlowitz to the Disintegration of the Ottoman Empire Greenwood Publishing Group p 72 ISBN 978 0 275 96891 5 Sicker Martin The Islamic World in Decline Westport Connecticut London Praeger p 73 Weisband Edward 2015 03 08 Turkish Foreign Policy 1943 1945 Small State Diplomacy and Great Power Politics Princeton University Press p 24 ISBN 978 1 4008 7261 9 Treaty of Peace Kucuk Kaynarca 1774 Empire in Asia A New Global History National University of Singapore Retrieved 18 July 2020 Mikaberidze 2011 p 492 The Russo Turkish War of 1768 1774 and the Treaty of Kuciuk Kainargi at historia ro in Romanian Schroeder Paul W 1994 The Transformation of European Politics 1763 1848 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0198221193 Sources editSee also Bibliography of Russian history 1613 1917 Aksan Virginia The One Eyed Fighting the Blind Mobilization Supply and Command in the Russo Turkish War of 1768 1774 International History Review 15 2 1993 221 238 Aksan Virginia Breaking the spell of the Baron de Tott reframing the question of military reform in the Ottoman empire 1760 1830 International History Review 24 2 2002 253 277 De Madariaga Isabel Russia in the Age of Catherine the Great 1981 pp 205 14 Mikaberidze Alexander 2011 Treaty of Kuchuk Kainardji 1774 In Mikaberidze Alexander ed Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russo Turkish War 1768 1774 amp oldid 1190026696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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