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Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)

The Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 (Turkish: 93 Harbi, lit.'War of ’93', named for the year 1293 in the Islamic calendar; Russian: Русско-турецкая война, romanizedRussko-turetskaya voyna, "Russian–Turkish war") was a conflict between the Ottoman Empire and a coalition led by the Russian Empire, and including Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro.[21] Fought in the Balkans and in the Caucasus, it originated in emerging 19th century Balkan nationalism. Additional factors included the Russian goals of recovering territorial losses endured during the Crimean War of 1853–56, re-establishing itself in the Black Sea and supporting the political movement attempting to free Balkan nations from the Ottoman Empire.

Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)
Part of The Great Eastern Crisis and the Russo-Turkish wars

Russian troops and Bulgarian volunteers fighting off the Ottoman Army during the Battle of Shipka Pass in August 1877 (painting: Alexey Popov, 1893)
Date24 April 1877 – 3 March 1878
(10 months and 1 week)
Location
Result

Russian Coalition victory

Territorial
changes
  • Reestablishment of the Bulgarian state
  • De jure independence of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro from the Ottoman Empire
  • Kars and Batum Oblasts become part of the Russian Empire, Britain occupies Cyprus, Bosnia and Herzegovina is occupied by Austria-Hungary
  • Russian annexation of Southern Bessarabia from Romania, Romanian annexation of Northern Dobruja
  • Belligerents

     Russia

    Romania
    Serbia
    Bulgarian Legion

    Montenegro

     Ottoman Empire

    Commanders and leaders
    Strength
    • Russian Empire:
      Initial: 185,000 in the Army of the Danube, 75,000 in the Caucasian Army[9]
      Total: 260,000 in four corps[10][11]
    Ottoman Empire:
    Initial: 70,000 in the Caucasus
    Total: 281,000[12]
    Casualties and losses
    • Russian Empire
      • 15,567–30,000 killed[13][14]
      • 81,166 died of disease
      • 56,652 wounded
      • 1,713 died from wounds[13]
    • Romania
      • 4,302 killed and missing
      • 3,316 wounded
      • 19,904 sick[15]
    • Bulgaria
      • 2,456 killed and wounded[16]
      • Several thousand total military deaths (mostly disease)
    • Serbia and Montenegro
      • 2,400 dead and wounded[16]
    • ~30,000 killed[17]
    • 60,000–90,000[17] died from wounds and diseases
    • ~110,000 captured[18]
    see civilian casualties section[a]

    The Russian-led coalition won the war, pushing the Ottomans back all the way to the gates of Constantinople, leading to the intervention of the western European great powers.

    As a result, Russia succeeded in claiming provinces in the Caucasus, namely Kars and Batum, and also annexed the Budjak region. The principalities of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro, each of which had had de facto sovereignty for some years, formally proclaimed independence from the Ottoman Empire. After almost five centuries of Ottoman domination (1396–1878), the Principality of Bulgaria emerged as an autonomous Bulgarian state with support and military intervention from Russia.

    Conflict pre-history

    Treatment of Christians in the Ottoman Empire

    Article 9 of the 1856 Paris Peace Treaty, concluded at the end of the Crimean War, obliged the Ottoman Empire to grant Christians equal rights with Muslims. Before the treaty was signed, the Ottoman government issued an edict, the Edict of Gülhane, which proclaimed the principle of the equality of Muslims and non-Muslims,[22] and produced some specific reforms to this end. For example, the jizya tax was abolished and non-Muslims were allowed to join the army.[23]

    Crisis in Lebanon, 1860

    In 1858, stirred by their clergy, the Maronite peasants of northern Lebanon revolted against their predominantly Druze feudal overlords and established a peasant republic. In southern Lebanon, where both Maronite and Druze peasants worked under Druze overlords, Druze peasants sided with their co-religious and against the Maronites, transforming the conflict into a civil war. Although both sides suffered, about 10,000 Maronites were massacred at the hands of the Druze.[24][25]

    On 27 May 1860, a group of Maronites raided a Druze village.[citation needed] Massacres and reprisal massacres followed, not only in Lebanon but also in Syria. In the end, between 7,000 and 12,000 people of all religions[citation needed] had been killed, and over 300 villages, 500 churches, 40 monasteries, and 30 schools were destroyed. Christian attacks on Muslims in Beirut stirred the Muslim population of Damascus to attack the Christian minority with between 5,000 and 25,000 of the latter being killed,[citation needed] including the American and Dutch consuls, giving the event an international dimension[citation needed].

    Fearing European intervention, the Ottoman foreign minister Mehmed Fuad Pasha was dispatched to Syria and immediately set about trying to resolve the conflict as swiftly as possible. Mehmed sought out and executed the agitators on all sides, including the governor and other officials. Order was soon restored, and preparations made to give Lebanon new autonomy. These efforts were ultimately not enough to prevent European intervention, however, with France deploying a fleet in September 1860. Fearing that a unilateral intervention would increase French influence in the region at their expense, the British joined the French expedition.[26] Faced with further European pressure, the Sultan agreed to appoint a Christian governor in Lebanon, whose candidacy was to be submitted by the Sultan and approved by the European powers.[24]

    The revolt in Crete, 1866–1869

     
    The Moni Arkadiou monastery

    The Cretan Revolt, which began in 1866, resulted from the failure of the Ottoman Empire to apply reforms for improving the life of the population and the Cretans' desire for enosis — union with Greece.[27] The insurgents gained control over the whole island, except for five fortified cities where the Muslims took refuge. The Greek press claimed that Muslims had massacred Greeks and the word was spread throughout Europe. Thousands of Greek volunteers were mobilized and sent to the island.

    The siege of Arkadi Monastery became particularly well known. In November 1866, about 250 Cretan Greek combatants and around 600 women and children were besieged by about 23,000 mainly Cretan Muslims aided by Ottoman troops, and this became widely known in Europe. After a bloody battle with a large number of casualties on both sides, the Cretan Greeks finally surrendered when their ammunition ran out but were killed upon surrender.[28]

    By early 1869, the insurrection was suppressed, but the Porte offered some concessions, introducing island self-rule and increasing Christian rights on the island. Although the Cretan crisis ended better for the Ottomans than almost any other diplomatic confrontation of the century, the insurrection, and especially the brutality with which it was suppressed, led to greater public attention in Europe to the oppression of Christians in the Ottoman Empire.

    Small as the amount of attention is which can be given by the people of England to the affairs of Turkey ... enough was transpiring from time to time to produce a vague but a settled and general impression that the Sultans were not fulfilling the "solemn promises" they had made to Europe; that the vices of the Turkish government were ineradicable; and that whenever another crisis might arise affecting the "independence" of the Ottoman Empire, it would be wholly impossible to afford to it again the support we had afforded in the Crimean war.[29]

    Changing balance of power in Europe

     
    Ottoman Empire in 1862

    Although on the winning side in the Crimean War, the Ottoman Empire continued to decline in power and prestige. The financial strain on the treasury forced the Ottoman government to take a series of foreign loans at such steep interest rates that, despite all the fiscal reforms that followed, pushed it into unpayable debts and economic difficulties. This was further aggravated by the need to accommodate more than 600,000 Muslim Circassians, expelled by the Russians from the Caucasus, to the Black Sea ports of north Anatolia and the Balkan ports of Constanța and Varna, which cost a great deal in money and in civil disorder to the Ottoman authorities.[30]

    The New European Concert

    The Concert of Europe established in 1814 was shaken in 1859 when France and Austria fought over Italy. It came apart completely as a result of the wars of German Unification, when the Kingdom of Prussia, led by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, defeated Austria in 1866 and France in 1870, replacing Austria-Hungary as the dominant power in Central Europe. Britain, diverted by the Irish question and averse to warfare, chose not to intervene again to restore the European balance. Bismarck did not wish the breakup of the Ottoman Empire to create rivalries that might lead to war, so he took up the Tsar's earlier suggestion that arrangements be made in case the Ottoman Empire fell apart, creating the Three Emperors' League with Austria and Russia to keep France isolated on the continent.

    France responded by supporting self-determination movements, particularly if they concerned the three emperors and the Sultan. Thus revolts in Poland against Russia and national aspirations in the Balkans were encouraged by France. Russia worked to regain its right to maintain a fleet on the Black Sea and vied with the French in gaining influence in the Balkans by using the new Pan-Slavic idea that all Slavs should be united under Russian leadership. This could be done only by destroying the two empires where most non-Russian Slavs lived, the Habsburg and the Ottoman Empires. The ambitions and the rivalries of the Russians and French in the Balkans surfaced in Serbia, which was experiencing its own national revival and had ambitions that partly conflicted with those of the great powers.[31]

    Russia after the Crimean War

    Russia ended the Crimean War with minimal territorial losses, but was forced to destroy its Black Sea Fleet and Sevastopol fortifications. Russian international prestige was damaged, and for many years revenge for the Crimean War became the main goal of Russian foreign policy. This was not easy though – the Paris Peace Treaty included guarantees of Ottoman territorial integrity by Great Britain, France and Austria; only Prussia remained friendly to Russia.

    The newly appointed Russian chancellor, Alexander Gorchakov depended upon alliance with Prussia and its chancellor Bismarck. Russia consistently supported Prussia in her wars with Denmark (1864), Austria (1866) and France (1870). In March 1871, using the crushing French defeat and the support of a grateful Germany, Russia achieved international recognition of its earlier denouncement of Article 11 of the Paris Peace Treaty, thus enabling it to revive the Black Sea Fleet.

    Other clauses of the Paris Peace Treaty, however, remained in force, specifically Article 8 with guarantees of Ottoman territorial integrity by Great Britain, France and Austria. Therefore, Russia was extremely cautious in its relations with the Ottoman Empire, coordinating all its actions with other European powers. A Russian war with Turkey would require at least the tacit support of all other Great Powers, and Russian diplomacy was waiting for a convenient moment.

    Balkan crisis of 1875–1876

    In 1875 a series of Balkan events brought Europe to the brink of war. The state of Ottoman administration in the Balkans continued to deteriorate throughout the 19th century, with the central government occasionally losing control over whole provinces. Reforms imposed by European powers did little to improve the conditions of the Christian population, while managing to dissatisfy a sizable portion of the Muslim population. Bosnia and Herzegovina suffered at least two waves of rebellion by the local Muslim population, the most recent in 1850.

     
    Europe before the Balkan crisis

    Austria consolidated after the turmoil of the first half of the century and sought to reinvigorate its centuries long policy of expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. Meanwhile, the nominally autonomous, de facto independent principalities of Serbia and Montenegro also sought to expand into regions inhabited by their compatriots. Nationalist and irredentist sentiments were strong and were encouraged by Russia and her agents. At the same time, a severe drought in Anatolia in 1873 and flooding in 1874 caused famine and widespread discontent in the heart of the Empire. The agricultural shortages precluded the collection of necessary taxes, which forced the Ottoman government to declare bankruptcy in October 1875 and increase taxes on outlying provinces including the Balkans.

    Balkan uprisings

    Albanian revolts

    Franklin Parker states that the Albanian highlanders resented new taxes and conscription, and fought against the Ottomans in the war.[32]

    Herzegovina Uprising

     
    Herzegovinian insurgents in 1875

    An uprising against Ottoman rule began in Herzegovina in July 1875. By August almost all of Herzegovina had been seized and the revolt had spread into Bosnia. Supported by nationalist volunteers from Serbia and Montenegro, the uprising continued as the Ottomans committed more and more troops to suppress it.

    Bulgarian Uprising

     
    Bashi-bazouks' atrocities in Bulgaria.

    The revolt of Bosnia and Herzegovina spurred Bucharest-based Bulgarian revolutionaries into action. In 1875, a Bulgarian uprising was hastily prepared to take advantage of Ottoman preoccupation, but it fizzled before it started. In the spring of 1876, another uprising erupted in the south-central Bulgarian lands despite the fact that there were numerous regular Turkish troops in those areas.

    A special Turkish military committee was established to quell the uprising. Regular troops (Nisam) and irregulars (Redif or Bashi-bazouk) were directed to fight the Bulgarians (11 May – 9 June 1876). The irregulars were mostly drawn from the Muslim inhabitants of the Bulgarian region. Many were Circassians from the Caucasus or Crimean Tatars who were expelled during the Crimean War; some were Islamized Bulgarians. The Turkish army suppressed the revolt, massacring up to 30,000[33][34] people in the process.[35][36] Five thousand out of the seven thousand villagers of Batak were put to death.[37] Both Batak and Perushtitsa, where the majority of the population was also massacred, participated in the rebellion.[34] Many of the perpetrators of those massacres were later decorated by the Ottoman high command.[34] Modern historians have estimated the number of murdered Bulgarians at between 30,000 and 100,000.[38]

    International reaction to atrocities in Bulgaria

    Word of the bashi-bazouks' atrocities filtered to the outside world by way of the American-run Robert College located in Constantinople. The majority of the students were Bulgarian, and many received news of the events from their families back home. Soon the Western diplomatic community in Constantinople was abuzz with rumours, which eventually found their way into newspapers in the West. While in Constantinople in 1879, Protestant missionary George Warren Wood reported Turkish authorities in Amasia brutally persecuting Christian Armenian refugees from Soukoum Kaleh. He was able to coordinate with British diplomat Edward Malet to bring the matter to the attention of the Sublime Porte, and then to the British foreign secretary Robert Gascoyne-Cecil (the Marquess of Salisbury).[39] In Britain, where Disraeli's government was committed to supporting the Ottomans in the ongoing Balkan crisis, the Liberal opposition newspaper Daily News hired American journalist Januarius A. MacGahan to report on the massacre stories firsthand.

     
    The Avenger: An Allegorical War Map for 1877 by Fred. W. Rose, 1872: This map reflects the "Great Eastern Crisis" and the subsequent Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78.

    MacGahan toured the stricken regions of the Bulgarian uprising, and his report, splashed across the Daily News's front pages, galvanized British public opinion against Disraeli's pro-Ottoman policy.[40] In September, opposition leader William Gladstone published his Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East[41] calling upon Britain to withdraw its support for Turkey and proposing that Europe demand independence for Bulgaria and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[42] As the details became known across Europe, many dignitaries, including Charles Darwin, Oscar Wilde, Victor Hugo and Giuseppe Garibaldi, publicly condemned the Ottoman abuses in Bulgaria.[43]

    The strongest reaction came from Russia. Widespread sympathy for the Bulgarian cause led to a nationwide surge in patriotism on a scale comparable with the one during the Patriotic War of 1812. From autumn 1875, the movement to support the Bulgarian uprising involved all classes of Russian society. This was accompanied by sharp public discussions about Russian goals in this conflict: Slavophiles, including Dostoevsky, saw in the impending war the chance to unite all Orthodox nations under Russia's helm, thus fulfilling what they believed was the historic mission of Russia, while their opponents, westernizers, inspired by Turgenev, denied the importance of religion and believed that Russian goals should not be defense of Orthodoxy but liberation of Bulgaria.[44]

    Serbo-Turkish War and diplomatic maneuvering

     
    Russia preparing to release the Balkan dogs of war, while Britain warns him to take care. Punch cartoon from 17 June 1876

    On 30 June 1876, Serbia, followed by Montenegro, declared war on the Ottoman Empire. In July and August, the ill-prepared and poorly equipped Serbian army helped by Russian volunteers failed to achieve offensive objectives but did manage to repulse the Ottoman offensive into Serbia. Meanwhile, Russia's Alexander II and Prince Gorchakov met Austria-Hungary's Franz Joseph I and Count Andrássy in the Reichstadt castle in Bohemia. No written agreement was made, but during the discussions, Russia agreed to support Austrian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Austria-Hungary, in exchange, agreed to support the return of Southern Bessarabia—lost by Russia during the Crimean War—and Russian annexation of the port of Batum on the east coast of the Black Sea. Bulgaria was to become autonomous (independent, according to the Russian records).[45]

    As the fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina continued, Serbia suffered a string of setbacks and asked the European powers to mediate an end to the war. A joint ultimatum by the European powers forced the Porte to give Serbia a one-month truce and start peace negotiations. Turkish peace conditions however were refused by European powers as too harsh. In early October, after the truce expired, the Turkish army resumed its offensive and the Serbian position quickly became desperate. On 31 October, Russia issued an ultimatum requiring the Ottoman Empire to stop the hostilities and sign a new truce with Serbia within 48 hours. This was supported by the partial mobilization of the Russian army (up to 20 divisions). The Sultan accepted the conditions of the ultimatum.

    To resolve the crisis, on 11 December 1876, the Constantinople Conference of the Great Powers was opened in Constantinople (to which the Turks were not invited). A compromise solution was negotiated, granting autonomy to Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina under the joint control of European powers. The Ottomans, however, refused to sacrifice their independence by allowing international representatives to oversee the institution of reforms and sought to discredit the conference by announcing on 23 December, the day the conference was closed, that a constitution was adopted that declared equal rights for religious minorities within the Empire. The Ottomans attempted to use this manoeuver to get their objections and amendments to the agreement heard. When they were rejected by the Great Powers, the Ottoman Empire announced its decision to disregard the results of the conference.

    On 15 January 1877, Russia and Austria-Hungary signed a written agreement confirming the results of an earlier Reichstadt Agreement in July 1876. This assured Russia of the benevolent neutrality of Austria-Hungary in the impending war. These terms meant that in case of war Russia would do the fighting and Austria would derive most of the advantage. Russia therefore made a final effort for a peaceful settlement. After reaching an agreement with its main Balkan rival and with anti-Ottoman sympathies running high throughout Europe due to the Bulgarian atrocities and the rejection of the Constantinople agreements, Russia finally felt free to declare war.

    Course of the war

    Opening manoeuvres

     
    Nizhegorodsky Dragoons pursuing the Turks near Kars, 1877, painting by Aleksey Kivshenko

    On 12 April 1877, Romania gave permission to the Russian troops to pass through its territory to attack the Turks.

    On 24 April 1877 Russia declared war on the Ottomans, and its troops entered Romania through the newly built Eiffel Bridge near Ungheni, on the Prut river, resulting in Turkish bombardments of Romanian towns on the Danube.

    On 10 May 1877, the Principality of Romania, which was under formal Turkish rule, declared its independence.[46]

    At the beginning of the war, the outcome was far from obvious. The Russians could send a larger army into the Balkans: about 300,000 troops were within reach. The Ottomans had about 200,000 troops on the Balkan peninsula, of which about 100,000 were assigned to fortified garrisons, leaving about 100,000 for the army of operation. The Ottomans had the advantage of being fortified, complete command of the Black Sea, and patrol boats along the Danube river.[47] They also possessed superior arms, including new British and American-made rifles and German-made artillery.

     
    Russian crossing of the Danube, June 1877, painting by Nikolai Dmitriev-Orenburgsky, 1883

    In the event, however, the Ottomans usually resorted to passive defense, leaving the strategic initiative to the Russians, who, after making some mistakes, found a winning strategy for the war. The Ottoman military command in Constantinople made poor assumptions about Russian intentions. They decided that Russians would be too lazy to march along the Danube and cross it away from the delta, and would prefer the short way along the Black Sea coast. This would be ignoring the fact that the coast had the strongest, best supplied and garrisoned Turkish fortresses. There was only one well manned fortress along the inner part of the river Danube, Vidin. It was garrisoned only because the troops, led by Osman Pasha, had just taken part in defeating the Serbs in their recent war against the Ottoman Empire.

    The Russian campaign was better planned, but it relied heavily on Turkish passivity. A crucial Russian mistake was sending too few troops initially; an expeditionary force of about 185,000 crossed the Danube in June, slightly fewer than the combined Turkish forces in the Balkans (about 200,000). After setbacks in July (at Pleven and Stara Zagora), the Russian military command realized it did not have the reserves to keep the offensive going and switched to a defensive posture. The Russians did not even have enough forces to blockade Pleven properly until late August, which effectively delayed the whole campaign for about two months.

    Balkan theatre

     
    Map of the Balkan Theater

    At the start of the war, Russia and Romania destroyed all vessels along the Danube and mined the river, thus ensuring that Russian forces could cross the Danube at any point without resistance from the Ottoman Navy. The Ottoman command did not appreciate the significance of the Russians' actions. In June, a small Russian unit crossed the Danube close to the delta, at Galați, and marched towards Ruschuk (today Ruse). This made the Ottomans even more confident that the big Russian force would come right through the middle of the Ottoman stronghold.

     
    Russian, Romanian and Ottoman troop movements at Plevna
     
    Soldiers of Finnish Guard sharpshooter battalion during Battle of Gorni Dubnik

    On 25–26 May, a Romanian torpedo boat with a mixed Romanian-Russian crew attacked and sank an Ottoman monitor on the Danube. Under the direct command of Major-General Mikhail Ivanovich Dragomirov, on the night of 27/28 June 1877 (NS) the Russians constructed a pontoon bridge across the Danube at Svishtov. After a short battle in which the Russians suffered 812 killed and wounded,[48] the Russian secured the opposing bank and drove off the Ottoman infantry brigade defending Svishtov. At this point the Russian force was divided into three parts: the Eastern Detachment under the command of Tsarevich Alexander Alexandrovich, the future Tsar Alexander III of Russia, assigned to capture the fortress of Ruschuk and cover the army's eastern flank; the Western Detachment, to capture the fortress of Nikopol, Bulgaria and cover the army's western flank; and the Advance Detachment under Count Joseph Vladimirovich Gourko, which was assigned to quickly move via Veliko Tarnovo and penetrate the Balkan Mountains, the most significant barrier between the Danube and Constantinople.

     
    Fighting near Ivanovo-Chiflik

    Responding to the Russian crossing of the Danube, the Ottoman high command in Constantinople ordered Osman Nuri Paşa to advance east from Vidin and occupy the fortress of Nikopol, just west of the Russian crossing. On his way to Nikopol, Osman Pasha learned that the Russians had already captured the fortress and so moved to the crossroads town of Plevna (now known as Pleven), which he occupied with a force of approximately 15,000 on 19 July (NS).[49] The Russians, approximately 9,000 under the command of General Schilder-Schuldner, reached Plevna early in the morning. Thus began the Siege of Plevna.

    Osman Pasha organized a defense and repelled two Russian attacks with colossal casualties on the Russian side. At that point, the sides were almost equal in numbers and the Russian army was very discouraged.[50] A counter-attack might have allowed the Ottomans to control and destroy the Russians' bridge, but Osman Pasha did not leave the fortress because he had orders to stay fortified in Plevna.

     
    The Ottoman capitulation at Niğbolu (Nicopolis, modern Nikopol) in 1877 was significant, as it was the site of an important Ottoman victory in 1396 which marked the expansion of the Ottoman Empire into the Balkans.

    Russia had no more troops to throw against Plevna, so the Russians besieged it, and subsequently asked[51] the Romanians to cross the Danube and help them. On 9 August, Suleiman Pasha made an attempt to help Osman Pasha with 30,000 troops, but he was stopped by Bulgarians at the Battle of Shipka Pass. After three days of fighting, the volunteers were relieved by a Russian force led by General Radezky, and the Turkish forces withdrew. Soon afterwards, Romanian forces crossed the Danube and joined the siege. On 16 August, at Gorni-Studen, the armies around Plevna were placed under the command of the Romanian Prince Carol I, aided by the Russian general Pavel Dmitrievich Zotov and the Romanian general Alexandru Cernat.

    The Turks maintained several fortresses around Pleven which the Russian and Romanian forces gradually reduced.[52][53][page needed] The Romanian 4th Division led by General Gheorghe Manu took the Grivitsa redoubt after four bloody assaults and managed to keep it until the very end of the siege. The siege of Plevna (July–December 1877) turned to victory only after Russian and Romanian forces cut off all supply routes to the fortified Ottomans. With supplies running low, Osman Pasha made an attempt to break the Russian siege in the direction of Opanets. On 9 December, in the middle of the night the Ottomans threw bridges over the Vit River and crossed it, attacked on a 2-mile (3.2 km) front and broke through the first line of Russian trenches. Here they fought hand to hand and bayonet to bayonet, with little advantage to either side. Outnumbering the Ottomans almost 5 to 1, the Russians drove the Ottomans back across the Vit. Osman Pasha was wounded in the leg by a stray bullet, which killed his horse beneath him. Making a brief stand, the Ottomans eventually found themselves driven back into the city, losing 5,000 men to the Russians' 2,000. The next day, Osman surrendered the city, the garrison, and his sword to the Romanian colonel, Mihail Cerchez. He was treated honorably, but his troops perished in the snow by the thousands as they straggled off into captivity.

     
    Taking of the Grivitsa redoubt by the Russians – a few hours later the redoubt was recaptured by the Ottomans and fell to the Romanians on 30 August 1877, in what became known as the "Third Battle of Grivitsa".

    At this point Serbia, having finally secured monetary aid from Russia, declared war on the Ottoman Empire again. This time there were far fewer Russian officers in the Serbian army but this was more than offset by the experience gained from the 1876–77 war. Under nominal command of prince Milan Obrenović (effective command was in hands of general Kosta Protić, the army chief of staff), the Serbian Army went on offensive in what is now eastern south Serbia. A planned offensive into the Ottoman Sanjak of Novi Pazar was called off due to strong diplomatic pressure from Austria-Hungary, which wanted to prevent Serbia and Montenegro from coming into contact, and which had designs to spread Austria-Hungary's influence through the area. The Ottomans, outnumbered unlike two years before, mostly confined themselves to passive defence of fortified positions. By the end of hostilities the Serbs had captured Ak-Palanka (today Bela Palanka), Pirot, Niš and Vranje.

     
    Battle at bridge Skit, November 1877

    Russians under Field Marshal Joseph Vladimirovich Gourko succeeded in capturing the passes at the Stara Planina mountain, which were crucial for maneuvering. Next, both sides fought a series of battles for Shipka Pass. Gourko made several attacks on the Pass and eventually secured it. Ottoman troops spent much effort to recapture this important route, to use it to reinforce Osman Pasha in Pleven, but failed. Eventually Gourko led a final offensive that crushed the Ottomans around Shipka Pass. The Ottoman offensive against Shipka Pass is considered one of the major mistakes of the war, as other passes were virtually unguarded. At this time a huge number of Ottoman troops stayed fortified along the Black Sea coast and engaged in very few operations.

    A Russian army crossed the Stara Planina by a high snowy pass in winter, guided and helped by local Bulgarians, not expected by the Ottoman army, and defeated the Turks at the Battle of Tashkessen and took Sofia. The way was now open for a quick advance through Plovdiv and Edirne to Constantinople.

    Besides the Romanian Army (which mobilized 130,000 men, losing 10,000 of them to this war), more than 12,000 volunteer Bulgarian troops (Opalchenie) from the local Bulgarian population as well as many hajduk detachments fought in the war on the side of the Russians.

    Caucasian theatre

     
    The Russo-Turkish War in Caucasia, 1877

    The Russian Caucasus Corps was stationed in Georgia and Armenia, composed of approximately 50,000 men and 202 guns under the overall command of Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich, Governor General of the Caucasus.[54] The Russian force stood opposed by an Ottoman Army of 100,000 men led by General Ahmed Muhtar Pasha. While the Russian army was better prepared for the fighting in the region, it lagged behind technologically in certain areas such as heavy artillery and was outgunned, for example, by the superior long-range Krupp artillery that Germany had supplied to the Ottomans.[55]

    The Caucasus Corps was led by a quartet of Armenian commanders: Generals Mikhail Loris-Melikov, Arshak Ter-Gukasov (Ter-Ghukasov/Ter-Ghukasyan), Ivan Lazarev and Beybut Shelkovnikov.[56] Forces under Lieutenant-General Ter-Gukasov, stationed near Yerevan, commenced the first assault into Ottoman territory by capturing the town of Bayazid on 27 April 1877.[57] Capitalizing on Ter-Gukasov's victory there, Russian forces advanced, taking the region of Ardahan on 17 May; Russian units also besieged the city of Kars in the final week of May, although Ottoman reinforcements lifted the siege and drove them back. Bolstered by reinforcements, in November 1877 General Lazarev launched a new attack on Kars, suppressing the southern forts leading to the city and capturing Kars itself on 18 November.[58] On 19 February 1878, the strategic fortress town of Erzurum was taken by the Russians after a lengthy siege. Although they relinquished control of Erzerum to the Ottomans at the end the war, the Russians acquired the regions of Batum, Ardahan, Kars, Olti, and Sarikamish and reconstituted them into the Kars Oblast.[59]

    Kurdish uprising

    As the Russo-Turkish war came to a close, a Kurdish uprising began. It was led by two brothers, Husayn and Osman Pasha. The rebellion held most of the region of Bohtan for 9 months. It was ended only through duplicity, after force of arms had failed.[60] In Kars, Kurdish notables like Abdürrezzak Bedir Khan and a son of Sheikh Ubeydullah were supporters of the Russians.[61]

    Civilian government in Bulgaria during the war

     
    Plevna Chapel near the walls of Kitay-gorod

    After Bulgarian territories were liberated by the Imperial Russian Army during the war, they were governed initially by a provisional Russian administration, which was established in April 1877. The Treaty of Berlin (1878) provided for the termination of this provisional Russian administration in May 1879, when the Principality of Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia were established.[62] The main objectives of the temporary Russian administration were to secure peace and order and to prepare for a revival of the Bulgarian state.

    Aftermath

    Intervention by the Great Powers

     
    Europe after the Congress of Berlin in 1878 and the territorial and political rearrangement of the Balkan Peninsula.

    Under pressure from the British, Russia accepted the truce offered by the Ottoman Empire on 31 January 1878, but continued to move towards Constantinople.

    The British sent a fleet of battleships to intimidate Russia from entering the city, and Russian forces stopped at San Stefano. Eventually Russia entered into a settlement under the Treaty of San Stefano on 3 March, by which the Ottoman Empire would recognize the independence of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro, and the autonomy of Bulgaria.

    Alarmed by the extension of Russian power into the Balkans, the Great Powers later forced modifications of the treaty in the Congress of Berlin. The main change here was that Bulgaria would be split, according to earlier agreements among the Great Powers that precluded the creation of a large new Slavic state: the northern and eastern parts to become principalities as before (Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia), though with different governors; and the Macedonian region, originally part of Bulgaria under San Stefano, would return to direct Ottoman administration.[63]

    The 1879 Treaty of Constantinople [ru] was a further continuation of negotiations between Russia and the Ottoman Empire. While reaffirming provisions of the Treaty of San Stefano which had not been modified by the Berlin Treaty, it set compensation terms owed by Ottoman Empire to Russia for losses sustained during the war. It contained terms to release prisoners of war and to grant amnesty to Ottoman subjects,[64][65] as well as providing terms for the inhabitants nationality after the annexations. Article VII allowed subjects to opt within six months of the signing of the treaty to retain Ottoman subjecthood or become Russian subjects.[65][66]

    A surprising consequence came in Hungary (part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire). Despite memories of the terrible defeat at Mohács in 1526, elite Hungarian attitudes were becoming strongly anti-Russian. This led to active support for the Turks in the media, but only in a peaceful way, since the foreign policy of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy remained neutral.[67]

    Effects on Bulgaria's Jewish population

    Many Jewish communities in their entirety fled with the retreating Turks as their protectors. The Bulletins de l'Alliance Israélite Universelle reported that thousands of Bulgarian Jews found refuge at the Ottoman capital of Constantinople.[68]

    Internationalization of the Armenian Question

     
    Emigration of Armenians into Georgia during the Russo-Turkish war

    The conclusion of the Russo-Turkish war also led to the internationalization of the Armenian Question. Many Armenians in the eastern provinces (Turkish Armenia) of the Ottoman Empire greeted the advancing Russians as liberators. Violence and instability directed at Armenians during the war by Kurd and Circassian bands had left many Armenians looking toward the invading Russians as the ultimate guarantors of their security. Influential pro-Russian Armenian thinker Grigor Artsruni encouraged Armenians to migrate to Russia in order to form a more concentrated block.[69] In January 1878, Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople Nerses II Varzhapetian approached the Russian leadership with the view of receiving assurances that the Russians would introduce provisions in the prospective peace treaty for self-administration in the Armenian provinces. Though not as explicit, Article 16 of the Treaty of San Stefano read:

    As the evacuation of the Russian troops of the territory they occupy in Armenia, and which is to be restored to Turkey, might give rise to conflicts and complications detrimental to the maintenance of good relations between the two countries, the Sublime Porte engaged to carry into effect, without further delay, the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by Armenians and to guarantee their security from Kurds and Circassians.[70]

    Armenian Patriarch discouraged Armenian migration to Russia and encouraged Armenians to “remain faithful to the Sultan”.Patriarch held the belief that Armenian-inhabited areas could remain under Ottoman rule, but under Christian control, and that Muslims who were dissatisfied with how the Ottomans had been governing the provinces would tolerate life under Christian leadership. In attempting to persuade the British to drive a hard bargain with the Ottoman Empire, he asserted to British Ambassador Henry Layard that the “only thing … that could induce the Armenians to refrain from listening to the advice of Russia to emigrate, and to be content to remain under the rule of the Sultan, would be the appointment of an Armenian as Vali of Armenia”.[69] Great Britain, however, took objection to Russia holding on to so much Ottoman territory and forced it to enter into new negotiations by convening the Congress of Berlin in June 1878. An Armenian delegation led by prelate Mkrtich Khrimian traveled to Berlin to present the case of the Armenians but, much to its chagrin, was left out of the negotiations. Article 16 was modified and watered down, and all mention of the Russian forces remaining in the provinces was removed. In the final text of the Treaty of Berlin, it was transformed into Article 61, which read:

    The Sublime Porte undertakes to carry out, without further delay, the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by Armenians, and to guarantee their security against the Circassians and Kurds. It will periodically make known the steps taken to this effect to the powers, who will superintend their application.[71]

    As it turned out, the reforms were not forthcoming. Khrimian returned to Constantinople and delivered a famous speech in which he likened the peace conference to a "'big cauldron of Liberty Stew' into which the big nations dipped their 'iron ladles' for real results, while the Armenian delegation had only a 'Paper Ladle'. 'Ah dear Armenian people,' Khrimian said, 'could I have dipped my Paper Ladle in the cauldron it would sog and remain there! Where guns talk and sabers shine, what significance do appeals and petitions have?'"[72] Given the absence of tangible improvements in the plight of the Armenian community, a number of Armenian intellectuals living in Europe and Russia in the 1880s and 1890s formed political parties and revolutionary societies to secure better conditions for their compatriots in Ottoman Armenia and other parts of the Ottoman Empire.[73]

    Civilian casualties

    Atrocities and ethnic cleansing

    Both sides carried out massacres and an ethnic cleansing policy during the war.[74][75]

    Against Turks

     
    Turkish refugees fleeing from Tarnovo towards Shumen
     
    The execution of the Bashi-bazouks in Bulgaria, 1878.

    In January 1878, advancing coalition forces started committing atrocities against Muslim populations in the region. British reports from that time have detailed information about atrocities and massacres. According to those reports, in the village of İssova Bâlâ, the school and 96 of the 170 houses were burned to the ground.[76] The inhabitants of Yukarı Sofular were slaughtered and 12 of the 130 houses in village, a mosque, and a school were burned.[77][78] In Kozluca, 18 Turks were killed.[79] Massacres of Muslim inhabitants occurred in Kazanlak too.[80] In the village of Muflis, 127 Muslim inhabitants were kidnapped by a group of Russian and Bulgarian troops. 20 managed to escape. The rest were killed.[81] 400 people from Muflis were killed according to Ottoman sources.[82] 11 inhabitants were killed in Keçidere.[81] According to John Joseph the Russian troops frequently killed Muslim peasants to prevent them from disrupting their supply and troop movements. During the Battle of Harmanli accompanying this retaliation on Muslim non-combatants, it was reported that a huge group of Muslim townspeople were attacked by the Russian army. Thousands died and their goods were confiscated.[83][84][85] The correspondent of the Daily News describes as an eyewitness the burning of four or five Turkish villages by the Russian troops in response to the Turks firing at the Russians from the villages, instead of behind rocks or trees,[86] which must have appeared to the Russian soldiers as guerrilla attempts by the local Muslim populace upon the Russian contingencies operating against the Ottoman forces embedded in the area. During the conflict a number of Muslim buildings and cultural centres were also destroyed. A large library of old Turkish books was destroyed when a mosque in Turnovo was burned in 1877.[87] Most mosques in Sofia were destroyed, seven of them in one night in December 1878 when "a thunderstorm masked the noise of the explosions arranged by Russian military engineers."[88]

    Many villages in the Kars region were pillaged by Russian army during the war.[82] The war in Caucasus caused many Muslims to migrate to remaining Ottoman lands, mostly in poverty and with poor conditions.[89] Between 1878 and 1881, 82,000 Muslims migrated to the Ottoman Empire from lands ceded to Russia in Caucasus.[90]

    There are different guesses about losses during the Russo-Turkish war. Dennis Hupchik and Justin McCarthy says that 260,000 people went missing and 500,000 became refugees.[91][92] Turkish historian Kemal Karpat claims that 250–300,000 people, about 17% of the former Muslim population of Bulgaria, died as a consequence of famine, disease, and massacres,[93] and 1 to 1.5 million people were forced to migrate.[94] Turkish author Nedim İpek gives the same numbers as Karpat.[95] Another source claims 400,000 Turks were massacred and 1,000,000 Turks had to migrate during the war.[96] The perpetrators of those massacres are also disputed, with Justin McCarthy claiming that they were carried out by Russian soldiers, Cossacks as well as Bulgarian volunteers and villagers, though there were few civilian casualties in battle.[97] while James J. Reid claims that Circassians were significantly responsible for the refugee flow, that there were civilian casualties from battle and even that the Ottoman army was responsible for casualties among the Muslim population.[98] The number of Muslim refugees is estimated by R.J. Crampton to be 130,000.[99] Richard C. Frucht estimates that only half (700,000) of the prewar Muslim population remained after the war, 216,000 had died and the rest emigrated.[100] Douglas Arthur Howard estimates that half the 1.5 million Muslims, for the most part Turks, in prewar Bulgaria had disappeared by 1879. 200,000 had died, the rest became permanently refugees in Ottoman territories.[101]

    Against Albanians

    Against Bulgarians

     
    Bones of massacred Bulgarians at Stara Zagora (ethnic cleansing by the Ottoman Empire)

    The most notable massacre of Bulgarian civilians took place after the July battle of Stara Zagora when Gurko's forces had to retreat back to the Shipka pass. In the aftermath of the battle Suleiman Pasha's forces burned down and plundered the town of Stara Zagora which by that time was one of the largest towns in the Bulgarian lands. The number of massacred Christian civilians during the battle is estimated at 15,000. Suleiman Pasha's forces also established in the whole valley of the Maritsa river a system of terror taking form in the hanging at the street corners of every Bulgarian who had in any way assisted the Russians, but even villages that had not assisted the Russians were destroyed and their inhabitants massacred.[102] As a result, as many as 100,000 civilian Bulgarians fled north to the Russian occupied territories.[103] Later on in the campaign the Ottoman forces planned to burn the town of Sofia after Gurko had managed to overcome their resistance in the passes of Western part of the Balkan Mountains. Only the refusal of the Italian Consul Vito Positano, the French Vice Consul Léandre François René le Gay and the Austro–Hungarian Vice Consul to leave Sofia prevented that from happening. After the Ottoman retreat, Positano even organized armed detachments to protect the population from marauders (regular Ottoman Army deserters and bashi-bazouks).[104] Circassians in the Ottoman forces also raped and murdered Bulgarians during the 1877 Russo-Turkish war.[105][106][107][108][109][110][111]

    According to Bulgarian historians, 30,000 Bulgarian civilians were killed during the war, with two-thirds of the killings being committed in the Stara Zagora area.[112]

    Against Circassians

    Russians raped Circassian girls during the 1877 Russo-Turkish war from the Circassian refugees who were settled in the Ottoman Balkans.[113] After the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano, the 10,000-strong Circassian minority in Dobruja was expelled.[114]

    Lasting effects

    International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement

     
    The Red Cross and the Red Crescent emblems

    This war caused a division in the emblems of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement which continues to this day. Both Russia and the Ottoman Empire had signed the First Geneva Convention (1864), which made the Red Cross, a colour reversal of the flag of neutral Switzerland, the sole emblem of protection for military medical personnel and facilities. However, during this war the cross instead reminded the Ottomans of the Crusades; so they elected to replace the cross with the Red Crescent instead. This ultimately became the symbol of the Movement's national societies in most Muslim countries, and was ratified as an emblem of protection by later Geneva Conventions in 1929 and again in 1949 (the current version).

    Iran, which neighbored both the Russian Empire and Ottoman Empire, considered them to be rivals, and probably considered the Red Crescent in particular to be an Ottoman symbol; except for the Red Crescent being centred and without a star, it is a colour reversal of the Ottoman flag (and the modern Turkish flag). This appears to have led to their national society in the Movement being initially known as the Red Lion and Sun Society, using a red version of the Lion and Sun, a traditional Iranian symbol. After the Iranian Revolution of 1979, Iran switched to the Red Crescent, but the Geneva Conventions continue to recognize the Red Lion and Sun as an emblem of protection.

    In popular culture

    The novella Jalaleddin, published in 1878 by the novelist Raffi describes the Kurdish massacres of Armenians in the eastern Ottoman Empire at the time of the Russo-Turkish war. The novella follows the journey of a young man through the mountains of Anatolia. The historical descriptions in the novella correspond with information from British sources at the time.[115]

    The novel The Doll (Polish title: Lalka), written in 1887–1889 by Bolesław Prus, describes consequences of the Russo-Turkish war for merchants living in Russia and partitioned Poland. The main protagonist helped his Russian friend, a multi-millionaire, and made a fortune supplying the Russian Army in 1877–1878. The novel describes trading during political instability, and its ambiguous results for Russian and Polish societies.

    The 1912 silent film Independența României depicted the war in Romania.

    Russian writer Boris Akunin uses the war as the setting for the novel The Turkish Gambit (1998).

    See also

    Notes

    1. ^ 400,000 Turkish civilians killed and 500,000–1.5 million displaced by coalition forces[19][better source needed][20][better source needed] 30,000 Bulgarian civilians massacred by Ottoman forces (according to Bulgarian sources)

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    • Crampton, R. J. (2006) [1997]. A Concise History of Bulgaria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-85085-1.
    • Gladstone, William Ewart (1876). Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East. London: William Clowes & Sons. OL 7083313M.
    • Greene, F. V. (1879). The Russian Army and its Campaigns in Turkey. New York: D.Appleton and Company. Retrieved 19 July 2018 – via Internet Archive.
    • von Herbert, Frederick William (1895). The Defence of Plevna 1877. London: Longmans, Green & Co. Retrieved 26 July 2018 – via Internet Archive.
    • Hupchick, D. P. (2002). The Balkans: From Constantinople to Communism. Palgrave. ISBN 1-4039-6417-3.
    • The War Correspondence of the "Daily News" 1877 with a Connecting Narrative Forming a Continuous History of the War Between Russia and Turkey to the Fall of Kars Including the Letters of Mr. Archibald Forbes, Mr. J. A. MacGahan and Many Other Special Correspondents in Europe and Asia. London: Macmillan and Co. 1878. Retrieved 26 July 2018 – via Internet Archive.
    • The War Correspondence of the "Daily News" 1877–1878 continued from the Fall of Kars to the Signature of the Preliminaries of Peace. London: Macmillan and Co. 1878. Retrieved 26 July 2018 – via Internet Archive.
    • Maurice, Major F. (1905). The Russo-Turkish War 1877; A Strategical Sketch. London: Swan Sonneschein. Retrieved 8 August 2018 – via Internet Archive.
    • Jonassohn, Kurt (1999). Genocide and gross human rights violations: in comparative perspective. ISBN 9781412824453.
    • Reid, James J. (2000). Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839–1878. Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte des östlichen Europa. Vol. 57 (illustrated ed.). Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 9783515076876. ISSN 0170-3595.
    • Shaw, Stanford J.; Shaw, Ezel Kural (1977). History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution, and Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey 1808–1975. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521291637.
    • Stavrianos, L. S. (1958). The Balkans Since 1453. pp. 393–412. ISBN 9780814797662.

    Further reading

    • Acar, Keziban (March 2004). "An examination of Russian Imperialism: Russian Military and intellectual descriptions of the Caucasians during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878". Nationalities Papers. 32 (1): 7–21. doi:10.1080/0090599042000186151. S2CID 153769239.
    • Baleva, Martina. "The Empire Strikes Back. Image Battles and Image Frontlines during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878." Ethnologia Balkanica 16 (2012): 273–294. online[dead link]
    • Dennis, Brad. "Patterns of Conflict and Violence in Eastern Anatolia Leading Up to the Russo-Turkish War and the Treaty of Berlin." War and Diplomacy: The Russo-Turkish War of 1878 (1877): 273–301.
    • Drury, Ian. The Russo-Turkish War 1877 (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012).
    • Glenny, Misha (2012), The Balkans: Nationalism, War, and the Great Powers, 1804–2011, New York: Penguin.
    • Isci, Onur. "Russian and Ottoman Newspapers in the War of 1877–1878." Russian History 41.2 (2014): 181–196. online
    • Murray, Nicholas. The Rocky Road to the Great War: The Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914. Potomac Books Inc. (an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press), 2013.
    • Neuburger, Mary. "The Russo‐Turkish war and the ‘Eastern Jewish question’: Encounters between victims and victors in Ottoman Bulgaria, 1877–8." East European Jewish Affairs 26.2 (1996): 53–66.
    • Stone, James. "Reports from the Theatre of War. Major Viktor von Lignitz and the Russo-Turkish War, 1877–78." Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift 71.2 (2012): 287–307. online contains primary sources
    • Todorov, Nikolai. "The Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Liberation of Bulgaria: An Interpretative Essay." East European Quarterly 14.1 (1980): 9+ online
    • Yavuz, M. Hakan, and Peter Sluglett, eds. War and diplomacy: the Russo-Turkish war of 1877–1878 and the treaty of Berlin (U of Utah Press, 2011)
    • Yildiz, Gültekin. "Russo-Ottoman War, 1877–1878." in Richard C. Hall, ed., War in the Balkans (2014): 256–258 online[dead link].

    • Глазков, В. В.; Копытов, С. Ю.; Литвин, А. А.; Митев, П.; Георгиева, Т.; Колев, В. (2018). Освобождение Болгарии — Лики Войны и Памяти. К 140-летию окончания Русско-турецкой войны 1877–1878 гг. [альбом] (1000 экз ed.). М.: Фонд «Русские Витязи». Сост. и науч. ред.: Олег Леонов, д.и.н Румяна Михнева. Сост.: профессор Пламен Митев, доцент Тина Георгиева, доцент Валери Колев. ISBN 978-5-6040157-4-2.

    External links

    • Seegel, Steven J, Virtual War, Virtual Journalism?: Russian Media Responses to 'Balkan' Entanglements in Historical Perspective, 1877–2001 (PDF), USA: Brown University.
    • Military History: Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), Digital book index.
    • Sowards, Steven W, , MSU, archived from the original on 15 October 2007.
    • "Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and the Exploits of Liberators", Grand war (in Russian), Kulichki.
    • The Romanian Army of the Russo-Turkish War 1877–1878, AOL.
    • (image gallery) (in Bulgarian), 8M, archived from the original on 13 October 2006
    • Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878). Historical photos. 14 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine

    Video links

    130 years Liberation of Pleven (Plevna)

    • Zelenogorsky, Najden (3 March 2007), (speech), archived from the original (video) on 25 October 2007, retrieved 30 April 2007.
    • Stanishev, Sergej (3 March 2007), (speech), archived from the original (video) on 25 October 2007, retrieved 30 April 2007.
    • Potapov (3 March 2007), (speech), archived from the original (video) on 24 October 2007, retrieved 30 April 2007.

    russo, turkish, 1877, 1878, russo, turkish, 1877, 1878, turkish, harbi, named, year, 1293, islamic, calendar, russian, Русско, турецкая, война, romanized, russko, turetskaya, voyna, russian, turkish, conflict, between, ottoman, empire, coalition, russian, empi. The Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Turkish 93 Harbi lit War of 93 named for the year 1293 in the Islamic calendar Russian Russko tureckaya vojna romanized Russko turetskaya voyna Russian Turkish war was a conflict between the Ottoman Empire and a coalition led by the Russian Empire and including Bulgaria Romania Serbia and Montenegro 21 Fought in the Balkans and in the Caucasus it originated in emerging 19th century Balkan nationalism Additional factors included the Russian goals of recovering territorial losses endured during the Crimean War of 1853 56 re establishing itself in the Black Sea and supporting the political movement attempting to free Balkan nations from the Ottoman Empire Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Part of The Great Eastern Crisis and the Russo Turkish warsRussian troops and Bulgarian volunteers fighting off the Ottoman Army during the Battle of Shipka Pass in August 1877 painting Alexey Popov 1893 Date24 April 1877 3 March 1878 10 months and 1 week LocationBalkans CaucasusResultRussian Coalition victory Official recognition of de facto and de jure independence of the Balkan states Treaty of San Stefano Treaty of Berlin Treaty of ConstantinopleTerritorialchangesReestablishment of the Bulgarian state De jure independence of Romania Serbia and Montenegro from the Ottoman Empire Kars and Batum Oblasts become part of the Russian Empire Britain occupies Cyprus Bosnia and Herzegovina is occupied by Austria Hungary Russian annexation of Southern Bessarabia from Romania Romanian annexation of Northern DobrujaBelligerents Russia Guard of Finland 1 Romania Serbia Bulgarian Legion Montenegro Ottoman Empire Khedivate of Egypt Polish volunteers Circassian volunteers 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Commanders and leadersAlexander IIGD Nicholas NikolaevichGD Michael NikolaevichDmitry MilyutinIosif GurkoMikhail Loris MelikovGrigol DadianiAlexander AlexandrovichPyotr VannovskyMikhail DragomirovMikhail SkobelevIvan LazarevEduard TotlebenNikolai StoletovCarol IMilan IKosta ProticNicholas I of MontenegroAbdul Hamid IIIbrahim Edhem PashaAhmed Hamdi PashaKurt Ismail PashaAhmed PashaOsman PashaMehmed Sakir PashaSuleiman PashaHasan Husnu PashaHuseyin PashaHobart PashaMehmed PashaAbdulkerim PashaAhmed Eyub PashaDeli Fuad PashaMehmed Riza PashaCerkes Giranduk BeyJozef JagminStrengthRussian Empire Initial 185 000 in the Army of the Danube 75 000 in the Caucasian Army 9 Total 260 000 in four corps 10 11 Ottoman Empire Initial 70 000 in the CaucasusTotal 281 000 12 Casualties and lossesRussian Empire 15 567 30 000 killed 13 14 81 166 died of disease 56 652 wounded 1 713 died from wounds 13 Romania 4 302 killed and missing 3 316 wounded 19 904 sick 15 Bulgaria 2 456 killed and wounded 16 Several thousand total military deaths mostly disease Serbia and Montenegro 2 400 dead and wounded 16 30 000 killed 17 60 000 90 000 17 died from wounds and diseases 110 000 captured 18 see civilian casualties section a The Russian led coalition won the war pushing the Ottomans back all the way to the gates of Constantinople leading to the intervention of the western European great powers As a result Russia succeeded in claiming provinces in the Caucasus namely Kars and Batum and also annexed the Budjak region The principalities of Romania Serbia and Montenegro each of which had had de facto sovereignty for some years formally proclaimed independence from the Ottoman Empire After almost five centuries of Ottoman domination 1396 1878 the Principality of Bulgaria emerged as an autonomous Bulgarian state with support and military intervention from Russia Contents 1 Conflict pre history 1 1 Treatment of Christians in the Ottoman Empire 1 1 1 Crisis in Lebanon 1860 1 1 2 The revolt in Crete 1866 1869 1 2 Changing balance of power in Europe 1 2 1 The New European Concert 1 2 2 Russia after the Crimean War 2 Balkan crisis of 1875 1876 2 1 Balkan uprisings 2 1 1 Albanian revolts 2 1 2 Herzegovina Uprising 2 1 3 Bulgarian Uprising 2 2 International reaction to atrocities in Bulgaria 2 3 Serbo Turkish War and diplomatic maneuvering 3 Course of the war 3 1 Opening manoeuvres 3 2 Balkan theatre 3 3 Caucasian theatre 3 4 Kurdish uprising 3 5 Civilian government in Bulgaria during the war 4 Aftermath 4 1 Intervention by the Great Powers 4 2 Effects on Bulgaria s Jewish population 4 3 Internationalization of the Armenian Question 5 Civilian casualties 5 1 Atrocities and ethnic cleansing 5 1 1 Against Turks 5 1 2 Against Albanians 5 1 3 Against Bulgarians 5 1 4 Against Circassians 6 Lasting effects 6 1 International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 Video linksConflict pre history EditTreatment of Christians in the Ottoman Empire Edit Article 9 of the 1856 Paris Peace Treaty concluded at the end of the Crimean War obliged the Ottoman Empire to grant Christians equal rights with Muslims Before the treaty was signed the Ottoman government issued an edict the Edict of Gulhane which proclaimed the principle of the equality of Muslims and non Muslims 22 and produced some specific reforms to this end For example the jizya tax was abolished and non Muslims were allowed to join the army 23 Crisis in Lebanon 1860 Edit Main article 1860 Mount Lebanon civil war In 1858 stirred by their clergy the Maronite peasants of northern Lebanon revolted against their predominantly Druze feudal overlords and established a peasant republic In southern Lebanon where both Maronite and Druze peasants worked under Druze overlords Druze peasants sided with their co religious and against the Maronites transforming the conflict into a civil war Although both sides suffered about 10 000 Maronites were massacred at the hands of the Druze 24 25 On 27 May 1860 a group of Maronites raided a Druze village citation needed Massacres and reprisal massacres followed not only in Lebanon but also in Syria In the end between 7 000 and 12 000 people of all religions citation needed had been killed and over 300 villages 500 churches 40 monasteries and 30 schools were destroyed Christian attacks on Muslims in Beirut stirred the Muslim population of Damascus to attack the Christian minority with between 5 000 and 25 000 of the latter being killed citation needed including the American and Dutch consuls giving the event an international dimension citation needed Fearing European intervention the Ottoman foreign minister Mehmed Fuad Pasha was dispatched to Syria and immediately set about trying to resolve the conflict as swiftly as possible Mehmed sought out and executed the agitators on all sides including the governor and other officials Order was soon restored and preparations made to give Lebanon new autonomy These efforts were ultimately not enough to prevent European intervention however with France deploying a fleet in September 1860 Fearing that a unilateral intervention would increase French influence in the region at their expense the British joined the French expedition 26 Faced with further European pressure the Sultan agreed to appoint a Christian governor in Lebanon whose candidacy was to be submitted by the Sultan and approved by the European powers 24 The revolt in Crete 1866 1869 Edit The Moni Arkadiou monastery The Cretan Revolt which began in 1866 resulted from the failure of the Ottoman Empire to apply reforms for improving the life of the population and the Cretans desire for enosis union with Greece 27 The insurgents gained control over the whole island except for five fortified cities where the Muslims took refuge The Greek press claimed that Muslims had massacred Greeks and the word was spread throughout Europe Thousands of Greek volunteers were mobilized and sent to the island The siege of Arkadi Monastery became particularly well known In November 1866 about 250 Cretan Greek combatants and around 600 women and children were besieged by about 23 000 mainly Cretan Muslims aided by Ottoman troops and this became widely known in Europe After a bloody battle with a large number of casualties on both sides the Cretan Greeks finally surrendered when their ammunition ran out but were killed upon surrender 28 By early 1869 the insurrection was suppressed but the Porte offered some concessions introducing island self rule and increasing Christian rights on the island Although the Cretan crisis ended better for the Ottomans than almost any other diplomatic confrontation of the century the insurrection and especially the brutality with which it was suppressed led to greater public attention in Europe to the oppression of Christians in the Ottoman Empire Small as the amount of attention is which can be given by the people of England to the affairs of Turkey enough was transpiring from time to time to produce a vague but a settled and general impression that the Sultans were not fulfilling the solemn promises they had made to Europe that the vices of the Turkish government were ineradicable and that whenever another crisis might arise affecting the independence of the Ottoman Empire it would be wholly impossible to afford to it again the support we had afforded in the Crimean war 29 Changing balance of power in Europe Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ottoman Empire in 1862 Although on the winning side in the Crimean War the Ottoman Empire continued to decline in power and prestige The financial strain on the treasury forced the Ottoman government to take a series of foreign loans at such steep interest rates that despite all the fiscal reforms that followed pushed it into unpayable debts and economic difficulties This was further aggravated by the need to accommodate more than 600 000 Muslim Circassians expelled by the Russians from the Caucasus to the Black Sea ports of north Anatolia and the Balkan ports of Constanța and Varna which cost a great deal in money and in civil disorder to the Ottoman authorities 30 The New European Concert Edit The Concert of Europe established in 1814 was shaken in 1859 when France and Austria fought over Italy It came apart completely as a result of the wars of German Unification when the Kingdom of Prussia led by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck defeated Austria in 1866 and France in 1870 replacing Austria Hungary as the dominant power in Central Europe Britain diverted by the Irish question and averse to warfare chose not to intervene again to restore the European balance Bismarck did not wish the breakup of the Ottoman Empire to create rivalries that might lead to war so he took up the Tsar s earlier suggestion that arrangements be made in case the Ottoman Empire fell apart creating the Three Emperors League with Austria and Russia to keep France isolated on the continent France responded by supporting self determination movements particularly if they concerned the three emperors and the Sultan Thus revolts in Poland against Russia and national aspirations in the Balkans were encouraged by France Russia worked to regain its right to maintain a fleet on the Black Sea and vied with the French in gaining influence in the Balkans by using the new Pan Slavic idea that all Slavs should be united under Russian leadership This could be done only by destroying the two empires where most non Russian Slavs lived the Habsburg and the Ottoman Empires The ambitions and the rivalries of the Russians and French in the Balkans surfaced in Serbia which was experiencing its own national revival and had ambitions that partly conflicted with those of the great powers 31 Russia after the Crimean War Edit Alexander Gorchakov Russia ended the Crimean War with minimal territorial losses but was forced to destroy its Black Sea Fleet and Sevastopol fortifications Russian international prestige was damaged and for many years revenge for the Crimean War became the main goal of Russian foreign policy This was not easy though the Paris Peace Treaty included guarantees of Ottoman territorial integrity by Great Britain France and Austria only Prussia remained friendly to Russia The newly appointed Russian chancellor Alexander Gorchakov depended upon alliance with Prussia and its chancellor Bismarck Russia consistently supported Prussia in her wars with Denmark 1864 Austria 1866 and France 1870 In March 1871 using the crushing French defeat and the support of a grateful Germany Russia achieved international recognition of its earlier denouncement of Article 11 of the Paris Peace Treaty thus enabling it to revive the Black Sea Fleet Other clauses of the Paris Peace Treaty however remained in force specifically Article 8 with guarantees of Ottoman territorial integrity by Great Britain France and Austria Therefore Russia was extremely cautious in its relations with the Ottoman Empire coordinating all its actions with other European powers A Russian war with Turkey would require at least the tacit support of all other Great Powers and Russian diplomacy was waiting for a convenient moment Balkan crisis of 1875 1876 EditIn 1875 a series of Balkan events brought Europe to the brink of war The state of Ottoman administration in the Balkans continued to deteriorate throughout the 19th century with the central government occasionally losing control over whole provinces Reforms imposed by European powers did little to improve the conditions of the Christian population while managing to dissatisfy a sizable portion of the Muslim population Bosnia and Herzegovina suffered at least two waves of rebellion by the local Muslim population the most recent in 1850 Europe before the Balkan crisis Austria consolidated after the turmoil of the first half of the century and sought to reinvigorate its centuries long policy of expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire Meanwhile the nominally autonomous de facto independent principalities of Serbia and Montenegro also sought to expand into regions inhabited by their compatriots Nationalist and irredentist sentiments were strong and were encouraged by Russia and her agents At the same time a severe drought in Anatolia in 1873 and flooding in 1874 caused famine and widespread discontent in the heart of the Empire The agricultural shortages precluded the collection of necessary taxes which forced the Ottoman government to declare bankruptcy in October 1875 and increase taxes on outlying provinces including the Balkans Balkan uprisings Edit Albanian revolts Edit Franklin Parker states that the Albanian highlanders resented new taxes and conscription and fought against the Ottomans in the war 32 Herzegovina Uprising Edit Herzegovinian insurgents in 1875 Main article Herzegovina Uprising 1875 78 An uprising against Ottoman rule began in Herzegovina in July 1875 By August almost all of Herzegovina had been seized and the revolt had spread into Bosnia Supported by nationalist volunteers from Serbia and Montenegro the uprising continued as the Ottomans committed more and more troops to suppress it Bulgarian Uprising Edit Main article April Uprising Bashi bazouks atrocities in Bulgaria The revolt of Bosnia and Herzegovina spurred Bucharest based Bulgarian revolutionaries into action In 1875 a Bulgarian uprising was hastily prepared to take advantage of Ottoman preoccupation but it fizzled before it started In the spring of 1876 another uprising erupted in the south central Bulgarian lands despite the fact that there were numerous regular Turkish troops in those areas A special Turkish military committee was established to quell the uprising Regular troops Nisam and irregulars Redif or Bashi bazouk were directed to fight the Bulgarians 11 May 9 June 1876 The irregulars were mostly drawn from the Muslim inhabitants of the Bulgarian region Many were Circassians from the Caucasus or Crimean Tatars who were expelled during the Crimean War some were Islamized Bulgarians The Turkish army suppressed the revolt massacring up to 30 000 33 34 people in the process 35 36 Five thousand out of the seven thousand villagers of Batak were put to death 37 Both Batak and Perushtitsa where the majority of the population was also massacred participated in the rebellion 34 Many of the perpetrators of those massacres were later decorated by the Ottoman high command 34 Modern historians have estimated the number of murdered Bulgarians at between 30 000 and 100 000 38 Konstantin Makovsky The Bulgarian Martyresses a painting depicting the atrocities of bashibazouks in Bulgaria Two Hawks by Vasily Vereshchagin showing two Bashibazouks held captive by the Bulgarian and Russian army Bashi Bazouks returning with the spoils from the Romanian shore of the Danube 1877 engraving International reaction to atrocities in Bulgaria Edit Word of the bashi bazouks atrocities filtered to the outside world by way of the American run Robert College located in Constantinople The majority of the students were Bulgarian and many received news of the events from their families back home Soon the Western diplomatic community in Constantinople was abuzz with rumours which eventually found their way into newspapers in the West While in Constantinople in 1879 Protestant missionary George Warren Wood reported Turkish authorities in Amasia brutally persecuting Christian Armenian refugees from Soukoum Kaleh He was able to coordinate with British diplomat Edward Malet to bring the matter to the attention of the Sublime Porte and then to the British foreign secretary Robert Gascoyne Cecil the Marquess of Salisbury 39 In Britain where Disraeli s government was committed to supporting the Ottomans in the ongoing Balkan crisis the Liberal opposition newspaper Daily News hired American journalist Januarius A MacGahan to report on the massacre stories firsthand The Avenger An Allegorical War Map for 1877 by Fred W Rose 1872 This map reflects the Great Eastern Crisis and the subsequent Russo Turkish War of 1877 78 MacGahan toured the stricken regions of the Bulgarian uprising and his report splashed across the Daily News s front pages galvanized British public opinion against Disraeli s pro Ottoman policy 40 In September opposition leader William Gladstone published his Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East 41 calling upon Britain to withdraw its support for Turkey and proposing that Europe demand independence for Bulgaria and Bosnia and Herzegovina 42 As the details became known across Europe many dignitaries including Charles Darwin Oscar Wilde Victor Hugo and Giuseppe Garibaldi publicly condemned the Ottoman abuses in Bulgaria 43 The strongest reaction came from Russia Widespread sympathy for the Bulgarian cause led to a nationwide surge in patriotism on a scale comparable with the one during the Patriotic War of 1812 From autumn 1875 the movement to support the Bulgarian uprising involved all classes of Russian society This was accompanied by sharp public discussions about Russian goals in this conflict Slavophiles including Dostoevsky saw in the impending war the chance to unite all Orthodox nations under Russia s helm thus fulfilling what they believed was the historic mission of Russia while their opponents westernizers inspired by Turgenev denied the importance of religion and believed that Russian goals should not be defense of Orthodoxy but liberation of Bulgaria 44 Serbo Turkish War and diplomatic maneuvering Edit Main articles Serbo Turkish War 1876 78 Montenegrin Ottoman War 1876 1878 Constantinople Conference Expulsion of the Albanians 1877 1878 and Attacks on Serbs during the Serbian Ottoman War 1876 1878 Russia preparing to release the Balkan dogs of war while Britain warns him to take care Punch cartoon from 17 June 1876 On 30 June 1876 Serbia followed by Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire In July and August the ill prepared and poorly equipped Serbian army helped by Russian volunteers failed to achieve offensive objectives but did manage to repulse the Ottoman offensive into Serbia Meanwhile Russia s Alexander II and Prince Gorchakov met Austria Hungary s Franz Joseph I and Count Andrassy in the Reichstadt castle in Bohemia No written agreement was made but during the discussions Russia agreed to support Austrian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Austria Hungary in exchange agreed to support the return of Southern Bessarabia lost by Russia during the Crimean War and Russian annexation of the port of Batum on the east coast of the Black Sea Bulgaria was to become autonomous independent according to the Russian records 45 As the fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina continued Serbia suffered a string of setbacks and asked the European powers to mediate an end to the war A joint ultimatum by the European powers forced the Porte to give Serbia a one month truce and start peace negotiations Turkish peace conditions however were refused by European powers as too harsh In early October after the truce expired the Turkish army resumed its offensive and the Serbian position quickly became desperate On 31 October Russia issued an ultimatum requiring the Ottoman Empire to stop the hostilities and sign a new truce with Serbia within 48 hours This was supported by the partial mobilization of the Russian army up to 20 divisions The Sultan accepted the conditions of the ultimatum To resolve the crisis on 11 December 1876 the Constantinople Conference of the Great Powers was opened in Constantinople to which the Turks were not invited A compromise solution was negotiated granting autonomy to Bulgaria Bosnia and Herzegovina under the joint control of European powers The Ottomans however refused to sacrifice their independence by allowing international representatives to oversee the institution of reforms and sought to discredit the conference by announcing on 23 December the day the conference was closed that a constitution was adopted that declared equal rights for religious minorities within the Empire The Ottomans attempted to use this manoeuver to get their objections and amendments to the agreement heard When they were rejected by the Great Powers the Ottoman Empire announced its decision to disregard the results of the conference On 15 January 1877 Russia and Austria Hungary signed a written agreement confirming the results of an earlier Reichstadt Agreement in July 1876 This assured Russia of the benevolent neutrality of Austria Hungary in the impending war These terms meant that in case of war Russia would do the fighting and Austria would derive most of the advantage Russia therefore made a final effort for a peaceful settlement After reaching an agreement with its main Balkan rival and with anti Ottoman sympathies running high throughout Europe due to the Bulgarian atrocities and the rejection of the Constantinople agreements Russia finally felt free to declare war Course of the war EditSee also Romanian War of Independence Opening manoeuvres Edit Nizhegorodsky Dragoons pursuing the Turks near Kars 1877 painting by Aleksey Kivshenko On 12 April 1877 Romania gave permission to the Russian troops to pass through its territory to attack the Turks On 24 April 1877 Russia declared war on the Ottomans and its troops entered Romania through the newly built Eiffel Bridge near Ungheni on the Prut river resulting in Turkish bombardments of Romanian towns on the Danube On 10 May 1877 the Principality of Romania which was under formal Turkish rule declared its independence 46 At the beginning of the war the outcome was far from obvious The Russians could send a larger army into the Balkans about 300 000 troops were within reach The Ottomans had about 200 000 troops on the Balkan peninsula of which about 100 000 were assigned to fortified garrisons leaving about 100 000 for the army of operation The Ottomans had the advantage of being fortified complete command of the Black Sea and patrol boats along the Danube river 47 They also possessed superior arms including new British and American made rifles and German made artillery Russian crossing of the Danube June 1877 painting by Nikolai Dmitriev Orenburgsky 1883 In the event however the Ottomans usually resorted to passive defense leaving the strategic initiative to the Russians who after making some mistakes found a winning strategy for the war The Ottoman military command in Constantinople made poor assumptions about Russian intentions They decided that Russians would be too lazy to march along the Danube and cross it away from the delta and would prefer the short way along the Black Sea coast This would be ignoring the fact that the coast had the strongest best supplied and garrisoned Turkish fortresses There was only one well manned fortress along the inner part of the river Danube Vidin It was garrisoned only because the troops led by Osman Pasha had just taken part in defeating the Serbs in their recent war against the Ottoman Empire The Russian campaign was better planned but it relied heavily on Turkish passivity A crucial Russian mistake was sending too few troops initially an expeditionary force of about 185 000 crossed the Danube in June slightly fewer than the combined Turkish forces in the Balkans about 200 000 After setbacks in July at Pleven and Stara Zagora the Russian military command realized it did not have the reserves to keep the offensive going and switched to a defensive posture The Russians did not even have enough forces to blockade Pleven properly until late August which effectively delayed the whole campaign for about two months Balkan theatre Edit Map of the Balkan Theater At the start of the war Russia and Romania destroyed all vessels along the Danube and mined the river thus ensuring that Russian forces could cross the Danube at any point without resistance from the Ottoman Navy The Ottoman command did not appreciate the significance of the Russians actions In June a small Russian unit crossed the Danube close to the delta at Galați and marched towards Ruschuk today Ruse This made the Ottomans even more confident that the big Russian force would come right through the middle of the Ottoman stronghold Russian Romanian and Ottoman troop movements at Plevna Soldiers of Finnish Guard sharpshooter battalion during Battle of Gorni Dubnik On 25 26 May a Romanian torpedo boat with a mixed Romanian Russian crew attacked and sank an Ottoman monitor on the Danube Under the direct command of Major General Mikhail Ivanovich Dragomirov on the night of 27 28 June 1877 NS the Russians constructed a pontoon bridge across the Danube at Svishtov After a short battle in which the Russians suffered 812 killed and wounded 48 the Russian secured the opposing bank and drove off the Ottoman infantry brigade defending Svishtov At this point the Russian force was divided into three parts the Eastern Detachment under the command of Tsarevich Alexander Alexandrovich the future Tsar Alexander III of Russia assigned to capture the fortress of Ruschuk and cover the army s eastern flank the Western Detachment to capture the fortress of Nikopol Bulgaria and cover the army s western flank and the Advance Detachment under Count Joseph Vladimirovich Gourko which was assigned to quickly move via Veliko Tarnovo and penetrate the Balkan Mountains the most significant barrier between the Danube and Constantinople Fighting near Ivanovo Chiflik Responding to the Russian crossing of the Danube the Ottoman high command in Constantinople ordered Osman Nuri Pasa to advance east from Vidin and occupy the fortress of Nikopol just west of the Russian crossing On his way to Nikopol Osman Pasha learned that the Russians had already captured the fortress and so moved to the crossroads town of Plevna now known as Pleven which he occupied with a force of approximately 15 000 on 19 July NS 49 The Russians approximately 9 000 under the command of General Schilder Schuldner reached Plevna early in the morning Thus began the Siege of Plevna Osman Pasha organized a defense and repelled two Russian attacks with colossal casualties on the Russian side At that point the sides were almost equal in numbers and the Russian army was very discouraged 50 A counter attack might have allowed the Ottomans to control and destroy the Russians bridge but Osman Pasha did not leave the fortress because he had orders to stay fortified in Plevna Gazi Osman Pasha The Ottoman capitulation at Nigbolu Nicopolis modern Nikopol in 1877 was significant as it was the site of an important Ottoman victory in 1396 which marked the expansion of the Ottoman Empire into the Balkans Russia had no more troops to throw against Plevna so the Russians besieged it and subsequently asked 51 the Romanians to cross the Danube and help them On 9 August Suleiman Pasha made an attempt to help Osman Pasha with 30 000 troops but he was stopped by Bulgarians at the Battle of Shipka Pass After three days of fighting the volunteers were relieved by a Russian force led by General Radezky and the Turkish forces withdrew Soon afterwards Romanian forces crossed the Danube and joined the siege On 16 August at Gorni Studen the armies around Plevna were placed under the command of the Romanian Prince Carol I aided by the Russian general Pavel Dmitrievich Zotov and the Romanian general Alexandru Cernat The Turks maintained several fortresses around Pleven which the Russian and Romanian forces gradually reduced 52 53 page needed The Romanian 4th Division led by General Gheorghe Manu took the Grivitsa redoubt after four bloody assaults and managed to keep it until the very end of the siege The siege of Plevna July December 1877 turned to victory only after Russian and Romanian forces cut off all supply routes to the fortified Ottomans With supplies running low Osman Pasha made an attempt to break the Russian siege in the direction of Opanets On 9 December in the middle of the night the Ottomans threw bridges over the Vit River and crossed it attacked on a 2 mile 3 2 km front and broke through the first line of Russian trenches Here they fought hand to hand and bayonet to bayonet with little advantage to either side Outnumbering the Ottomans almost 5 to 1 the Russians drove the Ottomans back across the Vit Osman Pasha was wounded in the leg by a stray bullet which killed his horse beneath him Making a brief stand the Ottomans eventually found themselves driven back into the city losing 5 000 men to the Russians 2 000 The next day Osman surrendered the city the garrison and his sword to the Romanian colonel Mihail Cerchez He was treated honorably but his troops perished in the snow by the thousands as they straggled off into captivity Taking of the Grivitsa redoubt by the Russians a few hours later the redoubt was recaptured by the Ottomans and fell to the Romanians on 30 August 1877 in what became known as the Third Battle of Grivitsa At this point Serbia having finally secured monetary aid from Russia declared war on the Ottoman Empire again This time there were far fewer Russian officers in the Serbian army but this was more than offset by the experience gained from the 1876 77 war Under nominal command of prince Milan Obrenovic effective command was in hands of general Kosta Protic the army chief of staff the Serbian Army went on offensive in what is now eastern south Serbia A planned offensive into the Ottoman Sanjak of Novi Pazar was called off due to strong diplomatic pressure from Austria Hungary which wanted to prevent Serbia and Montenegro from coming into contact and which had designs to spread Austria Hungary s influence through the area The Ottomans outnumbered unlike two years before mostly confined themselves to passive defence of fortified positions By the end of hostilities the Serbs had captured Ak Palanka today Bela Palanka Pirot Nis and Vranje Battle at bridge Skit November 1877 Russians under Field Marshal Joseph Vladimirovich Gourko succeeded in capturing the passes at the Stara Planina mountain which were crucial for maneuvering Next both sides fought a series of battles for Shipka Pass Gourko made several attacks on the Pass and eventually secured it Ottoman troops spent much effort to recapture this important route to use it to reinforce Osman Pasha in Pleven but failed Eventually Gourko led a final offensive that crushed the Ottomans around Shipka Pass The Ottoman offensive against Shipka Pass is considered one of the major mistakes of the war as other passes were virtually unguarded At this time a huge number of Ottoman troops stayed fortified along the Black Sea coast and engaged in very few operations A Russian army crossed the Stara Planina by a high snowy pass in winter guided and helped by local Bulgarians not expected by the Ottoman army and defeated the Turks at the Battle of Tashkessen and took Sofia The way was now open for a quick advance through Plovdiv and Edirne to Constantinople Besides the Romanian Army which mobilized 130 000 men losing 10 000 of them to this war more than 12 000 volunteer Bulgarian troops Opalchenie from the local Bulgarian population as well as many hajduk detachments fought in the war on the side of the Russians Caucasian theatre Edit The Russo Turkish War in Caucasia 1877 The Russian Caucasus Corps was stationed in Georgia and Armenia composed of approximately 50 000 men and 202 guns under the overall command of Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich Governor General of the Caucasus 54 The Russian force stood opposed by an Ottoman Army of 100 000 men led by General Ahmed Muhtar Pasha While the Russian army was better prepared for the fighting in the region it lagged behind technologically in certain areas such as heavy artillery and was outgunned for example by the superior long range Krupp artillery that Germany had supplied to the Ottomans 55 The Caucasus Corps was led by a quartet of Armenian commanders Generals Mikhail Loris Melikov Arshak Ter Gukasov Ter Ghukasov Ter Ghukasyan Ivan Lazarev and Beybut Shelkovnikov 56 Forces under Lieutenant General Ter Gukasov stationed near Yerevan commenced the first assault into Ottoman territory by capturing the town of Bayazid on 27 April 1877 57 Capitalizing on Ter Gukasov s victory there Russian forces advanced taking the region of Ardahan on 17 May Russian units also besieged the city of Kars in the final week of May although Ottoman reinforcements lifted the siege and drove them back Bolstered by reinforcements in November 1877 General Lazarev launched a new attack on Kars suppressing the southern forts leading to the city and capturing Kars itself on 18 November 58 On 19 February 1878 the strategic fortress town of Erzurum was taken by the Russians after a lengthy siege Although they relinquished control of Erzerum to the Ottomans at the end the war the Russians acquired the regions of Batum Ardahan Kars Olti and Sarikamish and reconstituted them into the Kars Oblast 59 Kurdish uprising Edit As the Russo Turkish war came to a close a Kurdish uprising began It was led by two brothers Husayn and Osman Pasha The rebellion held most of the region of Bohtan for 9 months It was ended only through duplicity after force of arms had failed 60 In Kars Kurdish notables like Abdurrezzak Bedir Khan and a son of Sheikh Ubeydullah were supporters of the Russians 61 Civilian government in Bulgaria during the war Edit Main article Provisional Russian Administration in Bulgaria Plevna Chapel near the walls of Kitay gorod After Bulgarian territories were liberated by the Imperial Russian Army during the war they were governed initially by a provisional Russian administration which was established in April 1877 The Treaty of Berlin 1878 provided for the termination of this provisional Russian administration in May 1879 when the Principality of Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia were established 62 The main objectives of the temporary Russian administration were to secure peace and order and to prepare for a revival of the Bulgarian state Aftermath EditIntervention by the Great Powers Edit Europe after the Congress of Berlin in 1878 and the territorial and political rearrangement of the Balkan Peninsula Under pressure from the British Russia accepted the truce offered by the Ottoman Empire on 31 January 1878 but continued to move towards Constantinople The British sent a fleet of battleships to intimidate Russia from entering the city and Russian forces stopped at San Stefano Eventually Russia entered into a settlement under the Treaty of San Stefano on 3 March by which the Ottoman Empire would recognize the independence of Romania Serbia and Montenegro and the autonomy of Bulgaria Alarmed by the extension of Russian power into the Balkans the Great Powers later forced modifications of the treaty in the Congress of Berlin The main change here was that Bulgaria would be split according to earlier agreements among the Great Powers that precluded the creation of a large new Slavic state the northern and eastern parts to become principalities as before Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia though with different governors and the Macedonian region originally part of Bulgaria under San Stefano would return to direct Ottoman administration 63 The 1879 Treaty of Constantinople ru was a further continuation of negotiations between Russia and the Ottoman Empire While reaffirming provisions of the Treaty of San Stefano which had not been modified by the Berlin Treaty it set compensation terms owed by Ottoman Empire to Russia for losses sustained during the war It contained terms to release prisoners of war and to grant amnesty to Ottoman subjects 64 65 as well as providing terms for the inhabitants nationality after the annexations Article VII allowed subjects to opt within six months of the signing of the treaty to retain Ottoman subjecthood or become Russian subjects 65 66 A surprising consequence came in Hungary part of the Austro Hungarian Empire Despite memories of the terrible defeat at Mohacs in 1526 elite Hungarian attitudes were becoming strongly anti Russian This led to active support for the Turks in the media but only in a peaceful way since the foreign policy of the Austro Hungarian monarchy remained neutral 67 Effects on Bulgaria s Jewish population Edit Many Jewish communities in their entirety fled with the retreating Turks as their protectors The Bulletins de l Alliance Israelite Universelle reported that thousands of Bulgarian Jews found refuge at the Ottoman capital of Constantinople 68 Internationalization of the Armenian Question Edit Emigration of Armenians into Georgia during the Russo Turkish war The conclusion of the Russo Turkish war also led to the internationalization of the Armenian Question Many Armenians in the eastern provinces Turkish Armenia of the Ottoman Empire greeted the advancing Russians as liberators Violence and instability directed at Armenians during the war by Kurd and Circassian bands had left many Armenians looking toward the invading Russians as the ultimate guarantors of their security Influential pro Russian Armenian thinker Grigor Artsruni encouraged Armenians to migrate to Russia in order to form a more concentrated block 69 In January 1878 Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople Nerses II Varzhapetian approached the Russian leadership with the view of receiving assurances that the Russians would introduce provisions in the prospective peace treaty for self administration in the Armenian provinces Though not as explicit Article 16 of the Treaty of San Stefano read As the evacuation of the Russian troops of the territory they occupy in Armenia and which is to be restored to Turkey might give rise to conflicts and complications detrimental to the maintenance of good relations between the two countries the Sublime Porte engaged to carry into effect without further delay the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by Armenians and to guarantee their security from Kurds and Circassians 70 Armenian Patriarch discouraged Armenian migration to Russia and encouraged Armenians to remain faithful to the Sultan Patriarch held the belief that Armenian inhabited areas could remain under Ottoman rule but under Christian control and that Muslims who were dissatisfied with how the Ottomans had been governing the provinces would tolerate life under Christian leadership In attempting to persuade the British to drive a hard bargain with the Ottoman Empire he asserted to British Ambassador Henry Layard that the only thing that could induce the Armenians to refrain from listening to the advice of Russia to emigrate and to be content to remain under the rule of the Sultan would be the appointment of an Armenian as Vali of Armenia 69 Great Britain however took objection to Russia holding on to so much Ottoman territory and forced it to enter into new negotiations by convening the Congress of Berlin in June 1878 An Armenian delegation led by prelate Mkrtich Khrimian traveled to Berlin to present the case of the Armenians but much to its chagrin was left out of the negotiations Article 16 was modified and watered down and all mention of the Russian forces remaining in the provinces was removed In the final text of the Treaty of Berlin it was transformed into Article 61 which read The Sublime Porte undertakes to carry out without further delay the improvements and reforms demanded by local requirements in the provinces inhabited by Armenians and to guarantee their security against the Circassians and Kurds It will periodically make known the steps taken to this effect to the powers who will superintend their application 71 As it turned out the reforms were not forthcoming Khrimian returned to Constantinople and delivered a famous speech in which he likened the peace conference to a big cauldron of Liberty Stew into which the big nations dipped their iron ladles for real results while the Armenian delegation had only a Paper Ladle Ah dear Armenian people Khrimian said could I have dipped my Paper Ladle in the cauldron it would sog and remain there Where guns talk and sabers shine what significance do appeals and petitions have 72 Given the absence of tangible improvements in the plight of the Armenian community a number of Armenian intellectuals living in Europe and Russia in the 1880s and 1890s formed political parties and revolutionary societies to secure better conditions for their compatriots in Ottoman Armenia and other parts of the Ottoman Empire 73 Civilian casualties EditAtrocities and ethnic cleansing Edit Both sides carried out massacres and an ethnic cleansing policy during the war 74 75 Against Turks Edit Turkish refugees fleeing from Tarnovo towards Shumen The execution of the Bashi bazouks in Bulgaria 1878 In January 1878 advancing coalition forces started committing atrocities against Muslim populations in the region British reports from that time have detailed information about atrocities and massacres According to those reports in the village of Issova Bala the school and 96 of the 170 houses were burned to the ground 76 The inhabitants of Yukari Sofular were slaughtered and 12 of the 130 houses in village a mosque and a school were burned 77 78 In Kozluca 18 Turks were killed 79 Massacres of Muslim inhabitants occurred in Kazanlak too 80 In the village of Muflis 127 Muslim inhabitants were kidnapped by a group of Russian and Bulgarian troops 20 managed to escape The rest were killed 81 400 people from Muflis were killed according to Ottoman sources 82 11 inhabitants were killed in Kecidere 81 According to John Joseph the Russian troops frequently killed Muslim peasants to prevent them from disrupting their supply and troop movements During the Battle of Harmanli accompanying this retaliation on Muslim non combatants it was reported that a huge group of Muslim townspeople were attacked by the Russian army Thousands died and their goods were confiscated 83 84 85 The correspondent of the Daily News describes as an eyewitness the burning of four or five Turkish villages by the Russian troops in response to the Turks firing at the Russians from the villages instead of behind rocks or trees 86 which must have appeared to the Russian soldiers as guerrilla attempts by the local Muslim populace upon the Russian contingencies operating against the Ottoman forces embedded in the area During the conflict a number of Muslim buildings and cultural centres were also destroyed A large library of old Turkish books was destroyed when a mosque in Turnovo was burned in 1877 87 Most mosques in Sofia were destroyed seven of them in one night in December 1878 when a thunderstorm masked the noise of the explosions arranged by Russian military engineers 88 Many villages in the Kars region were pillaged by Russian army during the war 82 The war in Caucasus caused many Muslims to migrate to remaining Ottoman lands mostly in poverty and with poor conditions 89 Between 1878 and 1881 82 000 Muslims migrated to the Ottoman Empire from lands ceded to Russia in Caucasus 90 There are different guesses about losses during the Russo Turkish war Dennis Hupchik and Justin McCarthy says that 260 000 people went missing and 500 000 became refugees 91 92 Turkish historian Kemal Karpat claims that 250 300 000 people about 17 of the former Muslim population of Bulgaria died as a consequence of famine disease and massacres 93 and 1 to 1 5 million people were forced to migrate 94 Turkish author Nedim Ipek gives the same numbers as Karpat 95 Another source claims 400 000 Turks were massacred and 1 000 000 Turks had to migrate during the war 96 The perpetrators of those massacres are also disputed with Justin McCarthy claiming that they were carried out by Russian soldiers Cossacks as well as Bulgarian volunteers and villagers though there were few civilian casualties in battle 97 while James J Reid claims that Circassians were significantly responsible for the refugee flow that there were civilian casualties from battle and even that the Ottoman army was responsible for casualties among the Muslim population 98 The number of Muslim refugees is estimated by R J Crampton to be 130 000 99 Richard C Frucht estimates that only half 700 000 of the prewar Muslim population remained after the war 216 000 had died and the rest emigrated 100 Douglas Arthur Howard estimates that half the 1 5 million Muslims for the most part Turks in prewar Bulgaria had disappeared by 1879 200 000 had died the rest became permanently refugees in Ottoman territories 101 Against Albanians Edit Main article Expulsion of the Albanians 1877 1878 Against Bulgarians Edit Bones of massacred Bulgarians at Stara Zagora ethnic cleansing by the Ottoman Empire The most notable massacre of Bulgarian civilians took place after the July battle of Stara Zagora when Gurko s forces had to retreat back to the Shipka pass In the aftermath of the battle Suleiman Pasha s forces burned down and plundered the town of Stara Zagora which by that time was one of the largest towns in the Bulgarian lands The number of massacred Christian civilians during the battle is estimated at 15 000 Suleiman Pasha s forces also established in the whole valley of the Maritsa river a system of terror taking form in the hanging at the street corners of every Bulgarian who had in any way assisted the Russians but even villages that had not assisted the Russians were destroyed and their inhabitants massacred 102 As a result as many as 100 000 civilian Bulgarians fled north to the Russian occupied territories 103 Later on in the campaign the Ottoman forces planned to burn the town of Sofia after Gurko had managed to overcome their resistance in the passes of Western part of the Balkan Mountains Only the refusal of the Italian Consul Vito Positano the French Vice Consul Leandre Francois Rene le Gay and the Austro Hungarian Vice Consul to leave Sofia prevented that from happening After the Ottoman retreat Positano even organized armed detachments to protect the population from marauders regular Ottoman Army deserters and bashi bazouks 104 Circassians in the Ottoman forces also raped and murdered Bulgarians during the 1877 Russo Turkish war 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 According to Bulgarian historians 30 000 Bulgarian civilians were killed during the war with two thirds of the killings being committed in the Stara Zagora area 112 Against Circassians Edit Russians raped Circassian girls during the 1877 Russo Turkish war from the Circassian refugees who were settled in the Ottoman Balkans 113 After the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano the 10 000 strong Circassian minority in Dobruja was expelled 114 Lasting effects EditInternational Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement Edit The Red Cross and the Red Crescent emblems This war caused a division in the emblems of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement which continues to this day Both Russia and the Ottoman Empire had signed the First Geneva Convention 1864 which made the Red Cross a colour reversal of the flag of neutral Switzerland the sole emblem of protection for military medical personnel and facilities However during this war the cross instead reminded the Ottomans of the Crusades so they elected to replace the cross with the Red Crescent instead This ultimately became the symbol of the Movement s national societies in most Muslim countries and was ratified as an emblem of protection by later Geneva Conventions in 1929 and again in 1949 the current version Iran which neighbored both the Russian Empire and Ottoman Empire considered them to be rivals and probably considered the Red Crescent in particular to be an Ottoman symbol except for the Red Crescent being centred and without a star it is a colour reversal of the Ottoman flag and the modern Turkish flag This appears to have led to their national society in the Movement being initially known as the Red Lion and Sun Society using a red version of the Lion and Sun a traditional Iranian symbol After the Iranian Revolution of 1979 Iran switched to the Red Crescent but the Geneva Conventions continue to recognize the Red Lion and Sun as an emblem of protection In popular culture EditThe novella Jalaleddin published in 1878 by the novelist Raffi describes the Kurdish massacres of Armenians in the eastern Ottoman Empire at the time of the Russo Turkish war The novella follows the journey of a young man through the mountains of Anatolia The historical descriptions in the novella correspond with information from British sources at the time 115 The novel The Doll Polish title Lalka written in 1887 1889 by Boleslaw Prus describes consequences of the Russo Turkish war for merchants living in Russia and partitioned Poland The main protagonist helped his Russian friend a multi millionaire and made a fortune supplying the Russian Army in 1877 1878 The novel describes trading during political instability and its ambiguous results for Russian and Polish societies The 1912 silent film Independența Romaniei depicted the war in Romania Russian writer Boris Akunin uses the war as the setting for the novel The Turkish Gambit 1998 See also EditBattles of the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 Ottoman fleet organisation during the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 Batak massacre Romanian War of Independence Harmanli massacre History of the Balkans Provisional Russian Administration in Bulgaria Monument to the Tsar Liberator The Turkish Gambit Serbo Russian MarchNotes Edit 400 000 Turkish civilians killed and 500 000 1 5 million displaced by coalition forces 19 better source needed 20 better source needed 30 000 Bulgarian civilians massacred by Ottoman forces according to Bulgarian sources References Edit Torsten Ekman 2006 Suomen kaarti 1812 1905 in Finnish Helsinki Schildts ISBN 951 50 1534 0 Daur Soner Plevne de Cerkesler Schem 1878 p 231 Hotko Samir Plevne 2007 p 224 Tam v Plevensko i Trnovsko dejstvitelno se govori che tezi cherkezi otvlichat deca ot blgari zaginali prez poslednite sbitiya Iz doklada na anglijskiya konsul v Ruse R Rijd ot 16 06 1876 g do anglijskiya poslanik v Carigrad H Eliot v N Todorov Polozhenieto s 316 Hacisalihoglu Mehmet Kafkasya da Rus Kolonizasyonu Savas ve Surgun PDF Yildiz Teknik Universitesi BOA HR SYS 1219 5 lef 28 p 4 Karatas Omer The Settlement of the Caucasian Emigrants in the Balkans during lkans duringthe 19th Century Century Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond 2 Volumes ABC CLIO 2014 P 748 Menning B W Bayonets before Bullets the Imperial Russian Army 1861 1914 Indiana University Press 2000 P 55 ISBN 0 253 21380 0 Olender P Russo Turkish Naval War 1877 1878 2017 STRATUS P 88 ISBN 978 83 65281 36 4 Mernikov AG 2005 Spektor A A Vsemirnaya istoriya vojn in Russian Minsk p 376 a b Urlanis Boris C 1960 Vojny v period domonopolisticheskogo kapitalizma Ch 2 Vojny i narodonaselenie Evropy Lyudskie poteri vooruzhennyh sil evropejskih stran v vojnah XVII XX vv Istoriko statisticheskoe issledovanie Wars and the population of Europe Human losses of the armed forces of European countries in the wars of the 17th 20th centuries Historical and statistical research in Russian M Socekgiz ru pp 104 105 129 4 Buyuk Larousse cilt VII s 3282 3283 Milliyet Yayinlari 1986 Scafes Cornel et al Armata Romania in Razvoiul de Independenta 1877 1878 The Romanian Army in the War of Independence 1877 1878 Bucuresti Editura Sigma 2002 p 149 Romence a b Urlanis Boris C Vojny i narodonaselenie Evropy Chast II Glava II a b Mernikov A G Spektor A A 2005 Vsemirnaya istoriya vojn Mn Harvest ISBN 985 13 2607 0 Turkish prisoners of war 1877 1878 accommodation keeping relationships with the population of the Russian provinces The Middle East Abstracts and Index Northumberland Press 1999 p 493 Karpat Kemal Ottoman Population pp 72 75 Crowe John Henry Verinder 1911 Russo Turkish Wars In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 931 936 see page 931 para five The War of 1877 78 Hatt i Humayun full text Turkey Anayasa Vatikiotis PJ 1997 The Middle East London Routledge p 217 ISBN 0 415 15849 4 a b Lebanon Country Studies US Library of Congress 1994 Churchill C 1862 The Druzes and the Maronites under the Turkish rule from 1840 to 1860 London B Quaritch p 219 Shaw amp Shaw 1977 pp 142 43 Robson Maureen M 1960 Lord Clarendon and the Cretan Question 1868 9 The Historical Journal 3 1 38 55 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00023001 S2CID 159657337 Stillman William James 15 March 2004 The Autobiography of a Journalist ebook vol II The Project Gutenberg eBook 11594 Argyll 1879 p 122 Finkel Caroline 2005 The History of the Ottoman Empire New York Basic Books p 467 Shaw amp Shaw 1977 p 146 Parker Franklin Parker Betty June Reforms cost money and the Kosovars resented new taxes and conscription In the Russo Turkish war of 1875 1878 Albanian and other Muslims fought against the Ottomans PDF Retrieved 9 April 2020 Hupchick 2002 p 264 a b c Jonassohn 1999 pp 209 10 Eversley Baron George Shaw Lefevre 1924 The Turkish empire from 1288 to 1914 p 319 Jonassohn 1999 p 210 Editorial staff 4 December 1915 Massacre New Statesman 6 139 201 202 see p 202 Jelavich Charles Jelavich Barbara 1977 The Establishment of the Balkan National States 1804 1920 Seattle Washington USA University of Washington Press p 139 ISBN 9780295803609 Parliamentary Papers House of Commons and Command Volume 80 Constantinople Great Britain Parliament House of Commons 1880 pp 70 72 Retrieved 3 January 2017 MacGahan Januarius A 1876 Turkish Atrocities in Bulgaria Letters of the Special Commissioner of the Daily News J A MacGahan Esq with An Introduction amp Mr Schuyler s Preliminary Report London Bradbury Agnew and Co Retrieved 26 January 2016 Gladstone 1876 Gladstone 1876 p 64 The liberation of Bulgaria History of Bulgaria US Bulgarian embassy archived from the original on 11 October 2010 Hevrolina VM Rossiya i Bolgariya Vopros Slavyanskij Russkij Vopros in Russian RU Lib FL archived from the original on 28 October 2007 Potemkin VP History of world diplomacy 15th century BC 1940 AD RU Diphis Chronology of events from 1856 to 1997 period relating to the Romanian monarchy Ohio Kent State University archived from the original on 30 December 2007 Schem Alexander Jacob 1878 The War in the East An illustrated history of the Conflict between Russia and Turkey with a Review of the Eastern Question Menning Bruce 2000 Bayonets before Bullets The Imperial Russian Army 1861 1914 Indiana University Press p 57 von Herbert 1895 p 131 Reminiscences of the King of Roumania Harper amp Brothers 1899 pp 274 75 Reminiscences of the King of Roumania Harper amp Brothers 1899 p 275 Furneaux Rupert 1958 The Siege of Pleven von Herbert 1895 Menning Bayonets before Bullets p 78 Allen amp Muratoff 1953 pp 113 114 Allen amp Muratoff 1953 p 546 Ռուս Թուրքական Պատերազմ 1877 1878 Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia The Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 in Armenian vol 10 Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1984 pp 93 94 Walker Christopher J 2011 Kars in the Russo Turkish Wars of the Nineteenth Century In Hovannisian Richard G ed Armenian Kars and Ani Costa Mesa California USA Mazda Publishers pp 217 220 Melkonyan Ashot 2011 The Kars Oblast 1878 1918 In Hovannisian Richard G ed Armenian Kars and Ani Costa Mesa California USA Mazda Publishers pp 223 244 Jwaideh Wadie 19 June 2006 The Kurdish National Movement Its Origins and Development Syracuse University Press p 117 ISBN 9780815630937 Henning Barbara 3 April 2018 Narratives of the History of the Ottoman Kurdish Bedirhani Family in Imperial and Post Imperial Contexts Continuities and Changes Bamberg University of Bamberg Press pp 309 310 ISBN 978 3 86309 551 2 Blgarskite drzhavni institucii 1879 1986 Bulgarian State Institutions 1879 1986 Sofiya Sofia Bulgaria DI D r Petr Beron 1987 pp 54 55 L S Stavrianos The Balkans Since 1453 1958 pp 408 12 KONSTANTINO POLSKIJ MIR 1879 Peace of Constantinople 1879 in Russian Great Russian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 a b The Definitive Treaty of Peace between Russia and the Porte Signed at Constantinople on 8th February 1879 American Journal of International Law in French Cambridge University Press for the American Society of International Law 2 4 Supplemental 424 426 October 1908 doi 10 2307 2212671 ISSN 0002 9300 JSTOR 2212671 OCLC 5545378434 S2CID 246006401 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Lohr Eric 2012 Russian Citizenship From Empire to Soviet Union Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 39 40 ISBN 978 0 674 06634 2 Ivan Bertenyi Enthusiasm for a Hereditary Enemy Some Aspects of The Roots of Hungarian Turkophile Sentiments Hungarian Studies 27 2 2013 209 218 online Tamir V Bulgaria and Her Jews A dubious symbiosis 1979 p 94 95 Yeshiva University Press a b Dennis Brad 3 July 2019 Armenians and the Cleansing of Muslims 1878 1915 Influences from the Balkans Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 39 3 411 431 doi 10 1080 13602004 2019 1654186 ISSN 1360 2004 S2CID 202282745 Hertslet Edward 1891 The Map of Europe by Treaty vol 4 London Butterworths p 2686 Hurewitz Jacob C 1956 Diplomacy in the Near and Middle East A Documentary Record 1535 1956 vol I Princeton NJ Van Nostrand p 190 Balkian Peter The Burning Tigris The Armenian Genocide and America s Response New York HarperCollins 2003 p 44 Hovannisian Richard G 1997 The Armenian Question in the Ottoman Empire 1876 1914 in Hovannisian Richard G ed The Armenian People From Ancient to Modern Times vol II Foreign Dominion to Statehood The Fifteenth Century to the Twentieth Century New York St Martin s Press pp 206 12 ISBN 0 312 10168 6 Rumeli nin Kaybi Gelen Sivil Kayip ve Gocler Balkan tarihi Archived 6 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ingilizce David Gillard Kenneth Bourne Donald Cameron Watt Great Britain Foreign Office British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print 1984 University Publications of America sf 150 David Gillard Kenneth Bourne Donald Cameron Watt Great Britain Foreign Office British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print 1984 University Publications of America sf 197 British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print sf 152 British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print sf 163 British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print sf 176 a b British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print sf 268 a b Russian Atrocities in Asia and Europe 1877 Istanbul No 51 Medlicott William Norton The Congress of Berlin and after p 157 Joseph John 1983 Muslim Christian Relations and Inter Christian Rivalries in the Middle East p 84 Medlicott William Norton 28 October 2013 Congress of Berlin and After Routledge p 157 ISBN 9781136243172 Reid 2000 p 324 Crampton 2006 p 111 Crampton 2006 p 114 Incorporated Facts On File 2009 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East Infobase Publishing p 244 ISBN 9781438126760 Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary Kars oblast St Petersburg Russia 1890 1907 Hupchick 2002 p 265 McCarthy 1995 64 85harvnb error no target CITEREFMcCarthy1995 help full citation needed Karpat Kemal Ouoman Population pp 72 5 Karpat Kemal H Studies on Ottoman social and political history selected articles and essays Brill 2004 ISBN 9789004121010 p 764 Ipek Nedim 1994 Turkish Migration from the Balkans to Anatolia sf 40 41 Library Information and Research Service The Middle East abstracts and index Part 1 1999 Northumberland Press sf 493 During that war nearly 400000 Rumelian Turks were massacred About a million of them who fled before the invading Russian armies took refuge in the Thrace lstanbul and Westem Anatolia McCarthy J 2001 The Ottoman Peoples and the end of Empire Oxford University Press p 48 Reid 2000 pp 42 43 Crampton RJ 1997 A Concise History of Bulgaria Cambridge University Press p 426 ISBN 0 521 56719 X Frucht Richard C 2005 Eastern Europe p 641 Howard Douglas Arthur 2001 The history of Turkey p 67 Argyll 1879 p 49 Greene Francis Vinton 1879 Report on the Russian Army and its Campaigns in Turkey in 1877 1878 D Appleton amp Co p 204 Ivanov Dmitri 8 November 2005 Pozitano Dushi v okovi in Bulgarian Sega Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 30 April 2009 Reid 2000 p 148 Thompson Ewa Majewska 2000 Imperial Knowledge Russian Literature and Colonialism illustrated ed Greenwood Press p 68 ISBN 0313313113 ISSN 0738 9345 Still Judith 2012 Derrida and Hospitality reprint ed Edinburgh University Press p 211 ISBN 978 0748687275 Gibson Sarah 2016 Molz Jennie Germann ed Mobilizing Hospitality The Ethics of Social Relations in a Mobile World reprint ed Routledge ISBN 978 1317094951 Culbertson Ely 1940 The Strange Lives of One Man An Autobiography Winston p 55 Magnusson Eirikr 1891 National Life and Thought of the Various Nations Throughout the World A Series of Addresses T F Unwin p 8 The New Review Volume 1 Longmans Green and Company 1889 p 309 Dimitrov Bozhidar 2002 Russian Turkish war 1877 1878 in Bulgarian p 75 Richmond Walter 2013 The Circassian Genocide Genocide Political Violence Human Rights Rutgers University Press p 107 ISBN 978 0813560694 Tița Diana 16 September 2018 Povestea dramatică a cerchezilor din Dobrogea Historia in Romanian Jalaleddin and the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Archived from the original on 24 July 2020 Retrieved 17 January 2019 Bibliography EditAllen William E D Muratoff Paul 1953 Caucasian Battlefields Cambridge Cambridge University Press Argyll George Douglas Campbell 1879 The Eastern question from the Treaty of Paris 1836 to the Treaty of Berlin 1878 and to the Second Afghan War Vol 2 London Strahan Crampton R J 2006 1997 A Concise History of Bulgaria Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 85085 1 Gladstone William Ewart 1876 Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East London William Clowes amp Sons OL 7083313M Greene F V 1879 The Russian Army and its Campaigns in Turkey New York D Appleton and Company Retrieved 19 July 2018 via Internet Archive von Herbert Frederick William 1895 The Defence of Plevna 1877 London Longmans Green amp Co Retrieved 26 July 2018 via Internet Archive Hupchick D P 2002 The Balkans From Constantinople to Communism Palgrave ISBN 1 4039 6417 3 The War Correspondence of the Daily News 1877 with a Connecting Narrative Forming a Continuous History of the War Between Russia and Turkey to the Fall of Kars Including the Letters of Mr Archibald Forbes Mr J A MacGahan and Many Other Special Correspondents in Europe and Asia London Macmillan and Co 1878 Retrieved 26 July 2018 via Internet Archive The War Correspondence of the Daily News 1877 1878 continued from the Fall of Kars to the Signature of the Preliminaries of Peace London Macmillan and Co 1878 Retrieved 26 July 2018 via Internet Archive Maurice Major F 1905 The Russo Turkish War 1877 A Strategical Sketch London Swan Sonneschein Retrieved 8 August 2018 via Internet Archive Jonassohn Kurt 1999 Genocide and gross human rights violations in comparative perspective ISBN 9781412824453 Reid James J 2000 Crisis of the Ottoman Empire Prelude to Collapse 1839 1878 Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte des ostlichen Europa Vol 57 illustrated ed Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 9783515076876 ISSN 0170 3595 Shaw Stanford J Shaw Ezel Kural 1977 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Vol 2 Reform Revolution and Republic The Rise of Modern Turkey 1808 1975 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521291637 Stavrianos L S 1958 The Balkans Since 1453 pp 393 412 ISBN 9780814797662 Further reading EditAcar Keziban March 2004 An examination of Russian Imperialism Russian Military and intellectual descriptions of the Caucasians during the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Nationalities Papers 32 1 7 21 doi 10 1080 0090599042000186151 S2CID 153769239 Baleva Martina The Empire Strikes Back Image Battles and Image Frontlines during the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Ethnologia Balkanica 16 2012 273 294 online dead link Dennis Brad Patterns of Conflict and Violence in Eastern Anatolia Leading Up to the Russo Turkish War and the Treaty of Berlin War and Diplomacy The Russo Turkish War of 1878 1877 273 301 Drury Ian The Russo Turkish War 1877 Bloomsbury Publishing 2012 Glenny Misha 2012 The Balkans Nationalism War and the Great Powers 1804 2011 New York Penguin Isci Onur Russian and Ottoman Newspapers in the War of 1877 1878 Russian History 41 2 2014 181 196 online Murray Nicholas The Rocky Road to the Great War The Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914 Potomac Books Inc an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press 2013 Neuburger Mary The Russo Turkish war and the Eastern Jewish question Encounters between victims and victors in Ottoman Bulgaria 1877 8 East European Jewish Affairs 26 2 1996 53 66 Stone James Reports from the Theatre of War Major Viktor von Lignitz and the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 Militargeschichtliche Zeitschrift 71 2 2012 287 307 online contains primary sources Todorov Nikolai The Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 and the Liberation of Bulgaria An Interpretative Essay East European Quarterly 14 1 1980 9 online Yavuz M Hakan and Peter Sluglett eds War and diplomacy the Russo Turkish war of 1877 1878 and the treaty of Berlin U of Utah Press 2011 Yildiz Gultekin Russo Ottoman War 1877 1878 in Richard C Hall ed War in the Balkans 2014 256 258 online dead link Glazkov V V Kopytov S Yu Litvin A A Mitev P Georgieva T Kolev V 2018 Osvobozhdenie Bolgarii Liki Vojny i Pamyati K 140 letiyu okonchaniya Russko tureckoj vojny 1877 1878 gg albom 1000 ekz ed M Fond Russkie Vityazi Sost i nauch red Oleg Leonov d i n Rumyana Mihneva Sost professor Plamen Mitev docent Tina Georgieva docent Valeri Kolev ISBN 978 5 6040157 4 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Russo Turkish War 1877 78 Seegel Steven J Virtual War Virtual Journalism Russian Media Responses to Balkan Entanglements in Historical Perspective 1877 2001 PDF USA Brown University Military History Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Digital book index Sowards Steven W Twenty Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History MSU archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 and the Exploits of Liberators Grand war in Russian Kulichki The Romanian Army of the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 AOL Erastimes image gallery in Bulgarian 8M archived from the original on 13 October 2006 Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 Historical photos Archived 14 October 2018 at the Wayback MachineVideo links Edit 130 years Liberation of Pleven Plevna Zelenogorsky Najden 3 March 2007 Mayor of Pleven speech archived from the original video on 25 October 2007 retrieved 30 April 2007 Stanishev Sergej 3 March 2007 Bulgarian Prime Minister speech archived from the original video on 25 October 2007 retrieved 30 April 2007 Potapov 3 March 2007 Ambassador of Russia in Bulgaria speech archived from the original video on 24 October 2007 retrieved 30 April 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 amp oldid 1134109136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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