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Treaty of San Stefano

The 1878 Treaty of San Stefano (Russian: Сан-Стефанский мир; Peace of San-Stefano, Сан-Стефанский мирный договор; Peace treaty of San-Stefano, Turkish: Ayastefanos Muahedesi or Ayastefanos Antlaşması) was a treaty between the Russian and Ottoman empires at the conclusion of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. It was signed at San Stefano, then a village west of Constantinople (present-day Istanbul), on 3 March  [O.S. 19 February] 1878 by Count Nicholas Pavlovich Ignatiev and Aleksandr Nelidov on behalf of the Russian Empire and by Foreign Minister Saffet Pasha and Ambassador to Germany Sadullah Bey on behalf of the Ottoman Empire.[1][2][3]

Treaty of San Stefano
The signing of the treaty of San Stefano
TypeBilateral treaty
Signed3 March 1878 (1878-03-03)
LocationSan Stefano, Ottoman Empire
Original
signatories

According to the official Russian position, by signing the treaty, Russia had never intended anything more than a temporary rough draft, so as to enable a final settlement with the other Great Powers.[4][5]

The treaty provided for the establishment of an autonomous Principality of Bulgaria following almost 500 years of Ottoman rule in the Bulgarian lands. Bulgarians celebrate the day the treaty was signed, 3 March  [O.S. 19 February] 1878, as Liberation Day. However, the enlarged Bulgaria envisioned by the treaty alarmed neighboring states as well as France and the United Kingdom. As a result, the enlargement was never implemented, being superseded by the Treaty of Berlin following the Congress of the same name that took place three months later.[3]

Effects edit

On Bulgaria edit

 
Borders of Bulgaria according to the Preliminary Treaty of San Stefano and the Treaty of Berlin.
 
Bulgaria after the Conference of Constantinople, 1876
 
Bulgaria after the Treaty of San Stefano, 1878

The treaty established the autonomous self-governing Principality of Bulgaria, with a Christian government and the right to keep an army.[6] Though still de jure tributary to the Ottomans, the Principality de facto functioned as an independent nation. Its territory included the plain between the Danube and the Balkan mountain range (Stara Planina), the region of Sofia, Pirot and Vranje in the Morava valley, Northern Thrace, parts of Eastern Thrace and nearly all of Macedonia (Article 6).

Bulgaria would thus have had direct access to the Mediterranean. This carried the potential of Russian ships eventually using Bulgarian Mediterranean ports as naval bases, which the other Great Powers greatly disliked.

A prince elected by the people, approved by the Ottoman Empire, and recognized by the Great Powers was to take the helm of the country (Article 7). A council of Bulgarian noblemen was to draft a constitution (also Article 7). (They produced the Tarnovo Constitution.) Ottoman troops were to withdraw from Bulgaria, while Russian troops would remain for two more years (Article 8).

According to Philip Roeder, the Treaty of San Stefano "transformed" Bulgarian nationalism, turning it from a disunited movement into a united one.[7]

Montenegro, Serbia, and Romania edit

Under the treaty, Montenegro more than doubled its territory, acquiring formerly Ottoman-controlled areas including the cities of Nikšić, Podgorica, and Bar (Article 1), and the Ottoman Empire recognized its independence (Article 2).

Serbia gained the cities of Niš and Leskovac in Moravian Serbia and became independent (Article 3).

Turkey recognized the independence of Romania (Article 5) while the latter gained Northern Dobruja from Russia (to which it was transferred from the Ottoman Empire) and ceded Southern Bessarabia in a forced exchange.

On Russia and the Ottoman Empire edit

 
The Treaty was signed in this house of the Simenoğlu (Simeonoglou) family in Yeşilköy.

In exchange for war reparations, the Sublime Porte ceded Armenian and Georgian territories in the Caucasus to Russia, including Ardahan, Artvin, Batum, Kars, Olti, Beyazit, and Alashkert. Additionally, it ceded Northern Dobruja, which Russia handed to Romania in exchange for Southern Bessarabia (Article 19).

Article 21 allowed the population living in areas conquered by Russia to sell property and immigrate to Turkey. The Treaty of Berlin kept a similar provision. Many Adjarians left Adjara at that time.[8]

On other regions edit

The Vilayet of Bosnia (Bosnia and Herzegovina) was supposed to become an autonomous province (Article 14). Crete, Epirus and Thessaly were to receive a limited form of local self-government (Article 15), while the Ottomans vouched for their earlier-given promises to handle reforms in Armenia in order to protect the Armenians from abuse (Article 16). The Straits—the Bosporus and the Dardanelles—were declared open to all neutral ships in war and peacetime (Article 24).

The Circassians of the newly liberated Balkan territories, who had been settled there in 1864 following the Circassian genocide and had committed several atrocities against the Christian population of the region during the war, were to be expelled. This way, the Circassian minority in Dobruja disappeared.[9]

Reaction edit

 
Maps of the region after the Treaty of San Stefano and the Congress of Berlin of 1878

The Great Powers, especially British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, were unhappy with this extension of Russian power, and Serbia feared that the establishment of Greater Bulgaria would harm its interests in the former and remaining Ottoman territories. These reasons prompted the Great Powers to obtain a revision of the treaty at the Congress of Berlin, and substitute it with the Treaty of Berlin.

Romania, which had contributed significantly to the Russian victory in the war, was extremely disappointed by the treaty, and the Romanian public perceived some of its stipulations as Russia breaking the Russo-Romanian pre-war treaties that guaranteed the integrity of Romanian territory.

Austria-Hungary was disappointed with the treaty as it failed to expand its influence in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Albanians, dwelling in provinces controlled by the Ottoman Empire, objected to what they considered a significant loss of their territory to Serbia, Bulgaria, and Montenegro and realized they would have to organize nationally to attract the assistance of foreign powers seeking to neutralize Russia's influence in the region. The implications of the treaty led to the formation of the League of Prizren.[10]

In the "Salisbury Circular" of 1 April 1878, the British Foreign Secretary Robert Cecil, made clear his and his government's objections to the Treaty of San Stefano and the favorable position in which it left Russia.

According to British historian A. J. P. Taylor, writing in 1954:

"If the treaty of San Stefano had been maintained, both the Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary might have survived to the present day. The British, except for [Disraeli] in his wilder moments, had expected less and were therefore less disappointed. Salisbury wrote at the end of 1878 'We shall set up a rickety sort of Turkish rule again south of the Balkans. But it is a mere respite. There is no vitality left in them.'"[11]

Critical re-evaluation of treaty in Bulgaria since the 1990s edit

Since 1990, a number of historians, publicists and journalists in Bulgaria have subjected the Treaty of San Stefano and the entire policy of the Russian Empire on the Eastern question in the 19th century to critical re-evaluation and have concluded that the treaty was a "charade" crafted by the long-standing Russian ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Count Nikolay Ignatyev, for the purpose of securing Russian interests in Bulgaria and fomenting lasting anti-Western sentiment in Bulgarian society.[12][13][14][15][16][17][18]

Russian Empire's objectives edit

Drawing on the texts of the 1876 Reichstadt Agreement, the 1877 Budapest Convention, various correspondence during the time period and particularly Count Ignatyev's own unfiltered thoughts in his diaries, all researchers draw the conclusion that the Russian Empire's only ambition was to conquer the Turkish Straits, in continuation of Catherine the Great's Greek Plan.[19][20][12]

They argue that the "Bulgarian Question" and the liberation of the Bulgarians were used only as a political ruse and a stepping stone to Constantinople.[19][20][12] As indicated in Ignatyev's Diaries, if the Russian plan had succeeded, Bulgarians would have ultimately been placed under Russian control by either subjecting them to direct Russian or indirect Serbian rule or ruling them as a puppet state.

Count Ignatyev's role in securing Russian imperial policy edit

Whereas in traditional Bulgarian and international historiography, Ignatyev is generally presented as a great friend of Bulgaria and an advocate of Bulgarian liberation, his diaires present him rather as a Machiavellian politician completely dedicated to furthering Russian imperialist expansion on the Balkans.

Among other things, Ignatyev is found to have continuously subverted the struggle for an independent Bulgarian Church in the 1860s and the 1870s, the success of which played a crucial role in Bulgarian nation-building. He is further implicated to have advocated for the hanging of the founder of the Bulgarian Internal Revolutionary Organisation (IRO), Vasil Levski, before the Ottoman authorities attempted to make the IRO, which was hostile to any foreign involvement, more amenable to Russian desires.[21][17][12][15][22]

Indzhev, in particular, notes that by eliminating IRO's ideologue and leader, hellbent on liberation "by own means" and maligning the 19th-century Bulgarian bourgeoisie (e.g., Stoyan Chomakov), which favoured gaining autonomy by working together with the Ottoman authorities, Ignatyev's work blocked both Bulgaria's "revolutionary" and "evolutionary" path of development, which made "liberation by Russia", the scenario giving Russia direct control over Bulgarian affairs, the only option left.

April Uprising and consequences edit

Between 1855 and 1865, the Ottoman authorities settled 300,000 Crimean Tatar, Circassian and other Muslim Caucasian Muhacir in the Danube Vilayet.[23][24] While the settlement of Crimean Tatars was largely problem-free, the scarcity of arable land, the sheer scale of Circassian migration and the inability of Ottoman authorities to address problems properly turned the Circassian settlement into a disaster that drove impoverished Circassians to join paramilitary (i.e., bashi-bazouk) units or turn to banditry and crime.[25][26][27] The Ottoman inability to restore social order was a direct cause of the Bulgarian April Uprising of 1876, whose bloody suppression generated widespread indignation and condemnation in Europe.[14][28][29]

Most Great Powers were still deliberating what action to take and eventually reached agreement to convene the Constantinople Conference in late December 1876, when the Russian Empire and Austria-Hungary had already apportioned the Ottoman holdings in Europe for themselves by virtue of the Reichstadt Agreement of 8 July 1876, more than half a year earlier. The agreement was reconfirmed and elaborated further in the Budapest Convention of 15 January 1877.

Reichstadt and Budapest Treaties edit

Both treaties erre kept entirely secret and envisaged à Russian war on the Ottoman Empire, with Austria-Hungary pledging neutrality. The Russian Empire, in turn, pledged not to create a large Slavic state but only two independent principalities or two autonomous Ottoman vilayets (the version varies depending on language) north and south of the Balkan Range. In turn, Austria-Hungary was given permission to annex Bosnia and Herzegovina. The treaties also envisaged Romania ceding southern Bessarabia to the Russian Empire, territorial acquisitions for Greece, etc.

All researchers have noted the pronounced similarity of the clauses of the two secret treaties to the provisions of the Berlin Treaty and the stark contrast of the three to the territorial provisions of the Treaty of San Stefano. The tous infer that the Russian Empire never had any actual intent to implement it.

In view of Ignatyev's dedication to Russian imperialism and his past disregard for Bulgarian interests, the universal conclusion here is that the Treaty of San Stefano was a "ruse", "deceit", "fraud", "trap" and "decoy" and that he signed it only for propaganda purposes to tie the nascent Bulgarian state to the Russian Empire by pretending that it was the Bulgarians' only protector but simultaneously blame the inevitable break-up of Bulgaria on the other Great Powers to so permanent distrust of them in Bulgarian society.[14][17][12][16][18][15][22][13][30]

Sabotaging Constantinople Conference as casus belli for the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) edit

However, in particular, Indzhev, Doychev, Gochev and Yordanov do not draw the line here. After comparing the dates of signing of the Budapest Convention (15 January 1877) and Grand Vizier Midhat Pasha's refusal (18 January 1877) to accede to the Great Powers' proposal at the Constantinople Conference for the creation of two autonomous Bulgarian vilayets and taking into account Ignatyev's own memos in his 1875–1878 Diaries, among other things, his allegation that

"The Ottoman Sultan trusts the Russian ambassador fully" (pp. 72–73), the insistence that

"the Bulgarians... should be turned into an obedient tool of Russian policy and into our permanent allies by annihilating any option for them to cross to the enemy side" (pp. 51–53) and that

"the Austrian and Turkish Slavs must be our allies and tools of our policy towards Germany" (pp. 51–53), the warning that

"if the nations that rebelled against the Turks fall under Western rather than our influence, the situation on the Balkans will become far more untenable for Russia than it is now" (p. 58), etc.

and after analysing the Great Power that would benefit most from sabotaging the Constantinople Conference, they conclude that the culprit must be The Russian Empire.[12][16][14][15][22][19]

Traditionally, Bulgarian historiograhy, in line with Russian propaganda, has always cast the blame for the failure of the Conference on the go-to villain in modern Bulgarian history: the English. However, the vilayet autonomy proposal reflected all of the United Kingdom's desires by splitting the autonomous territory into two and ensuring extensive international (including English) oversight of vilayet affairs, which would have prevented the autonomous territories from becoming Russian puppets.

The inability to subjugate the Bulgarians to its long-term goals and policy and the desire to keep Western influence out of the Balkans are argued to be the very reasons for Russia's unwillingness to commit to the proposals of the Conference. A war would have drastically reduced the territory of the future Bulgarian state but also given Russia free rein to dictate Bulgarian affairs. Russia's intent to go to war as early as July 1876, as stipulated in the Reichstadt Agreement, is adduced as a further argument that the Constantinople Conference was an obstacle, rather than a solution, to the Bulgarian Crisis for Russia.[12][16][15]

Indzhev and Gochev hypothesise that Ignatyev secured the Ottomans' co-operation by assuring them that any territory they would lose in a potential war would be far smaller than the territory of the two autonomous vilayets, which largely overlapped with the borders of the Bulgarian Exarchate.[14][12] Indeed, the Principality of Bulgaria created after the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) covered less than 40% of the territory of the autonomous vilayets.

In that connection, several of the authors have also noted the unwillingness of the Russian administration to refer to the Bulgarians by their national name and to instead call them "Slavs" and "Orthodox Christians" before the war and the subsequent use of designations such as "Russian-Danubian Province", "Balkan Province", "occupation fund" and "occupation" until the terms of the Berlin Treaty defined the organisation of the future Bulgarian Principality and gave the Russian occupation corps explicit deadlines for retreat.[12][14][16][15][22][30][13][31]

In particular, Indzhev, Doychev and Yordanov have opined that if the Russian troops had not been forced in Berlin to withdraw, they would have never left.[12][16][15]

Myth of San Stefano edit

Numerous authors conclude that the carefully crafted myth of San Stefano has caused lasting harm to Bulgarian statehood by making Bulgarians vulnerable to Russian propaganda and depriving them of the ability to exercise judgement at critical junctures in their history.

In particular, Aleksandar Tatsov, Yanko Gochev, Plamen Tzvetkov and Alexander Yordanov have referred to the Balkan Wars in which the false belief of several successive Russophile cabinets that "Russia will help Bulgaria because it did so in San Stefano" essentially made the country's entire future dependent on a foreign power that had anathemised the Unification of Bulgaria, invited the Ottoman Sultan to reconquer Eastern Rumelia and organised a coup against the Bulgarian Prince only three decades earlier.[15][13][17][30]

The Bulgarian journalist Ivo Indzhev focuses on the vulnerability of modern Bulgaria to Russian propaganda, including with regard to the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine, and points out that "the myth of San Stefano" remains to this day the most effective tool for generating pro-Russian and anti-Western sentiment in Bulgarian society.[12] Finally, Tsvetkov bluntly states that unless Bulgarian society overcomes what he refers to as "its San Stefano inferiority complex" and "self-degrading Russophilia", he is not optimistic about the future of the country.[31]

In that connection, quite notably and despite being unaware of either the Reichstadt and Budapest Treaties or Count Ignatyev's Diaries, the Bulgarian statesman and long-standing Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov held similar beliefs as early as the 1880s. He considered the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) to be an attempt by Tsarist Russia to turn Bulgaria into a protectorate and preferred a union with Romania or even a dual Bulgarian-Turkish state to further involvement with Russia.[32]

Gallery edit

In popular culture edit

The circumstances leading to the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano are depicted in Boris Akunin's historical novel The Turkish Gambit. Akunin in general sticks to known historical facts, though he attributes some acts to fictional characters such as his recurrent protaginist Erast Fandorin.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hertslet, Edward (1891), "Preliminary Treaty of Peace between Russia and Turkey. Signed at San Stefano 19 February/3 March 1878 (Translation)", The Map of Europe by Treaty; which have taken place since the general peace of 1814. With numerous maps and notes, vol. IV (1875–1891), London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, pp. 2672–2696, retrieved 2013-01-04
  2. ^ Holland, Thomas Erskine (1885), "The Preliminary Treaty of Peace, signed at San Stefano, 17 March 1878", The European Concert in the Eastern Question and Other Public Acts, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 335–348, retrieved 2013-03-04
  3. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bulgaria/History" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 04 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 779–784 [782]. Treaties of San Stefano and Berlin.
  4. ^ Compare: Holland, Thomas Erskine (1898), "The Execution of the Treaty of Berlin", Studies in International Law, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 227–228, retrieved 2020-12-14, In the preliminary treaty of peace Russia had taken no account of the opinion of Europe. [...] The problem for the Powers was to persuade Russia in the moment of victory to submit her contract with Turkey to a resettlement from the point of view of the general interest.
  5. ^ Although it was inconsistent with the Treaty of Paris of 1856 and with the London Convention of 1871, and for that reason was justly protested by Great Britain, the Preliminary Treaty of Peace of San Stefano was, according to general international law, valid. See Kelsen, Hans (1952), Principles of International Law, New York: Rinehart & Company Inc., p. 365
  6. ^ Briggs, Asa; Calvin, Patricia (2003). Modern Europe, 1789–Present (2 ed.). London: Routledge. p. 113. ISBN 0582772605.
  7. ^ Roeder, Philip G. (2007). Where Nation-States Come From: Institutional Change in the Age of Nationalism. Princeton University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-691-13467-3. JSTOR j.ctt7t07k.
  8. ^ "Transforming Identity of Ajarian Population". ALPPI Annual of Language & Politics and Politics of Identity. V (05): 57–72. 2011. ISSN 1803-1757.
  9. ^ Tița, Diana (16 September 2018). "Povestea dramatică a cerchezilor din Dobrogea". Historia (in Romanian).
  10. ^ Gawrych, George. The Crescent and the Eagle. London: I.B. Tauris, 2006, pp. 44–49.
  11. ^ Taylor, A. J. P. (1954) The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1914–1918. Oxford University Press, p. 253.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ivo Indzhev (2022). The San Stefano Deceit (Измамата Сан Стефано) (in Bulgarian) (2nd reworked ed.). София: Ciela. ISBN 978-9542838708.
  13. ^ a b c d Plamen Tzvetkov (2008). "Chapters 9–11". The World of the Megamyths (in Bulgarian). София: New Bulgarian University Publishing House. ISBN 978-954-535-498-4.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Yanko Gochev (2010). "Why We Should Not Allow the Erection of a Monument of Alexander II in Svishtov" (in Bulgarian).
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Alexander Yordanov (2019). Lessons on Patriotism (in Bulgarian). София: Век 21 – прес. ISBN 978-6199100516.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Momchil Doychev (2020). "The San Stefano Scam – Who Erased 13 July 1878 from Historical Memory" (in Bulgarian).
  17. ^ a b c d Alexander Tatsov (2020). "Do We Owe Russia Anything?" (in Bulgarian).
  18. ^ a b Velko Miloev (2012). "The Myth of San Stefano Bulgaria" (in Bulgarian).
  19. ^ a b c Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev (1986). Diaries 1875–1878 (Записки 1875–1878) (in Bulgarian). София: Отечествен фронт.
  20. ^ a b Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev (2008). Diplomatic Diaries 1864–1874 (Дипломатически записки 1864–1874) (in Bulgarian). София: Държавна агенция "Архиви".
  21. ^ Yanko Gochev (2016). "Chapters The Vice-Emperor of Constantinople: Count Nikolay Ignatiev & Why Did Russia Find Levski Inconvenient?". The Murder of Levski – the Culprits (Убийството на Левски – виновниците) (in Bulgarian). София: Aniko. ISBN 978-9548247238.
  22. ^ a b c d Alexander Yordanov (2018). "The San Stefano Treaty – A Snare, Trap, Illusion and an Instrument for Manipulating Bulgarians for More Than a Century" (in Bulgarian).
  23. ^ Karpat, K.H. (1985). Ottoman population, 1830–1914: demographic and social characteristics. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Pres. pp. 27, 50.
  24. ^ Koyuncu, Aşkın. . www.turkishstudies.net. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
  25. ^ Muchinov, Ventsislav (2013). "Ottoman Policies to Address the Migrant Crisis in the Bulgarian Lands at the End of the 1850s and 1860s" (in Bulgarian).
  26. ^ Hamed, Vladimir (July 2018). "Imperial Refuge: Resettlement Of Muslims From Russia In The Ottoman Empire, 1860–1914" (PDF). pp. 15, 86, 88, 89, 109, 261.
  27. ^ Dobreva, Margarita (2013). "Circassian Colonization in the Danube Vilayet and Social Integration" (PDF). OTAM: Journal of the Center for Ottoman Studies, Ankara University / Ankara Üniversitesi Osmanli Arastirma ve Uygulama Merkezi Dergisi (33): 24. doi:10.1501/OTAM_0000000612.
  28. ^ Иван Хаджийски [in Bulgarian] (1966). "Chapter: Psychology of the April Uprising". Optymistic Theory about Our People (Оптимистична теория за нашия народ) (in Bulgarian). София: Otechestvo.
  29. ^ Hamed, Vladimir (July 2018). "Imperial Refuge: Resettlement Of Muslims From Russia In The Ottoman Empire, 1860–1914" (PDF). p. 55.
  30. ^ a b c Yanko Gochev (2021). "The Russophile Lies about the Creation of a Bulgarian State on 3 March 1878" (in Bulgarian).
  31. ^ a b Plamen Tzvetkov (2012). "San Stefano Myths and Bulgarian Complexes" (in Bulgarian).
  32. ^ Nyagulov, Blagovest (2012). "Ideas of federation and personal union with regard to Bulgaria and Romania". Bulgarian Historical Review (3–4): 36–61. ISSN 0204-8906.

External links edit

  • "Preliminary Treaty of Peace between Russia and Turkey: Signed at San Stefano, February 19/ March 3, 1878 (Translation)". The American Journal of International Law. II (4, Supplement, Official Documents): 387–401. October 1908. doi:10.2307/2212669. JSTOR 2212669. S2CID 246010753.
  • The Preliminary Treaty of Peace, signed at San Stefano – Full text, in English.
  • Full text of the San Stefano Preliminary Treaty (in Russian)

Maps edit

  • Bulgaria in the borders after the Treaties of Constantinople, San-Stephano, Berlin, London, Bucharest and Neuilly. Scale 1:1600000 map. (in German)

treaty, stefano, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Treaty of San Stefano news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 1878 Treaty of San Stefano Russian San Stefanskij mir Peace of San Stefano San Stefanskij mirnyj dogovor Peace treaty of San Stefano Turkish Ayastefanos Muahedesi or Ayastefanos Antlasmasi was a treaty between the Russian and Ottoman empires at the conclusion of the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 It was signed at San Stefano then a village west of Constantinople present day Istanbul on 3 March O S 19 February 1878 by Count Nicholas Pavlovich Ignatiev and Aleksandr Nelidov on behalf of the Russian Empire and by Foreign Minister Saffet Pasha and Ambassador to Germany Sadullah Bey on behalf of the Ottoman Empire 1 2 3 Treaty of San StefanoThe signing of the treaty of San StefanoTypeBilateral treatySigned3 March 1878 1878 03 03 LocationSan Stefano Ottoman EmpireOriginalsignatories Ottoman Empire RussiaAccording to the official Russian position by signing the treaty Russia had never intended anything more than a temporary rough draft so as to enable a final settlement with the other Great Powers 4 5 The treaty provided for the establishment of an autonomous Principality of Bulgaria following almost 500 years of Ottoman rule in the Bulgarian lands Bulgarians celebrate the day the treaty was signed 3 March O S 19 February 1878 as Liberation Day However the enlarged Bulgaria envisioned by the treaty alarmed neighboring states as well as France and the United Kingdom As a result the enlargement was never implemented being superseded by the Treaty of Berlin following the Congress of the same name that took place three months later 3 Contents 1 Effects 1 1 On Bulgaria 1 2 Montenegro Serbia and Romania 1 3 On Russia and the Ottoman Empire 1 4 On other regions 2 Reaction 3 Critical re evaluation of treaty in Bulgaria since the 1990s 3 1 Russian Empire s objectives 3 2 Count Ignatyev s role in securing Russian imperial policy 3 3 April Uprising and consequences 3 4 Reichstadt and Budapest Treaties 3 5 Sabotaging Constantinople Conference as casus belli for the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 3 6 Myth of San Stefano 4 Gallery 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 External links 8 1 MapsEffects editOn Bulgaria edit nbsp Borders of Bulgaria according to the Preliminary Treaty of San Stefano and the Treaty of Berlin nbsp Bulgaria after the Conference of Constantinople 1876 nbsp Bulgaria after the Treaty of San Stefano 1878The treaty established the autonomous self governing Principality of Bulgaria with a Christian government and the right to keep an army 6 Though still de jure tributary to the Ottomans the Principality de facto functioned as an independent nation Its territory included the plain between the Danube and the Balkan mountain range Stara Planina the region of Sofia Pirot and Vranje in the Morava valley Northern Thrace parts of Eastern Thrace and nearly all of Macedonia Article 6 Bulgaria would thus have had direct access to the Mediterranean This carried the potential of Russian ships eventually using Bulgarian Mediterranean ports as naval bases which the other Great Powers greatly disliked A prince elected by the people approved by the Ottoman Empire and recognized by the Great Powers was to take the helm of the country Article 7 A council of Bulgarian noblemen was to draft a constitution also Article 7 They produced the Tarnovo Constitution Ottoman troops were to withdraw from Bulgaria while Russian troops would remain for two more years Article 8 According to Philip Roeder the Treaty of San Stefano transformed Bulgarian nationalism turning it from a disunited movement into a united one 7 Montenegro Serbia and Romania edit Under the treaty Montenegro more than doubled its territory acquiring formerly Ottoman controlled areas including the cities of Niksic Podgorica and Bar Article 1 and the Ottoman Empire recognized its independence Article 2 Serbia gained the cities of Nis and Leskovac in Moravian Serbia and became independent Article 3 Turkey recognized the independence of Romania Article 5 while the latter gained Northern Dobruja from Russia to which it was transferred from the Ottoman Empire and ceded Southern Bessarabia in a forced exchange On Russia and the Ottoman Empire edit nbsp The Treaty was signed in this house of the Simenoglu Simeonoglou family in Yesilkoy In exchange for war reparations the Sublime Porte ceded Armenian and Georgian territories in the Caucasus to Russia including Ardahan Artvin Batum Kars Olti Beyazit and Alashkert Additionally it ceded Northern Dobruja which Russia handed to Romania in exchange for Southern Bessarabia Article 19 Article 21 allowed the population living in areas conquered by Russia to sell property and immigrate to Turkey The Treaty of Berlin kept a similar provision Many Adjarians left Adjara at that time 8 On other regions edit The Vilayet of Bosnia Bosnia and Herzegovina was supposed to become an autonomous province Article 14 Crete Epirus and Thessaly were to receive a limited form of local self government Article 15 while the Ottomans vouched for their earlier given promises to handle reforms in Armenia in order to protect the Armenians from abuse Article 16 The Straits the Bosporus and the Dardanelles were declared open to all neutral ships in war and peacetime Article 24 The Circassians of the newly liberated Balkan territories who had been settled there in 1864 following the Circassian genocide and had committed several atrocities against the Christian population of the region during the war were to be expelled This way the Circassian minority in Dobruja disappeared 9 Reaction edit nbsp Maps of the region after the Treaty of San Stefano and the Congress of Berlin of 1878The Great Powers especially British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli were unhappy with this extension of Russian power and Serbia feared that the establishment of Greater Bulgaria would harm its interests in the former and remaining Ottoman territories These reasons prompted the Great Powers to obtain a revision of the treaty at the Congress of Berlin and substitute it with the Treaty of Berlin Romania which had contributed significantly to the Russian victory in the war was extremely disappointed by the treaty and the Romanian public perceived some of its stipulations as Russia breaking the Russo Romanian pre war treaties that guaranteed the integrity of Romanian territory Austria Hungary was disappointed with the treaty as it failed to expand its influence in Bosnia and Herzegovina The Albanians dwelling in provinces controlled by the Ottoman Empire objected to what they considered a significant loss of their territory to Serbia Bulgaria and Montenegro and realized they would have to organize nationally to attract the assistance of foreign powers seeking to neutralize Russia s influence in the region The implications of the treaty led to the formation of the League of Prizren 10 In the Salisbury Circular of 1 April 1878 the British Foreign Secretary Robert Cecil made clear his and his government s objections to the Treaty of San Stefano and the favorable position in which it left Russia According to British historian A J P Taylor writing in 1954 If the treaty of San Stefano had been maintained both the Ottoman Empire and Austria Hungary might have survived to the present day The British except for Disraeli in his wilder moments had expected less and were therefore less disappointed Salisbury wrote at the end of 1878 We shall set up a rickety sort of Turkish rule again south of the Balkans But it is a mere respite There is no vitality left in them 11 Critical re evaluation of treaty in Bulgaria since the 1990s editSince 1990 a number of historians publicists and journalists in Bulgaria have subjected the Treaty of San Stefano and the entire policy of the Russian Empire on the Eastern question in the 19th century to critical re evaluation and have concluded that the treaty was a charade crafted by the long standing Russian ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Count Nikolay Ignatyev for the purpose of securing Russian interests in Bulgaria and fomenting lasting anti Western sentiment in Bulgarian society 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Russian Empire s objectives edit Drawing on the texts of the 1876 Reichstadt Agreement the 1877 Budapest Convention various correspondence during the time period and particularly Count Ignatyev s own unfiltered thoughts in his diaries all researchers draw the conclusion that the Russian Empire s only ambition was to conquer the Turkish Straits in continuation of Catherine the Great s Greek Plan 19 20 12 They argue that the Bulgarian Question and the liberation of the Bulgarians were used only as a political ruse and a stepping stone to Constantinople 19 20 12 As indicated in Ignatyev s Diaries if the Russian plan had succeeded Bulgarians would have ultimately been placed under Russian control by either subjecting them to direct Russian or indirect Serbian rule or ruling them as a puppet state Count Ignatyev s role in securing Russian imperial policy edit Whereas in traditional Bulgarian and international historiography Ignatyev is generally presented as a great friend of Bulgaria and an advocate of Bulgarian liberation his diaires present him rather as a Machiavellian politician completely dedicated to furthering Russian imperialist expansion on the Balkans Among other things Ignatyev is found to have continuously subverted the struggle for an independent Bulgarian Church in the 1860s and the 1870s the success of which played a crucial role in Bulgarian nation building He is further implicated to have advocated for the hanging of the founder of the Bulgarian Internal Revolutionary Organisation IRO Vasil Levski before the Ottoman authorities attempted to make the IRO which was hostile to any foreign involvement more amenable to Russian desires 21 17 12 15 22 Indzhev in particular notes that by eliminating IRO s ideologue and leader hellbent on liberation by own means and maligning the 19th century Bulgarian bourgeoisie e g Stoyan Chomakov which favoured gaining autonomy by working together with the Ottoman authorities Ignatyev s work blocked both Bulgaria s revolutionary and evolutionary path of development which made liberation by Russia the scenario giving Russia direct control over Bulgarian affairs the only option left April Uprising and consequences edit Between 1855 and 1865 the Ottoman authorities settled 300 000 Crimean Tatar Circassian and other Muslim Caucasian Muhacir in the Danube Vilayet 23 24 While the settlement of Crimean Tatars was largely problem free the scarcity of arable land the sheer scale of Circassian migration and the inability of Ottoman authorities to address problems properly turned the Circassian settlement into a disaster that drove impoverished Circassians to join paramilitary i e bashi bazouk units or turn to banditry and crime 25 26 27 The Ottoman inability to restore social order was a direct cause of the Bulgarian April Uprising of 1876 whose bloody suppression generated widespread indignation and condemnation in Europe 14 28 29 Most Great Powers were still deliberating what action to take and eventually reached agreement to convene the Constantinople Conference in late December 1876 when the Russian Empire and Austria Hungary had already apportioned the Ottoman holdings in Europe for themselves by virtue of the Reichstadt Agreement of 8 July 1876 more than half a year earlier The agreement was reconfirmed and elaborated further in the Budapest Convention of 15 January 1877 Reichstadt and Budapest Treaties edit Both treaties erre kept entirely secret and envisaged a Russian war on the Ottoman Empire with Austria Hungary pledging neutrality The Russian Empire in turn pledged not to create a large Slavic state but only two independent principalities or two autonomous Ottoman vilayets the version varies depending on language north and south of the Balkan Range In turn Austria Hungary was given permission to annex Bosnia and Herzegovina The treaties also envisaged Romania ceding southern Bessarabia to the Russian Empire territorial acquisitions for Greece etc All researchers have noted the pronounced similarity of the clauses of the two secret treaties to the provisions of the Berlin Treaty and the stark contrast of the three to the territorial provisions of the Treaty of San Stefano The tous infer that the Russian Empire never had any actual intent to implement it In view of Ignatyev s dedication to Russian imperialism and his past disregard for Bulgarian interests the universal conclusion here is that the Treaty of San Stefano was a ruse deceit fraud trap and decoy and that he signed it only for propaganda purposes to tie the nascent Bulgarian state to the Russian Empire by pretending that it was the Bulgarians only protector but simultaneously blame the inevitable break up of Bulgaria on the other Great Powers to so permanent distrust of them in Bulgarian society 14 17 12 16 18 15 22 13 30 Sabotaging Constantinople Conference as casus belli for the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 editHowever in particular Indzhev Doychev Gochev and Yordanov do not draw the line here After comparing the dates of signing of the Budapest Convention 15 January 1877 and Grand Vizier Midhat Pasha s refusal 18 January 1877 to accede to the Great Powers proposal at the Constantinople Conference for the creation of two autonomous Bulgarian vilayets and taking into account Ignatyev s own memos in his 1875 1878 Diaries among other things his allegation that The Ottoman Sultan trusts the Russian ambassador fully pp 72 73 the insistence that the Bulgarians should be turned into an obedient tool of Russian policy and into our permanent allies by annihilating any option for them to cross to the enemy side pp 51 53 and that the Austrian and Turkish Slavs must be our allies and tools of our policy towards Germany pp 51 53 the warning that if the nations that rebelled against the Turks fall under Western rather than our influence the situation on the Balkans will become far more untenable for Russia than it is now p 58 etc and after analysing the Great Power that would benefit most from sabotaging the Constantinople Conference they conclude that the culprit must be The Russian Empire 12 16 14 15 22 19 Traditionally Bulgarian historiograhy in line with Russian propaganda has always cast the blame for the failure of the Conference on the go to villain in modern Bulgarian history the English However the vilayet autonomy proposal reflected all of the United Kingdom s desires by splitting the autonomous territory into two and ensuring extensive international including English oversight of vilayet affairs which would have prevented the autonomous territories from becoming Russian puppets The inability to subjugate the Bulgarians to its long term goals and policy and the desire to keep Western influence out of the Balkans are argued to be the very reasons for Russia s unwillingness to commit to the proposals of the Conference A war would have drastically reduced the territory of the future Bulgarian state but also given Russia free rein to dictate Bulgarian affairs Russia s intent to go to war as early as July 1876 as stipulated in the Reichstadt Agreement is adduced as a further argument that the Constantinople Conference was an obstacle rather than a solution to the Bulgarian Crisis for Russia 12 16 15 Indzhev and Gochev hypothesise that Ignatyev secured the Ottomans co operation by assuring them that any territory they would lose in a potential war would be far smaller than the territory of the two autonomous vilayets which largely overlapped with the borders of the Bulgarian Exarchate 14 12 Indeed the Principality of Bulgaria created after the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 covered less than 40 of the territory of the autonomous vilayets In that connection several of the authors have also noted the unwillingness of the Russian administration to refer to the Bulgarians by their national name and to instead call them Slavs and Orthodox Christians before the war and the subsequent use of designations such as Russian Danubian Province Balkan Province occupation fund and occupation until the terms of the Berlin Treaty defined the organisation of the future Bulgarian Principality and gave the Russian occupation corps explicit deadlines for retreat 12 14 16 15 22 30 13 31 In particular Indzhev Doychev and Yordanov have opined that if the Russian troops had not been forced in Berlin to withdraw they would have never left 12 16 15 Myth of San Stefano edit Numerous authors conclude that the carefully crafted myth of San Stefano has caused lasting harm to Bulgarian statehood by making Bulgarians vulnerable to Russian propaganda and depriving them of the ability to exercise judgement at critical junctures in their history In particular Aleksandar Tatsov Yanko Gochev Plamen Tzvetkov and Alexander Yordanov have referred to the Balkan Wars in which the false belief of several successive Russophile cabinets that Russia will help Bulgaria because it did so in San Stefano essentially made the country s entire future dependent on a foreign power that had anathemised the Unification of Bulgaria invited the Ottoman Sultan to reconquer Eastern Rumelia and organised a coup against the Bulgarian Prince only three decades earlier 15 13 17 30 The Bulgarian journalist Ivo Indzhev focuses on the vulnerability of modern Bulgaria to Russian propaganda including with regard to the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine and points out that the myth of San Stefano remains to this day the most effective tool for generating pro Russian and anti Western sentiment in Bulgarian society 12 Finally Tsvetkov bluntly states that unless Bulgarian society overcomes what he refers to as its San Stefano inferiority complex and self degrading Russophilia he is not optimistic about the future of the country 31 In that connection quite notably and despite being unaware of either the Reichstadt and Budapest Treaties or Count Ignatyev s Diaries the Bulgarian statesman and long standing Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov held similar beliefs as early as the 1880s He considered the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 to be an attempt by Tsarist Russia to turn Bulgaria into a protectorate and preferred a union with Romania or even a dual Bulgarian Turkish state to further involvement with Russia 32 Gallery edit nbsp Annex to the Treaty of San Stefano showing the change of Serbia s borders nbsp Annex to the Treaty of San Stefano showing the change of Montenegro s borders nbsp Annex to the Treaty of San Stefano showing the borders of the new Principality of Bulgaria nbsp Annex to the Treaty of San Stefano showing the change of the border between the Russian and the Ottoman Empire in the Caucasus In popular culture editThe circumstances leading to the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano are depicted in Boris Akunin s historical novel The Turkish Gambit Akunin in general sticks to known historical facts though he attributes some acts to fictional characters such as his recurrent protaginist Erast Fandorin See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Treaty of San Stefano Treaty of Berlin 1878 Bulgarian irredentism History of BulgariaReferences edit Hertslet Edward 1891 Preliminary Treaty of Peace between Russia and Turkey Signed at San Stefano 19 February 3 March 1878 Translation The Map of Europe by Treaty which have taken place since the general peace of 1814 With numerous maps and notes vol IV 1875 1891 London Her Majesty s Stationery Office pp 2672 2696 retrieved 2013 01 04 Holland Thomas Erskine 1885 The Preliminary Treaty of Peace signed at San Stefano 17 March 1878 The European Concert in the Eastern Question and Other Public Acts Oxford Clarendon Press pp 335 348 retrieved 2013 03 04 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bulgaria History Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 04 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 779 784 782 Treaties of San Stefano and Berlin Compare Holland Thomas Erskine 1898 The Execution of the Treaty of Berlin Studies in International Law Oxford Clarendon Press pp 227 228 retrieved 2020 12 14 In the preliminary treaty of peace Russia had taken no account of the opinion of Europe The problem for the Powers was to persuade Russia in the moment of victory to submit her contract with Turkey to a resettlement from the point of view of the general interest Although it was inconsistent with the Treaty of Paris of 1856 and with the London Convention of 1871 and for that reason was justly protested by Great Britain the Preliminary Treaty of Peace of San Stefano was according to general international law valid See Kelsen Hans 1952 Principles of International Law New York Rinehart amp Company Inc p 365 Briggs Asa Calvin Patricia 2003 Modern Europe 1789 Present 2 ed London Routledge p 113 ISBN 0582772605 Roeder Philip G 2007 Where Nation States Come From Institutional Change in the Age of Nationalism Princeton University Press pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0 691 13467 3 JSTOR j ctt7t07k Transforming Identity of Ajarian Population ALPPI Annual of Language amp Politics and Politics of Identity V 05 57 72 2011 ISSN 1803 1757 Tița Diana 16 September 2018 Povestea dramatică a cerchezilor din Dobrogea Historia in Romanian Gawrych George The Crescent and the Eagle London I B Tauris 2006 pp 44 49 Taylor A J P 1954 The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1914 1918 Oxford University Press p 253 a b c d e f g h i j k Ivo Indzhev 2022 The San Stefano Deceit Izmamata San Stefano in Bulgarian 2nd reworked ed Sofiya Ciela ISBN 978 9542838708 a b c d Plamen Tzvetkov 2008 Chapters 9 11 The World of the Megamyths in Bulgarian Sofiya New Bulgarian University Publishing House ISBN 978 954 535 498 4 a b c d e f Yanko Gochev 2010 Why We Should Not Allow the Erection of a Monument of Alexander II in Svishtov in Bulgarian a b c d e f g h Alexander Yordanov 2019 Lessons on Patriotism in Bulgarian Sofiya Vek 21 pres ISBN 978 6199100516 a b c d e f Momchil Doychev 2020 The San Stefano Scam Who Erased 13 July 1878 from Historical Memory in Bulgarian a b c d Alexander Tatsov 2020 Do We Owe Russia Anything in Bulgarian a b Velko Miloev 2012 The Myth of San Stefano Bulgaria in Bulgarian a b c Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev 1986 Diaries 1875 1878 Zapiski 1875 1878 in Bulgarian Sofiya Otechestven front a b Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev 2008 Diplomatic Diaries 1864 1874 Diplomaticheski zapiski 1864 1874 in Bulgarian Sofiya Drzhavna agenciya Arhivi Yanko Gochev 2016 Chapters The Vice Emperor of Constantinople Count Nikolay Ignatiev amp Why Did Russia Find Levski Inconvenient The Murder of Levski the Culprits Ubijstvoto na Levski vinovnicite in Bulgarian Sofiya Aniko ISBN 978 9548247238 a b c d Alexander Yordanov 2018 The San Stefano Treaty A Snare Trap Illusion and an Instrument for Manipulating Bulgarians for More Than a Century in Bulgarian Karpat K H 1985 Ottoman population 1830 1914 demographic and social characteristics Madison Wis University of Wisconsin Pres pp 27 50 Koyuncu Askin Population And Demographics In The Danube Province 1864 1877 www turkishstudies net Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2018 06 06 Muchinov Ventsislav 2013 Ottoman Policies to Address the Migrant Crisis in the Bulgarian Lands at the End of the 1850s and 1860s in Bulgarian Hamed Vladimir July 2018 Imperial Refuge Resettlement Of Muslims From Russia In The Ottoman Empire 1860 1914 PDF pp 15 86 88 89 109 261 Dobreva Margarita 2013 Circassian Colonization in the Danube Vilayet and Social Integration PDF OTAM Journal of the Center for Ottoman Studies Ankara University Ankara Universitesi Osmanli Arastirma ve Uygulama Merkezi Dergisi 33 24 doi 10 1501 OTAM 0000000612 Ivan Hadzhijski in Bulgarian 1966 Chapter Psychology of the April Uprising Optymistic Theory about Our People Optimistichna teoriya za nashiya narod in Bulgarian Sofiya Otechestvo Hamed Vladimir July 2018 Imperial Refuge Resettlement Of Muslims From Russia In The Ottoman Empire 1860 1914 PDF p 55 a b c Yanko Gochev 2021 The Russophile Lies about the Creation of a Bulgarian State on 3 March 1878 in Bulgarian a b Plamen Tzvetkov 2012 San Stefano Myths and Bulgarian Complexes in Bulgarian Nyagulov Blagovest 2012 Ideas of federation and personal union with regard to Bulgaria and Romania Bulgarian Historical Review 3 4 36 61 ISSN 0204 8906 External links edit Preliminary Treaty of Peace between Russia and Turkey Signed at San Stefano February 19 March 3 1878 Translation The American Journal of International Law II 4 Supplement Official Documents 387 401 October 1908 doi 10 2307 2212669 JSTOR 2212669 S2CID 246010753 The Preliminary Treaty of Peace signed at San Stefano Full text in English Full text of the San Stefano Preliminary Treaty in Russian Maps edit Bulgaria in the borders after the Treaties of Constantinople San Stephano Berlin London Bucharest and Neuilly Scale 1 1600000 map in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Treaty of San Stefano amp oldid 1183810920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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