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WORLD WAR I AND ITS IMPACT ON THE
SOUTH CAUCASUS
(1914 - 1917)

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On August 1, 1914
Germany declared war on Russia. Three months later, on October
29 of the same year, turkey entered the World War by naval
bombardment of Russian Black Sea ports. On November 2, Russia
declared war on turkey, and the Caucasus became a battleground.
Each
ethnic community of the region reacted differently both to the
threat of turkish attack, and to the prospect of Russian
victory.
Hoping
for a quick triumph, most Russians were enthusiastic about the
war against turkey. The possible victory would result in the
establishing of Russian hegemony in the Black Sea area and the
annexation of Constantinople, which had always been the
strategic goal of the Imperial court as well as of Russian
nationalists.
The
Armenians of the Caucasus were mobilized by the fear of Moslem
invasion, and also by the possibility of emancipation of
West-Armenian population of the hated Ottoman turks, and even of
establishment of a "Greater Armenia".
The
azerbaijanis, Ajarians, Kabardians and other Moslem communities,
exempt from military service, remained passive, quietly hoping
for the defeat of Russia and possible establishment of a
"Greater Turan" from the Balkans to China.
turkish
Asker.
The
reactions of the Georgians were mixed. Most Georgians, as
Christians, officially backed the Allies and supported the
Russian Empire. On the other hand, they believed to gain very
little from victory by either side. Some extreme Georgian
nationalists backed Germany, and both Georgian and Russian
Marxists hoped for a Russian defeat to be followed by a
revolution.
In
November of 1914, the turks, under Enver Pasha, invaded South
Caucasus but were soon hurled back, and in 1915 and 1916 Russian
troops under Count Vorontsov-Dashkov (later, under Grand Duke
Nicholas), pushed southwest into Eastern turkey and Northern
Iran, which had also been invaded by the turks.
As
the war raged on, the turkish government pursued a policy of
genocide with respect to the Armenians and other Christian
communities of the country.
In
April 1915, by special decree it ordered local authorities to
carry out the
massive extermination of Armenians
and Aysors. In 1915-16 more than one million Armenians were
annihilated by turkish troops and Kurdish irregulars. Over
600,000 people were deported to the Mesopotamian desert, where
most of them died.
Kurd
irregular (left) and turkish cavalryman (right)
Hundreds of thousands of
Armenians took refuge in various countries of the Middle East,
Europe and America. At least 200,000 of them resettled to the
Caucasus and other parts of the Russian Empire.
In
the turkish province of Van, the local Armenians and Aysors
launched a desperate revolt. They managed to control most of the
province and its capital until the arrival of Russian troops.
Click to enlarge

In
response to the massacre, multiple volunteer Armenian regiments
were formed in the Caucasus. Together with West-Armenian
partisan bands (fidajins), they enthusiastically fought the
Ottoman turks on the Russian side. However the Armenians were to
be bitterly disappointed by Russian imperial policy. In early
1916, Russian government planned to settle the liberated
Armenian lands with ethnic Russians and Cossacks, under the
slogans "Armenia without Armenians" and "No more Bulgarias".
Between January and
August 1916, Russian troops finally defeated the turkish armies.
They conquered vast territory in Eastern turkey, including most
of turkish Armenia and Paryadria with the major cities Trabzon
(Trebizond), Erzerum, Erzinjan and Van.
However
the revolution of February 1917 and the abdication of Czar
Nicholas II drastically changed the situation at the fronts. The
first half of 1917 was marked by stagnation of all military
operations and rapid demoralization of Russian troops.
Russian
Cossack from the Expeditionary Corps of Baratov in Northern
Iran.
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