DARDANELLES

därdənĕlzˈ or Çanakkale Boğazichänäkˈkälĕ bōäzŭˈ, strait, c.40 mi (60 km) long and from 1 to 4 mi (1.6 to 6.4 km) wide, connecting the Aegean Sea with the Sea of Marmara and separating the Gallipoli peninsula of European Turkey from Asian Turkey. It was called the Hellespont in ancient times and was the scene of the legend of Hero and Leander. Its modern name is derived from Dardanus, an ancient Greek city on its Asian shore. Controlling navigation between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, the Dardanelles and Bosporus straits have long been of immense strategic and commercial importance. Ancient Troy prospered at the western entrance to the Hellespont. Xerxes I crossed (c.481 b.c.) the strait over a bridge of boats, as did Alexander the Great in 334 b.c. Throughout the existence of the Byzantine and Ottoman empires the Straits were essential to the defense of Constantinople (Istanbul). By 1402 the Dardanelles were under the control of Ottoman Sultan Beyazid I. Muhammad II began (15th cent.) to fortify the passage, which, with brief interruptions, has remained in Turkish hands until the present. Russian expansion along the Black Sea (from the 18th cent.) and the resulting weakening of the Ottoman Empire became of great concern to the Western powers (see Eastern Question), notably England and France, which from 1841 joined forces to prevent Russia from gaining control over, or special rights in, the Straits. In 1841, England, France, Russia, Austria, and Prussia agreed to close the Straits to all but Turkish warships in peacetime. This convention was formally reaffirmed by the Congress of Paris (1856) at the end of the Crimean War and, theoretically at least, remained in force until World War I. Early in 1915 an Anglo-French fleet, commanded first by Admiral Carden and later by Admiral Sir John de Robeck, sought unsuccessfully to force the Dardanelles and take Constantinople. A second attempt, known as the Gallipoli campaign, was also unsuccessful, but after the final Turkish collapse an Allied fleet passed (Nov., 1918) the Straits and occupied Constantinople. The Treaty of Sèvres (1920) with Turkey internationalized and demilitarized the Straits zone, but it was superseded by the Treaty of Lausanne (1923). The zone was restored to Turkey, but was to remain demilitarized; the Straits were to be open to all ships in peacetime and in time of war if Turkey remained neutral; if Turkey was at war, it could not exclude neutral ships. Secretly, however, Turkey soon began to refortify the zone, and in 1936, by the Montreux Convention, it was formally permitted to remilitarize it. Turkey has maintained the right to restrict the access of ships from non-Black Sea states.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Dardanelles
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books on: Dardanelles  - 2198 results

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...cessfully blasted its way through the Dardanelles in 1807, only to be frustrated by unhelpful...incisively arguing the case for a Dardanelles campaign. This Royal Marine officer...year and suggested an attack on the Dardanelles to Churchill. The First Sea Lord...
...aware of the frictions within the medical community at the Dardanelles, cabled Hamilton to ask if the system was working to his...work, nor could it against the complexities of the overall Dardanelles campaign. The Secretary of War frankly admitted this by...
...War Memoirs, 1:327-32. 33. Dardanelles Committee, July 5, 1915, CAB 42...1933 (1963), pp. 132-33. 43. Dardanelles Committee, August 20, 1915, CAB 42...57. 45. Cassar, French and the Dardanelles, pp. 151-80. 46. Bonham Carter...
...the European and Asian sides of the Dardanelles supported their ships. Both sides sustained...retired after about an hour back into the Dardanelles. This was a Greek victory because the...another sortie out of the mouth of the Dardanelles, but once again failed to break the...
...ANZAC" perspective. Damn the Dardanelles was the account by the prolific...specifically about Churchill and the Dardanelles has not been satisfactory. In By Ships Alone: Churchill and the Dardanelles by Jeffrey Wallin 2862 , Churchill...
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journal articles on: Dardanelles  - 106 results

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The Dardanelles Campaign: a Historical Analogy for...Finally, we review the Royal Navys Dardanelles campaign as a more relevant analogy...experiences of other navies. The Royal Navys Dardanelles campaign comes immediately to mind...
Disputes in the Dardanelles: A Report on Russo-Ottoman Relations. by Theophilus C. Prousis...commerce in the ports of the Nicomedian Gull the Sea of Marmara, the Dardanelles, but especially in those of the Black Sea that are used for the...
...Straits-consisting of the Bosporus and Dardanelles-still stood between Russia and the...years, maintaining a blockade of the Dardanelles and exercising total sea control in...Conference of 1936 turned control of the Dardanelles and Bosporus over to Turkey and greatly...
...Atomic Bomb."28 THE MEGALOMANIA OF THE DARDANELLES These hardly justifiable events during...participated in the battle to control the Dardanelles in Turkey, a place of strategic importance...disaster, he resigned. Although the Dardanelles campaign was ostensibly a heroic effort...
...and New Zealand ) troops in the 1915 Dardanelles campaign. "The wireless tells and the cable tells, how our boys behaved by the Dardanelles," Henry Lawson begins his "Song of the Dardanelles" ( Lawson 155). Nevertheless, the...
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magazine articles on: Dardanelles  - 89 results

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Fisher, Churchill and the Dardanelles by John Colvin Geoffrey Penn Leo...Turkey and proposed to force the Dardanelles, enter the Sea of Marmora with...French capital ships against the Dardanelles forts began on 19 February 1915...
...up to the devastating failure of the Dardanelles campaign in 1915, Churchill was routinely...the Napoleonic idea." After the Dardanelles fiasco, he concluded in a similar vein...about Napoleon." As the outcome of the Dardanelles campaign might suggest, however, whatever...
...triumph) and the attempt to force the Dardanelles, known today as the Gallipoli campaign...relentless advocacy of the disastrous Dardanelles campaign meant that he got the public...1922 and West Leicester in 1923. The Dardanelles was the chief cause. This operation...
...real action. The main objective of the Dardanelles campaign was to knock Turkey out of...of primary concern to Russia that the Dardanelles be kept open--the vast majority of...lost opportunity that characterised the Dardanelles campaign. The films major weakness...
...narrow waterways, the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, the historic trade route for the Black...vessels passing through the Bosphorus and Dardanelles carry hazardous material, mainly oil...times of peace, in effect making the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus international waters...
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newspaper articles on: Dardanelles  - 129 results

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...and a thin channel of water, the Dardanelles, on the other, leading down from the...was to send a flotilla of ships up the Dardanelles, take Istanbul and bring victory in...Gallipoli. To your left you have the Dardanelles and can see clearly across the blue...
...his knowledge of the currents in the Dardanelles Strait to torpedo the Turkish battleship...is connected to the Aegean Sea by the Dardanelles strait. The very narrow and winding...more like a river than a lake. The Dardanelles, stretching about 37.8 nautical miles...
...his knowledge of the currents in the Dardanelles strait to torpedo the Turkish battleship...is connected to the Aegean Sea by the Dardanelles strait. The narrow and winding shape...more like a river than a lake. The Dardanelles, stretching 37.8 nautical miles with...
...centered on a Royal Navy charge up the Dardanelles through the Sea of Marmora was made...High Seas Fleet for an adventure in the Dardanelles. In the end, only one fairly new battleship...batteries inhibiting fleet passage up the Dardanelles. Mr. Priors research into the individual...
...Herbert, Steve Wiblen and Alan Schofield completed the 4.5km Dardanelles swim from Europe to Asia, with Ray OBrien winning his age...Yamba very proudly in both Surf demonstration carnivals and Dardanelles swim and made many new friends from the touring teams and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Dardanelles  - 46 results

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DARDANELLES dard nelz or Canakkale Bogazi chanak...Black Sea and the Mediterranean, the Dardanelles and Bosporus straits have long been...Constantinople (Istanbul). By 1402 the Dardanelles were under the control of Ottoman Sultan...
...Mediterranean Sea by the Bosporus, the Sea of Marmara, and the Dardanelles. It is c.750 mi (1,210 km) from east to west, up...the Ottoman Empire over control and use of the Bosporus and Dardanelles. In 1783, Russia annexed the Tatar Khanate of Crimea...
...Zone of the Straits, which, however, was to remain demilitarized and remain subject to an international convention (see Dardanelles ). Turkey recovered full sovereign rights over all its territory, and foreign zones of influence and capitulations (see...
...Thasos , and the Dodecanese . The Aegean Seas greatest depths (more than 11,600 ft/3,540 m) are found E of Crete. The Dardanelles strait connects the Aegean Sea with the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea. Sardines and sponges taken from the Aegean are...
...after the outbreak (1914) of World War I. He advocated an amphibious strike against Germany in the Baltic but opposed the Dardanelles expedition and resigned (1915) because of it. His reforms proved crucial to Britains wartime naval supremacy. See his...
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