RUSSO-TURKISH WARS

The great eastward expansion of Russia in the 16th and 17th cent., during the decline of the Ottoman Empire, nevertheless left the shores of the Black Sea in the hands of the Ottoman sultans and their vassals, the khans of Crimea. The Russo-Turkish Wars were the result of Russian attempts to find an outlet on the Black Sea and—in later stages—to conquer the Caucasus, dominate the Balkan Peninsula, gain control of the Dardanelles and Bosporus straits, and retain access to world trade routes.

Warfare between the Russians and the Crimean Tatars was chronic during the 16th and 17th cent. In 1696, Peter I won the first major Russian victory over the Turko-Tatars by capturing the fortress of Azov. In the Northern War (1700–1721) Sultan Ahmed III openly entered the conflict against Russia in 1710 and regained Azov by the Peace of the Pruth (1711). France, the traditional ally of the Ottomans, had a share in instigating this and later Ottoman attempts at stemming the Russian advance.

In 1736 war again broke out between the Ottomans and Russia, allied with Austria. The Russians recaptured Azov and won a spectacular success in Moldavia, where General Münnich entered Jassy (1739). However, Austria became alarmed by Russian ambitions in the Balkans and concluded the separate Treaty of Belgrade (1739), in which Russia was forced to join. Russia agreed to demilitarize Azov and not to build a Black Sea fleet.

The first major Russo-Turkish War, that of 1768–74, was an indirect result of Russian interference in Poland. Sultan Mustafa III, alarmed by Russia's action and encouraged by France, declared war on Catherine II of Russia. The Russians conquered (1771) the Crimea, where a pro-Russian khan was installed, and overran Moldavia and Walachia. The Treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji (1774) declared the Crimean khanate independent of the sultan, gave Russia considerable territorial gains, conceded to Russia the role of protector of the sultan's Greek Orthodox subjects, and allowed Russian shipping to navigate the Black Sea and pass through the Straits.

A general partition of the Ottoman Empire was contemplated in the treaty of alliance (1781) between Catherine II and Emperor Joseph II; the fate of the Ottoman Empire thus became a major concern of the Western powers and created the explosive Eastern Question. In 1783, Catherine annexed the Crimea outright. A new Russo-Turkish War broke out in 1787, and in 1788 Joseph II entered the war as Catherine's ally. Although Austria was forced, chiefly by Prussian exertions, to withdraw from the alliance in 1791, Russian successes under Suvorov enabled Catherine to reach a favorable settlement in the Treaty of Jassy (1792).

In 1806 the energetic Sultan Selim III deposed the Russophile governors of Moldavia and Walachia, an act that led to the Russo-Turkish War of 1806–12. This was brought to a close by Kutuzov's lightning campaign of 1811–12 and resulted in the gain of Bessarabia by Russia in the Treaty of Bucharest (1812). The Greek War of Independence (see Greece) precipitated the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–29, which ended with the Treaty of Adrianople (see Adrianople, Treaty of).

When, in 1853, Russia sought to obtain further concessions from the Ottoman Empire, the Ottomans, backed by England and France, declared war. Their allies entered the conflict in 1854, and the Crimean War resulted. The peace of 1856 (see Paris, Congress of) brought no major territorial changes but marked a severe setback to Russian influence.

The last Russo-Turkish War came as a result of the anti-Ottoman uprising (1875) in Bosnia and Hercegovina. On Russian instigation, Serbia and Montenegro joined the rebels in their war on the Ottoman Empire; after securing Austrian neutrality, Russia openly entered the war (1877). The Treaty of San Stefano in 1878 so thoroughly revised the map in favor of Russia and of Russian-influenced Bulgaria that the European powers called a conference to revise its terms (see Berlin, Congress of). In 1878 a thorough realignment of alliances took place.

In World War I, Russia and the Ottoman Empire faced each other once more; Russia sided with the traditional allies of the Ottomans—England and France—while the Ottomans fought with the former partners of Russia—Austria and Bulgaria. By the separate Russo-Turkish treaty of 1921, the USSR returned the districts of Kars and Ardahan, acquired in 1878, to Atatürk's Turkish government.

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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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books on: Russo Turkish Wars  - 3382 results

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...lessons of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 and the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-5...1871 and 1914. These wars revealed in all their...sustenance. The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 would...resolution until after the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78...
...better-known world wars. In narrower military perspective, the Russo-Japanese War of 1904...historical treatment of the Russo-Japanese conflict...people who felt the wars impact, including...treatment of the wars course on sea and...premise that the Russo-Japanese war was worldwide...
...loose with chronology as well as with the characters involved. In what appears to be an oblique reference to the Russo-Turkish war of 1877, the tale begins with the Circassian grandfathers expulsion from the Caucasus. German-Turkish military...
...diplomacy had soon shattered the Russo-Turkish alliance of 1799. With the Russians...on Russia and then Britain. As the Turkish forces were overstretched by the...dreadful battle of the entire French Wars. Ensconced in a strong defensive...
...1877 were greater than those of the Civil War or the Russo-Turkish war then being fought. It was an intense, dramatic confrontation...out in a great, varied landscape. No wonder the Indian wars remain Americas Trojan War. 3. Material Culture...
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journal articles on: Russo Turkish Wars  - 44 results

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...Russia recruited a variegated and sizable group of beratlis, comprised of naval and military auxiliaries who fought in Russo-Turkish wars; consuls and dragomans (interpreters and translators) who staffed consular offices; and sailors, captains, shippers...
...and subsequently a Turkish fortress, Turtucaia...Dobrogea, far from Russo-Romanian forces further...detachments. Two Turkish divisions would arrive...a flank attack by Russo-Romanian forces coming...sending relief from Russo-Romanian forces elsewhere...locals of Bulgarian or Turkish descent, joined the...
...David MacKenzie The Russo-Turkish and Second Serbo-Turkish Wars Just before Russia declared...Serbias readiness to enter the Russo-Turkish War and to explain that Serbia...Serbias participation in the Russo-Turkish War which continued on a...
...Russian policies dating from Catherine the Greats Russo-Turkish Wars. In this period prominent Balkan Orthodox clergy...Russia, especially at the end of the 1768-1774 Russo-Turkish War, see S. K. Batalden, "A Further Note on Patriarch...
...Russian policies dating from Catherine the Greats Russo-Turkish Wars. In this period prominent Balkan Orthodox clergy...Russia, especially at the end of the 1768-1774 Russo-Turkish War, see S. K. Batalden, "A Further Note on Patriarch...
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magazine articles on: Russo Turkish Wars  - 14 results

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...Britain now feared that further Russo-Turkish conflicts might result in the collapse...Constantinople. The Napoleonic Wars (1803-15) demonstrated that the...At the outbreak of the eighth Russo-Turkish (Crimean) War in 1854 it was not...
...1953. by Paul Dukes Stalins Wars From World War to Cold War, 1939-1953 Geoffrey...necessity to recover the losses incurred in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05, to Eastern Europe...example, on the age-old question of the Turkish Straits, he asked, what would the Americans...
...to the war against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, so the Russo-Turkish war in the Balkans (1877-78) led to the Anglo-Afghan...atrocities in the two countries. In Bulgaria, the notorious Turkish `bashi-bazouks had killed tens of thousands of civilians...
...vassal of the Ottoman Empire. In the course of numerous Russo-Turkish wars Crimea was annexed in 1783 into the Russian Empire and...proudly about the heroic defence of Sevastopol against the Turkish, British, French and German forces. And after so much...
...the Balkans, which it lost as a result of a series of Russo-TUrkish wars that ended in 1878. The implications of this rise of...still part of the Russian Federation there are several wars of inter-Muslim and Muslim-Christian character, and one...
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newspaper articles on: Russo Turkish Wars  - 1 result

 
 
...sympathetic account of the Chechen cause. As in the two wars of the 1990s, the massively outgunned Chechens of the...uprising against Russian rule erupted in 1877-78, during the Russo-Turkish war. The Chechens defeat led to a massive deportation...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Russo Turkish Wars  - 39 results

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RUSSO-TURKISH WARS The great eastward expansion of...vassals, the khans of Crimea . The Russo-Turkish Wars were the result of Russian attempts...a Black Sea fleet. The first major Russo-Turkish War, that of 1768 74, was an indirect...
...II with the first two of the Russo-Turkish Wars (1768 74, 1787 92), when Russia...on the newly formed state. The Russo-Turkish War of 1828 29, connected with...Muhammad Ali of Egypt, followed by a Russo-Turkish alliance (1833), greatly disquieted...
...ADRIANOPLE, TREATY OF also called Treaty of Edirne, 1829, peace treaty between Russia and the Ottoman Empire (see Russo-Turkish Wars ). Turkey gave Russia access to the mouths of the Danube and additional territory on the Black Sea, opened the Dardanelles...
...peace treaty signed at the end of the first of the Russo-Turkish Wars undertaken by Catherine II of Russia against Sultan...independent. Russian trading ships were allowed to navigate in Turkish waters. Moldavia and Walachia were restored to the suzerainty...
...He suffered severe defeats in the second of the Russo-Turkish Wars with Catherine II, but suffered no major territorial...coalition against France in the French Revolutionary Wars. Turkish forces lost Jaffa to Napoleon Bonaparte, who had...
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