In 2014, Vladimir
Putin took Crimea as part of the Russian Federation. But about two centuries
ago, Russia, under Catherine the Great, did the same. Explore how Catherine the
Great annexed the Crimean Peninsula more two centuries before Putin did.
During
the early months of 2014, the world watched how Russia retaken Crimea from
Ukraine. The Russian army marched into the peninsula,
securing Russia’s control. But Crimea had been part of Russia before all of this, during the times
of the Soviet Union and the time of Tsarist Russia. Crimea was the
apple of the eye of many Tsars. But a Tsarina managed to take the lands –
Catherine the Great. With war and political maneuvering, she succeeded in
annexing Crimea.
Background
Crimea is a peninsula located in the northern shores of the Black Sea. It is connected to Ukraine through the Isthmus of Perekop. It also separated the Black Sea from the Sea of Azov. In the Middle Ages, during the western migration of Central Asians, a group of Mongols settled in the Peninsula, who became known as Tatars and established a Khanate. For the following centuries, the Khanate flourished through trade and raid with the Rus in the north.
For
the Tsars of Russia, Crimea held a strategic value. For centuries, the raids of
the Tatars to southern Russian towns were a menace and dictated the turn of
Russian history several times. To capture Crimea meant an end to the Khanate
and to the problematic raids that crippled the Russian frontiers. It also meant
an expansion in the network of trade as well as the military capability for Russia. Control of the Crimean Peninsula meant access to the Black Sea and
ultimately with the Mediterranean Sea and the rest of Europe. Its conquest for the access of the sea began with Peter the Great. After the Great Northern War, the Baltic Sea
offered a glimpse of the west, but its freezing waters for more than half of
the year limited travel for Russia. The warm waters of the Black Sea offered a
better alternative. It would allow Russia to increase trade and communication with the west. In political and military terms, capturing Crimea meant better
participation in the politics of the Balkans and Asia Minor. And for these reasons, Russia
desired Crimea and its surrounding territories tremendously.
At
the time of Catherine the Great, Russia was at its pinnacle. The energy of
military conquest and aggressive expansion soared once again, making Russia a
great power in Europe and the largest empire in the world, spanning three
continents – Europe, Asia and North America.
While
Russia boasted a golden age, otherwise happened in its surrounding neighbors in
the south. The Ottoman Empire was in a state of stagnation and even decay. The
Siege of Vienna in 1689 marked the end of her strong role in
Eastern Europe. Incompetence, decadence and corruption of the Sultans and
government officials led to its state. Although in peace, the once mighty
Turkish Empire was rotting from the inside. The same also occurred to their
client state – the Crimean Khanate. Centuries of prosperity through raids ended
with the growing military capability of the Russians. The power of the Russian
military in the early 18th century took away the number one source of income
for the Khanate - plunder and slave trade. In 1736, the Russians inflicted a humiliating defeat for the
Tatars when they burned the Khanate’s capital of Bakhchisarai. And so by the
time of Catherine the Great, the Crimean Khanate and the Ottoman Empire were
ripe for conquest.
Russo-Ottoman War of
1768 to 1774
Prologue
Stanislaw Poniatowski |
Initial Battles
Not much happened in the early stages of the war in the latter part of 1768. Ottoman armies did not completely mobilized until 1769. The Russians too only completed their troop deployment in the south until 1769 as well. But when the Russian forces under the command of Prince Alexander Golitsyn (Galitzine) attacked, they captured several towns and fortresses in the region of Bessarabia and the River of Dniester. Prince Golitsyn scored a brilliant military victory in Khotin (Khotyn). Meanwhile, in Ukraine, Russian troops began to push towards Ukraine, capturing towns and fortresses leading to the mouth of the Don River. They aimed to capture the port of Taganrog and secure the fort of Azov.
Russian Victories
1769 and 1770 saw numerous actions. For the Russians, Golitsyn's slow advanced caused his relieve from command and replaced by General Peter Rumyantsev (Rumiantsev). Under his command, the Russians continued to advance to Crimea, Bessarabia and Moldavia. In 1769, Russian forces advanced south to Crimea, capturing Azov and Taganrog. Russia also captured more fortresses in the Dniester River and even in the Prut and the Danube River.
Greek Front
In 1770, Russia created another theater in Greece. Yeorghios Papazolis, a Greek Officer in the Russian army, convinced Alexis and Feodor Orlov, who were high ranking military officers who commanded great favors from Empress Catherine, to go to Greece and instigate a rebellion to cause further chaos in Istanbul. On that year, the two Orlov brothers arrived in Greece along with a squadron of Russian warships from the Baltic Fleet. The brothers began a rebellion with local Greek support and caused a huge stir in the region. In the Aegean Sea, the Russian Navy scored another brilliant naval victory in the Battle of Cesme on July 6, 1770, where fire ships destroyed a sizable part of the Ottoman Navy. In 1771, however, conditions at home led the Orlov Brothers to withdraw from Greece, leaving the Greek fighters to certain annihilation on the hands of the Turks.
Treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji
In 1772, talks for peace began. Nothing much came up from the peace talks on that year. But Russia made it urgent for its conclusion. First, disease began to take a toll on the armies in the south. Secondly, Catherine needed his armies in the south to control a crisis closer to home. The Pugachev Rebellion, which began in Siberia, threatened to capture Kazan and the ancient capital of Moscow. Catherine needed his troops in the south to return north and quell the rebellion. In 1773, nothing came up once again. But in June 25, 1774, Russia advanced to the Danube River and beat the Ottomans in the Battle of Kozludhi (Kozluca or Kozludja). It forced the Turks to accept a peace treaty.
On
July 21, 1774. Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Kuchuk
Kainarji (Kucuk Kaynarca). Under the terms of the Treaty, Russia gained the
land between the Bug and Dnieper River. It secured free commercial access for Russian trade ships
through the Bosporus and the Dardanelles. For the Ottomans, they maintained control of the fort of Ochakov in
the Bug River. It also had to recognize the independence of the Crimean
Khanate, allowing the Tatars to elect their new Khan. But the Treaty also obligated Russia not to station troops in the Crimean Peninsula. Russia made sure to keep
some of the articles of the treaty confusing in order to provide a future
pretext for a conflict. Such as, the treaty indirectly made Russia defender of
the rights of any Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire, including Crimea. Surely enough,
Russia wanted another conflict to secure further Russia’s control of Crimea.
Russian Annexation of Crimea
Catherine decided to strongly secure Crimea. Catherine realize that capturing Crimea would enhance her prestige and her position as Tsarina. About a decade before, she took power through a palace revolution ending with the assassination of her husband the Tsar. She crowned herself instead of Paul, their son, which naturally was the rightful heir. In other words, she was a usurper. The Pugachev Rebellion scared her of losing her crown and her life. And so, she looked for ways to strengthen her position. She saw the achieving of Russia’s long time dream to gain access to the Black Sea as an opportunity to cement her power. Thus, she looked for ways to achieve this goal. An opportunity came immediately after the war.
After
the Russo-Ottoman War ended in 1774, the Crimean Khanate suffered further
internal political chaos. Russia supported Sagin Giray (Sahin Giray) as the
new Khan of the Crimean Khanate. Sagin Giray had been a Tartar educated in
Venice and visited St. Petersburg. With the Sagin Giray’s charm, disposition
for western ideas and political value, Catherine the Great supported him. In
1777, Sagin Giray became the Khan of Crimea. His championing of reforms base on
western models and tolerance towards foreigners led to massive discontent and
anger among the Tatar nobles. As a result, the disgruntled nobles dethroned
him. The Ottoman Empire then instigated the Tatars to kill Russian Orthodox Christians in Crimea.
Many Orthodox Christians sought refuge in Russia. Then, Russian forces came in to
Crimea to restore order and restore Sagin Giray as Khan. In 1778, an Ottoman fleet sailed to Crimea to
forcefully depose Sagin Giray. But eventually, in 1779, both sides decided to deescalate
the tensions when Russia agreed to withdraw their forces in Crimea if Sagin
Giray remained Khan. And so, Sagin Giray remained Khan for another three years
until another major revolt erupted in Kuban.
Russia took the revolt as an opportunity to finally take Crimea once and for all. When Sagin Giray sought once again the assistance of Russia, it offered only one thing to the Khan – annexation. Sagin Giray had no choice. He accepted annexation in exchange for safety and on April 8, 1783, Catherine the Great signed the decree that declared Russia’s annexation of Crimea. Sagin Giray went to St. Petersburg, but eventually felt like a prisoner and wanted to leave. The Russians allowed him to go to a humble Greek City for retirement. But the Ottomans took Sagin Giray and took vengeance on him. The last Khan of Crimea was executed in 1787 ending the history of centuries of Khans.
Grigory Potemkin |
Russo-Ottoman War of 1787 to 1794
The Ottomans went into fury after Catherine’s tour of New Russia. They also felt cheated with the Treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji. And so on August 19, 1787, the Ottomans attacked Russians in Ukraine. In the following year, Russia launched a counter attack with a huge army numbering around 100,000 and attacked the fortress of Ochakov in the mouth of the Dnieper River. The fortress resisted for months until it fell in December 1788, leaving 9,500 Ottomans dead and 4,000 captured. From 1789 to 1790, the Ottomans continued to suffer defeats and heavy losses. The Russian navy cleared the Black Sea of any Ottoman warships. The Austrians joined the prey on the side of the Russians. With overwhelming force, the Ottomans sued for peace in 1791 and a treaty was signed in 1792.
The
Treaty of Iasi or Jassy, signed on January 9, 1792, ended the 1783 to 1791
Russo-Ottoman War. The Treaty gave the fortress of Ochakov to the Russians. And it
forced the Ottoman Empire to recognize Russia’s annexation of Crimea. Russia
and Catherine the Great, succeeded in taking Crimea and its long desired access
to the Black Sea.
Catherine
the Great passed away in 1796 as one of the most powerful woman rulers in the
world. Russia gained its access to the Black Sea and allowed it to play a key
role in the Balkan Regions and Europe. Eventually, in 1850’s, Crimea went again
to the limelight when it became the center of a conflict known as the Crimean
War. But after the conflict, Russia kept its control on the peninsula. For the
Crimean Tatars, they suffered centuries of discrimination
and deportation. There numbers dwindled until they became a minority within
their own lands.
In Comparison with Putin’s Annexation
Catherine’s annexation and Putin’s annexation of Crimea had similarities in some ways. For instance, Catherine annexed Crimea as part of her enhancing her power and securing her position as Tsarina. Putin did it in order to inflame nationalist fervor turning the image of his government’s image from a kleptocratic to nationalistic.
They
also have similarities in the timing of their annexation – a time of political
chaos. Catherine took the internal dissent within the Crimean Khanate to impose
Russia’s annexation. Putin did the same. He annexed Crimea when protest in
Ukraine’s capital Kiev ousted the pro-Russian president Victor Yanukovych. With
this, Catherine the Great’s actions in the past had resemblance to what Putin
did in 2014.
Summing Up
Catherine the Great annexed Russia in the some ways parallel to that of the present. She used Russian muscle to impose her will and to protect her political position. She saw an oppurtunity of weakness both in political and military terms and exploited it to her advantage. As a result, with the power of her military, she succeeded in her goal of annexation. Eventually, more than two centuries later, another Russian leader decided to the same way. Only time and politics would tell, if Russia would keep Crimea at the present.
Summing Up
Catherine the Great annexed Russia in the some ways parallel to that of the present. She used Russian muscle to impose her will and to protect her political position. She saw an oppurtunity of weakness both in political and military terms and exploited it to her advantage. As a result, with the power of her military, she succeeded in her goal of annexation. Eventually, more than two centuries later, another Russian leader decided to the same way. Only time and politics would tell, if Russia would keep Crimea at the present.
Explore also:
Who were the Romanovs? (Part 2)
Who were the Romanovs? (Part 2)
Bibliography:
Books:
Agoston, Gabor and Bruce Masters, Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. New York, New York: Facts On File, Inc, 2009.
Figes, O. The
Crimean War. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2010.
Finkel,
Caroline. The History of the Ottoman Empire: Osman's Dream. New York, New York:
Basic Books, 2005.
Kliuchevskii, V. A
Course in Russian History: The Seventeenth Century. New York: M. E. Sharpe,
Inc., 1994.
Websites:
“April 19.” Russiapedia. Accessed March 23, 2014. http://russiapedia.rt.com/on-this-day/april-19/
“April 19.” Russiapedia. Accessed March 23, 2014. http://russiapedia.rt.com/on-this-day/april-19/
No comments:
Post a Comment