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The Armenian Genocide
Timeline
1878
During the Russo-Turkish war of
1877-1878 the Russian troops gained
victories both on the Balkan and the
Caucasian fronts. In the Balkans,
the Russian troops occupied Bulgaria
and advanced to the outskirts of
Istanbul, while on the Caucasian war
stage, they took Ardahan, Bayazet,
Alashkert, Kars and Erzurum, i.e., a
considerable segment of Western
Armenia, as well as Batumi. The
Turks had to terminate the war
operations and seek for peace. The
Peace Treaty between Russia and the
Ottoman Empire was signed on March
3, 1878, in the township of San
Stefano in the vicinity of Istanbul.
It verified the victories, gained
with the Russian weapon. In the
Treaty of San Stefano a special
Paragraph 16 was added about the
application of reforms in Western
Armenia. It read, “Taking into
account that the withdrawal of the
Russian troops from the territories
of Armenia, occupied by them and
bound to be returned to Turkey, may
cause clashes and complications
there, which may harm the good
relations between the two states,
the Sublime Porte undertakes to
immediately carry out improvements
and reforms in the provinces,
inhabited by Armenians, proceeding
from the local needs, as well as to
ensure the Armenians’ security from
Kurds and Circassians.” The Treaty
of San Stefano was the victory of
the Russian diplomacy, and it
seriously worried its European
opponents, who feared that the
Ottoman Empire would become totally
dependent on Russia, and the
strategic balance in the Eastern
Question would change in favor of
the Russian Empire. This
contradicted their interests, and
they would never let it happen.
England and Austria-Hungary, which
enjoyed Germany’s and German
chancellor Bismarck’s support, were
particularly active in this matter.
These forces managed to achieve an
agreement on convening an ad hoc
congress to revise the Treaty of San
Stefano. The Congress met in Berlin
on June 13, 1878, presided over by
Bismarck. England and
Austria-Hungary, supported by
Germany, France and Italy, succeeded
in that the decisions of San Stefano
were revised, Russia’s positions
were weakened, while their own
positions and influence on the
Ottoman Empire, vice versa, was
reinforced. By the decision of the
Congress, Russia returned Alashkert
with the valley and Bayazet (Erzurum
had been returned before) to Turkey.
Ardahan, Kars, as well as Batumi
remained with Russia. The Treaty of
Berlin contained a specific
Paragraph 61, all dedicated to the
Armenian Question. It, however,
differed from Paragraph 16 of the
Treaty of San Stefano in several
very principal aspects, and this not
to the benefit of Armenians. If,
under the Treaty of San Stefano, the
reforms in Western Armenia were to
be carried out in the presence of
the Russian troops, which presented
a certain guarantee of said
implementation, now, under the
Treaty of Berlin, the Russian troops
were withdrawn to leave everything
to the discretion of the
“bloodthursty Sultan”. He only
claimed responsibility to
periodically report on his
undertakings to the European Powers.
The latter acquired supervising
functions. In other words, by the
Treaty of Berlin, the mechanisms for
reforms in Western Armenia,
suggested by San Stefano, were
destroyed, and no other realistic
offers put forward instead. After
the Congress of Berlin, the Sultan
and the ruling clique got reinforced
in their conviction that the best
solution for the Armenian Question
was extermination of the Armenians.
At that point they saw in this an
actual means of precluding of the
intervention of the European Powers
in Empire's internal affairs. In
their eyes, The Armenian Question,
the reforms question in the Armenian
regions was used by those Powers as
a pretext to meddle in the internal
affairs of Turkey. Therefore it was
necessary to eliminate the pretext
and deprive the Powers of the
opportunity to extort concessions
from the Empire.
1891
Paradoxical was the fact that the
powers entrusted the Sultan “to
ensure Armenians’ security from
Kurds and Circassians’”, whereas the
Sultan himself was the principal
instigator of all the anti-Armenian
deeds of the Kurds and Circassians.
A perfect example of this is that,
right after the Congress of Berlin
of 1891, by the order of Abdul Hamid
II, a cavalry, named “Hamidie” after
the Sultan, in which only Kurds were
enlisted, was set up and kept at the
expense of the Ottoman Empire. It
consisted of 30 regiments which were
not integrated in the system of the
Ottoman army and were kept as a
separate military unit, located in
the Armenian town of Erzinkan. The
foremost goal of the “Hamidie” was
to organize carnages of Armenians
all throughout the Empire, which
they executed perfectly in 1894-1896
and during the ensuing Armenian
massacres
1894-1896
The apex of the Armenian massacres,
committed by the Ottoman Empire at
the end of the XIX century, were the
slaughters of 1894-1896. The first
blow struck Sasun, a province in the
vilayet of Bitlis, which had long
been known for its steadfast will to
withstand Turkish tyranny. In August
of 1894, the fourth Turkish Army
marched on Sasun. The forces were
unequal, and the regular Turkish
army eventually won. Sasun was
demolished, 40 villages were
leveled, and 10 thousand people
killed. In September 1895 Armenian
massacres began in the capital city,
and then also in Trabzon, Erzinka,
Marash, Sebastia, Erzerum,
Diyarbekir, Bayazid, Kharberd and
elsewhere. The Sultan’s authorities
tried unsuccessfully to organize
pogroms in Zeytun too, but the local
inhabitants had taken prior
necessary measures to resist the
threatening Turkish troops. Carnages
started with new conviction in 1896.
Massacres took place in
Constantinople, Urfa,
Shapin-Garahisar, Amasia, Mush,
Marzvan and in other regions, towns
and villages of the Empire During
the 1894-1986 massacres,
approximately 300,000 Armenians were
killed. But the losses of Armenians
were sadly not confined to this
horror alone. In these unspeakably
desperate times, around 100,000
Armenians were forcibly Islamized,
while the same number were expelled
from their native land
1908, July 10
Groupings emerged with the aim of
unseating the Sultan and his
authoritarian regime. Gradually
uniting the groupings turned into a
movement, receiving the name "Young
Turks". Soon the "Young Turks"
founded their own party - Ittihad ve
Terakki, or "Union and Progress".
The idea of overthrowing the
bloodthirsty Sultan was growing in
popularity; the Young Turks were the
ones to effect it. On July 23, 1908,
the Committee of Union and Progress
organized a coup. Sultan Abdul Hamid
II was deprived of power; and in
1909 he was dethroned. The Young
Turks came onto the arena under the
slogans of the French Revolution:
“Liberty, Equality, Fraternity”. All
the nations in the Empire, Moslem or
Christian, vigorously welcomed the
overthrow of the “red Sultan”. The
people believed that a new era in
the history of the Ottoman Empire
had dawned. Armenians thought so,
too. As evidenced by Moussa Prince,
“Armenians, Turks, and Greeks were
hugging each other in the streets”
in euphoria. Yet, shortly after
this, it turned out that the Young
Turks were well disguised ardent
nationalists, who continued the
policy of oppressions and slaughters
carried out by the preceding
Sultans. They were advocates of the
idea of assimilation of all the
nations of the Empire to create a
“pure” Turkish nation, never even
stopping at mass slaughters in order
to achieve that goal.
April, 1909
Only a year after the Young Turk
Revolution, in April 1909, Turkish
chauvinist figures in the town of
Adana, in Cilicia, incited a
crowd/throng to commit wholesale
atrocities against the local
Armenian population. Only after a
few days did the the Turkish army
intervene. From Adana the massacre
spread on to other Armenian
settlements - from Marash to Kesab.
In some regions Armenians turned to
self-defense and managed to survive.
The massacres raged on for a month,
resulting in the death of over
thirty thousand Armenians. Having
initially supported the Young Turk
Revolution with enthusiasm,
Armenians for the first time faced
serious doubts and fear for this new
proto-fascist regime.
1910
Undertaking the construction and use
of the railway that traversed the
Ottoman Empire in the end of the XIX
and in the beginning of XX century,
Germany strived to assume control
over the Ottoman Empire, in order to
contain the position of England in
India and Egypt, as well as weaken
Russia’s position in the Caucasus.
Germany connected the construction
of the Baghdad railway also with its
economic and military-political
ambitions in Western Armenia. Within
the German political agenda it was
thought that in order to establish
Turkish homogeneity in North-Eastern
Anatolia, it would be necessary to
resettle Armenians in the are of the
Baghdad railway construction, which
then would achieve two important
goals: the actual construction of
the railway, which would be provided
with skilful and qualified manpower,
and the attenuation of Russian
influence in Western Armenia.
Particularly, the well-known German
political scientist Paul Raurbach
thought that “Native Armenians
should be moved from Western
Armenia, and in their place be
settled Muslims brought from Trachea
and Russia. In this case Armenia
would be separated from Russia at
once.” Raurbach suggested relocating
Western Armenians to Mesopotamia,
which in his mind would contribute
to the “economic development of the
road”. This viewpoint of Germans
became a basis for the Young Turkish
policy of annihilating the Armenians
in their homeland.
1911
The Young Turkish decision to solve
the Armenian Question through
genocide was finally adopted in the
beginning of 1910s at a number of
secret sessions and conferences of
the Union and Progress Party’s
Central Committee. In this regards
the 1911 Salonika conference stood
out,where the leadership explicitly
decided to Turkify all the
non-Turkish nations of the Empire.
This most acutely impacted the
Armenians throughout the Empire’s
territories. The decisions made at
the conference became the official
strategy of the policy adopted by
Young Turks. Secret orders were then
signed by Talaat and sent to the
Empire’s local authorities in order
for them to take prior necessary
measures for exterminating the
Armenians.
1912-1913
The Balkan Wars (the first one from
October 1912 through May 1913, and
the second one from June 1913
through August 1913), waged between
the Balkan Alliance and Turkey,
resulted in the aggravation of
international relations in the
Balkans and in the whole of Europe,
thus accelerating the unleashing of
the World War. Ottoman Turkey's
defeat during the first Balkan War
prepared grounds for the revisiting
of the Armenian Question, as a
result of which the Reforms Question
of Western Armenia was once again
alive. Thanks to the efficient
participation of Armenian public
circles and the Russian government,
this human rights issue became a
discussion point of international
diplomacy.
July 1914
The congress of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation was held in
Erzerum. One could already feel the
spirit of the imminent war in the
air, and the Federation had convened
to decide on its position in case
war broke out. Learning of the
congress, the Young Turk authorities
sent two representatives- Naji Bey
and Shakir Behaeddin, who occupied
important positions in their party.
At the congress they laid the
following demands to Armenians on
behalf of the Union and Progress
party; first, the congress should
declare on behalf of all Armenians
that both the Armenians of Turkey
and the Armenians of Russia would
stay loyal to Turkey in case of war;
second,that they were to form
Armenians detachments to fight
against Russians, third, they should
foment a revolt in the Caucasus and
behind the lines of the Russian
army. At the same time they declared
that “If Armenians were to hold such
positions, after the war they would
be given the right to establish an
independent state on certain
territories of Turkey and Russia”.
In response to the Young Turk
demands, the congress declared that
in case of war the Armenians of the
Ottoman Empire and the Armenians of
Russia would appear in two different
camps, as they are the subjects of
two different states and are loyal
to them. Regarding the issue of
raising a revolt in Caucasus, the
congress emphasized in its decision
that “the congress cannot speak on
behalf of the Armenians of Russia,
as they are the subjects of another
state”. Along with this, the
congress explicitly stated in its
decision that “in case the Turkish
government decides to join the war,
Armenians of Turkey would carry out
their responsibilities put on them
as Turkish subjects – to serve the
country in the army, protect the
country just like the other subjects
of the Empire”. It was not easy to
make such a decision for it meant
fraternal war for Armenians, as the
Armenians of Russia would likewise
tend to their duties. However, the
Young Turk representatives were
dissatisfied with the decisions of
the congress, as they had rejected
the Young Turk desires of the
Armenians of Russia to rise in
revolt against Russia . As such, the
enraged Shakir Behaeddin, later to
be remembered as one of the most
active organizers and butchers
during the Armenian Genocide,
exclaimed at the congress “This is
high treason!”.
August - October 1914
On August 1, 1914, World War I broke
out. It lasted for four years, and
involved 33 states. The principal
role-players, however, were two
hostile military-political
alliances, formed at the turn of the
century: The Entente, with England,
France and Russia representing the
core nations, and the Central Powers
– Germany, Austria-Hungary and
Italy, with Turkey to join later.
1.5 billion people, or 75% of the
world population, was drawn into the
war, with over 74 million people
mobilized. The death toll amounted
to 10 million, plus another 20
million injured in the military
operations during various episodes
of the war. The Ottoman Empire,
ruled by the Young Turk triumvirate
– Minister of Interior Talat,
Minister of War Enver, and Minister
of the Navy Jemal--officially joined
in the war on October 29, 1914.
Months later in an interview given
to the American press Enver Pasha
gave the following reasons for
Turkey’s participation: “It’s beyond
doubt that the world has
difficulties in perceiving that
Turkey is no longer what it used to
be. It’s not the Turkish government,
but the Turkish nation that is at
war today. The newspapers of France,
Great Britain and Russia write a lot
that Turkey joined the war to help
Germany. It is true for the moment,
but is not for when we were
recruiting our forces. Today
Austria-Hungary and Germany help us
and we help them. We joined the war,
because there was no other way out.
…Russia threatens to seize our
territories in the Black Sea and in
the Caucasus, while England started
military operations against
Messopotamia and has placed a navy
at the mouth of the Dardanelles. We
waited for another week and then we
declared a war. Presently Turkey has
a well-prepared and armed army of
2,000,000 soldiers. We have been so
much doubted and insinuated, that
now we wish to persuade the world by
arms that ethnically we are not
dead, as some insist”. /Interview
given to ”Associated Press”, 20
April, 1915/.
November 1914
When Turkey joined in the war and
mobilization was announced, Western
Armenians, like the other peoples of
the Empire, were called to the army.
1915
First violent acts committed against
Armenians under the guise of the War
January 2
After the withdrawal of Russian
troops most of the Armenian and
Assyrian refugees going from Urmia,
Salmast and other surrounding
settlements to Nor Jugha were
attacked and killed by Turkish and
Kurdish armed forces. January 12
Slaughter of 107 Armenians took
place in the village of Avgharik.
February
For implementing the Armenian
Genocide in an organized and
merciless manner, the Union and
Progress Party’s Central Committee
formed the “Executive Committee of
Three” in February 1914, comprised
of Doctor Nazim, Shakir Behaeddin
and Midhat Shyukri. The Young Turk
Triumvirate – Talaat, Enver and
Jemal - operated through this
committee, which was responsible for
the implementation of the
deportation and massacre of all the
Armenians of the Ottoman Empire. The
committee, which had top-level
authorization, had resolved all the
technical problems connected with
deporting and exterminating
Armenians – the deportation dates
according to regions, the
deportation routes and places, the
concentration camps for their
ultimate annihilation, etc. Doctor
Nazim, one of the most important
Young Turk leaders and one of the
organizers of the Armenian Genocide,
made a speech at a secret session of
the party, when the final decision
to exterminate Armenians was made,
stating, “The Armenian nation should
be entirely exterminated, so that no
Armenian is left in our country and
that their name be completely
forgotten. Now we are at war and no
other such occasion will ever occur.
The intervention of the European
Powers and the loud protests of the
World Press will remain unnoticed,
and if they learn about it, they
will face a fait accompli and the
question will disappear. This time
our operations should be directed at
total extermination of the
Armenians. It is necessary to
annihilate them all, till the very
last man...I want the Turk and the
Turk only to live and impartially
rule over this country. Let all the
non-Turkish elements go to hell, no
matter what nationality or religion
they may belong to”. The so-called
“Teshkilat mahsuse”, or “Special
Organization” that was established
by the decision of the Young Turk
party was put at the disposal of the
“Committee of Three” and was
resposible for implementing the
Armenian Genocide. The leader of the
organization was Shakir Behaeddin.
“Teshkilat mahsuse” was formed from
criminals freed from prisons for
this very purpose, chetens – bands
of robbers, bandits and other dregs
of society that were capable of and
called upon to commit the most
hideous of crimes.
February 12
The beginning of the dismissal of
Armenian officials, imprisonment of
Armenian officers of the Ottoman
army, and formation of labor
detachments comprised of disarmed
Armenian soldiers.
February 18
The Regional delagates of the party
are informed about the decision and
the plan to exterminate Armenians
with letters signed by the
plenipotentiary of the Young Turk
Central Committee, Behaeddin Shakir.
February 19
The slaughtering agents were formed
from murderers and criminals let out
of prisons, with orders to kill the
disarmed soldiers working on the
Karin military line.
February
The Young Turk leadership began the
practical phase of the plan of the
Armenian Genocide by eliminated at
first the enlisted Armenian
soldiers. By doing that, they
intended to deprive the Armenians of
their potential armed support. By
the decree of Turkey’s minister of
war Enver, issued in February, 1915
, all Armenian soldiers were
disarmed, split into groups of
50-100, and killed. As a result,
from the very beginning Armenians
were deprived of any military force,
capable to defend their lives,
homes, property and settlements. As
a result, only the old and sick, and
women and children, were left in the
towns where Armenians lived.
April 8
First mass deportations and
massacres of the population of
Western Armenia, in Zeitun
April-June
On this day in Constantinople, with
no official charge leveled, the
selected elite of the Western
Armenians were arrested and deported
– members of the Turkish Parliament
(Mejlis), writers, lawyers,
teachers, journalists, physicians,
public figures, clergymen, men of
art – approximately 800 people. They
all were killed on the road to
exile, or upon reaching the
destination. Armenian party and
political figures were arrested and
killed as pre-designed. Such was the
fate of Nazareth Chaush, the well
known leader of Zeytun; Ishkhan, the
prominent public figure of Van; the
entire leadership of the Armenians
of Urfa – close to one hundred
people. In June, 1915, in one of the
central squares of the capital of
the Empire, twenty members of the
Henchak Party, led by the prominent
party leader Paramaz, were hanged.
The orientation, as well as the
importance given to this quick
strike, were carefully chosen by the
Ottoman government. The intention
was to behead the Western Armenians,
to leave them without military
support and political and
intellectual leadership, to
disorganize and demoralize the
general Armenian population, and to
preclude every possibility for them
to prepare or muster resistance. The
slaughter of Armenian soldiers and
the decapitation of the
intelligentsia proved fatal for
Western Armenians, who in fact lost
their capacity to organize and
resist. This accounts for the
relative ease and the devastating
scale of the perpetration of the
Genocide. Having successfully
carried out this first phase, the
executioners embarked on a path to
arrest, evict and slay Armenians in
their ancestral homeland of Western
Armenia, Cilicia, and throughout the
regions and towns of Western
Anatolia. The Armenian massacres and
deportations were pervasive across
the entire Ottoman Empire from east
to west, and north to south.
April 15 – May 16
On April 15, around 500 Armenians
were killed by the Turkish
authorities in the village of Akants
near Van. Massacres took place in 80
villages in the environs of Van
resulting in the deaths of 24,000
Armenians over the course of 3 days.
On April 20, having swept through
the villages in the environs of Van,
Turks reached the city and the
heroic battle of Van began. It
lasted until May 16, 1915.
May – June
Mass Deportations across the entire
territory of Turkey
May 9
Deportations in Tokat
May 14
Deportations in Baberd
On May 14, 1915, by the Sultan’s
decree, the Law on Deportation was
endorsed, the implementation of
which was entrusted to the Minister
of War, Enver. The law allowed for
the military command to expel and
resettle the residents of villages
and towns, individually or
collectively. As such, the forcible
eviction of the Armenians from their
ancestral homeland and their
deportation to the Arabian deserts
was legalized.
May 15 –18
Exile of Karin valley Armenians and
the massacre of 25,000 Armenians
May 19
Massacre of Khnus Armenians
May 22-25
In Nur Osmanie Center of Istanbul
opened the mixed meeting of the
Young Turk “Special Organization”,
at which Talaat presented the
extensive project of the ways and
procedures of deporting Armenians,
the control of the property left
after the Armenians, the
resettlement of Armenian villages
and families, etc.
May 27
The Young Turk government of the
Ottoman Empire legalized the May 22
order of Talaat and charged the
Ministry of Internal Affairs and the
Ministry Defense with its
implementation. The very same day
Talaat promulgated the decree on the
deportation and massacre of
Armenians.
June 1
12,000 Armenian soldiers that had
been working in labor camps since
November 1914 were murdered on the
Tigranakert – Kharberd roadway
June 3
Armenians of Hadjin deported
June 6 – end of July
Deportation and Massacre of Arabkir
Armenians. The caravans coming from
Arabkir were one by one shot on the
bank of the Euphrates, thus leaving
no Armenian in Arabkir by the end of
July.
June 7
Deportations in Erzinka and Akn
June 10
Armenians of Mardin and Severak
deported
June 11
Armenians of Khotorjur deported
June 11
Deportation and massacre of 1700
families from Khnus
June 14 – July 26
Armenians of Karin city deported
Armenians of Mardin and Severak
deported
June 22 – July 5
Deportation of Sebastia
June 24
Deportation of Shapin Garahisar
started
June 26 - 27
Deportations started in Kharberd,
Trabzon, Marzvan and Samson
June 25
Massacres in Baghesh
May 1915
The Allied Powers could not remain
indifferent to what was going on in
Turkey and thus sent a note of
protest to the Turkish Cabinet,
holding it responsible for the
massacres of the Armenians. On May
13, 1915 in London, Paris and
Petrograd the joint official
declaration of England, France and
Russia was issued simultaneously on
the responsibility of the Ottoman
Empire for the atrocities against
the Armenians. In particular it
stated: “During this whole month
massacres of Armenians are
implemented in Armenia by Turks and
Kurds, with evident permission of
the Ottoman authorities, and
sometimes with their immediate help.
In mid-April massacres of Armenians
took place in Erzerum, Bitlis, Mush,
Sasun, Zeitun and Cilicia. In the
environs of Van inhabitants of
hundreds of villages were
annihilated and Kurds have captured
the Armenian district of Van. At the
same time the Turkish government of
Constantinople imprisoned and
unspeakably persecuted the peaceful
Armenian inhabitants. The joint
declaration of England-France-Russia
was the first vital official
document adopted in the XX century,
which held responsible another
government and its leadership taken
together and individually for
state-sponsored crimes.
July 1
Massacre of the Armenians of
Kharbed-Mezire, Trabzon and Bayazet
started
July 2
Massacre of the villages surrounding
Yozghat started
July 10
Mush massacre started. From an
initial population of 15,000 only
500 survived, and from 59,000
inhabitants of the district only
9000 survived.
July 15
Karin’s ruler Tahsi in his letter
addressed to the central government
wrote: “In Karin, barbarism has
overstepped all limits. The disgrace
and outrage practiced for money and
women are extremely shameful and are
inhuman. An end should be put to all
this and especially to the chetens
operating under the name “Teshkilat
Makhuse”. The ruler of Kharberd
writes that all the roads are
covered with corpses of children and
women and they don’t have time to
bury them. It would be better if we
preserved our nobleness and national
image”.
Mid July
Deportation and massacre of
Tigranakert Armenians began
July 18
Self-defense of Sasun began, as
Turkish troops attacked the
inhabitants of the city. Realizing
that annihilation was threatening
them, the residents of the city
turned to self-defense and three
days later, on July 21, they climbed
the mountain Andok.
July 24 – 28
Deportations started in the environs
of Ankara and Istanbul Deportations
started in Izmit, Partizak, Armash,
Kesaria, in the Armenian villages
near Ankara. The deportations
continued in Cilicia involving new
locales – Antioch, Aintap, Pehesni,
Kilis, Ateaman, and Garaturan, then
also Kesab and the other surrounding
settlements.
July 30 – September 14
Commands of deportations in Setio
region were given, but the locals
met the troops with self-defense.
The heroic battle known as the 40
days of Musa Dagh lasted until
September 14. After fighting for 40
days, the 4000 Armenians that
survived managed to break the
Turkish blockade, get to the beach
and board the English and French
ships waiting for them there. Some
days later they arrived at the city
of Port-Said. Years later the
Austrian writer Franz Werfel
immortalized that tragic yet heroic
episode of the Armenian nation in
his novel "40 Days of Musa Dagh"
August 3- 11
Deportations started in Afion
Garahisar, Kesaria, Sivr, Hisar,
Mersin, Adabazar, Marash,and the
villages near Eskishehire.
August 13-21
Deportation of the Armenians of
Ankara, Brusa, Everik, Adana and the
surrounding villages started
August – September
First official eyewitness accounts
of mass extermination of Western
Armenians
August
US Ambassador Morgenthau recounts
the information from meetings and
negotiations with Talaat
August 12
Enver reports that to date 200,000
Armenians slain.
August 19
Lord Bryce reports that 500,000
Armenians have been murdered in
Turkey.
August 31
Talaat tells German ambassador,
Prince Ernst Hohenlohe-Langenburg,
that the Armenian Question no longer
exists.
September 14
The New York Times reports the
murder of 350,000 Armenians.
September 15
The Law on Abandoned Goods is
ratified by the Turkish Senate
1916
March 7
Replying to the March 3 telegram of
the Ministry Abdulhat Nuri informed
the Ministry that through March 16
of 1916 in Pap and Meske 35,000
Armenians were exterminated; 10,000
in Karlk near Aleppo, 20,000 in
Tipsi, Apuharrar and Hamam , and
35,000in Ral es Ain. In total
100,000.
March 17
Deportation of over 50,000 Armenians
gathered in Ras el Ain began.
Deportations were followed by
massacres that lasted until June,
when the massacre of 200,000
Armenians gathered in Der zor took
place.
June 22 – July 13
Atrocities started in different
locales, as a result of which in
Sebastia 10 000 soldiers working in
the labor camps were killed, in the
West of Karin – 9000, in Zara –
1000, and in a place called Reshatie,
in the region of Tokat --1000
Armenians. The massacres ended on
July 13 with total of 21000
Armenians murdered.
August 10
By official note, the Young Turk
government dissolved the Jerusalem
and Istanbul patriarchates, leaving
only the Cilicia patriarchate, which
adopted jurisdiction over the
Istanbul patriarchate.
October
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson,
acting on a resolution of the US
Congress, proclaims October 8 and 9
as "Armenian Relief Days."
November 26
On the basis of the London treaty
signed by the president of the
Armenian national delegation Poghos
Nubar Pasha, together with Mark Sax
(England), and George Picot (France)
on November 26, the Armenian
Volunteer Detachment – the Eastern
Legion within the French troops--
was formed to liberate Armenian
lands from Turkish domination.
1917
January
Mr. Goppert, a German Embassy
official, visits Enver, Talaat and
Halil to convey that forced
Islamization under the guise of
military necessity or security must
be stopped.
October 25
The Bolsheviks led by Lenin carried
out a political revolution in
Russia, taking control of the
authority of the country’s temporary
government. Coming to power, the
Bolsheviks ceased military
operations, and in November Russian
troops began abandoning their
positions on the territories of
Western Armenia. Seizing the
occasion, the Turkish government set
their sights not only on the control
of Western Armenia, but also to
seize all of Eastern Armenia.
1918
March 3
The Bolshevik leaders of Russia
signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
with the anti-Entente states -
Germany, Turkey, Austria-Hungary and
Bulgaria, by which in fact it
withdrew from the Entente and joined
its former antagonists. By this
treaty the parties agreed on ceasing
military operations and Russia
guaranteed the withdrawal of its
troops from Eastern Anatolia,
particularly from the Kars, Ardahan
and Batum regions. This treaty was
the logical continuation of the
decree “on peace” adopted by the
Bolsheviks on November 8 of 1917.
The Brest-Litovsk treaty put the
Armenians living in the Caucasus in
an extremely difficult situation. In
fact, it invalidated the decision of
December 29, 1917 on the right of
self-determination of Eastern
Armenian lands, instead adopting the
decree on returning the same lands
to Turkey. Months later, on
September 20, the Russian
government, by the note signed by
the Foreign Affairs Minister
Chicherin, invalidated the
concession of Caucasus territories
to Turkey. Regardless, even with the
temporary treaty of Brest Litovsk,
the Western Armenian territories,
where only a few months before the
Russian army presided, were
ethnically cleansed and robbed of
any near-term future as a part of
Armenia. The Brest Treaty presented
intriguing opportunities for the
Turkish side with its continual
expansionist policy. Using the
occasion and breaking the Erzinka
ceasefire agreement signed December
5, 1917, the Turkish army initiated
fresh attacks with vastly superior
forces, and one by one captured
Erzinka, Karin, Sarighamish, Kars,
and on May 15, Alexandropol. The
very existence of Armenia was in
jeopardy.
May
Turkish troops captured the
Sardarapat station. The Armenian
army of regular troops and militia
men went to a last gasp battle of
life and death against the Turkish
regular army. General Silikyan was
charged with the responsibility of
leading the Sardarapat defense.
After enduring heavy losses on May
27, the remnants of the Turkish army
fled to Alexandropol. The next day,
May 28, the Republic of Armenia was
proclaimed. The newly-established
Armenian state was to exist two and
half short years, until the
Sovietization of Armenia.
June-September
Ignoring the June 14, 1918 Batum
treaty, the Turkish troops attacked
Alexandropol on August 15. The
15-hour Armenian resistance gave an
opportunity to the Armenian refugees
gathered from Karin, Kars, Ardahan
and Ardvin to once again flee the
city. The Turkish army slaughtered
the rest of the inhabitants and
attacked the refugees, adding
numerous victims. The “Savage
detachment” Tatar regiment on
September 15 carried out a similar
carnage in Baku, where 30,000
Armenians were slain.
September 19
in Arara, in Palestine, the Armenian
Legion of the French army clashed
against the Turkish army. Thanks to
the victory Armenians at this
battle, the Armenian Legion greatly
contributed to the victory of the
Allied countries over the Turks.
October 30
In the city of Mudros an armistice
was signed between the Entente
states and Turkey. Thus Turkey
accepted defeat in World War I. This
document makes provisions for the
return of the Armenian survivors to
their homes. Later the Entente
states did not do anything to
enforce the implementation of the
Mudros armistice, which could have
assisted ravaged Armenia. Instead,
the Turkish government of Ankara
rejected the Mudros armistice,
actually invalidating it.
November – December
On November 28 the Eastern Legion,
later renamed the Armenian Legion,
entered Alexandrette port of Cilicia
and managed to capture a number of
important militray locales from Dec.
17 through Dec. 19.
November
Talaat, Enver and Jemal flee Turkey
1919
February 28
After the consolidation of the
Nationalist-Kemalist forces in
Turkey, massacres of the Armenians
of Aleppo took place on February 28.
July 23
Kyazim Karabekir and colonel Mustafa
Kemal as president opened the
Turkish Nationalist Congress in
Karin, most of the participants of
which were former Young Turks. On
August 7, finishing its sessions,
the congress adopted a decision on
the integrity and immunity of
Turkey.
1920
January 21 – February 12
The heroic battle Marash began
against the Turkish nationalists,
lasting until February 12, 1920. On
February 11 the French forces
withdrew from Marash, leaving the
city’s Armenian population to the
mercy of the Turkish troops.
Armenians followed the French army,
but were attacked by Turks along the
way. The Turks brutalized and
slaughtered the Armenians and the
French during their withdrawal.
While retreating, Armenians endured
3-5000 victims, while the French
lost 800-1200, the freezing
conditions exacerbating the attacks
by the Turks.
January 27
At the session of the Istanbul
military Mustafa Kemal stated the
following about the Young Turks,
“Those pashas committed
unprecedented, unspeakable and
incomprehensible crimes and for
their personal interest they brought
the country to its present state.
They have committed all kinds of
violence, they have organized
deportations and massacres, they
have burnt infants with petroleum,
they have raped women and girls in
front of their husbands and parents,
they have stolen children from their
parents, they have confiscated the
real estate and property of
Armenians, they have exiled
Armenians to Mosul in deplorable
conditions, they have drowned
thousands of innocent people in the
sea, they forced people to change
their religion, they made starving
old men walk for months and work,
and they have forced young women to
submit to dreadful brothels never
encountered in the history of any
other nation”.
March 23
The Turkish-Mustafa gang led by
Khosrov bek Sultanov butchered over
30,000 Armenians of Shushi, and
robbed, destroyed and burnt to the
ground the Armenian district of the
town.
March 23 - October 15
On March 23 the heroic battle of
Hadjin started against the joined
forces of Turkish nationalists and
Young Turks, and ended on October
15, 1920.
1 April 1920 – 8 February 1921
The heroic battle of Aintap started
on April 1 and ended on February 8,
1921.
July 5
The verdict of Young Turk leaders
was issued, according to which 4 out
of 31 criminals - Talaat, Jemal,
Enver and Nazim - were condemned to
death, while the remainder of the 27
were condemned to imprisonment for
different terms. After World War I
the trial of Young Turk leaders
began in Turkey, with charges of war
crimes. Among the accusations was
the organization and implementation
of massacres of Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire. However, several
were charged ‘in absentia’ as they
had managed to flee the country.
August 4
On August 4, 1920 the Autonomous
Cilician Republic of Armenia, led by
Mihran Tamatyan, was proclaimed in
Adana under French patronage.
However, it was declared a republic
in name only, as due to a fallout of
Anglo-French relations, the French
military authories became inclined
to defend Turkey’s position, leading
to the dissolution of the
newly-formed Armenian government.
August 10
In the Paris suburb of Sevres the
victorious states of World War I
signed a treaty with Turkey, a
document of 13 parts and 433
Articles. Articles 88 and 89
recognized the Republic of Armenia
as a free and independent state. The
Articles state: “Turkey and Armenia,
as well as the higher powers agree
on leaving the border determination
of Erzerum, Van and Bitlis between
Turkey and Armenia to the decision
of the US President Woodrow Wilson
and accept his decision, as well as
all the means he can suggest for
Armenia to have sea access and on
the mentioned territory any
demilitarization of the Ottoman
territory… From the moment of
adopting this resolution Turkey
waives all rights to these
territories”.
September 14
The French authorities of Adana gave
an order to the Armenians refugees
in Cilicia to leave for Istanbul,
America, Marseille, Beirut, Dort-Yol,
Iskenderun or elsewhere. The order
initially concerned those 14,000
Armenians that were under French
patronage, but later was augmented
to include all Armenians.
September 23
Without any declaration of war, the
Turkish army attacked Armenia and
captured Alexandropol. Around 30
villages in the Alexandropol and
Akhalkalak regions were overrun,
with the inhabitants being greeted
with pillage and slaughter. The
Turkish troops were merciless in the
degree of their cruelty and horror.
November- December
While Woodrow Wilson expresses his
frustrations about implementing the
new borders of the Republic of
Armenia, Soviet forces regained
total control of the Caucasus. At
the end of November the Red Army
entered Armenia. The ruling
government of the short-lived
independent Armenia, in an effort to
avoid still more bloodshed and
fraternal civil war, relinquished
authority to the Bolsheviks, and on
December 2 Armenia was Sovietized.
1921
March 15 – July 1922
One of the organizers of Armenian
Genocide, Talaat, was assassinated
in Berlin by an Armenian student,
Soghomon Tehlirian. This was the
beginning of the “Nemesis” (named
after the goddess of revenge in
Greek mythology) operation, worked
out at the 9th session of the ARF
party in autumn, 1919, the aim of
which was to execute the death
sentence of Young Turk leaders in
Turkey. “Nemesis” was a clear,
thoroughly worked out operation,
which with time was efficiently
implemented by the Armenian
avengers, pursuing only the aim of
justice. A special committee was
formed to discover the hiding-places
of the criminals living in different
corners of the world. In June,
Tehleryan’s trial for killing Talaat
began in Germany, which in fact
became a trial against the
organizers of the genocide. Given
European acknowledgment of Talaat’s
responsibility as chief architect of
the genocide, Tehlirian was
acquitted. In Rome, on December 6, a
bullet from a gun wielded by another
Armenian avenger Arshavir Shirakyan
killed the leader of the first Young
Turk government – Said Halim. In
Berlin on April 7, 1922 Armenian
avengers Arshavir Shirakyan and Aram
Yerkanyan executed the death
sentence of the former governor of
Trabzon Jemal Azmi and the founder
of “Teshkilateshi Makhsuse” criminal
organization – Behaeddin Shakir. In
Tbilisi on July 25 Armenian avengers
Stepan Tsaghikyan, Artashes
Gevorgyan and Petros Ter-Poghosyan
murdered one of the butchers of the
Armenian Genocide – Jemal Pasha.
March 16
In Moscow on March 16 a treaty on
Soviet-Turkish friendship and
fraternity was signed. It was signed
at a time when Soviet Russia
supported Kemalist Turkey,
disregarding the latter’s
expansionist policy towards Armenia.
Thus the open questions regarding
Armenia were settled without heed to
Armenia’s interest or historical
justice.
March 20
Turkish-French Treaty of London
October 13
A treaty was signed in Kars between
Turkey and the newly-established
Armenian Soviet Republic, Georgian
Soviet Republic and the Azerbaijani
Soviet Republic. This treaty
restated the points of the Moscow
treaty and regarding territorial
matters in Armenia, it was strongly
anti-Armenian.
October 20
On October 20 the Turkish-French
treaty was signed in Ankara
resulting in the French troop
pullout from Cilicia, lasting from
December of 1921 until January 4 of
1922. The threat of new massacres
led to the migration of 160,000
Armenians to Syria, Lebanon and
Greece.
1922
August 4
On August 4 during the clash between
Soviet and anti-Soviet forces in
Central Asia, the Armenian soldier
Hakob Melkumov killed the Minister
of War of the Ottoman Turkey – Enver.
September 9
The Turkish army entered Izmir and
massacred 10,000 Armenians and
100,000 Greeks. Three days later
Izmir was set afire.
November
An international conference
commenced in Switzerland on the
question of the Middle East, lasting
until July 24, 1923. The
participants of the conference were
Great Britain, France, Italy,
Greece, Japan, Romania, Yugoslavia,
Turkey and the US as an observer
country. The delegation of the
Armenian Republic was not allowed to
take part at the conference, as it
no longer represented Armenia, which
had been absorbed into the Soviet
Union. The Lausanne Conference also
discussed the Armenian Question, but
the Turkish delegation led by Ismet
Pasha and Riza Nur Bey decisively
spoke against the idea of founding
any Armenian state on the territory
of Turkey. In the end Turkey managed
to dictate its will to the Entente
countries. As a result the treaty
included no mention of Armenia or of
Armenians whatsoever. Thus by the
Lausanne Conference the Armenian
Question was temporarily closed and
the territories to be delivered to
Armenia by the Treaty of Sevres
disappeared within the ethnically
cleansed newly-determined borders of
Republic of Turkey.
March 31
Ankara announced a verdict of "not
guilty" concerning all those Turks
who had been condemned by military
or other courts.
November 30
Deportation of Armenians and Greeks
from Pontus
1923
September
According to a new Turkish law the
return of Armenians to Turkey was
once and for all prohibited
1939
June
Against the will of the local
population and disregarding Syria’s
opposition, the region of
Alexandrette was annexed to Turkey,
as a consequence of which around
40,000 Armenians were forced to
leave their homes and settle in
Syria and Lebanon between July
16-23.
September
A week before the invasion of Poland
and the start of World War II,
Adolph Hitler spoke of his orders
"to kill without pity or mercy all
men, women, and children of Polish
race or language," and concluded his
remarks by asking, "Who, after all,
speaks today of the extermination of
the Armenians?”
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