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Zeitun rebellion (1895–96)

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Zeitun rebellion of 1895–1896
Part of Hamidian massacres
DateOctober 1895 – January 1896
LocationZeitun, Aleppo Vilayet
Result Armenian Victory
Belligerents
Hunchak Party

 Ottoman Empire

Commanders and leaders
Aghasi (Karapet Ter-Sargsian)
Ghazar Shovroian
Ali Bey
Mustafa Remzi Pasha
Edhem Pasha
Units involved
Ottoman Fifth Army Corps
Strength
1,500–6,000 armed militia 28,000 Ottoman troops
30,000–35,000 Muslim (Turkish, Kurdish, and Circassian) irregulars
12 cannons
Total: 58,000–63,000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
2,000 (includes non-combatant Armenians) 20,000–30,000 soldiers
Battles involving Armenian National movement
Armenian national movement (1862–1921)

Armenian resistance during Hamidian massacres

Armenians in World War I
Armenian resistance during the Armenian genocide

Caucasus campaign

First Republic of Armenia
Caucasus campaign

Armenian–Azerbaijani war

Armeno-Georgian War

Turkish–Armenian War

Soviet-Armenian conflict

The Zeitun rebellion or Second Zeitun Resistance (Armenian: Զեյթունի երկրորդ գոյամարտը, Zeyt'uni yerkrord goyamartĕ) took place in the winter of 1895–1896, during the Hamidian massacres, when the Armenians of Zeitun (modern Süleymanlı), fearing the prospect of massacre, took up arms to defend themselves from Ottoman troops.

Background

The Armenians of Zeitun had historically enjoyed a period of high autonomy in the Ottoman Empire until the nineteenth century. In the first half of the nineteenth century, the central government decided to bring this region of the empire under tighter control and attempted to do this by settling Muslims in the villages around Zeitun. This strategy ultimately proved ineffective and in the summer of 1862 during the First Zeitun Resistance the Ottomans sent a military contingent of 12,000 men to Zeitun to reassert government control. The force, however, was held at bay by the Armenians and, through French mediation, the first Zeitun resistance was brought to a close.

The Ottoman government was nevertheless upset with the results of the mediation. In the following decades, it once more resolved to bring the area under control by provoking Zeitun's Armenians: newly stationed government troops harassed the population and frequent calls for their massacre were issued by a number of Turks. Between the years 1891 and 1895, activists from the Armenian Social Democrat Hunchakian Party visited Cilicia and established a new branch in Zeitun and encouraged the Armenians to resist the oppressive measures of the Ottoman government. It was also at this time that the ruler of the Ottoman Empire, Sultan Abdul Hamid II, decided finally to eliminate one of the only strongholds of Armenian autonomy during the Armenian massacres of 1895–1896.

As the governor of the province was removed and replaced by Avni Bey, a man who held a deep-seated hatred for Armenians, orders were given on October 24, 1895, by Ottoman authorities to use the troops to begin razing several of the Armenians villages near Zeitun.

Resistance

Monument to Zeitun resistance at the Surp Kevork Church, Aleppo, Syria.

The Armenian citizens of Zeitun, under the leadership of the Hunchakian Party, heard of the ongoing massacres in nearby regions, and thus prepared themselves for armed resistance. Between 1,500 and 6,000 men, armed with flintlock guns and Martini-Henry rifles, were sent to the battlefield and sixteen Armenians were selected to head an administrative body during the siege. With this, the Ottoman military commander sent a wire to Abdul Hamid and told him that the Armenians had started an uprising and were proceeding to massacre Muslims. The Ottoman forces possessed an overwhelming numerical and technological advantage: the entire force consisted of 24 battalions (20,000 troops), twelve cannons, 8,000 men from the Zeibek Division from Smyrna, and 30,000–35,000 Turkish, Kurdish, and Circassian irregulars.

The Armenians started by conquering the nearby Ottoman garrison, taking 600 Ottoman soldiers and officers as prisoners and placing them under the surveillance of Armenian women. At one point, the prisoners attempted to escape, but failed and were executed. Ottoman troops were repeatedly defeated in their engagements with the Armenian militia. During the negotiations that later settled the conflict, an Ottoman military commander expressed his admiration to Aghasi, one of the leaders of the resistance, for the Armenians' accurate marksmanship and their determination to resist.

Resolution

Through the intervention of the six major European powers, the Armenians of Zeitun ended the resistance. The Hunchak activists were allowed to go into exile, the tax burden was eased, and a Christian sub-governor was appointed. Due to the freezing temperatures, thousands of Turks perished and many others died in hospitals from wounds sustained in battle. The figures on casualties are heavily conflicting but all agree that the Ottoman forces suffered greatly. The British Consulate reported on January 6, 1896, that "at least 5,000 have been killed though common report swells the number to 10,000." The Austrian Consulate based in Aleppo stated that the Armenians killed 1,300 Turks in the final battle alone. The British consul estimated that combat and non-combat fatalities among all Armenians neared the figure of 6,000. Pierre Quillard, a French writer, estimated that Ottoman losses totaled no less than 20,000 men.

The Armenians lived on in relative peace until World War I, when they were massacred and deported from Zeitun by the Young Turks in 1915.

Popular culture

The rebellion in mentioned in The Forty Days of Musa Dagh.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dadrian. History of the Armenian Genocide, p. 129.
  2. ^ (in Armenian) Nersisian, M. G. "Zeytuntsineri 1895-1896 tt. Inknapashtpan Herosamarte" , Patma-Banasirakan Handes 143-144 (1996): pp. 7-16.
  3. ^ Kurdoghlian, Mihran (1996). Patmutiwn Hayots Volume 3 (in Armenian). Athens, Greece: Council of National Education Publishing. pp. 28–29.
  4. Hovannisian, Richard G. "The Armenian Question in the Ottoman Empire, 1876–1914" in The Armenian People From Ancient to Modern Times, Volume II: Foreign Dominion to Statehood: The Fifteenth Century to the Twentieth Century. Richard G. Hovannisian (ed.) New York: St. Martin's Press, p. 223. ISBN 0-312-10168-6.
  5. Barsoumian, Hagop. "The Eastern Question and the Tanzimat Era" in The Armenian People From Ancient to Modern Times, Volume II, p. 200.
  6. (in French) Langlois, Victor, "Les Arméniens de la Turquie et les massacres du Taurus," Revue des Deux Mondes 43 (January–February 1863).
  7. See (in Armenian) Meliksetyan, Vaspur. Zeytuni 1862 tvakani dyutsaznamarte` 100-amyaki artiv . Yerevan: Society of the Armenian SSR for the Expansion of Civil and Scientific Knowledge, 1962.
  8. Dadrian, Vahakn N (1995). The History of the Armenian Genocide: Ethnic Conflict from the Balkans to Anatolia to the Caucasus. Oxford: Berghahn Books. p. 127. ISBN 1-57181-666-6.
  9. Dadrian. History of the Armenian Genocide, pp. 127-28.
  10. ^ Dadrian. History of the Armenian Genocide, p. 128.
  11. Dadrian. History of the Armenian Genocide, p. 130.
  12. On which, see Aram Arkun, "Zeytun and the Commencement of the Armenian Genocide," in A Question of Genocide: Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman Empire, eds. R.G. Suny, Fatma Muge Goçek, and Norman Naimark. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 221-243.
  13. Werfel, Franz (1935). The Forty Days of Musa Dagh. New York: The Viking Press. p. 82.

Further reading

  • (in Armenian) Aghasi. Զեյթուն եւ իր շրջականները . Beirut: Shirak Publishing, 1968.
  • (in Armenian) Mkrtchyan, Levon. Զեյթունի ապստամբությունը . Yerevan: Pan-Armenian and Armenian Educational and Cultural Union, 1995.
  • (in Armenian) Poghosyan, Haykaz. Զեյթունի պատմությունը, 1409–1921 թթ. . Yerevan: Hayastan, 1969.

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