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Russo-Persian War (1722–1723)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Second conflict of the Russo-Persian Wars
Russo-Persian War (1722–1723)
Part of theRusso-Persian Wars

Peter the Great's fleet
Date18 June 1722 – 12 September 1723
Location
Caucasus, northernIran
Result

Russian victory

Territorial
changes
Russia gainsDerbent,Baku, and the provinces ofShirvan,Gilan,Mazandaran andAstarabad.
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
ShahTahmasp II
Strength
Russian Army: 61,039[8]At least 15,000[9]
Casualties and losses
6,531 killed or wounded[10]
36,664[8]died of disease
At least 1,000 casualties[11][12]

TheRusso-Persian War of 1722–1723, known in Russian historiography as thePersian campaign ofPeter the Great,[13] was a war between theRussian Empire andSafavid Iran, triggered by thetsar's attempt to expand Russian influence in theCaspian andCaucasus regions and to prevent its rival, theOttoman Empire, from territorial gains in the region at the expense of declining Safavid Iran.

The Russian victory ratified for Safavid Iran's cession of their territories in theNorth Caucasus,South Caucasus and contemporary northern Iran to Russia, comprising the cities ofDerbent (southernDagestan) andBaku and their nearby surrounding lands, as well as the provinces ofGilan,Shirvan,Mazandaran andAstarabad conform theTreaty of Saint Petersburg (1723).[8]

The territories remained in Russian hands for nine and twelve years, when respectively according to theTreaty of Resht of 1732 and theTreaty of Ganja of 1735 during the reign of Anna Ioannovna, they were returned to Iran.

Background

[edit]

Before the war, the nominal Russian border was theTerek River. South of that, theKhanates of Dagestan were nominal vassals of Iran. The ultimate cause of the war was Russia's desire to expand to the southeast and the temporary weakness of Iran. At the start of the war,the Iranian capital was under siege by anAfghan army. The formal pretext was the grave damage inflicted to the many Russian merchants who inhabited the Safavid Iranian city ofShamakhi.

In 1721, rebelliousLezgins, from within the declining Safavid Empire, hadsacked and looted the city, killing many of its inhabitants including several Russian merchants.[14][15]Artemy Volynsky, Russia's ambassador to Safavid Iran reported on the great damage done to the Russian merchants, to then incumbent TsarPeter the Great (r. 1682–1725).[16][15] The report stipulated that the 1721 event was a clear violation of the1717 Russo-Iranian trade treaty, by which Iran guaranteed to ensure the protection of Russian nationals within the Safavid domains. With Safavid Iran in chaos, and the Safavid ruler completely unable to safeguard the provisions of the treaty, Volynsky urged Peter to take advantage of the situation, and to invade Iran, on the pretext of restoring order as an ally of the Safavid king.[16][15] Indeed, Russia shortly after used the attack on its merchants in Shamakhi as the pretext to launch the war.[17][18]

Preparations

[edit]

Between 1714 and 1720, several Russian sailors had mapped theCaspian Sea. On 15 July 1722, Peter issued a manifesto in several local languages justifying the invasion, drawn up byDimitrie Cantemir. Peter gathered 22,000 infantry, 9,000 dragoons and 70,000Cossacks,Tatars andKalmyks.[citation needed] For transport, he created theCaspian Flotilla atAstrakhan underFyodor Apraksin. The infantry, artillery and stores were to be shipped by sea to the mouth of theSulak River while the cavalry went overland fromTsaritsyn andMozdok. By the time Peter was assembling Russian forces for the attack, the Safavid state had already entered the final stages of collapse.[19]

Campaign

[edit]

All datesold style used in Russian accounts of the time, followed by thenew style (N.S.) modern equivalent, 11 days ahead of the Julian calendar.

Phase One (1722)

[edit]
A hand-drawn map of a city on the coast. In the sea off the city's shoreline is a ship. At the bottom of the map is a painted view of the city.
Map of Derbent drawn during its occupation by Russia 1722–1735.

The flotilla arrived at the mouth of the Sulak on 27 July 1722 (August 7 N.S.) and Peter, carried ashore by four boatmen, was the first to disembark. There, he learned that some of his cavalry had beendefeated by Kumyks and Chechens at Endirey. Peter responded with a punitive expedition using Kalmukh troops. He went south and camped at what later becamePetrovsk. On August 12 (August 23 N.S.), he made a state entry intoTarki, the capital of theShamkhalate of Tarki, where the ruler received him as a friend. Next day, he headed south toDerbent, the flotilla following coastwise. He sent envoys to the next major ruler, the Sultan of Utemish. Sultan Mahmoud Otemishsky[20] killed the envoys and gathered about 16,000 men at Utemish to bar the way. The mountaineers fought valiantly, but could not withstand the disciplined infantry. Utemish was burned and all the prisoners hanged in revenge for the murder of the envoys. On learning of this, the Khan of Derbent offered Peter the keys to the city on August 23 (September 3 N.S.). Derbent is at a narrow point on the coastal plain and has long been considered the northern gateway to Iran. While in Derbent, Peter learned that the flotilla had been caught in a storm and most of the supplies lost. Since there was no possibility of resupply this late in the season, he left a strong garrison at Derbent, marched back to the Terek River, took ship to Astrakhan and, on December 13 (December 24 N.S.), made a triumphal entry into Moscow.

Vakhtang VI of Kartli (central Georgia) was a vassal of Iran and had been their captive for seven years. Given the weakness of Iran, he made an arrangement with Russia. In September 1722, he advanced onGanja. When the Russians did not join him, he returned to Tbilisi in November. This provocation of Iran led to a disastrous invasion of his country.

Peter I in Tarki, the capital ofTarki Shamkhalate; byFranz Roubaud

Phase Two (1722/23)

[edit]
Colourful hand-drawn map of a city and its surrounding countryside. On the map are: a caption naming the city, Gilan, a map legend, a compass rose and at the bottom of the map a small painting perhaps showing a city-gate.
Map of Rasht, likely drawn during its Russian occupation 1722–1735.
Hand-drawn colour map of a city on the coast. The map focuses on the fortifications and street grid of the city. Off the coast are five ships. At the bottom of the map is a small painting of two ships and a boat.
Map of Baku, likely drawn during the Russian occupation of 1723–1735.

Before leavingAstrakhan, Peter, on 6 November (17 November N.S.), sent Colonel Shipov and two battalions south to occupy the Iranian city ofRasht at the southwest corner of theCaspian. The locals wanted help against theinvading Afghans but quickly changed their minds. 15,000 men were gathered,Shah Tamasp ordered the Russians out (February) and towards the end of March the Russians defeated the Iranians,and had decisively captured the Caspian Sea town.

After a long siege on 26 June 1723 (7 July 1723 N.S.) General Matyushkin took the Iranian town ofBaku and soonShirvan to the west and then the three Iranian provinces on the south coast of the Caspian Sea. On September 12 (September 23 N.S.), the Russians and Iranians made a treaty in which the Russians would drive out the Afghans and restore Shah Tahmasp to the Iranian throne in return for the cession of Derbent, Baku and the three south coast provinces. Next year, Prince Meshchersky went to Iran but was unable to secure ratification and was almost killed.

The war was formally concluded by the1723 Treaty of Saint Petersburg, which recognized the Russian annexation of the west and south coasts of the Caspian. By the1724 Treaty of Constantinople, Russia recognized Turkish control of nearly everything west of what they had captured, thereby partitioning Transcaucasia between the two powers. The Russians lost many soldiers to disease. At the same time,Nader Shah restored Iranian power. In 1732, through theTreaty of Resht, Russia withdrew to approximately the current Iranian border. In 1735, as a result of theTreaty of Ganja, Russia withdrew to its former border along theTerek River.

Aftermath

[edit]

The war was a costly war for both sides in different measures. Iran had lost swaths of its territories, while Russia had suffered large human losses. In total, the Russians lost 6,531 people during the campaign,[10] and about 36,000 during the occupation of the Caucasus, mostly from diseases.[a] Grave damage was inflicted by the Russians on the occupied areas.[8] Thus, inGilan, one of the consequences of the occupation was the rapid decline ofsericulture, as many of those involved in it fled.[8] It took years for the industry to revive.[8]

Peter was determined to keep the newly conquered Iranian territories in theCaucasus and northern mainlandIran. However, he was concerned about their safety and thus ordered the fortifications atDerbent and Holy Cross to be strengthened.[8] He was determined to attachGilan andMazandaran to Russia.[8] In May 1724, the Tsar wrote to Matiushkin, Russian commander inRasht, that he should invite "Armenians and otherChristians, if there are such, to Gilan and Mazandaran and settle them, while Muslims should be very quietly, so that they would not know it, diminished in number as much as possible."[8]

In 1732, on the eve of theRusso-Turkish War, the government of EmpressAnna Ioannovna, Peter's successor, returned many of the annexed territories to Iran as a part of theTreaty of Resht, to construct an alliance with theSafavids against theOttoman Empire.[21] By the 1735Treaty of Ganja, the remaining territories were returned, includingDerbent,Baku andTarki, and Iran was again in full possession of its territories in the North and South Caucasus and in contemporary northern Iran. The Russian troops nevertheless had not evacuated from the Iranian provinces until 1734.[22]

AsThe Cambridge History of Iran adds, "perhaps the only long-term consequence was the consciousness on the part of Russia's rulers that their armies had once marched beyond the Caucasus, that the Russian flag had flown over the southern shore of the Caspian Sea."

However, the sequel was additionally disastrous for the Georgian rulers who had supported Peter's venture. In eastern Georgia,Vakhtang VI of Kartli lost his throne and sought protection of the Russian court in 1724. In western Georgia,Alexander V of Imereti had to accept an Ottoman suzerainty on more stringent terms. The Ottomans, further, alarmed by the Russian intervention, strengthened their hold along the Caucasian coastline.[23]

See also

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Notes

[edit]
  1. ^

References

[edit]
  1. ^Персидский поход 1722-23
  2. ^abcd"722". Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved9 June 2015.
  3. ^ab"Кумыкский мир". Archived fromthe original on 28 October 2007. Retrieved9 June 2015.
  4. ^abОфициальный сайт администрации Табасаранского района Населенные пунктыArchived 2012-11-14 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^Treaty of St Petersburg (1723),Alexander Mikaberidze,Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, Vol. I, ed. Alexander Mikaberidze, (ABC-CLIO, 2011), 850.
  6. ^Konstantin Nikolaevich Maksimov.Kalmykia in Russia's Past and Present National Policies and Administrative System Central European University Press, 2008ISBN 9639776173 p 86
  7. ^"lekia.ru". Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved9 June 2015.
  8. ^abcdefghijFisher et al. 1991, p. 321
  9. ^Langaroudi, EIr; Langaroudi, R. Rezazadeh (2009). "GĪLĀN vi. History in the 18th century".Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. X, Fasc. 6. pp. 642–645.
  10. ^abcKurkin 2010, p. 207.
  11. ^Cite error: The named referenceMikaberidze was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).
  12. ^William Bayne Fisher,P. Avery,G. R. G. Hambly,C. Melville.The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 7 Cambridge University Press, 10 okt. 1991ISBN 0521200954 p 318
  13. ^Elena Andreeva,Russia and Iran in the Great Game: Travelogues and Orientalism, (Routledge, 2007), 38.
  14. ^Axworthy 2010, p. 42.
  15. ^abcFisher et al. 1991, p. 316.
  16. ^abSicker 2001, p. 48.
  17. ^Axworthy 2010, p. 62.
  18. ^Matthee 2005, p. 28.
  19. ^Atkin 1980, p. 4.
  20. ^Персидский поход Петра Великого: Низовой корпус на берегах Каспия (1722–1735) / И. В. Курукин; Науч. ред. к.и.н. Т. А. Коняшкина; МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова, Институт стран Азии и Африки. – М.: Квадрига, Объединенная редакция МВД России, 2010
  21. ^A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East, Vol. II, ed. Spencer C. Tucker, (ABC-CLIO, 2010), 729.
  22. ^Langaroudi, EIr; Langaroudi, R. Rezazadeh (2009). "GĪLĀN vi. History in the 18th century".Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. X, Fasc. 6. pp. 642–645.
  23. ^Allen, W.E.D. (1950). "Two Georgian Maps of the First Half of the Eighteenth Century".Imago Mundi, Vol. 10: 99.

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