A 1918 map of theCaucasus by theBritish Army. The highlighted sections show the successor states of the TDFR, which claimed roughly the same territory.[1]
TheTranscaucasian Democratic Federative Republic (TDFR;[a] 22 April – 28 May 1918)[b] was a short-livedstate in theCaucasus that included most of the territory of the present-dayArmenia,Azerbaijan andGeorgia, as well as parts of Russia and Turkey. The state lasted only for a month beforeGeorgia declared independence, followed shortly after byArmenia andAzerbaijan.
The region that formed the TDFR had been part of theRussian Empire. As the empire dissolved during the 1917February Revolution and aprovisional government took over, a similar body, called theSpecial Transcaucasian Committee (Ozakom), did the same in the Caucasus. After theOctober Revolution and rise of theBolsheviks in Russia, theTranscaucasian Commissariat replaced the Ozakom. In March 1918, as theFirst World War continued, the Commissariat initiated peace talks with theOttoman Empire, which hadinvaded the region, but the talks broke down quickly as the Ottomans refused to accept the authority of the Commissariat. TheTreaty of Brest-Litovsk, which ended Russia's involvement in the war, conceded parts of the Transcaucasus to the Ottoman Empire, which pursued its invasion to take control of the territory. Faced with this imminent threat, on 22 April 1918 the Commissariat dissolved itself and established the TDFR as an independent state. A legislature, the Seim, was formed to direct negotiations with the Ottoman Empire, which had immediately recognized the state.
Diverging goals of the three major groups (Armenians,Azerbaijanis,[c] andGeorgians) quickly jeopardized the TDFR's existence. Peace talks again broke down and, facing a renewed Ottoman offensive in May 1918, Georgian delegates in the Seim announced that the TDFR was unable to continue, and declared theDemocratic Republic of Georgia independent on 26 May. With the Georgians no longer part of the TDFR, theRepublic of Armenia andAzerbaijan Democratic Republic each declared themselves independent on 28 May, ending the federation. Owing to its short existence, the TDFR has been largely ignored in the national historiographies of the region and has been given consideration only as the first stage towards independent states.
Most of the South Caucasus had beenabsorbed by theRussian Empire in the first half of the nineteenth century.[8] ACaucasian Viceroyalty had originally been established in 1801 to allow for direct Russian rule, and over the next several decades local autonomy was reduced and Russian control was further consolidated, the Viceroyalty gaining greater power in 1845.[9]Tiflis (now Tbilisi), which had been the capital of the GeorgianKingdom of Kartli-Kakheti, became the seat of the viceroy and thede facto capital of the region.[10] The South Caucasus was overwhelmingly rural: aside from Tiflis the only other city of significance wasBaku,[d][11] which grew in the late nineteenth century as the region began exporting oil and became a major economic hub.[12] Ethnically the region was highly diverse. The three major local groups were Armenians, Azerbaijanis, and Georgians; Russians had also established themselves after the Russian Empire absorbed the area.[13]
With the outbreak of theFirst World War in 1914, the Caucasus became a majortheatre, the Russian andOttoman Empires fighting each other in the region.[14] The Russians won several battles and penetrated deep into Ottoman territory. However, they were concerned that the local population, who were mostlyMuslims, would continue to follow the OttomanSultan Mehmed V and disrupt the Russian forces, as he was also thecaliph, the spiritual leader of Islam.[15] Both sides also wanted to use the Armenian population, who lived across the border, to their advantage and foment uprisings.[16] After military defeats, the Ottoman government turned against the Armenians, and initiated agenocide by 1915, in which around 1 million Armenians were killed.[17][18]
The 1917February Revolution saw the demise of the Russian Empire and the establishment of aprovisional government in Russia. The Viceroy of the Caucasus,Grand Duke Nicholas, initially expressed his support for the new government, yet he was forced to resign his post as imperial power eroded.[19] The provisional government created a new temporary authority, theSpecial Transcaucasian Committee (known by its Russian abbreviation, Ozakom[e]) on 22 March 1917 [O.S. 9 March]. It was composed of Caucasian representatives to theDuma (Russian legislature) and other local leaders, it was meant to serve as a "collective viceroyalty", and had representatives from the ethnic groups of the region.[21][22] Much like inPetrograd,[f] adual power system was established, the Ozakom competing withsoviets.[g][24] With little support from the government in Petrograd, the Ozakom had trouble establishing its authority over the soviets, most prominently the Tiflis Soviet.[25]
News of theOctober Revolution, which brought theBolsheviks to power in Petrograd on 7 November 1917 [O.S. 25 October], reached the Caucasus the following day. The Tiflis Soviet met and declared their opposition to the Bolsheviks. Three days later the idea of an autonomous local government was first expressed byNoe Jordania, aGeorgian Menshevik, who argued that the Bolshevik seizure of power was illegal and that the Caucasus should not follow their directives, and wait until order was restored.[26] A further meeting of representatives from the Tiflis Soviet, the Ozakom, and other groups on 28 November [O.S. 15 November] decided to end the Ozakom and replace it with a new body, theTranscaucasian Commissariat, which would not be subservient to the Bolsheviks. Composed of representatives from the four major ethnic groups in the region (Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Georgians, and Russians) it replaced the Ozakom as the government of the South Caucasus, and was set to serve in that role until theRussian Constituent Assembly could meet in January 1918.Evgeni Gegechkori, a Georgian, was named the president and Commissar of External Affairs of the Commissariat.[27] The other commissariats were split between Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Georgians, and Russians.[28] Formed with the express purpose of being a caretaker government, the Commissariat was not able to govern strongly: it was dependent on national councils, formed around the same time and based on ethnic lines, for military support and was effectively powerless to enforce any laws it passed.[29]
With Russian and Ottoman forces still nominally engaged in the region, a temporary ceasefire, theArmistice of Erzincan, was signed on 18 December 1917 [O.S. 5 December].[30] With the fighting paused, on 16 January 1918 [O.S. 3 January], Ottoman diplomats invited the Commissariat to join the peace talks inBrest-Litovsk, where the Bolsheviks were negotiating an end to the war with theCentral Powers. As the Commissariat did not want to act independently of Russia, they did not answer the invitation and thus did not participate in the peace talks there.[31] Two days later, on 18 January [O.S. 5 January], the Constituent Assembly had its first and only meeting, broken up by the Bolsheviks, thereby effectively consolidating their power in Russia.[32] This confirmed for the Commissariat that they would not be able to work with the Bolsheviks in any serious capacity, and so they began to form a more formal government.[33] The ceasefire between the Ottoman Empire and the Commissariat lasted until 30 January [O.S. 17 January], when the Ottoman army launched a new offensive into the Caucasus, claiming it was to retaliate against sporadic attacks by Armenian militias on the Muslim population in occupied Ottoman territory.[34] With Russian forces largely withdrawn from the front, the Commissariat realized that they would not be able to resist a full-scale advance by the Ottoman forces, and so on 23 February agreed to start a new round of peace talks.[30]
The idea to establish a Transcaucasian legislative body had been discussed since November 1917, though it had not been acted on at that time.[35] With the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly in January, it became apparent to the leaders of the Commissariat that ties with Russia had been all but severed. With no desire to follow the lead of the Bolsheviks, the Commissariat agreed to establish their own legislative body so that the Transcaucasus could have a legitimate government and negotiate with the Ottoman Empire more properly. Thus on 23 February they established the "Seim" ("legislature") in Tiflis.[36]
No election was held for the deputies; instead, the results for the Constituent Assembly election were used, the electoral threshold being lowered to one-third of that used for the Constituent Assembly to allow more members to join, which allowed smaller parties to be represented.[h][37]Nikolai Chkheidze, a Georgian Menshevik, was named the chairman.[38] Ultimately the Seim comprised ten different parties. Three dominated, each representing one major ethnic group: the Georgian Mensheviks and AzerbaijaniMusavat party each had 30 members, and theArmenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) had 27 members.[37] The Bolsheviks boycotted the Seim, asserting that the only legitimate government for Russia (including Transcaucasia) was the Bolshevik-controlledCouncil of People's Commissars (known by its Russian acronym, Sovnarkom).[i][36]
From the outset, the Seim faced challenges to its authority. With a diverse ethnic and political makeup and no clear status to its authority, there was conflict both within its chambers and outside.[39] It was largely dependent on national councils, represented by the three main ethnic groups, and was unable to proceed without their consent.[1] Thus the Ottoman offer to renew peace talks and a willingness to meet in Tiflis, where the Seim was based, was refused, as the Seim felt it would only showcase the internal disagreements taking place. Instead they agreed to travel toTrabzon, in northeastAnatolia.[40]
A delegation representing the Seim was scheduled to depart for Trabzon on 2 March, but that day it was announced that the peace talks at Brest-Litovsk had concluded, and the Russians would sign a peace treaty.[41] Contained within theTreaty of Brest-Litovsk was the agreement that the Russians would give up large swaths of land to the Ottoman Empire, including major regions in the Transcaucasus: the territories ofArdahan,Batum Oblast, andKars Oblast, all of which had been annexed by Russia after theRusso-Turkish War of 1877–1878.[42] With this sudden development, the delegation postponed leaving as they had to reconsider their stance.[43] As the Transcaucasus had not been part of the negotiations at Brest-Litovsk, they sent messages to several governments around the world, stating as they were not a party in the peace talks they would not honor the treaty and would not evacuate the territories.[44] The delegation would finally depart on 7 March and arrive at Trabzon the next day.[45] On arrival, the delegation, comprising ten delegates and another fifty guards, was held up as the guards were asked to disarm. The unusually large delegation was made up of individuals selected to represent the diverse ethnic groups and political factions that composed the Seim;[46] on their arrival an Ottoman official quipped that "[i]f this was the entire population of Transcaucasia, it was indeed very small; if, however, it was only a delegation, it was much too large."[44]
While the delegates waited for the conference in Trabzon to begin, the head of theOttoman Third Army,Vehib Pasha, sent a request on 10 March toEvgeny Lebedinskii [ru], a former Russian general who had begun to follow orders from the Commissariat, to evacuate the Ardahan, Batum, and Kars areas, as stipulated by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. Vehib also toldIlia Odishelidze, who was also taking orders from the Commissariat, that in light of attacks by Armenian forces on the population nearErzurum, Ottoman forces would have to advance to keep the peace, warning that any hostile reply would be met with force. These requests were replied to directly by Chkheidze as Chairman of the Seim, who noted that the Transcaucasus had sent a delegation to Trabzon to negotiate peace, and that as the Seim no longer recognized Russian authority they would not acknowledge the provisions of Brest-Litovsk.[47][48] On 11 March the Ottoman army began their attack on Erzurum and with little hope for success, the mostly Armenian defenders evacuated less than twenty-four hours later.[49]
TheTrabzon Peace Conference opened on 14 March. At the first session, the lead Ottoman delegate,Rauf Bey, asked the Transcaucasian delegation whom they represented.Akaki Chkhenkeli, the head of the Transcaucasian delegation, was unable to give a proper response as it was not clear to him or his associates who they represented. When the question was repeated two days later, Rauf also asked Chkhenkeli to clarify the make-up of their state, to determine if it qualified as one underinternational law. Chkhenkeli clarified that since the October Revolution, the central authority had ceased to exist in Transcaucasia. An independent government had been formed and that since it had acted like a state when it discussed the invitation to the Brest-Litovsk peace talks, it qualified as a sovereign state, even if independence had not been explicitly proclaimed.[50] Rauf refuted the argument, asserting that the Sovnarkom had authority over all of Russia and even though Ottoman representatives had sent messages to the Commissariat to join the talks at Brest-Litovsk, that did not confer recognition. Finally, Rauf stated that the Ottoman delegation was at Trabzon only to resolve some economic and commercial issues that had not been settled at Brest-Litovsk. Chkhenkeli and his fellow delegates had little option but to request a short recess so they could message the Seim and determine how to proceed.[51]
During the recess at Trabzon, the Ottoman forces continued their advance into the Transcaucasian territory, crossing the 1914 border with the Russian Empire by the end of March.[52] The Seim debated the best course of action; a majority of the delegates favored a political solution. On 20 March the Ottoman delegates offered that the Seim could only return to negotiations if they declared independence, thereby confirming that Transcaucasus was no longer part of Russia.[53] The idea of independence had arisen before, the Georgians having discussed it in depth in preceding years; it was decided against as the Georgian leadership felt the Russians would not approve it and the Menshevik political ideology leaned away from nationalism.[54]
By 5 April, Chkhenkeli accepted the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk as a basis for further negotiations and urged the Transcaucasian Seim to accept this position.[55] He initially asked that Batum remain part of the Transcaucasus, arguing that as the major port in the region it was an economic necessity. The Ottomans refused the proposal, making it clear that they would only accept the terms of Brest-Litovsk, to which Chkhenkeli conceded.[56] Acting on his own accord, on 9 April Chkhenkeli agreed to negotiate further based on the terms set out, though requested that representatives from the other Central Powers participate in the talks. Rauf replied that such a request could only be considered if the Transcaucasus were an independent state.[57]
Tired of fruitless negotiations and realizing that the contested territories could be occupied by force, Ottoman officials issued an ultimatum to the defenders in Batum, ordering it evacuated by 13 April.[58] While Chkhenkeli was receptive to the loss of Batum, recognizing its importance but accepting that it was part of the terms at Brest-Litovsk, the Georgian members of the Seim were adamant about keeping the city, Gegechkori noting that it could be defended quite easily.[57][59]Irakli Tsereteli, a Georgian Menshevik, gave an impassioned speech calling for the defense of the city and asked the Seim to denounce the Brest-Litovsk treaty altogether. Armenian delegates had long been in support of fighting the Ottoman Empire, a response to the 1915 genocide and continued attacks on Armenian civilians, while only the Azerbaijanis resisted going to war, as they were reluctant to fight fellow Muslims.[60] Azerbaijanis were outvoted and on 14 April the Seim declared war on the Ottoman Empire.[61][62] Immediately after the voting finished, Tsereteli and Jordania left to join the defense of Batum, while the delegation in Trabzon was ordered to return to Tiflis immediately.[63] Some Azerbaijani delegates defied this order and remained there, seeking potential negotiation, though nothing came of this.[64]
The military superiority of the Ottoman forces became apparent right away.[65] They occupied Batum on 14 April, with little resistance. They also attacked Kars, but a force of 3,000 Armenian soldiers, with artillery support, held the city until it was evacuated on 25 April.[66] Having captured most of their claimed territory and unwilling to lose more soldiers, the Ottoman delegates offered another truce on 22 April and waited for the Transcaucasians to reply.[67]
In the face of Ottoman military superiority, theGeorgian National Council decided that the only option was for Transcaucasia to declare itself an independent state.[68] The idea was debated in the Seim on 22 April, the Georgians leading the debate, noting that the Ottoman representatives had agreed to resume peace talks provided that the Transcaucasus would meet them as an independent state.[69] The choice to move forward was not unanimous initially: the mostly Armenian Dashnaks felt that the best option at the time was to stop the Ottoman military's advance, though they were reluctant to give up so much territory, while the Musavats, who represented Azerbaijani interests, were still hesitant to fight fellow Muslims, but conceded that independence was the only way to ensure the region would not be divided by foreign states. The only major opposition came from theSocialist Revolutionary Party, when one of their representatives,Lev Tumanov [ru], argued that the people of Transcaucasia did not support such an action. He also argued that while the Musavats claimed their driving force was "conscience not fear", it was in reality "fear and not conscience". He concluded that they would all regret this act.[70]
When the debate finished,Davit Oniashvili, an ethnic Georgian Menshevik, proposed the motion for the Seim "to proclaim Transcaucasia an independent democratic federative republic".[71] Some deputies left the chamber as they did not want to vote in favor of the matter, so the motion passed with few dissents.[72] The new republic, the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic (TDFR), immediately sent a message to Vehib Pasha announcing this development and expressing their will to accept the provisions of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, and surrendered Kars to the Ottoman Empire.[73] The Ottoman Empire recognized the TDFR on 28 April.[74] Despite this recognition, the Ottomans continued their advance into Transcaucasian territory and shortly after occupied bothErzerum[j] and Kars.[76]
Akaki Chkhenkeli served both as prime minister and foreign affairs minister for the republic.
Upon its establishment, the TDFR had no cabinet to lead the new government. The Commissariat had been dissolved when independence was declared, and Gegechkori refused to continue in a leadership position, feeling he had lost support to do so. Though it had been agreed during the Seim debates that Chkhenkeli would take up the role of prime minister, he refused to serve in a caretaker position until a new cabinet could be formed. The cabinet was not finalized until 26 April, so for three days the TDFR effectively had no executive.[72] With pressing needs to attend to, Chkhenkeli took up his role as prime minister. He ordered the Armenian forces to cease fighting and also requested Vehib to meet him for peace negotiations in Batum, the location deliberately chosen so that he could travel to Tiflis if necessary, something that was not possible from Trabzon.[77]
Upset at Chkhenkeli's actions over the previous days, namely the evacuation of Kars, the Dashnaks initially refused to join the cabinet. They negotiated with the Mensheviks but relented when the latter warned they would only support Chkhenkeli orHovhannes Kajaznuni, an Armenian. The Mensheviks knew that electing Kajaznuni would give the perception that the TDFR intended to keep fighting to defend Armenian territory, and it was feared that this would see the Azerbaijanis leave the federation and make it easier for Ottoman forces to threaten the rest of Armenia, a proposition the Dashnaks were not eager to endorse.[78] The cabinet was confirmed by the Seim on 26 April, consisting of thirteen members. Chkhenkeli, aside from being prime minister, assumed foreign minister's office, the remaining positions being split among Armenians (four), Azerbaijanis (five), and Georgians (three).[79] Azerbaijanis and Georgians took up the leading positions in the cabinet, an act that historianFiruz Kazemzadeh said revealed as "the relationship of forces in Transcaucasia" at the time.[74] In his inaugural address to the Seim, Chkhenkeli announced that he would work to ensure all citizens had equality and to establish borders for the TDFR that were based on agreement with their neighbors.[80] He further laid out a platform with five main points: write a constitution; delineate borders; end the war; combat counter-revolution and anarchy; and land reform.[74]
A new peace conference was convened at Batum on 11 May, with both Chkhenkeli and Vehib in attendance.[81] Before the conference, Chkhenkeli repeated his request to have the other Central Powers present, which the Ottoman delegates ignored.[82] Both sides invited observers: the TDFR brought a small German contingent, led by GeneralOtto von Lossow, while the Ottoman delegates had representatives from theMountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus, an unrecognized state they were backing. Chkhenkeli wished to proceed on the basis of the Brest-Litovsk terms, but this was refused by the Ottoman delegation, led byHalil Bey, the Ottoman minister of justice. Halil Bey argued that as the two states were in conflict, the Ottoman would no longer recognize Brest-Litovsk and instead presented Chkhenkeli with a duly prepared draft treaty.[83]
The treaty contained twelve articles which called for the Ottoman Empire to be ceded not only theoblasts ofKars andBatum, but also theuezds ofAkhalkalaki,Akhaltsikhe,Surmalu, and large parts of theAlexandropol,Erivan, andEtchmiadzin, mainly along the course of the Kars–Julfa railway. The territory named would effectively bring all of Armenia into the Ottoman Empire.[84] The railway was desired as the Ottoman forces sought a fast route to North Persia, where they were fighting the British forces in thePersian Campaign, though historianRichard G. Hovannisian has suggested that the real reason was to allow them a means to reach Baku and access the oil production around the city.[85]
Giving the TDFR several days to consider their options, the Ottoman forces resumed their military advances into Armenia on 21 May. They engaged the Armenians at the battles ofBash Abaran,Sardarapat andKara Killisse, but could not defeat the Armenians decisively. As a result, their advance slowed down, and eventually, they were forced to retreat.[86][87]
By 22 May the Ottoman forces, split into two groups, were 40 km (25 mi) fromErevan and 120 km (75 mi) from Tiflis.[88] With this threat, the TDFR reached out to Von Lossow and the Germans in hopes of securing their help and protection. Von Lossow had previously offered to mediate between the TDFR and the Ottoman Empire on 19 May, though this had not led to any progress.[89] While the German and Ottoman Empires were nominally allies, the relationship had deteriorated in the preceding months, as the German public had not approved of reports that the Ottoman government was massacring Christians, nor did the German government appreciate the Ottoman army's advance into territory not agreed to at Brest-Litovsk.[90] The Germans also had their own strategic interests in the Caucasus: they wanted both a potential path to attackBritish India and access to raw materials in the region, both of which could be blocked by the Ottomans.[91]
With the Armenians fighting the Ottoman forces and the Azerbaijanis having their own issues withBolsheviks controlling Baku, the Georgians concluded that they had no future in the TDFR.[92] On 14 May Jordania went to Batum to request German assistance to help secure Georgian independence. He returned to Tiflis on 21 May and expressed confidence that Georgia could become independent.[93] The Armenian, Azerbaijani, and Georgian representatives from the Seim met on 21 May to discuss the future of the TDFR and agreed that it was not likely to last much longer. The next day the Georgians met alone and resolved that independence was their only logical choice.[92] Jordania andZurab Avalishvili drafted adeclaration of independence on 22 May, before Jordania left again for Batum to meet Von Lossow.[94] On 24 May Von Lossow replied that he was only authorized to work with the TDFR as a whole; as it was becoming apparent that it would not last long, he would have to leave Trabzon and consult with his government on how to proceed further.[95]
Irakli Tsereteli gave the final speech of the Seim, calling for the dissolution of the TDFR and the independence of Georgia.
On 26 May Tsereteli gave two speeches in the Seim. In the first, he explained that the TDFR was unable to continue as there was a lack of unity among the people and that ethnic strife led to a division of action in regards to the Ottoman invasion. In his second speech, Tsereteli blamed the Azerbaijanis for failing to support the defense of the TDFR and declared that as the federation had failed it was time for Georgia to proclaim itself independent.[96] At 15:00 the motion was passed: "Because on the questions of war and peace there arose basic differences among the peoples who had created the Transcaucasian Republic, and because it became impossible to establish one authoritative order speaking in the name of all Transcaucasia, the Seim certifies the fact of the dissolution of Transcaucasia and lays down its powers."[97] Most delegates left the chamber, leaving only the Georgians, who were shortly joined by members of the Georgian National Council. Jordania then read the Georgian declaration of independence and proclaimed theDemocratic Republic of Georgia.[98] This was followed two days later with anArmenian declaration of independence, followed quickly byAzerbaijan doing the same, creating theRepublic of Armenia andAzerbaijan Democratic Republic, respectively.[99] All three newly independent states signed a peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire on 4 June, effectively ending that conflict.[100] Armenia then later engaged in brief wars with bothAzerbaijan (1918–1920) andGeorgia (December 1918) to determine its final borders.[101]
As the TDFR lasted only a month, the historical scholarship on the topic is limited.[102] Historians Adrian Brisku and Timothy K. Blauvelt have noted that it "seemed both to the actors at the time and to later scholars of the region to be unique, contingent, and certainly unrepeatable."[103]Stephen F. Jones stated it was "the first and last attempt at an independent Transcaucasian union",[104] while Hovannisian noted that the actions of the TDFR during its short existence demonstrated that it "was not independent, democratic, federative, or a republic".[72]
^Russian:Закавказская демократическая Федеративная Республика (ЗДФР),Zakavkazskaya Demokraticheskaya Federativnaya Respublika (ZDFR).[3]
^Russia and the TDFR used theJulian calendar, which was 13 days behind theGregorian calendar used by most of Europe at that time. Both switched to the Gregorian calendar in early 1918.[4] Both dates are given until February 1918, when Russia changed over, at which point only the Gregorian calendar is used.
^Each deputy to the Constituent Assembly had represented 60,000 people, while this was lowered to 20,000 for the Seim, effectively tripling the number of representatives.[36]
^Russian:Совнарком; short forСовет народных комиссаров,Sovet narodnykh kommissarov.[36]
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