Categories: Humanitarian

The ‘Great Calamity’ Armenian Genocide – 1915-1918

The Armenians have inhabited the Caucusus, between Russia and eastern Turkey, since time immemorial. They were among the earliest Christian converts and clung zealously to their faith after the rise of Islam in the 7th century.

War between Turkey and Russia resulted in the division of Armenia, with the eastern part under Russian control and the west governed by Turkey. When a surge of Armenian nationalism began to threaten this rather shaky status quo, Russia responded by clamping down on the intelligentsia, and confiscating Armenian Church property. The Turks were more overt in their repression – they carried out several massacres between 1894 and 1896. At the outbreak of World War I, eastern border, Turkey decided it was time to settle the problem of Armenia once and for all, by the simple expedient extermination under the guise of relocating all 1.75 million inhabitants.

The plan was carried out systematically through a series of official emergency measures, under cover of the war. Armenian community leaders and intellectuals were arrested on April 241915, then all males aged 20 to 45 were conscripted to the front line while older men aged up to 60 were put to work on military transport. Finally, the rest of the population were evacuated for ‘security reasons’. In practice, through a system of concentration camps and forced marches, old men, women and children were forcibly driven southwards to the Mesopotamian desert – a journey of one or two months – where, if they had not already died from exhaustion, rape or massacre en route, they were abandoned to die from thirst, starvation and exposure.

In the postwar political repositioning, eastern Armenia was absorbed into the Soviet Union (until the collapse of the USSR in 1990). Turks settled in the western part, and the disappearance of an entire population was simply ignored.

When: April 24 1915-1918

Where: Armenia, Caucasus

Death toll: At least a million.

You should know: The Armenians are one of the world’s most dispersed peoples. Among the Armenian diaspora, the genocide is known as the Great Calamity. More than 20 countries have now formally recognized the mass killings as genocide; the UK and USA are not among them. To this day Turkey denies that a planned ethnic cleansing program ever took place. Instead it continues to claim that around 300 000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were killed in the general turmoil of war, with atrocities and massacres on both sides.

devastating

Share
Published by
devastating

Recent Posts

Famous Last Words: The Chilling Final Moments of Historical Figures

  Overview The final words spoken by an individual offer a unique and powerful window…

3 months ago

First-Hand Accounts: What It Was Like to Live Through the Dust Bowl

Overview The Dust Bowl was a decade-long environmental and economic catastrophe that struck the American…

3 months ago

The Unsolved Mystery of the Titanic’s Sister Ship, the Britannic

Overview In the cold waters of the Aegean Sea rests the world's largest sunken passenger…

3 months ago

The Most Infamous Cults in American History

Overview The term "cult" is one of the most fraught and controversial in modern language.…

3 months ago

7 Celebrities Who Died Tragically Young from Overdoses

Overview The sudden deaths of beloved public figures often serve as stark, public reminders of…

3 months ago

The Chernobyl Disaster: A Look Inside the Exclusion Zone Today

Overview On April 26, 1986, a catastrophic explosion and fire at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power…

3 months ago