The Russo-Turkish War of 1735–1739 between Russia and the Ottoman Empire was caused by the Ottoman Empire's war with Persia and the continuing raids by the Crimean Tatars.[5] The war also represented Russia's ongoing struggle for access to the Black Sea. In 1737, the Habsburg monarchy joined the war on Russia's side, known in historiography as the Austro-Turkish War of 1737–1739.
Russo-Turkish War of 1735–1739 Austro-Turkish War of 1737–1739 | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Russo-Ottoman and Austro-Ottoman war series | |||||||||
| |||||||||
Belligerents | |||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Burkhard Münnich Peter Lacy Ernst Gideon von Laudon |
Mehmed Pasha Ali Pasha Yahya Pasha Claude Alexandre de Bonneval Grigore II Ghica Constantin Mavrocordat | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
100,000–150,000 dead[1]
|
44,427 casualties in battle[4] Total casualties unknown |
Russian diplomacy before the war
editBy the outbreak of the Russo-Turkish War, Russia had successfully secured a favorable international situation. This was achieved through the signing of treaties with the Persian Empire from 1732 to 1735 (which was engaged in a conflict with the Ottoman Empire from 1730 to 1735) and by supporting the accession of Augustus III to the Polish throne in 1735, instead of Stanislaw Leszczynski, who had been nominated by pro-Ottoman France. Austria had been Russia's ally since 1726.
The course of the war in 1735–1738
editThe casus belli was the raids of the Crimean Tatars on the Cossack Hetmanate at the end of 1735 and the Crimean Khan's military campaign in the Caucasus. In 1736, the Russian commanders envisioned the seizure of Azov and the Crimean Peninsula.
In 1735, on the eve of the war, Russia made peace with Persia, returning all the remaining territory conquered during the Russo-Persian War (Treaty of Ganja).[6]
On 20 May 1736, the Russian Dnieper Army (62,000 men), under the command of Field Marshal Burkhard Christoph von Münnich, stormed the Crimean fortifications at Perekop and occupied Bakhchysarai on June 17.[7] The Crimean khans failed to defend their territory and repel the invasion. In 1736, 1737, and 1738, Russian expeditionary armies broke through their defensive positions, pushing deep into the Crimean peninsula, driving the Tatar noblemen into the hills and forcing Khan Fetih II Giray to take refuge at sea.[8] They burned Gozlev, Karasubazar, and the khan's palace in the Crimean capital, Bakhchysarai. Additionally, they captured the Ottoman fortress at Azov.[8]
Khans Qaplan I Giray and Fetih II Giray were deposed by the Ottoman sultan Mahmud I for their incompetence.[8] However, the years 1737 to 1739 were notable plague years, and all sides of the conflict were crippled by disease and unsanitary conditions.[9] Despite his success and a string of battlefield victories,[8] the outbreak of an epidemic coupled with shortages[10] forced Münnich to retreat to Ukraine.
On 19 June 1736, the Russian Don Army of 28,000 men, under the command of General Peter Lacy, with support from the Don Flotilla under the command of Vice Admiral Peter Bredahl, seized the fortress of Azov.[7] The Crimean campaign of 1736 ended with Russian withdrawal into Ukraine, resulting in an estimated 30,000 lives lost. Only 2,000 of these losses were related to war, while the rest were due to disease, hunger, and famine. In July 1737, Münnich's army stormed the Turkish fortress of Ochakov. Lacy's army, already 40,000 men strong, marched into Crimea the same month and captured Karasubazar (see Lacy's campaign to Crimea). However, Lacy and his troops had to leave Crimea due to a lack of supplies.[11]
In July 1737, the Habsburg monarchy entered the war against the Ottoman Empire but was defeated several times, including in the Battle of Banja Luka on 4 August 1737,[12][13] the Battle of Grocka on 18, 21–22 July 1739,[14] and then lost Belgrade after an Ottoman siege from 18 July to September 1739. In August, Russia, Austria, and the Ottoman Empire began negotiations in Nemirov, which would turn out to be fruitless. There were no significant military operations in 1738. The Russian Army had to leave Ochakov and Kinburn due to a plague outbreak.
According to an Ottoman Muslim account of the war translated into English by C. Fraser, Bosnian Muslim women fought in battles, having "acquired the courage of heroes" against the Austrian Germans at the siege of Osterwitch-atyk (Östroviç-i âtık) fortress.[15][16] Women also fought in the defense of the fortresses of Būzin (Büzin) and Chetin (Çetin).[17] Their bravery was also described in a French account.[18] Yeni Pazar, Izvornik, Gradişka, and Banaluka were also struck by the Austrians.[19]
The final stage of the war
editIn 1739, the Russian army, commanded by Field Marshal Münnich, crossed the Dnieper, defeated the Turks at Stavuchany and occupied the fortresses of Khotyn (August 19) and Iaşi. However, Austria was defeated by the Turks at Grocka (21-22 July) and signed a preliminary peace agreement with the Ottomans on 1 September, followed by the final Austro-Ottoman treaty of Belgrade on 18 September.[20][21] This, coupled with the imminent threat of a Swedish invasion,[22] and Ottoman alliances with Prussia, Poland, and Sweden,[23] forced Russia to accept French mediation, that resulted with conclusion of Russo-Ottoman preliminary peace agreement that was also signed on 18 September in Belgrade, and then finalized by the Treaty of Niš on 3 October, thus ending the Russo-Ottoman war.[24] The peace treaty granted Azov to Russia and consolidated Russia's control over the Zaporizhia[25] in exchange for Russia abandoning its claims to Crimea and Moldova.[26] The Russian campaign ended indecisively for both sides; neither the Russians nor the Ottomans fulfilled their goals.[27][28] However, there are also sources that claim an Ottoman victory[29] or a Russian victory in the war.[30]
For Austria, the war proved a stunning defeat. The Russian forces were much more successful on the field, but they lost tens of thousands to disease.[31] The Russians had access to the Black Sea[32] but were not allowed to maintain any fleet in the Azov and Black Sea.[33][34]
Military details
editThis section summarizes Davies and Amin in sources.
Geography
editThe Ottoman Empire held forts along the north shore of the Black Sea and on the eastern side of the Balkans. Azov kept the Don Cossacks out of the Sea of Azov. Kaffa dominated the Crimean Khanate. Or Kapi, behind the Perekop trenches, guarded the entrance to Crimea. Ochakov, at the mouth of the Dnieper, kept the Dnieper Cossacks out of the Black Sea. Khotyn, on the upper Dniester, watched the Polish Commonwealth. The Turkish border was close to the current Ukrainian border along the Dniester. Polish claims extended to the Dnieper, except for Kiev. Russia had a very vague border about 100 or more miles south of the current border. The semi-independent Zaporozhian Cossacks were along the Dnieper bend. The Crimean Khanate and its Nogai steppe allies raided Poland and Russia and sold the captives to the Turks at Kaffa.
Before 1735
editIn 1722, Russia and Turkey took advantage of Persian weakness to capture the northwest part of the Persian Empire. Russia took the west side of the Caspian and the Ottomans got as far as Tabriz. Nader Shah slowly restored Persian power. By 1734, Persia was reconquering its land south of the Caucasus, and it was clear that Russia could not hold its gains. In 1733 or 1734, the Turks ordered Crimea to send a force across the north Caucasus to attack the Persians. Eropkin on the Terek river tried to stop them and lost 55 men. The army went down the west shore of the Caspian as far as the Samur River, where it was recalled by Turkey for unexplained reasons.
1735: War starts
editIn 1735, the Crimean khan led 80,000 men across the North Caucasus and south to Derbent. By the end of 1735, he received news of Leontev’s raid on Crimea and decided to turn back. During his return journey, he spent time foraging in Kabardia and eventually reached Crimea in the spring of 1736.[35] Crimean interference in the Caucasus served as one pretext for the war.
In March 1735, through the Treaty of Ganja, Russia returned its territorial gains to Persia and forged an alliance with Persia against Turkey. With Crimean troops absent from the peninsula and the Turks engaged with Persia, Russia seized the opportunity for a surprise attack. General Münnich moved south and discovered that his army would not be ready until the following year. In order not to waste that year's campaigning season, he dispatched Leontev on a raid.
1735: Leontev's raid Leontev set off on 1 October 1735, far too late in the season. He started near the Samara River and marched south, east of the Dnieper bend. At Konska Voda, he killed about 1,000 Nogais and stole their livestock. He turned west with the river, and on 16 October, reached the Russian fort of Kamenny Zaton, about 10 days' march from Perekop. Here, he turned back because of the cold and the loss of 3,000 horses. The next day, a snowstorm killed another 1,000 horses. By late November, he was back where he started, having lost 9,000 of his 40,000 men and about 9,000 horses.
1736: 1st Crimea, Azov, Kinburn
edit1736: Azov captured: Around 30 March 1736, Münnich and 5,000 men besieged Azov. Additional soldiers arrived, and on 7 April, Münnich left to join the main force on the Dnieper. In May Peter Lacy took over and on 26 June the Turks surrendered on condition of safe passage. Lacy set off for Crimea, but turned back when he heard of Münnich's withdrawal.
1736: First Russian invasion of Crimea: In mid-April, Münnich set off south with 54,000 men and 8,000 or 9,000 carts, following Leontiev’s route east of the Dnieper bend. On 4 May, the Tatars were defeated at the Bela Zirka river near Kamenny Zaton and withdrew to Perekop. By 19 May, Russia had 30,000 troops facing Perekop. On 20 May, the wall was breached, and on 22 May, the 2,254 Turks in the Or Qapi fort surrendered on parole.
Russia now entered Crimea for the first time. On 5 June, they raided Gozleve for supplies. On 17 June,[36] they captured Bakhchisarai. The khan’s palace was burned, either accidentally or deliberately. On 23 June, they burned the kalga’s seat at Ak Mechet. Most of the Crimean army had scattered to the hills, while the Turks withdrew to Kaffa. Münnich hoped to capture Kaffa before the Turks could send reinforcements, but on 25 June, he decided to withdraw. Dysentery had first been noted on 7 June. Soon, a third of the army was sick, and many of the rest weakened. There was not enough food, fresh water, or fodder to support his army. By 18 July, they were back on the Samara river. Half of the army had been lost, 2,000 in fighting, and the rest from disease. Because of the invasion, Crimean khan Qaplan I Giray was replaced by Fetih II Giray.
1736: Kinburn captured: After Perekop was captured, Leontev and 13,000 men were sent west to capture the fort on the Kinburn Peninsula, south of Ochakov. The garrison was allowed to abandon the fort and cross to Ochakov on the opposite bank.[37] 250 Russian prisoners were freed there.
1737: 2nd Crimea, Ochakov
editOn 9 January 1737, Austria joined the war drawing Turkish troops away from the Black Sea. The Turko-Persian conflict had ended in September 1736, but it took time to move Turkish troops west. The plan for 1737 involved one army capturing the Turkish fort of Ochakov at the mouth of the Dnieper-Bug estuary, while a second army invaded Crimea.
1737:Capture of Ochakov: In early April, Münnich left the Kiev area with about 70,000 men. On 30 June, they reached Ochakov, which now had 20,000 defenders. Fighting began the next day, and on 3 July, heated shot set the town on fire. The fire spread to the powder magazine, which blew up, killing thousands of Turks. This caused the Turks to surrender the same day.
Münnich left 8,000 men to hold the fort and returned with the rest of the army to Poltava. In October, the Ottomans tried to retake the fort under the direct orders of Sultan Mahmut I. All of their attempts failed, and on 30 October, they withdrew. (Next spring, the plague appeared in the fort and was reported in Moldavia, Wallachia, Poland, and Zaporozhia. It increased, and in September 1738, Ochakov and Kinburn were evacuated to escape the plague because the weakened troops would not be able to resist if the Turks came back.)
1737: Second invasion of Crimea: The goal was to prevent the Crimeans from supporting Ochakov, damage Crimea as much as possible, and capture the Turkish fort of Kaffa if possible. On 3 May 1737, Peter Lacy set out from the Mius River near Taganrog, about 50 km west of Azov. Around 320 small boats with supplies and Don Cossacks followed along the coast. On 23 May, the two forces joined at what is now Mariupol, about 100 km further west. On 28 June, a Turkish fleet caught the Azov flotilla near Henichesk. After two gun duels, they were driven off (1 July). Soon after, a storm destroyed most of the flotilla along with its food and ammunition.
Instead of attacking the 60,000 Tatars waiting at Perekop, Lacy built a pontoon bridge out of water casks and crossed the Henichesk Strait onto the Arabat Spit, starting on 2 July. Khan Fetih headed south toward the far end of the spit, but Lacy again outflanked him by crossing to the mainland near the Salhyr River, causing the Crimeans to disperse. Lacy went southwest, and on 14 July, he burned Karasubazar. Three days later, he chose to withdraw.[38] He had lost most of his supplies with the flotilla; the Tatars were regrouping, there was not enough fresh water and fodder, and sickness was starting to appear. On 23 July, he crossed the Henichesk Strait, and a month later reached "Molochnye Vody".[39] Because of the invasion, the Turks replaced Khan Fetih II with Meñli II Giray.
1738: 3rd Crimea, western campaign
editPlanning started in November 1737. The goal for 1738 was to tie down the Crimeans while Münnich attacked along the Dniester in support of the Austrians.
1738: Third invasion of Crimea: Peter Lacy started from Vol'chye Vody (location?) with an army about the same size as the previous year. On 19 May, he met the supply fleet at what is now Berdiansk on the Azov coast (see Azov fleet below). Lacy learned that Mengli and 30,000 men were waiting behind Perekop, and that Turkish troops had garrisoned Or Kapi. They rested at Molochnye Vody. Instead of attacking Perekop, Lacy chose to cross the Syvash by wading at low tide, possibly near the Chongar Strait. They turned west and got between Perekop and the khan’s army. They blasted Or Kapi with mortars,[40] which surrendered around the beginning of July. They turned south, but on 6 July, they decided to go home. There was little food or fodder because the Crimean interior had been trashed the previous year, supplies with the Azov fleet had been lost (see Azov fleet below), and disease was beginning to appear. They stopped a Tatar attack on 9 July, rested at Perekop for a month, ruined Perekop as much as they could, and returned to Molochnye Vody.
Azov fleet: Peter Bredal with a rebuilt Azov fleet, supplies, and 4,000 Don Cossacks, met Lacy’s army on 19 May. On 23 May, more Don Cossacks arrived with their own boats. On 25 May, Bredal was caught by a much larger Turkish fleet and blockaded at ‘Cape Vissarion’ (location?). The blockade was broken when the Turks unwisely pursued three escaping sloops. On 6 June, they were again caught at ‘Cape Fedotov’, probably on the long sand spit just east of Henichesk Strait. They hauled their boats across the sand spit and reassembled near Henichesk, where they were again caught on 16 June. They landed their guns, built a shore battery, and burned their boats. There was a two-day artillery duel, but the Turks chose not to land, perhaps because they lacked marines. The loss of the supply fleet forced Lacy to withdraw from Crimea.
1738: Western campaign: The goal was for Münnich to lead the main army to the Dniester and attack the border forts at either Khotin or Bender. On 17 April, he crossed the Dnieper south of Poltava, and in late June, he crossed the Bug. He reached the Dniester, but on 6 August, he abandoned the campaign because of Turkish resistance and reports of plague west of the river.
1739: 4th Crimea fails, western campaign, war ends
edit1739: Failed invasion of Crimea: Levashev was supposed to march from Azov, but an epidemic forced him to halt at the Miuss River. He later returned to Azov because a fire had destroyed the Azov arsenal and granary. Bredal could not sail from Azov due to disease and a shortage of ships. Lacy left Izium on 10 May. His force was weakened because much had been transferred to the western campaign. In July, he learned that the Turks had sent troops and a fleet, and that Levashev had turned back. He marched toward Perekop, saw that there was no hope, and returned to the Ukrainian line, which he reached on 24 August.
1739: Western campaign: Münnich planned to capture Khotin to take pressure off the Austrians, who were doing poorly. He left Kiev in late April, crossing Polish territory because the land was better and the Poles were too weak to interfere. He won the Battle of Stavuchany in August, took Khotin, and marched south to Jassy. There he learned that Austria had signed a separate peace, which made his position untenable. On 23 September, he was ordered to return to Russian territory.
1739: Treaties: The war was ended by the Treaty of Belgrade with Austria in September and the Treaty of Niš (1739) with Russia in October. All three parties wanted out because the war as it was costing more than anything they might gain. Russia was also worried about the looming Russo-Swedish War (1741–1743). Russia kept nothing more than a demilitarized Azov and Zaporozhye, but it had demonstrated that it could reach Moldavia and was now a serious threat to Crimea. In the next war, Russia took Crimea and briefly occupied Bucharest.
Note on the Austro-Turkish war
editAustria hoped to gain land in the Balkans while the Turks were tied down with Russia. The border was then about 100 km south of Belgrade in land gained in 1717. In 1737, Austria went south, captured Niš but soon gave it up. In 1738, the Turks advanced and took places in central Serbia and on the Danube. In 1739, Austria crossed the Danube, fought a battle at Grocka, and fell back to the Danube. Belgrade was under siege by the Turks when talks began. Austria gave up Belgrade with central Serbia, south of the Danube, and also western Wallachia, which was perhaps more than the military situation required. The war was poorly managed. The next year, the War of the Austrian Succession began.[41]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ William C. Fuller & Jr.، William C. Fuller, Strategy and Power in Russia 1600–1914. [1]
- ^ Kernosovsky 1938, p. 42.
- ^ Clodfelter, M. (2008). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (3rd ed.). McFarland. p. 96.
- ^ Approximate losses that do not take into account losses from exhaustion and disease during the maneuvering of troops, as well as do not take into account the front with the Austrians. If all of the above factors are added up, the losses are greater. The losses comprise: Battle of Azov (2,427), First Siege of Ochakov (17,000), ru:Second Siege of Ochakov (10,000), Battle of Stavuchany (15,000).
- ^ Stone 2006, p. 64.
- ^ Mikaberidze 2011a, p. 329.
- ^ a b Tucker 2010, p. 732.
- ^ a b c d Davies L. B. The Russo-Turkish War, 1768–1774: Catherine II and the Ottoman Empire. 2016
- ^ The Seven Years' War: Global Views. Brill. 2012. p. 184
- ^ Stone D. R. A Military History of Russia: From Ivan the Terrible to the War in Chechnya. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2006. p. 66
- ^ Aksan 2007, p. 103.
- ^ Aksan 2007, p. 110–111.
- ^ Shapira 2011, pp. 136–137.
- ^ Aksan 2007, p. 115.
- ^ Oriental Translation Fund (1830). Publications. Royal Asiatic Society. pp. 17–.
- ^ Michael Robert Hickok (1995). Looking for the Doctor's Son: Ottoman Administration of 18th Century Bosnia. University of Michigan. p. 34.
- ^ Michael Robert Hickok (1997). Ottoman Military Administration in Eighteenth-Century Bosnia. Brill. pp. 15–. ISBN 90-04-10689-8.
- ^ Roider 1972b, p. 195–207.
- ^ Mikaberidze 2011a, p. 210.
- ^ Grinevetsky S., Zonn I., Zhiltsov S., Kosarev A., Kostianoy A. The Black Sea Encyclopedia. Springer. 2014. p. 661
- ^ Somel S. Historical Dictionary of the Ottoman Empire. Scarecrow Press. 2003. p. 169
- ^ Mikaberidze 2011b, p. 647.
- ^ Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Volume 4. 1993. p. 476
- ^ Erhan Afyoncu, A Short History of the Ottoman Empire (Yeditepe Yayınevi).[2]
- ^ Егоршина 2023, p. 94.
- ^ Петрухинцев Н.Н. Война с пространством / / С. 66.
- ^ Wang, Kevin; Ray, James Lee (1994). "Beginners and Winners: The Fate of Initiators of Interstate Wars Involving Great Powers Since 1495". International Studies Quarterly. 38 (1): 139–154. doi:10.2307/2600875. JSTOR 2600875.
- ^ Nelipovich 2010, p. 270.
- ^ Black. J. European Warfare, 1660–1815. Routledge. 2002
- ^ Русско-турецкие войны С : [арх. L 29 ноября 20221 // Румыния - Сен-Жан-де-Люз. - М. : Большая российская энциклопедия, 2015. - С. 88-92. — (Большая российская энциклопедия : [в 35 т.] / гл. ред. Ю. С. Осипов ;
- ^ Shapira 2011, pp. 138.
- ^ Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Volume 4. 1993. p. 476
- ^ The sources used for these two campaigns, Davies, Howorth and Smirnov, are vague and somewhat contradictory
- ^ Amin,p. 40, Davies, p. 198 has 11 Jun for the 'date they marched on Bakhchisarai'
- ^ Davies, pp. 196–197 has the Russians reach Perekop on 22 May and capture Kinburn on 29 May. Possibly a misprinted date.
- ^ Amin, p. 74 has the withdrawal decision on 27 July, probably using new style dates. Davies' dates used in this article appear to be old style.
- ^ Davies, p. 213, following Baiov. This sounds like the Molochna river, probably the southernmost crossing point near Melitopol. The place is 150km northeast of Perekop, not in Russian territory but directly south of the Dnieper bend. A rather inaccurate eighteenth map above in this article has a 'Molotzna R.' at the Molochna and a longer 'Molotznie Wodi' with a mouth near Perekop, something that cannot be found on modern maps.
- ^ Davies does not explain how they moved mortars across a mudflat
- ^ From Hochedlinger, Austria's Wars of Emergence,2003,pp. 212–218, Roider, Austria's Eastern Question, 1982, pp. 71–90. and DE:Russisch-Österreichischer Türkenkrieg (1736–1739)
Sources
edit- Aksan, Virginia H. (2007). Ottoman Wars, 1700-1870: An Empire Besieged. Routledge.
- Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
- Davies, Brian (2011). Empire and Military Revolution in Eastern Europe: Russia's Turkish Wars in the Eighteenth Century. London & New York: Bloomsbury Publishing.
- Егоршина, Петрова (2023). История русской армии [The history of the Russian Army] (in Russian). Moscow: Edition of the Russian Imperial Library. ISBN 978-5-699-42397-2.
- Hochedlinger, Michael (2013). Austria's Wars of Emergence: War, State and Society in the Habsburg Monarchy, 1683–1797. London & New York: Routledge.
- Kernosovsky, Anton (1938). История русской армии [History of the Russian army].
- Mikaberidze, Alexander, ed. (2011a). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO.
- Mikaberidze, Alexander, ed. (2011b). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO.
- Nelipovich, Sergei (2010). Союз двуглавых Орлов: русско-австрийский военный альянс в XVIII веке [The Union of Double-headed Eagles: the Russian-Austrian military Alliance in the XVIII century] (in Russian). Moscow: Квадрига. ISBN 978-5-91791-045-1.
- Riasanovsky, Nicholas; Steinberg, Mark (2010). The History of Russia. Oxford University Press.
- Roider, Karl A. (1972a). The Reluctant Ally: Austria's Policy in the Austro-Turkish War, 1737–1739. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
- Roider, Karl A. (1972b). "The Perils of Eighteenth-Century Peacemaking: Austria and the Treaty of Belgrade, 1739". Central European History. 5 (3): 195–207.
- Shapira, Dan D. Y. (2011). "The Crimean Tatars and the Austro-Ottoman Wars". The Peace of Passarowitz, 1718. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press. pp. 131–140.
- Stone, David R. (2006). A Military History of Russia: From Ivan the Terrible to the War in Chechnya. Greenwood Publishing Group.
- Tucker, Spencer C. (2010). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East, Vol. II. ABC-CLIO.