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Battle of Sardarabad

Coordinates: 40°5′37.05″N 43°56′48.13″E / 40.0936250°N 43.9467028°E / 40.0936250; 43.9467028
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40°5′37.05″N 43°56′48.13″E / 40.0936250°N 43.9467028°E / 40.0936250; 43.9467028

Battle of Sardarabad
Part of the Caucasus Campaign

The memorial dedicated to the Armenian victory at the battle of Sardarabad near Araks, Armavir, Armenia
Date21–29 May 1918
Location
near Sardarapat (present-day Nor Armavir, Armenia)
Result

Decisive Armenian victory

Belligerents

Armenian National Council

  • Armenian Army Corps
 Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Daniel Bek-Pirumyan
Movses Silikyan (commander of the Yerevan detachment)
Tovmas Nazarbekian (commander of the Armenian Army Corps)
Aram Manukian (dictator of Yerevan)
Wehib Pasha
Kâzım Karabekir (commander of the I Caucasian Corps)[2][3][4]
Rüştü Bey (commander of the 9th Caucasian Division)[5]
Zihni Bey (commander of the Zihni Bey Detachment)[3][4]
Strength
9,000[n 1] ~10-13,000[n 2] Including Kurdish cavalry 1,500-3000
Casualties and losses
Unknown 3,500 dead alone from May 22 to May 26[6]

The Battle of Sardarabad (Template:Lang-hy, Sardarapati č̣akatamart; Template:Lang-tr)[7] was a battle of the Caucasus Campaign of World War I that took place near Sardarabad, Armenia from May 22–29, 1918, between the regular Armenian military units and militia on one side and the Ottoman army that had invaded Eastern Armenia on the other. Sardarabad was only 40 kilometers west of the city of Yerevan. The battle is currently seen as not only stopping the Ottoman advance into the rest of Armenia, but also preventing complete destruction of the Armenian nation.[8] In the words of Christopher J. Walker, had the Armenians lost this battle, "it is perfectly possible that the word Armenia would have henceforth denoted only an antique geographical term."[9]

Prehistory

The Ottoman army's invasion to Eastern Armenia

Tovmas Nazarbekyan, commander of Armenian Army Corps

After the October Revolution of 1917 in Russia and the ceasefire signed between the Third Army of the Ottoman Empire and the Transcaucasian Commissariat in Erzincan, newly forming Armenian detachments came to replace Russian forces retreating from the Caucasian Front, particularly from the territory of Western Armenia. Taking advantage of the military-political situation of the time, the Ottoman government set its mind on regaining control of territories occupied by the Russian Army during World War I and invade Eastern Armenia and the South Caucasus afterwards.[10] The German government, the Ottoman Empire's ally, objected to this attack and refused to help the Ottoman Army in the operation. The Ottoman Army intended to crush Armenia and seize Russian Transcaucasia and the oil wells of Baku.

Launching an assault in February 1918, the Third Army of the Ottoman Empire occupies Western Armenian settlements one after another. Following the failure of Trabzon peace talks in April, Third Army commander Mehmed Wehib Pasha moved his forces towards Transcaucasia. Taking advantage of the conciliatory policy of the leadership of the newly-proclaimed Transcaucasian Federative Republic, the Turkish military units captured the heavily fortified Castle of Kars on April 25, thus creating a direct threat to Alexandrapol. Following the siege of Kars, the Ottoman Forces Command put forward new conditions before the Transcaucasian authorities, demanding the surrender of Akhalkalaki, Akhaltsikhe and Alexandrapol, as well as of Alexandropol-Julfa railway, which the Turkish troops could use to reach Tabriz and get their hands on all the Transcaucasian railroads before the end of the war against the British. Unwilling to wait for the end of negotiations with the Transcaucasian delegation in Batumi,  the Turkish forces took Alexandropol with a quick offensive on May 15, creating a threat of conquest for all of Eastern Armenia.[11]

In order to break into Eastern Armenia, the Turkish Military Command made a regrouping of its troops. A special detachment commanded by Yakub Shevki Pasha was formed in Kars from subdivisions of the 1st Caucasian Army Corps (under the command of Major-General Kazim Karabekir Pasha) and the 2nd Caucasian Army Corps of the Third Army (under the command of Major-General Yakub Shevki Pasha). Within the newly-formed detachment, the 36th Division (under the command of Colonel Pirselimoğlu Hamdi Bey) and the 9th Division (under the command of Colonel Rüştü Paşa) of the 1st Caucasian Army Corps, as well as the 11th Division (under the command of Colonel Cavit Erdel) and the 5th Division (under the command of Colonel Mürsel Pasha) of the 2nd Caucasian Army Corps were to operate against the Armenian forces. Besides the detachment in question, also participating in combat operations in the course of the invasion of Eastern Armenia was the 12th Division of the 4th Army Corps of the Second Army, which supervised Surmali mountain passes on the eve of the Battle of Sardarapat and had a mission to invade Igdir Province.[12][13][14]

File:Movses-Silikyan.png
Movses Silikyan

To be able to resist the attack, commander of the Armenian Corps, commander-in-chief of the Armenian Armed Forces Tovmas Nazarbekian decided to safeguard the strategic roads to Yerevan and Tiflis.[15]

A part of the Armenian troops that had left Alexandropol, including some units of the 1st Division of the Armenian Corpse, as well as several units within the Special Armenian Detachment, retreated towards the Ararat Plain.[16] Here under the general command of Movses Silikyan, the Detachment of Yerevan of the Armenian Armed Forces was created with a task to thwart the Turkish attack on Yerevan.

The situation in Yerevan on the eve of the battle

The invasion of the Turkish army put the Armenian political leadership in both Tiflis and Yerevan into a difficult situation. On May 19, after invading Surmali, Turkish General Halil Kut (the uncle of Enver Pasha) declared in Batumi that “the Armenians have been defeated and must be obeyed.” On the other hand, the Armenian delegation represented in the negotiations of Batumi (Alexander Khatisian, Hovhannes Kajaznuni) in a cable sent to Khachatur Karchikyan, the Armenian member in the Transcaucasian Commissariat, recommended “against showing resistance to Turks.”[17]

Amid a widespread panic in the Aleksandropolsky Uyezd, the Ararat Plain and Yerevan following the attack of the Turkish troops, the Yerevan city council at a session on May 18 approved mayor Tadevos Tosyan’s proposal to hand over the city to the Turks with no resistance, evacuate the population and lead them to the mountains. But the decision to surrender Yerevan yielded no practical results, as the Executive Body of the Armenian National Council of Tbilisi - the Special Committee - headed by Yerevan National Council Chairman Aram Manukian sharply opposed such a development and overthrew the decision (supreme power in Yerevan and the province of Yerevan was given to the Special Committee).[18] By the order of Aram Manukian and with the help of as many as 1500 residents, Yerevan’s defenses, especially the area near Yerablur, were fortified.[17]

File:Catholicos-Gevorg-V-Surenjanc.png
Catholicos Gevorg V Surenjanc

On May 18, Aram Manukian accompanied by Yerevan’s commandant Arshavir Shahkhatuni visited Etchmiadzin to urge Catholicos George V to leave the town for security reasons. But His Holiness not only rejected the proposal, but also encouraged the military to show strong resistance to the belligerent.[19] He ordered, church bells peal for six days as Armenians from all walks of life – peasants, poets, blacksmiths, and even the clergymen – rallied to form organized military units.[20] Civilians, including children, aided in the effort as well, as "Carts drawn by oxen, water buffalo, and cows jammed the roads bringing food, provisions, ammunition, and volunteers from the vicinity" of Yerevan.[21]

File:Aram-Manukyan.png
Aram Manukian

In the days that followed, Manukian played a vital role in stabilizing the situation in Yerevan and the adjacent areas and tipping the scale in the Armenians’ favor. In the morning of May 19, he ordered the Commander of the 1st Division, Major-General Movses Silikyan to stop the retreat of Armenian forces and avert the Turkish attack on Yerevan at any cost. To this end, Manukian promised to carry out organizational work in a short period of time, collect manpower and ammunition.[22] In the subsequent days, recruitment was organized on Astafyan street, in the English park, in front of the Teachers’ Seminary and elsewhere for volunteers to join the army at the start of the Battle.

The Battle of Sardarapat

General Movses Silikyan, commander of the Armenian forces.

Units Involved on Both Sides

The Turkish Side

Forming part of the 36th Turkish Division moving towards Alexandropol-Yerevan were the 106th, 107th and 108th Infantry Regiments, one rifle battalion, two artillery divisions. The Turkish army was further supported by a separate cavalry regiment and another one of 1,500 Kurdish fighters. The Turkish forces were a total of 7,500 - 10,000 soldiers and officers, including the Kurds. The Turks had 40 cannons at their disposal.

The Armenian Side

During the Battle of Sardarapat, the forces of the Armenian side formed part of the Yerevan detachment, whose other units took part in the Battle of Bash-Aparan against the 9th Turkish Division. Major-General Movses Silikyan was the Commander of the detachment, while Colonel Alexander Vekilyan served as the Chief of Staff based in the building of the Gevorgian Seminary of Etchmiadzin in Vagharshapat. The Commander-in-Chief of the forces fighting in the Battle of Sardarapat was the Deputy Commander of the Yerevan detachment, Colonel Daniel Bek-Pirumyan, while Alexander Chneour was the Chief of Staff. Included in these forces were the 2nd Division of the Armenian Corps and several squads of the Special Armenian Detachment. Forming part of the 2nd Division (under the command of Movses Silikyan) were the 5th (3rd battalion, under the command of Poghos Bek-Pirumyan) and 6th (12 companies, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Abraham Dolukhanyan) regiments, the 2nd cavalry regiment with four cavalry battalions (Colonel Zalinyan), the Partisan infantry regiment with eight battalions (Colonel Aleksei Perekrestov), the Partisan cavalry regiment with three battalions (Colonel Korolkov), the Border Battalion (Lieutenant Colonel Silin), the Patrol Battalion of the 2nd Division. One battalion from the Fourth Regiment of the 1st Division was stationed in Davalu to defend the southern direction.

File:Sardarapat-commanders-Nazarbekyan-Silikyan-Bek-Pirumyan.jpg
Command staff of Armenian forces

Included in the Yerevan unit from the Special Armenian Detachment were the 1st (Colonel Yuzbashev) and 2nd (Colonel Chakhmakhchev) infantry regiments of Van from the 3rd Special Brigade, the 2nd Special Cavalry regiment of Zeytun (four cavalry battalions, Colonel Salibekyan), the infantry regiments of Khnus and Karakilisa (Colonel Kazimirsi) which formed part of the military units of the 2nd Special Brigade, the Regiment of Erzincan (6 battalions, Karapet Hassan-Pashaian) of the 1st Special Brigade, as well as the 1st Special Cavalry Regiment (military starshina Pavel Zolotarev).[23][24][25]

File:Colonel-Korolkov.png
Colonel Korolkov

Five infantry batteries under Colonel Christophor Araratyan’s command were included in the Yerevan detachment, which also involved several squads composed of Western Armenian intellectuals, a Yezidi cavalry battalion (under the command of Usub Bek and Jangir Agha), as well as a great number of militia troops. The Armenian forces were composed of a total of 9,000-10,000 soldiers and officers, and amounted to 6,000 - 6,500 after some part of them were dispatched to the Bash-Aparan Front. Armenians had 28 cannons at their disposal but only 16-20 were used in the course of combat operations.[26]

The Course of the Battle

The Siege of Kars by Turks: The Armenians’ Counter-Offensive
File:Pogos-Bek-Pirumyan.png
Poghos-Bek Pirumyan

On May 21, the 108th Turkish Infantry Regiment, including cavalry and infantry subdivisions, went on with their offensive from an area adjacent to Araks railway station. The Sardarapat detachment, conducting defensive artillery operations, started to retreat and withdrew to the Kurakanlu-Kyorpalu-Zeyva Hayi initial positions. The Turks came close to Kyorpalu (7km west of Etchmiadzin). Advancing along the railroad, on May 21, the detachment of Zihni Bey defeated an Armenian unit composed of 600 infantry and 250 cavalry, and then took Sardarabad.[4][27] (now in the territory of the city of Armavir) that evening and the village of the same name 2 km south of the station, as well as the village of Gechrlu. Keeping up with their attack, the Turkish forces took the Verin Kolibeklu settlement (now in the territory of the village of Aknalich) and proceeded to Ghamishlu train depot (now in the territory of the village of Zartonk), 20 km far from Yerevan.

The Turkish forces moving along the railroad sought to advance towards Zangibasar, which would put the Armenian troops south of the railroad, the locals and as many as 100,000 Western Armenian immigrants at risk of being cut off from Yerevan and destroyed.[28] But Captain Khoren Igitkhanyan’s artillery battery stationed in the village of Artashar managed to rivet the enemy to the spot.[26]

Armenian forces before the battle

Despite the retreat, the defense of bridges on the left bank of the Araks River was significantly enhanced, at the same time, more Armenian units were sent to the battleground from Yerevan.[15]

Commander of the Yerevan detachment Movses Silikyan and his Chief of Staff, Colonel A. Vekilyan drew up a tactical plan designed to throw the actively counter-attacking Turkish forces out of Sardarapat. In the evening of May 21, all the detachments of the Sardarapat Front were given relevant instructions for the next day with an order to coordinate the fulfillment of military actions. Included in the the Armenian forces fighting in the Sardarapat Front were the 5th and 6th regiments, the Infantry Regiment of Karakilisa (Lieutenant-Colonel Areshyan) of the 2nd Special Brigade, the Partisan Infantry Regiment, the Yezidi Cavalry Battalion, the Western Armenian volunteer groups, four artillery batteries.

File:Khoren-Igitkhanyan.png
Khoren Igitkhanyan

On the night of May 21-22, an exchange of fire between the Armenian militia and the Yezidi Cavalry Unit commanded by Jahangir Agha and the Turkish troops near the village of Molla Bayazet prevented the enemy from attacking the Armenian forces from the rear. The shooting gave Dolukhanyan and Perekrestov the opportunity to array the troops for the battle, at the same time enabling Captains Sergo Atanesyan and Vladimir Sakkilari to marshal their artillery units.

Christophor Araratov

Deputy commander of the Yerevan detachment, commander of the forces of the Sardarapat Front Colonel Daniel Bek-Pirumyan came to lead the crucial counter-attack of the Armenian forces. In the wee hours of May 22, the Armenian side launched an offensive along the entire front-line of the villages of Kurakanlu-Kyorpalu-Zeyva Hayi-Ghurdughuli. The attack was fulfilled by the 5th and 6th Regiments in the center, which managed to destroy the vanguard Turkish troops with backing from artillery and machine guns near the Ghamishlu depot. In particular, military batteries under the command of Kh. Igitkhanyan, V. Sakkilari, Nikolay Klich and S. Atanesyan, positioned on the hills close to the battleground, as well as machine gun subdivisions of other military units managed to suppress the enemy's artillery fire and rarefy their infantry and cavalry ranks, which enabled the Armenian infantry and militia to launch a counter-offensive in full force. Perekrestov’s volunteer regiment, the squads of Igdir, Zeytun and Khnus, 1st Special Cavalry Regiment struck the enemy from the sides and the rear. The Turkish forces attempted to show active resistance which was at some points accompanied by bayonet fighting, but were forced to flee after suffering major losses.[29]

File:Vladimir-Sakilari-Troops.png
Vladimir Sakkilari battery

The Armenian units continued their advancement and took back Gechrlu, Molla Bayazet, the village of Sardarapat and the station of the same name, as well as the field lying to the right of it. One battalion of the 5th Armenian Regiment attacked in the direction of Kosh-Talish and liberated the villages of Ujan and Kosh by the evening. The vanguard Turkish forces were entirely destroyed in fighting, with more than 500 casualties registered on their side overall. The Armenians, meanwhile moved forward 15-20 km.[22]

After suffering defeat on May 22, the Turkish forces took advantage of the fact that the Armenians stopped pursuing them to avoid from diverging from their initial positions, and retreated towards Araks station, basing themselves on the hills nearby. In the days that followed, the 449 (Tulki-tapa) and 440 (Cimni Gir) high grounds north of the station had a great tactical significance for both sides.

File:Jhangir-Aga.png
Jangir Agha

On May 23, no active combat operations were carried along the main front of Sardarapat, with only one military unit from Igdir clashing near Dzhafarabat. After winning the battle, the Igdir detachment joined the Sardarapat detachment under Daniel Bek-Pirumyan’s command, while the subdivisions of the 2nd Special Regiment of Zeytun were entrusted with the defense of the bridges on Araks River.[30] Repeated attempts to cross the river were met with fierce resistance by the 5th Armenian Regiment.[6] On the other parts of the front, the sides were chiefly engaged in exploration of enemy positions and arraying of troops for the battle, On May 22 and 23, a group of clergy representatives led by Bishop Garegin Hovsepyan and Archbishop Zaven visited the front to encourage the soldiers. Ahead of the crucial battle of May 22, Bishop Karekin met the servicemen of the 5th Regiment, addressed the soldiers with a speech.[31]

The Overall Situation in the First Days of the Battle

File:Daniel-Bek-Pirumov.png
Daniel-Bek Pirumyan

After the battles of May 22, Major-General Movses Silikyan moved a part of detachments he had at his disposal - the 6th Regiment, the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, the Partisan Cavalry Regiment and other units - to the Bash-Aparan Front to block the advancement of the Turkish troops proceeding towards Yerevan. Movses Silikyan ordered elements of the 5th Armenian Regiment under Poghos Bek-Pirumyan, a reserve guerrilla unit, and a special cavalry regiment to check the advance of the Ottoman army.[6] The Armenians’ first victory in the Sardarapat Front was of crucial importance not only in terms of boosting combat readiness of the army and ensuring further victories, but also overcoming the panic among the Armenian population of the province of Yerevan and the Western Armenian refugees. On May 24, Major-General Silikyan urged the nation to join the battle:

“Armenians, hurry up to free the homeland… There’s no time to lose. All the men under the age of 50 are obliged to take up arms: I demand that everyone come with their weapons and ammunition for the defense of the homeland…” - - Movses Silikyan (May 22, 1918)

Residents of Yerevan and the surrounding villages would send water and food, other essentials for those fighting in the battle.

After the first defeat in the Sardarapat Front, the Turkish command staff, seeking to succeed and make progress, adopted the tactics of weakening the rear of the Armenian troops by means of riots in villages populated by Turkic-speaking peoples. Back on the first day of the counter-offensive on May 22 such unrest was observed in the Davalu-Ghamarlu region. When the Armenian population of Davalu was transferred by train to Garamlu for security reasons that day, the 4th Regiment of Van overseeing the transfer was attacked by a gang of 5,000 from Turkish and Kurdish villages nearby. The five-hour confrontation was especially fierce in the vicinity of the villages of Avshar and Shirazlu which the Armenian troops ultimately captured. Later in the day, however, the Regiment came in the village of Yuva. The Armenian side suffered 37 casualties overall, while those of Turks topped 100.[32]

Till the end of the Battle of Sardarapat and the departure to Dilijan at the beginning of June, the 4th Regiment of Van overseeing Ghamarlu protected the rear of the Yerevan detachment from Sharur, as well as foiled the Turks’ attempt to cross the Araks River.

Further Fighting

On May 24, the Turkish side launched an offensive but was thrown off sustaining heavy losses from Armenian artillery fire. The initial positions of both sides remained unchanged. In order to conceal defeats and major losses, the Turkish command staff made up a fake story about the sinking of Turkish echelon in the Akhuryan River and disseminated it through the press.[33]

By the order of Major-General Movses Silikyan, a regrouping of the Armenian forces was carried out. As a result, the main Armenian strike forces - the companies of the 5th Rifle Regiment, as well as one cavalry company from the 1st Special Cavalry Regiment, the Patrol Department of the Yerevan detachment - were stationed in the direction of Sardarapat-Araks railway station. In the left wing, the Partisan Infantry Regiment, the remaining subdivisions of the 1st Special Cavalry Regiment, four cannons from the 2nd Battery were dispatched to the villages of Sardarapat and Molla Bayazet. The detachment of Igdir (1st and 2nd Regiments of Van) based themselves in the village of Kyarimarkh, while the 2nd Cavalry Regiment (Zeytun), the Regiment of Karakilisa, as well as several volunteer groups were sent to the Araks River. The right wing, meanwhile, was protected by forces designed for quick military manoeuvres, including the Regiment of Erzincan in Khznauz and half a company from the Squad of Khnus, as well as the Battalion of Maku in Kosh and one company from the Regiment of Karakilisa.

File:Pandukht-troops.png
Pandukht troops

The Partisan Cavalry Squad under the command of Captain Pandukht (Mikayel Seryan) was stationed in the front-line positions of the right wing, while some subdivisions of the 5th Regiment of the Sardarapat military unit went to the villages of Upper Kulibeklu (near the village of Aknalich) and Turkish Zeyva[33].

File:Tachat-Hovhakimyan.png
Tachat Hovakimyan

On May 25, the vanguard subdivisions of the 5th Regiment, supported by 4 artillery batteries and Captain Tachat Hovakimyan’s machine gun squad, attacked the 440th and 449th hills, but met persistent resistance from the Turkish side and were forced to retreat to their initial positions. Another Armenian military column attacked along the railway towards the Araks station and stopped about 3 km away, encountering persistent resistance from Turkish frontline units. A very strong grouping of enemy troops turned out to have been dispatched to Araks station, whereas the Armenian intelligence had reported that the main forces of the Turks were based at Karaburun station and in Nerkin Talin.

In the wee hours of May 26, the reserve companies of the 5th Regiment were brought forward from the rear. According to a roadmap drawn by Commander Movses Silikyan, the right, central and left columns were set to capture Araks and Karaburun stations with a simultaneous attack and throw the rival back to Alexandropol by attacking along the entire area from the slopes of Mount Aragats to the banks of Akhurian River.[34]

File:Vardan-Jaghinyan.png
Vardan Jaghinyan

Later in the morning of that same day, the 1st Battalion of the 5th Regiment, by the arbitrary order of Stabs-kapitan Vardan Jaghinyan, launched an unsuccessful offensive on the Cimni Gir (440) high ground and was forced to retreat to its initial positions, suffering major losses, including Jaghinyan himself. No actions were taken on the other part of the front, with only Colonel A. Perekrestov’s Partisan Machine Gun Regiment striking the Turkish troops near Araks station.[34]

After the unsuccessful assaults of May 25-26, Movses Silikyan came up with a new plan which sought to perform a quick manoeuvre of detachments in Khznauz and Kosh and support the frontal attack on Turkish-held hills with strikes from the rear. At the same time, the central and left wings of the main front were reinforced by the Igdir Regiment and the Patrol forces of the Partisan Regiment, brought forward from the rear.[34][35]

File:Karo-Hasan-Pashayan.png
Karo Hassan-Pashaian

At dawn of May 27, the Khznauz detachment initiated manoeuvres and successfully bypassed the left wing of the Turkish vanguard forces. At the same time, the detachment of Kosh to the right of that of Khznauz was unable to overcome the resistance of Turks near the village of Nerkin Kalakut and had to stop, with Erzincan Regiment Commander K. Hassan-Pashaian sending two companies for help. At 9 a.m. on the same day, the Armenian artillery units in the main front of Sardarapat carried out powerful strikes on the rival’s positions for half an hour, suppressing fire from artillery and machine gun subdivisions from the other part of the battleground.[36] The central detachments then launched an offensive on the enemy positions, waiting for an attack from the rear for a decisive blow.

To encourage his soldiers, Colonel Daniel Bek-Pirumyan wore his military uniform inside out to reveal the red lining and led his army into battle.[37] After bypassing the left wing of the Turkish troops at noon, the detachment of Khznauz turned sharply to the south, reaching the rear of the 440 and 449 hills. Following this brilliant tactical maneuver, the main forces of the central front of Sardarapat attacked and, with support from the Erzincan Regiment, managed to capture the high grounds nearby at 2:00 p.m.

“Our  entrenched lines got up and with shouts of “hurrah” pursued them. A group of Turks was successfully surrounded, but the main part fled, running head over heels, because the detachment of Captain Hassan Pashaian with the Erzincan regiment, already operated in their rear. A few moments later the Turks started to flee abandoning everything including their munitions, supplies, their wounded and dead. The battle was won. Armenia was saved.” - Alexander Chneour

File:Alexey-Perekryostov.png
Aleksey Perekrestov

On the same day Perekrestov’s left column launched an assault along the railway and captured Araks station, as well as Mastara depot in the evening. Captain Pandukht’s cavalry unit, meanwhile, started an offensive south of Nerkin Kalakut, overturned the resistance of Turkish forces with the help of companies from Kosh and Khznauz, then cut through the Turkish troops to the north-west of the battleground. On May 27-28, Pandukht’s squad weighed heavily upon smaller Turkish units, passed through Talin, Gyuzlu and Kirmizlu to rapidly penetrate into Sogyutlu, where Pandukht was joined by a local 1000-member squad. A cannon was seized from Turks, and a large number of troops were taken captive as a result.[38]

During the decisive battles on May 27, the Turks were completely defeated, forced to retire to Karaburun Station-Mount Karaburun line in a panic. Exhausted after winning the battle, the Sardarapat detachment was ordered to stop and base themselves on the heights of Mastara depot. During that day, a 100-member Kurdish gang was thrown back while attempting to cross the Araks River near Margara.

On the night of May 27-28, the Armenian forces moved forward and reached the Karaburun station-Mount Karmrasar line. Unable to resist the Armenian side’s attacks after a brief engagement in Karaburun-Ashnak, the Turks began to withdraw towards the Aragats station-Kirmizlu-Verin Agdzhakala on May 28, where they were once again thrown back to the north. As a result of that day’s fighting, the Armenian side seized Karaburun and Aragats stations, as well as Nerkin Talin, Verin Talin and Mastara, while Armenian intelligence units reached Ani station and found out that there are no Turkish troops on their way to Ani and Aghin stations. The next day on May 29, however, the Turkish forces were significantly enhanced with more personnel which enabled them to initiate a counter-offensive on Aragats station. Weighed heavily upon by the Turkish units and under threat of encirclement by them, the vanguard Armenian forces retreated and based themselves at the Karaburun station. In the right wing of the battleground, meanwhile, the Armenians fought heavy battles near the village of Shirvandzhug.[39] It was on that same day that Major-General Movses Silikyan, the commander of the Yerevan detachment, addressed the people and the army for the second time urging them to continue the triumphant battles to take Alexandropol too.

“Armenians! The heroic activity of our brave troops is going on, and the Turkish forces are retreating. We must take Alexandropol back from the Turks who seized the city so treacherously. They require Akhalkalak, Alexandropol and Etchmiadzin along with the Holy See, most of the Yerevan province, Nakhijevan. Can we tolerate such an insult? Armenians, assemble hurriedly, kick the enemy out of our native bleeding soil. To arms, everybody. To Alexandropol.” Ashkhatank No 5 (205), June 5 (23) 1918. - Movses Silikyan

But after the Armenian delegation accepted a three-day (May 26-29) Turkish ultimatum in Batumi, a ceasefire was signed that same day (May 29). By the order of General Tovmas Nazarbekian all the Armenian forces ceased attacks. This marked the end of the Battle of Sardarapat. The soldiers of the Sardarapat Front and the command staff were extremely dissatisfied with the news of the ceasefire and cessation of attacks.[40] According to the commander of the Armenian artillery unit, Colonel Christophor Araratyan, although the Yerevan detachment was in a favorable situation when the ceasefire was being signed, the complete failure of Armenians in Karakilisa Front forced them to stop the assault, as Yerevan would remain open for the enemy’s attack from the northeast.[41] According to some analyses, the cessation of attacks in the Battle of Sardarapat was also conditioned by the fact that the Armenian military warehouses were almost empty, as well as by the danger of Turkish troops launching another counter-attack after receiving fresh supplies.[42]

Once the truce was established in Batumi, clashes continued in some sections of the Sardarapat Front but no significant changes were made. Following the signing of the Treaty of Batum on June 14, all the Armenian units withdrew from their posts to the borderline prescribed by the agreement.[43]

In the Battle of Sardarapat, Turkish casualties amounted to 3,500, while the Armenian side’s losses were far less, although no accurate data is available.[43]

Aftermath

New York Times article headlines from May 15 and June 29, 1918
File:Aram-Manukyan-message-to-Movses-Silikyan.png
Letter from Aram Manukian to Movses Silikyan

With the Ottoman forces in a full rout, General Silikyan wished to press on his advantage with the hope of dislodging the Ottomans from Alexandropol and Kars. But, almost immediately, he was informed of the ongoing negotiations between the Ottoman leadership and the Armenian National Council in Tiflis and was told by Corps Commander Tovmas Nazarbekian to cease military operations in the region.[44] Though members of the National Council were widely criticized for issuing this order at the time, this decision was carried out because the ammunition stores had been all but been depleted and Ottoman commanders had received fresh reinforcements.[44]

The 9-day Battle of Sardarapat ended with Armenia’s full victory, as a result of which the rival was thrown back 50-65 km and the immediate threat to Yerevan was eliminated. The victory played an important role in the partial failure of the Turkish invasion of Eastern Armenia, as well as in securing a victorious counter-offensive in Bash-Aparan and the heroic resistance in Karakilisa. The Battle of Sardarapat saved the locals and Western Armenian refugees from imminent massacre. The victory secured at a great cost also contributed to the enhancement of the role of Yerevan-based political and social organizations, as well as of local authorities and leading figures[45]: In fact, this triumph laid the foundation for the establishment of a newly independent Armenia.

The Ottoman defeats at Sardarabad, Bash Abaran, and Karakilisa staved off the annihilation of the Armenian nation, and the victories here were instrumental in allowing the Armenian National Council to declare the independence of the First Republic of Armenia on May 30 (retroactive to May 28). Though the terms that Armenia agreed to in the Treaty of Batum (June 4, 1918) were excessively harsh, the little republic was able to hold out until the Ottomans were forced to withdraw from the region with the end of World War I in late 1918.

Legacy and memory

Armenian memorial coin to Sardarabat victory

The battle of Sardarabad holds a special place in Armenian historical memory and is often compared to the 451 A.D. battle of Avarayr.[46] Leaders of the First Republic frequently invoked the name of the battle, exhorting their people to aspire to the example of those who had fought and participated in it.[47][48] The battle was seldom mentioned or given little significance in Soviet historiography until after the death of Joseph Stalin.[49][50] In the mid-1960s, a number of Soviet historians began to highlight its importance, as well as that of Bash Abaran and Karakilisa.[51][52] The Soviet military historian Evgenii F. Ludshuvet, for example, emphasized that these battles, fought by the "Armenian Dashnak forces", helped slow down the Turkish advance on Baku and helped relieve some pressure against that city.[53] Notable Soviet Armenian literary figures such as Hovhannes Shiraz and Paruyr Sevak, whose work "Sardarapat" was turned into a popular song, composed songs and wrote poems that lionized the Armenian fighters.[54] Ivan Bagramyan, a Marshal of the Soviet Union and himself a participant of the battle, described its importance in the following manner:

The significance of the battle of Sardarapat is great... If they [the Armenian forces] did not defeat the Ottomans there, they would have proceeded to Echmiadzin and Yerevan—nothing would have remained of Armenia, nothing would have been saved... The Armenians won and, thanks to them, our people preserved their physical existence within the current borders of Armenia.[55]

After the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide's fiftieth anniversary in 1965, Soviet authorities agreed to the construction of a monument and park dedicated to the Armenian victory near the site of the battle. Architect Rafayel Israyelian was commissioned to design the monument, which was completed in 1968.

The battles of Sardarabad, Bash Abaran and Karakilisa are collectively known as the "Heroic battles of May" in Armenian historiography (Մայիսյան հերոսամարտեր Mayisyan herosamarter).[56]

Each year, the President of Armenia, visits the memorial on 28 May. During that day, many cultural and military events and parades take place.

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ These are the figures provided by Simon Vratsian, the then member of the Armenian National Council. The composition of the forces was as follows: 4th Battalion (1,500 men); 5th Battalion (800); 1st Battalion (700; 1st Partisan (1,200); Erzinjan Battalion (700); Maku (300); 2nd Cavalry Battalion (700); Partisan Cavalry (800); Special Cavalry (500); and the 1st and 2nd Van Regiments (2,500): see Stephen G. Svajian, A Trip Through Historic Armenia. New York: GreenHill Publishing, 1977, p. 558.
  2. ^ The composition of the Ottoman I Caucasian Corps was as follows: 5th Caucasian Division; 9th Caucasian Division; 11th Caucasian Division; 36th Caucasian Division; 1,500-3,000 Kurdish Cavalry
References
  1. ^ a b Krikorian, Robert; Masih, Joseph (2013). Armenia: At the Crossroads. Routledge. p. 21. ISBN 9781134412181. ...Armenian victories at the battles of Sardarabad, Karakilise and Bash Abara, which stopped a Turkish invasion of Eastern Armenia and secured the creation of the first independent Republic of Armenia in May 1918.
  2. ^ T.C. Genelkurmay Harp Tarihi Başkanlığı Yayınları, Türk İstiklâl Harbine Katılan Tümen ve Daha Üst Kademlerdeki Komutanların Biyografileri, Genkurmay Başkanlığı Basımevi, Ankara, 1972, pp. 161-162. Template:Tr icon
  3. ^ a b Template:Tr icon Karabekir, Kâzım. Erzincan ve Erzurum'un Kurtuluşu: Sarıkamış, Kars ve Ötesi (The Liberation of Erzincan and Erzurum: Sarıkamış, Kars and Beyond). Erzurum Ticaret ve Sanayi Odası Araştırma, Geliştirme ve Yardımlaşma Vakfı, 1990, p. 377. ISBN 978-975-512-072-0.
  4. ^ a b c Template:Tr icon Gürbüz, Mustafa, "1917 Rus İhtilali Sonrası Kafkasya'da Türk Askeri Faaliyetleri: Serdarabad Savaşları ve Siyasi Sonuçları" [Turkish Military Operations in the Caucasus after the 1917 Russian Revolution: The battles of Serdarabad and its Political Results]. Ermeni Araştırmaları, No. 25, 2007.
  5. ^ T.C. Genelkurmay Harp Tarihi Başkanlığı Yayınları, Türk İstiklâl Harbine Katılan Tümen ve Daha Üst Kademlerdeki Komutanların Biyografileri, Genkurmay Başkanlığı Basımevi, Ankara, 1972, pp. 29-30. Template:Tr icon
  6. ^ a b c Template:Hy icon Harutunyan, Ashot H. «Սարդարապատի ճակատամարտ 1918» [The Battle of Sardarapat, 1918]. Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia. Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1984, vol. x, pp. 227-228.
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  23. ^ Նազարյան, Արամ. "Արևմտյան Հայաստանի մասին դեկրետը. արևմտահայ զորամասերի կազմավորումը". Հայագիտությունը դպրոցում: 11–17.
  24. ^ Մ․ Կարապետյան. [ysu.am/files/01M_Karapetyan.pdf "Հայկական ազգային բանակային կորպուսի ստեղծման պատմությունից"] (PDF). Բանբեր Երևանի համալսարանի». 1 (82): 6–12. {{cite journal}}: Check |url= value (help)
  25. ^ Մելիքյան, Հովակիմ. "Հովակիմ Մելիքյանի հուշերը․ 1918 թվականի մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը մասնակիցների հուշերում". Բանբեր Երևանի համալսարանի: 68.
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  27. ^ Template:Tr icon T.C. Genelkurmay Başkanlığı. Birinci Dünya Harbi'nde Türk Harbi Kafkas Cephesi: 3 ncü Ordu Harekâtı [The Turkish Campaign on the Caucasus Front during the First World War: The Operations of the 3rd Army], T.C. Genelkurmay Başkanlığı Basım Evi, 1993, p. 516.
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  30. ^ Manaseryan, Manaser. Մանասեր Մանասերյանի հուշերը․ 1918 թվականի մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը մասնակիցների հուշերում. Yerevan: Բանբեր Երևանի համալսարանի. pp. 35–37.
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  33. ^ a b Սարդարապատ Բաշ-Ապարան Ղարաքիլիսա: 1918 թ. մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը. Yerevan. p. 176.
  34. ^ a b c Սարդարապատ Բաշ-Ապարան Ղարաքիլիսա: 1918 թ. մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը. Yerevan. p. 177.
  35. ^ Սարդարապատ Բաշ-Ապարան Ղարաքիլիսա: 1918 թ. մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը. Yerevan. pp. 178–179.
  36. ^ Հայոց պատմություն, գիրք երկրորդ (XVII դ. երկրորդ կես - 1918 թ.), volume 3. Yerevan. p. 645.
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  38. ^ Chneur, Aleksander. Ալեքսանդր Շնեուրի հուշերը․ 1918 թվականի մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը մասնակիցների հուշերում. Yerevan. pp. 126–127.
  39. ^ Սարդարապատ Բաշ-Ապարան Ղարաքիլիսա: 1918 թ. մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը. Yerevan. p. 181.
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  52. ^ Editorial (1968). "Փառք Զոհվածներին [Glory to the Fallen]". Sovetakan Grakanutiun (in Armenian) (5): 102–104.
  53. ^ Ludshuvet, Evgenii F. (1966). Турция в Первой мировой войне, 1914-1918, военно-политической очерк [Turkey in World War I, 1914-1918: A Military-Political Outline] (in Russian). Moscow: Moscow State University Press. pp. 186–190.
  54. ^ Hamaynapatker (in Armenian) (46): 2. 2008. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  55. ^ Mnatsakanyan, Aramayis N. (1978). Մարշալ Բաղրամյան, Կյանքի և Գործունեության Ուրվագիծ [Marshal Baghramyan: An Outline of His Life and Work] (in Armenian). Yerevan: Hayastan Publishing. p. 32.
  56. ^ Khurshudyan, Lendrush (1999). "1918 թ. Մայիսյան հերոսամարտերը և Հայաստանի Հանրապետության պատմական նշանակությունն ու դասերը [The May Heroic Battles of 1918 and Historic Significance and Lessons of the Republic of Armenia]". Patma-Banasirakan Handes (in Armenian) (2–3): 27–38. ISSN 0135-0536.

Further reading

  • Template:Fr icon Afanasyan, Serge. La victoire de Sardarabad: Arménie, mai 1918. Paris: L'Harmattan, 1985.
  • Allen, William E.D. and Paul Muratoff. Caucasian Battlefields. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1953.
  • Template:Hy icon Aghayan, Tsatur P. Հոկտեմբերը և Հայ Ժողովրդի Ազատագրական Պայքարը (October and the Liberation Struggle of the Armenian People). Yerevan: Yerevan State University Press, 1982.
  • Kayaloff, Jacques. The Battle of Sardarabad. The Hague: Mouton, 1973.
  • Hovannisian, Richard G. Armenia on the Road to Independence, 1918. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967.
  • Template:Fr icon Poidebard, Antoine. "Rôle militaire des Arméniens sur le front du Caucase après la defection de l'armée russe (décembre 1917-novembre 1918)." Revue des Études Arméniennes, I, pt. 2, 1920.
  • (in Armenian)Armenian Question Encyclopedia[1], Yerevan, 1996
  1. ^ "Հայկական Հարցը Հանրագիտարան". 1996. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)