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1894 Sasun rebellion

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First Sasun Resistance

Location of the 1894 and 1904 Sasun uprisings
Date1894
Location
Result

Ottoman victory

Suppression of the Armenian resistance, followed by wholesale massacres of Armenian civilian population
Belligerents
Social Democrat Hunchakian Party

 Ottoman Empire

Commanders and leaders
Mihran Damadian
Hampartsoum Boyadjian
Hrayr Dzhoghk
Strength
8,000[1] 10,000[1]
Casualties and losses
20,000 rebel and civilians[1] 550[1]

The Sasun rebellion of 1894, also known as the First Sassoun resistance (Armenian: Սասնո առաջին ապստամբութիւն), was the conflict between Ottoman Empire's Hamidiye forces and the Armenian fedayi belonging to the Armenian national movement's Hunchakian party in the Sassoun region.

Background

The Social Democrat Hunchakian Party was an Armenian national movement active in the region. In 1894, Sultan Abdul Hamid II began to target the Armenian people in a precursor of the Hamidian massacres. This persecution strengthened devolution sentiment among Armenians.[2][3]

In Sason Armenians were organized by Hunchak activists, such as Mihran Damadian, Hampartsoum Boyadjian and Hrayr Dzhoghk.

Conflict

Medzn Mourad

Sassoun was the location for the first notable battle in the Armenian resistance movement. The Armenians of Sassoun confronted the Ottoman army and Kurdish irregulars at Sassoun, succumbing to superior numbers.[4]

Foreign news agents protested vehemently against the Sassoun event; British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone called Hamid "the Great Criminal" or "the Red Sultan". The rest of the Great Powers also protested and demanded the execution of Ottoman Sultan Hamid's promised reforms. An investigation committee composed of French, British, and Russian representatives were sent to the region in order to examine the event.[4]

Aftermath

In May 1895, the aforementioned foreign powers prepared a set of reforms. However, they were never carried out, because they were not actively imposed on Ottoman Turkey. The Russian Empire's policies vis-a-vis the Armenian question had changed. In fact, the Russian foreign minister Alexei Lobanov-Rostovsky supported Ottoman integrity. Moreover, he was so anti-Armenian that he wanted an "Armenia without Armenians". On the other hand, Britain had gained considerable influence and power in former Ottoman Egypt and Cyprus, and for Gladstone, good relations with the Ottomans were less important than before. Meanwhile, Turkey had found a new European ally, Germany's Bismarck. The Ottoman Empire thus felt free to commit further massacres, in 1896.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d A Crime of Silence: The Armenian Genocide , p 133
  2. ^ "The Rise of Nationalism and the Collapse of the Ottoman Empire". Archived from the original on 2020-10-30.
  3. ^ Ter Minassian, Anahide (2012). Nationalism and Socialism in the Armenian Revolutionary Movement (1887-1912). İletişim Yayınları.
  4. ^ a b c Kurdoghlian, Mihran (1996). Hayots Badmoutioun, Volume III (in Armenian). Athens, Greece: Hradaragoutioun Azkayin Ousoumnagan Khorhourti. pp. 42–44.