{"id":108979,"date":"2022-01-25T18:06:00","date_gmt":"2022-01-25T14:06:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/1905.az\/?p=108979"},"modified":"2022-01-26T16:45:11","modified_gmt":"2022-01-26T12:45:11","slug":"armenian-azerbaijani-conflict-roots-massacres-of-1905-1906-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/armenian-azerbaijani-conflict-roots-massacres-of-1905-1906-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict: roots. Massacres of 1905-1906"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"504\" height=\"339\" src=\"http:\/\/1905.az\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/Baku-1905.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-107585\" srcset=\"https:\/\/1905.az\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/Baku-1905.jpg 504w, https:\/\/1905.az\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/Baku-1905-300x202.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 504px) 100vw, 504px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p><em>(End)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>&nbsp;Events of&nbsp;1905-1906<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<!--more-->\n\n\n\n<p>The reconstruction of an objective picture surrounding the massacres 1905-1906 is not easy task because Russian and Western media expressed sympathy to the Armenians. Tadeush Swietochowski noted that, &#8220;the events were reported in the world press generally with a tone of partiality towards the Armenians&#8221;. (<em>Swietochowski, pp. 41-42)<\/em>Audrey Alstatd stressed that the media displayed an anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim tone. Observers nearly always blamed Muslims for the violence. The right-liberal newspaper Slovo blamed nationalism; the left-liberal Russkaya Vedomost blamed Pan-Islamism. (<em>Altstadt, p. 41)<\/em> Conservative Sankt- Peterburgskiye Vedomosti accused only the Tatars. (<em>Moreover, an Azerbaijani publicist Rahim Bek Melikov blamed &#8220;Sankt-Peterburgskiye Vedomosty&#8221; for insinuation and abetting. He wrote in \u00abKaspiy\u00bb (\u2116 14, 18 January 1906): &#8220;It is a futile attempt to prove to these newspapers that the ongoing hostility between the Armenians and the Muslims is not caused by pan-Islamism but by other factors. Because these conservative and pro- government newspapers want to increase the ethnic hatred in the Caucasus while all forces of the society try to stop violence&#8221;)<\/em> Armenian newspapers joined that choir. But they sometimes had to acknowledge that the Armenians shared some responsibility for the massacres. An American-Armenian publication wrote:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>The view of the Armenians as&nbsp;harmless sheep uncomplainingly stretching their necks to the slaughter is nor&nbsp;borne out by the facts. [I]t is also untrue that the Armenians have always been&nbsp;the chief sufferers. Although in Baky and Nakhichevan this was the case, at\nErivan and Etchmiadzin they remained the victors. At Shusha and Baky in&nbsp;September they suffered heavy material losses, but otherwise they fully held&nbsp;their own and paid the Tatars in their own coin.<\/em><\/strong>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Pavel Shekhtman&nbsp;used those aforementioned reports from Russian publications to create an&nbsp;argument which takes an anti-Azerbaijani tone. He frequently quoted the&nbsp;newspaper Tiflisskiy Listok about which a contemporary journalist, Ossetian writer&nbsp;Arsen Kotsoyev said: &#8220;The more I work for this newspaper more I am&nbsp;convinced that Tiflisskiy Listok is a pure shop, which trades and cheats&#8221;.(<em>Sawa Dangulov, Slovo ob Arsene Kotsoyeve.\n&#8220;Sovremennik&#8221; (Moscow, 1971), &lt;<\/em><a href=\"http:\/\/biblio.danal-online.rn\/text\/_Kotsoev\/dangulov.shtml\">http:\/\/biblio.danal-online.rn\/text\/\nKotsoev\/dangulov.shtml<\/a><em>&gt;.)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>Luigi&nbsp;Villari&#8217;s book is also clearly biased towards Armenians. (<em>Charles van der Leeuw, p. 246)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\n<\/em>I quote and&nbsp;mention many sources (most of them are available on internet) about the&nbsp;massacres of 1905-1906 both Armenian, pro-Armenian and Azerbaijani sources. A&nbsp;reader can make his own judgment; I offer the following reconstruction of the&nbsp;events.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After the December 1904 strike which appalled the Russian authorities, rumors about an upcoming slaughter of Tatars by Armenians and vice-versa circulated in Baky. Luigi Villari reported that Baky Governor Prince Nakashidze, a Georgian noble, openly encouraged the Tartars and treated the Armenians with marked coldness.<em> (Villari, p. 193)<\/em>One of the leaders of the Azerbaijani political class Ismayil Ziyatkhanov witnessed in Russian State Duma (parliament) in 1907:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>We, the Muslims, were told&nbsp;by the administration: you have been economically enslaved by the Armenians. They&nbsp;are arming themselves and plan to create a State. [T]he Armenians were told&nbsp;that the idea of Pan-Islamism had put down deep roots in all strata of the&nbsp;Muslim community and one day the Muslims would massacre them. [W]e had been&nbsp;living as good neighbors and liked each other. [i]n the past there had been no&nbsp;armed clashes. (<\/em><\/strong><em>Gosudarstvennaya Duma Rossiyi. Vtoroy Soziv&nbsp;(Sankt-Petersbutg, 1907), p. 1229)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to&nbsp;some sources, a small incident served as the pretext of the outbreak of the mas\u00adsacres.&nbsp;On January 12 two soldiers of Armenian origin killed 18-year old detainee,&nbsp;Bula-Aga Reza Oglu, when he attempt to escape from a guard. The deceased&nbsp;Azerbaijani was previously imprisoned on the charge of assaulting Armenians.\nLuigi Villari wrote that the person was the shopkeeper Gashum Beg. He also&nbsp;suggested that that &#8211; according to a Tartar version &#8211; the soldier whispered to&nbsp;Gashum Beg that if he tried to escape he would be allowed to get away and the&nbsp;moment he did so fired on him. The Armenians say that the offer of escape was&nbsp;not suggested. (<em>Villari, p. 193)<\/em> The&nbsp;murder of the young Azerbaijani negatively affected the Azerbaijani community.&nbsp;Rumors spread that the Armenian escort intentionally killed the Azerbaijani.&nbsp;Villari further asserted that the Armenian killer was a member of the Armenian&nbsp;revolutionary committee the Dashnak, but the Armenians once again denied this.&nbsp;(Ibid.,&nbsp;<em>p. 194)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Armenian and&nbsp;Tatar educated stratum, feeling the rising tension, gathered at the premises of&nbsp;the Azerbaijani newspaper Kaspiy and elected a committee, comprising five people, in&nbsp;the aim of preventing further such troubles.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Soon, on&nbsp;February 6 (by Russian Orthodox calendar and February 19 by European calendar)&nbsp;a relative of the deceased Babayev hunted down an Armenian escort soldier near&nbsp;the Armenian Church and opened fire to kill him but failed and was shot to&nbsp;death by other Armenians who reportedly were members of the Dashnak party. (<em>Swietochowski, p. 41)<\/em> This day and event&nbsp;became a starting point for the Armenian-Tatar massacres.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to&nbsp;Villari, immediately after this murder of Babayev, Prince Nakashidze,&nbsp;&#8220;summoned some Armenian journalists to his Chancery, and delivered them a\nlong discourse on the dangers of an Armenian-Tartar pogrom. He declared that if the Tartars did rise against the&nbsp;Armenians he would be powerless to defend them, as he had not enough troops,&nbsp;and the police were unreliable, many of them being Tartars. In fact one of the&nbsp;said Armenians reported that parts of this speech corresponded almost word for\nword with the report that the Governor made following the massacre, which&nbsp;suggests that he had foreseen the whole affair.&#8221; (<em>Villari, p. 194)&nbsp;<\/em>The British&nbsp;diplomatic source reported that the city was placarded with leaflets&nbsp;purportedly signed by the local chief of police but those leaflets turned to be&nbsp;forgeries, inciting the Muslims to a massacre of Armenians on&nbsp; March 4. (<em>Dominic Lieven, Kenneth Bourne, Cameron&nbsp;Watt, p. 67)<\/em>The same source reported that the authorities&nbsp;supplied the Muslims with arms. (Ibid,<em> pp. 91-92)<\/em> Tadeush&nbsp; Swietochowski stated, however, that:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>Widespread speculation had&nbsp;it that Nakashidze intended to weaken the antigovernment forces by exploiting&nbsp;the enmity between the Muslims and the rebellious Armenians. In actuality, the&nbsp;measure of the responsibility born by the tsarist authorities for the events\nthat followed has never been fully determined. No incontrovertible proof of&nbsp;official connivance has been discovered, and there was at any rate enough&nbsp;accumulated hostility between the two peoples to set off an explosion without&nbsp;it. It is known, however, that Nakashidze, after a visit to St. Petersburg in&nbsp;January 1905, authorized the issue of large numbers of arms permits to the&nbsp;Muslims. (<\/em><\/strong><em>Swietochowski, p. 41)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The massacres&nbsp;began soon after the Babayev death. Russian newspapers reported that a Tatar&nbsp;crowd attacked the Armenian quarter of the city. However, it is also known that&nbsp;the Armenians were well prepared for the attack and soon launched counter&nbsp;offensive. The massacres continued for three days. Many Armenian and&nbsp;Azerbaijani-owned stores were destroyed and pillaged. &#8220;The majority of&nbsp;looters from the Muslim sides were Iranian workers, from the Armenian side the&nbsp;Dash-naks, arrived from Turkey, and other volunteers joined them.&#8221;<em> (Ordubadi, p. 14)<\/em> The three-day&nbsp;massacre left about 300 to 400 dead. Luigi Villari informed that 218 Armenians&nbsp;and 126 Azerbaijanis were killed.<em> (Villari,&nbsp;p. 195)<\/em> In Baky, police reports stated that some Armenians found shelter in&nbsp;Azerbaijani houses.<em> (Gosudarstvenniy&nbsp;Istoricheskiy Arkhiv Azerbayjanskoy Respubliki, F. 375, O. 1, D. 17, pp. 136-137,143-145)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Both Azerbaijani&nbsp;and Armenian sources blamed the police and the authorities for inaction. Luigi&nbsp;Villari wrote that Nakashidze encouraged and supported the Tatars. However, on&nbsp;February 9 he himself led the peaceftil procession that included the Muslim&nbsp;Sheikh Ul-Islam and the Armenian bishop, calling the two communities to peace&nbsp;and reconciliation. Nevertheless, the Dashnaks passed a death sentence on the&nbsp;governor and on May 11 the Dashnak Dro Kanayan threw a bomb on a Nakashidze&#8217;s&nbsp;carriage, killing him.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After the three&nbsp;days of riots in Baky the situation stabilized despite some isolated incidents\nand murders. Luigi Villari noted:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>Both Armenians and Tartars&nbsp;armed themselves but the former did so on a larger scale, for their having previously&nbsp;experienced government hostility led them to feel that they had only themselves&nbsp;to rely on. The revolutionary committee displayed great zeal in collecting&nbsp;money both front Armenians and foreign firms who paid the blackmail and it was&nbsp;used to smuggle arms and explosives into town from Moscow. The Tartars,&nbsp;thinking themselves secure in the Government&#8217;s favour, were less active. (<\/em><\/strong><em>Villari,&nbsp;p. 196)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Baky the&nbsp;Azerbaijanis had the strategic advantage, as surrounding settlements were&nbsp;populated by Azerbaijanis but in other regions and cities &#8211; Erivan, Shusha,&nbsp;Ganje (then Elizavetpol) the Ar\u00admenians were better positioned and armed.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In May,&nbsp;Nakhichevan became the battleground. Luigi Villari reported, based on accounts&nbsp;of the Armenian clergy, that the Tatars, instigated by local nobility and news&nbsp;from Baky, launched an offensive against the lightly armed Armenians. (Ibid.,&nbsp;<em>Chapter &#8220;Nakhitchevan And The May Massacres&#8221;, pp. 265-291)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>Ordubadi wrote that before the outbreak on May 11&nbsp; several Azerbaijanis were&nbsp;murdered on May 5, 7 and 9. On the night of May 11 Armenian gangs shelled the&nbsp;city of Nakhichevan. (<em>Ordubadi, pp. 18-20)&nbsp;<\/em>Russian vice-governor Taranovskiy arrived in the city from Erivan to restore&nbsp;order but his efforts failed. The Russian administration displayed no will to&nbsp;deal with the problem. Armenians, led by the Dashnak leader Duman, sent a&nbsp;message to the chief of Russian forces, warning him not to intervene and&nbsp;threatening Nakashidze if things turned otherwise. At the end of May, violence&nbsp;erupted in Erivan and spread to surrounding areas. There the Armenians were&nbsp;much stronger and celebrated victory.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In May 1905,&nbsp;Vorontsov-Dashkov was appointed Royal envoy in the Caucasus. Russian troops&nbsp;received orders to fire at the Azerbaijanis. The new envoy applied other&nbsp;measures against them. He considered the Armenians loyal to the Russian throne&nbsp;and maintained that since Peter the Great&#8217;s Russian policy was based on&nbsp;benevolence toward the Armenians. They in turn rewarded Russia with their&nbsp;active aid. (<em>Swietochowski, pp. 42-43)&nbsp;<\/em>From that time the Armenians felt confident to attack the Azerbaijanis.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>In response to superior organization of&nbsp;the Daslinaktsutun, various Muslim groups that had been fighting in a&nbsp;hit-or-miss fashion began to coordinate their actions. Yet it took the menacing&nbsp;reality of the Russian-Armenian entente to move the Azerbaijanis to create a&nbsp;clandestine political association, specifically to counteract this danger. Know&nbsp;as the Difai (Defence) was founded in Ganja, in the fall 1905 on the initiative&nbsp;of some local notables. [F]rom Baky they were joined by Ahmad Agayev. (<\/em><\/strong><em>Ibid)<sup> <\/sup><\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The latter was&nbsp;considered by Russian sources as a main proponent of pan-Islamism. However, he&nbsp;tried to persuade the Muslims that they lived peacefully with the Armenians for&nbsp;centuries. In general, the Difai blamed Russia for the bloodshed but also&nbsp;warned the Armenians that violence on their part would&nbsp;be answered in kind. (<em>Swietochowski)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In June violence&nbsp;broke out in Jebrail. Ordubadi reported that the Dashnaks invited Azerbaijani&nbsp;local leaders at a meeting and in a categorical manner called for joint&nbsp;struggle against the Russian rule. &#8220;We, Armenians, long ago started&nbsp;fighting for our national rights and self-rule. Our enemy, the Russian Empire&nbsp;resembles a big elephant. We, you and other non-Russian peoples suffered for&nbsp;many centuries and were helpless against this brutal government. We all skulk&nbsp;in the corner because of the fear, live in poverty and hunger.&#8221; Another&nbsp;Dashnak member concluded: &#8220;If you will not help us in this matter,&nbsp;sufferings will fall upon your motherland, which will be burnt out and&nbsp;destroyed. Your homes will become your graves.&#8221; (<em>Ordubadi, pp. 44)<\/em> This passionate passage from Ordubadi might be&nbsp;biased. However, we can find the confirmation of similar conversations between&nbsp;the Armenians and Azerbaijanis on other places from a pro-Armenian source. Luigi&nbsp;Villari reported his conversation with a local bek in Nakhichevan, Raghim-khan&nbsp;who told the following story:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>When the Russian Government&nbsp;confiscated the lands of the Armenian Church and closed its schools, the&nbsp;Armenian revolutionary committees became very active and tried to enlist our&nbsp;support on behalf of their movement. But we Tartars are peaceful people, loyal&nbsp;to our Tsar, and refused to listen to them. Whereupon the Armenians proceeded&nbsp;to threaten us, saying that if we did not help them we should be killed. They&nbsp;distributed menacing proclamations and pictures of Djon-fidais (Armenian&nbsp;revolutionists who have sworn to die for their country), armed to the teeth and&nbsp;told the Tartars that they had large stores of bombs and rifles. As the Tartars&nbsp;still persisted in their refusal the Armenians fell on them and assassinated a great&nbsp;number. (<\/em><\/strong><em>Vilarri, p.281)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Further Raghim-khan reported that the Armenians were better armed and &#8220;obtained them from Armenian ex-soldiers, or even from the Cossacks and from the Arsenal, for Government officials are always open to bribes.&#8221; &#8220;They [Armenians] never attack an armed Tatar unless they are in overwhelming numbers and even then they prefer to hide behind a bush or a rock&#8221;, (<em>Ibid)<\/em><sup> &nbsp;<\/sup>Ragim-khan concluded his story, which was accepted by Villari with a great sense of skepticism, while he did not question the version of events in Nakhichevan as narrated by Armenian archimandrites.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is not clear&nbsp;why the Armenians, having heard the refusal from the Azerbaijanis, decided to&nbsp;attack their possible future allies, as the refusal did not imply future enmity.&nbsp;Ordubadi noted that the Armenians were trying to achieve an independent State&nbsp;that would have no place for Azerbaijanis and Georgians. He doubted that the&nbsp;attempt to separate from the Russian Empire would be possible under any&nbsp;circumstance. &#8220;No matter how it [the Russian Empire] is weak, it has&nbsp;enough power to strike back. It is clear that in this case other Caucasian&nbsp;peoples will suffer. And needless to say, this strike will affect us Muslims. The&nbsp;Russian government will not be involved directly in the fight against the&nbsp;Armenians &#8211; it will use another Caucasian people against them&#8221;. (<em>Ordubadi, p.54)<\/em>This is what&nbsp;eventually happened.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;Azerbaijanis, at least the leaders of the nobility, refused to join the fight&nbsp;against Russian domination perhaps, because, as Audrey Alstadt pointed out,&nbsp;they wanted to reach their goals at the Russians&#8217; expense; the Armenians &#8211; at&nbsp;the Azerbaijanis. (<em>Altstadt, p.43)<\/em>The Azerbaijani leaders also might have been suspicious of the Armenians&#8217; sincerity and strategy. After May 1905 the Armenians allied with the Russian&nbsp;administration. The aforementioned Raghim-han blamed the Russian government for&nbsp;the enmity between the two peoples.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps&nbsp;initially the Azerbaijanis were not inclined to fight for their national&nbsp;rights. However, starting from this period the national liberation movement&nbsp;began to form. One of its leaders, Naki Keykurun blamed the Russians for the&nbsp;massacres as well. He believed that the Russian government supported and armed&nbsp;the Armenians.<em> (Naki Keykurun, The Memoirs&nbsp;of the National Liberation Movement in Azerbaijan. Published by Tomris Azeri,&nbsp;1998, see at &lt;<\/em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.azerbaijan.com\/azeri\/tomrisbookl.htm\">http:\/\/www.azerbaijan.com\/azeri\/tomrisbookl.htm<\/a><em>&gt;)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite the&nbsp;enmity, violence and clashes, the Armenian and Azerbaijani educated stratum&nbsp;tried to stop the massacres. In July 1905, peace committees were established to&nbsp;facilitate reconciliation. Tadeush Swietochowski noted&nbsp;that the Azerbaijanis &#8220;extended their open hand to the Armenians above the&nbsp;heads of the angry mobs [which] were more that just a manifestation of the&nbsp;intelligentsia&#8217;s enlightened humanitarianism, and even more than simply&nbsp;alertness to the scheming of Russian officialdom&#8221;.(<em>Swietochowski, p.45)&nbsp;<\/em>Unfortunately, these peace&nbsp;committees did not succeed in breaking the vicious circle of violence.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In August 1905&nbsp;violence and fires again hit Baky. Ordubadi reported that after the February&nbsp;events the Armenians decided to take revenge:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>If we had pondered something&nbsp;bad against the Armenians we would have never left the city, trusting it to the&nbsp;hands of porters and cabmen. And the Armenians would have never dared to act,&nbsp;if the Muslims had stayed in the city. The Armenians portrayed the actions on&nbsp;August 20 as an act of heroism. They wanted revenge for the February defeat.<\/em><\/strong><em>\n(Ordubadi, p. 64)<\/em><strong><em><\/em><\/strong>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The British&nbsp;diplomatic source confirmed this opinion: &#8220;The Armenians had not forgiven&nbsp;the Ta\u00adtars for the February massacres, and, considering themselves&nbsp;sufficiently well prepared to deal the Tatars a blow, may in all probability&nbsp;have arranged to attack them&#8221;.<em> (Dominic\nLieven, Kenneth Bourne, Cameron Watt, p. 189)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The second turn&nbsp;of violence in Baky started with a bell ringing at an Armenian Church and soon&nbsp;the Armenians attacked the Azerbaijanis. The latter, outnumbered and defeated&nbsp;in the city, burnt Armenian-owned oil fields in the outskirts of Baky in&nbsp;revenge. Vorontosv-Dashkov, having arrived in the city, took immediate and&nbsp;sharp measures to suppress the violence. Troops bombed any house from which&nbsp;fire was opened. By September 14 order was restored. Ordubadi reported that&nbsp;many Azerbaijanis and Armenians, led by their respective nobility and clergy,&nbsp;walked along streets and celebrated a peace accord.<em> (Ordubadi, p 69)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In summer 1905,&nbsp;the armed activities took an unprecedented dimension in Karabakh and Zangezur,&nbsp;particularly in Shusha. The events started with the murder of an Azerbaijani&nbsp;lamplighter on August 6. On August 16 Cossaks killed several Armenians&nbsp;but Azerbaijanis were blamed for this. The violence started immediately. On the&nbsp;next day the Azerbaijanis were successful in ousting the Armenians from the&nbsp;city. Two Armenian attempts to storm Shusha failed. On August 21 an armistice&nbsp;was concluded.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In November the&nbsp;two ethnic groups clashed in Ganja (then Elizavetpol). Armenian publicist&nbsp;Alibegov reported that on the night of November 18 two Azerbaijani corps were sent&nbsp;to an Armenian quarter. On the next morning an Azerbaijani opened fire on Armenians.&nbsp;It signaled the assault on the Armenian quarter. The Armenians quickly&nbsp;organized a defense. Alibegov blamed the city authorities for inaction. (<em>I.Alibekov. Elisovetpolskiyi krovaviyi dni&nbsp;pred sudom obshestva (Tiflis, 1906), pp. 1-6, see at &lt;http\/\/<\/em><em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.genocide.ru\/lib\/alibegov\/elizavetpole.html\">www.genocide.ru\/lib\/alibegov\/elizavetpole.html<\/a><\/em><em>&gt;)<\/em> He believed&nbsp;that a Russian governor Takaishvili abetted the massacres. (<em>Alibekov, pp. 7-8)<\/em> Ordubadi reported the&nbsp;murder of Azerbaijanis by certain Armenians and named them. (<em>Ordubadi, p. 90<\/em><em>)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Takaishvili was&nbsp;replaced by Fleischer but violence continued despite numerous attempts to reach&nbsp;peace. Order was restored with the arrival of general Malama. Villari reported&nbsp;that while troops tried to restore order, police worked to undo those efforts.&nbsp;(<em>Villari, p. 332<\/em><em>)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On November 20&nbsp;interethnic violence erupted in Tbilisi (then Tiflis) &#8211; capital of the Russian&nbsp;administration in the South Caucasus. The event was preceded by the murders of&nbsp;Azerbaijanis and Armenians. In Tbilisi the Armenians significantly outnumbered&nbsp;the Azerbaijanis. The latter asked for help from surrounding Azerbaijani&nbsp;settlements in the Borchali region. After reaching a military balance, the two&nbsp;parties agreed to sign a peace accord brokered by the Social-Democrats on&nbsp;December 1.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In February&nbsp;1906, a peace conference was called in Tbilisi to put an end to the interethnic&nbsp;violence. The conference delegates from both communities pointed to the&nbsp;inaction of the Russian administration as a major problem. Azerbaijani&nbsp;delegates also blamed the Dashnaktsutun party for massacring and propelling&nbsp;violence. Armenian delegates blamed Pan-Islamism. Vladimir Mayevsky, describing&nbsp;the conference, agreed that, &#8220;We need to acknowledge the guilt of &#8216;Dashnaktsutun&#8217;.&#8221; (<em>V.Mayevskiy, <\/em>ibid)<sup> &nbsp;<\/sup>The Armenians repelled this accusation, saying that&nbsp;the party just helped to organize self-defense of Armenian population.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite growing&nbsp;hopes that the enmity would end, in the summer 1906 new clashes erupted in&nbsp;Shusha. It was here that Russian Co-Governor Goloshapov had helped the&nbsp;Armenians significantly in the summer 1905 by backing their cause. After summer&nbsp;1905 Goloshapov was dismissed as Governor of Elizavetpol guberniya, which&nbsp;included Karabakh with Shusha. Governor Alftan replaced him. But in summer 1906&nbsp;Russian authorities decided to appoint two governors for this guberniya &#8211;&nbsp;Alftan was retained and Goloshapov was brought back. With Goloshapov&#8217;s help,&nbsp;the Armenians laid siege to Shusha, but the Azerbaijanis succeeded in defending&nbsp;the city.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After failure in&nbsp;Shusha, Armenians launched offensive operations in Zangezur and Nakhichevan.&nbsp;According to Ordubadi, they tried to create a mono-ethnic Armenian zone from&nbsp;Erivan to Karabakh. (<em>Ordubadi, p. 126<\/em><em>)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>This operation was not successful either. This was the last big clash&nbsp;between the ethnic communities within the Russian Empire, which collapsed&nbsp;later, in 1917. Isolated incidents continued until winter 1906.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The massacres of&nbsp;1905-1906 claimed thousands of lives and destroyed hundreds of settlements.&nbsp;According to an Armenian source, 158 Azerbaijani and 128 Armenian villages were&nbsp;destroyed and pillaged. (<em>Quoted from&nbsp;Swietochowski, p. 39 &#8211; E.Aknouni, Political persecutions: Armenian Prisoners of&nbsp;the Caucasus (NewYork, 1911), p. 30)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>The same source&nbsp; acknowledged that more Azerbaijani were killed than&nbsp;Armenians and their total of victims might be greater because Muslims concealed&nbsp;the number of killed as a result of the Muslim custom to bury the dead on the&nbsp;same day. Moreover, the Azerbaijanis &#8211; unlike the Armenians &#8211; did not cooperate&nbsp;closely with the authorities after May 1905 and probably did not report their&nbsp;losses. Another Armenian source says that from 3,000 to 10,000 people died&nbsp;during the interethnic clashes. (<em>Richard&nbsp;Hovannisian, Armenia on the Road to Independence, 1918. Reprint (Berkeley and&nbsp;Los Angeles: University o! California Press, 1967), p. 264<\/em><em>)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>Obviously, the Azerbaijanis suffered greater losses. Ordubadi notes:\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>Had the Armenians conducted&nbsp;their preparations in a clandestine manner, the total of Azerbaijanis killed&nbsp;would have been even greater. In the meantime, the Muslims in Baky did not take&nbsp;the confrontation seriously and defended many Armenians. We have a number of&nbsp;letters about that. [W]e hope that in the future the two peoples will not feel&nbsp;anything except love and trust. [I] would like to say that both peoples should&nbsp;not think of revenge because they have to live on this land together, free from&nbsp;troubles, trying to honour their laws and dignity.<\/em><\/strong> (<em>Ordubadi, p.17<\/em><em>)<\/em><sup> <\/sup>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><strong><\/strong>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Unfortunately,&nbsp;the tragedy of 1905-1906 was repeated on an even larger scale. In the aftermath&nbsp;of the collapse of the Russian Empire in March 1918 the Dashnaks, together with&nbsp;the Bolsheviks massacred close to 12,000 Azerbaijanis in Baky. In 1988 the&nbsp;current conflict started and resulted in grave consequences causing much loss&nbsp;and suffering. The events of 1905-1906 are imprinted in the memory of the two&nbsp;peoples.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Before 1905 the&nbsp;two groups lived together peacefully. The Turkish-Armenian clashes in the&nbsp;Ottoman Empire in the 1890s affected the Azerbaijanis; this effect was even&nbsp;greater after the event of 1915. The Armenians led by the nationalist&nbsp;Dashnaktsutun considered the Azerbaijani Turks as their enemy too. While the&nbsp;Russian authorities bore their own portion of responsibility for their colonial&nbsp;policy, the Armenian nationalist groups, particularly the Dashnaks, are&nbsp;responsible for the outbreak and continuation of the hostilities. Armenian&nbsp;revolutionary aspirations were channeled to narrow chauvinistic ideas aimed&nbsp;against the Turkic population of the South Caucasus and creation of an&nbsp;independent State on the territories where the Azerbaijani Turks lived. (<em>Speaking about&nbsp; hese territories and its&nbsp;population, I put aside a moot concept of &#8216;historical lands&#8221; and their&nbsp;belonging to certain ethnic groups 500, 1000 or 2000 years ago)<\/em>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Azerbaijani&nbsp;violence was frequently spontaneous and initiated among the grassroots. Some&nbsp;local leaders of the nobility and perhaps emissaries from the Persian State are&nbsp;also responsible for clashes. The same patterns of violence can be observed&nbsp;during the ongoing conflict. The pogroms in Sumgait in February 1988 and in&nbsp;Baky in January 1990 differ radically from the Azerbaijani exodus from Armenia&nbsp;in the fall of 1989 and the massacre in Khojaly in February 1992. While&nbsp;violence on the part of the Azerbaijanis stemmed from the grassroots and&nbsp;conducted either by groups of criminals or refugees fleeing from Armenia, on&nbsp;the Armenian side it were conducted by the leaders of the country, parties or&nbsp;the elites who meticulously planned and organized the acts of violence against&nbsp;the Azerbaijanis.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As for the&nbsp;massacres of 1905-1906, violence usually started in response to the murders of&nbsp;Azerbaijanis. Some scholars believe that these murders were organized&nbsp;provocation by the Russian authorities. It seems, however, the Russian administration&nbsp;did not act as executer of these events but rather facilitated to the massacres&nbsp;by its inaction and later manipulated the two ethnic groups. At the very least,&nbsp;the colonial policy of the Russian Empire created conditions for animosity between&nbsp;the Armenians and the Azerbaijanis.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During the&nbsp;Soviet era the policy of favoritism and discrimination continued. For example,&nbsp;the Soviets allowed Armenians and Georgians to retain their ancient alphabets&nbsp;but introduced the Latin script for the Azerbaijanis to change traditional askl&nbsp; alifba based on the Arabic script. Later when Turkey adopted&nbsp;the Latin script, the Soviets introduced the Cyrillic script. The Bolsheviks&nbsp;considered the Azerbaijani Turks proximity to their Anatolian brethrens as a&nbsp;threat to the Soviet rule. The resettlement policy was also continued by the&nbsp;Soviet Union. In 1948-1953- as a result of a decision of Soviet Cabinet of Ministries&nbsp;dated December 23, 1947 &#8211; thousands of Azerbaijanis were resettled from Armenia&nbsp;to Azerbaijan, and some even ended up in Kazakhstan these are just few examples&nbsp;of the Soviet policy of discrimination and favoritism.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Many other&nbsp;parallels can be found between the events of 1905-1906 and the modern conflict&nbsp;after the 1905-1906 massacres the two ethnic communities &#8211; particularly their&nbsp;nobility, clergy and educated classes &#8211; cooperated and interacted. However&nbsp;during the current conflict, hatred prevails, and the rhetoric of territorial&nbsp;claims and ethnic incompatibility, as described by the former Armenian president&nbsp;Robert Kocharian, overwhelms the vocabulary of politicians and academics.\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><em>Farid Shafiyev<\/em><\/strong>\n\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cDiplomatiya al\u0259mi\u201d. <\/em><strong><em>2008.-N18-<\/em><\/strong><em>1<\/em><strong><em>9.-S. 14-2<\/em><\/strong><strong><em>9<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(End) &nbsp; &nbsp;Events of&nbsp;1905-1906<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":12,"featured_media":108982,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[653,141,59],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-108979","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-beginning-genocide-slide-9","category-analysis-genocides-of-azerbaijanis","category-genocides-of-azerbaijanis"],"fimg_url":"https:\/\/1905.az\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/02\/Baku-1905.jpg","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/108979","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/12"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=108979"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/108979\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":164493,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/108979\/revisions\/164493"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/108982"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=108979"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=108979"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1905.az\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=108979"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}