The Russian Annexation of the Crimea 1772–1783
The Black Sea and the coastal areas have played an important role in the history of eastern Europe and western Asia. Byzantium, Kiev Rus, the Golden Horde, Lithuania, Poland, the Ottoman Empire and Muscovy all tried to control parts of its area at various periods in history. From 1475 for three hundred years the Ottoman Turks controlled the Black Sea and the lands surrounding it. In 1783 Catherine annexed the Crimean peninsula, with its Muslim Tatar population, to the Russian Empire after a major Russian military victory over the Ottomans. The effect on the Ottoman Empire was significant. It lost its Tatar military forces when traditional means of securing recruits for the army had broken down; lost its secure northern frontier - the route to Istanbul itself was now open; it lost, for the first time, a Muslim province. This book provides a scholarly and balanced account of an important part of the transformation of the Muscovite state into a multinational empire. It also contributes to our understanding of the decline of the Ottoman Empire.
Product details
September 2008Paperback
9780521077606
200 pages
216 × 140 × 12 mm
0.26kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. The Crimean Khanate in the Ottoman
- 2. Russian interest in the Crimea before 1768
- 3. The establishment of the independent Crimean state
- 4. The first period of Crimean independence, 1774–7
- 5. Sahin Giray and the second period of Crimean independence
- 6. Sahin Giray's second reign
- 7. The Russian annexation of the Crimea
- 8. The Treaty of Jassy: conclusion.