Publication: Reform or cataclysm? the agreement of 8 February 1914 regarding the ottoman eastern provinces
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Kieser, Hans-Lukas
Polatel, Mehmet
Schmutz, Thomas
Advisor
Publication Date
2015
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
On 8 February 1914, Ottoman Grand Vizier Said Halim and the Russian charge d'affaires Konstantin Gulkevich signed a reform project for seven Ottoman eastern provinces that covered roughly half of Asia Minor. This international Reform Agreement differed considerably from a first Russian draft the year before. Though little known by most World War I historians in the West, this agreement was a central but fragile piece for the future of Ottoman coexistence in egalitarian terms in Asia Minor on the eve of World War I. Often called 'Armenian Reforms', it was also a last seminal, more or less consensual project of European diplomacy before the latter's breakdown in the July crisis of 1914. Important Ottoman and non-Ottoman protagonists then chose the road towards cataclysm instead of efforts for Ottoman coexistence, reform and international consensus building. The cataclysm of greater Europe in World War I produced various seminal outcomes. One main result in the Levant was a Turkish nation-state in Asia Minor that excluded Asia Minor's Christians and tried to assimilate non-Turkish Muslims, above all Kurds, into 'Turkdom'. This article argues that the agreement of 1914 had opened for a short time a completely different perspective and that it played a crucial role on the road that led to genocide in spring 1915. Its postulates are still topical.
Description
Source:
Journal of Genocide Research
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Keywords:
Subject
Political science