1879 |
Armenian performances
are forbidden in Constantinople. The urban
Armenian population of Garin and Arabkir
come out against the government. |
1880
August |
By special order of
the Turkish government, the word "Armenia"
is forbidden for use in official documents. |
1884
June |
Armenians "rebel" in
Zeitun against oppressive Turkish taxes. |
1886 |
The Turkish government
divides Western Armenia administratively
into separate vilayets of Erzerum, Garin,
Kharput, Diarbekir, Dersim, Bitlis (Baghesh),
Van, Hekyari and Sivas (Sebastia). |
1888 |
The Turkish government
orders that all Armenian periodicals and
magazines in Constantinople and Western
Armenia be discontinued. |
1890
June 15 |
An Armenian
demonstration in the district of Gum-Gapu in
Constantinople is drowned in Armenian blood. |
1890
June 18-20 |
Alleging provocative
actions by Armenians, Turkish armed forces
and Turkish mobs attack Armenians in Garin (Erzerum).
Hundreds of Armenians are killed. |
1891
January |
The Armenians of
Vardenis in Taron are robbed by Turks and
their village is destroyed. |
1893
|
Sultan Abdul Hamid II,
known as the Bloody Sultan, suspends the
Armenian National Constitution, and also
discontinues the national parliament in
Constantinople, which includes some Armenian
representatives. |
1894
August 20-27 |
Sassun’s Gelie-guzan
village massacre, known as the "Gelie-guzan
Hole Carnage" takes place. Here, Turks
inaugurate the system of slaughtering
unarmed people, which later was the
prototype for Hitler’s concentration camps. |
1894
August 25-30 |
Sassun’s Gebin Mount
carnage is inflicted when the Turkish army
manages to force Armenian women, children
and old men to leave Andok for the forest on
the bottom of mountain. The army ignites the
forest and burns the Armenians alive. Note:
This is a harbinger of the extermination of
future victims by burning them alive in
stables and other large storage facilities. |
1894
August |
10,000 Armenians are
killed and 74 Armenian villages are
destroyed in Sassun. |
1894
August-October |
Armenians refuse to pay illegal taxes to
Kurdish irregular forces in Sassun. Unrest
in the vilayet of Bitlis, near Mush. Revolt
in Sassun. Attempted uprising against
Kurdish oppression is followed by massacres
in Sassun. A joint report published on July
28, 1895 by the Commission of Inquiry
created by the initiative of the Great
Powers, estimates the number of victims at
5,000. |
1895
May 11 |
Governments of six
countries present the Turkish Sultan Abdul
Hamid II a special note describing the
disastrous conditions of Armenia and demand
the Turkish government to carry out
improvements. |
1895
August
|
Joint memorandum
presented by Britain, France and Russia to
the Sultan, pointing out the disastrous
situation in the Armenian provinces and
urging him to proceed with the reforms. The
Imperial Turkish Government replies in
August 1895 and promises to carry out the
reforms specified in Article 61 of the
Treaty of Berlin (1978). |
1895
September 30 |
Carnage of Armenians
in Baberd at the hands of the Turks. |
1895
September 30, October |
In the Bab Ali section
of Constantinople, Armenians carry out a
peaceful demonstration. The Turks set upon
killing Armenians. 2000 Armenians die.
Protests by the Great Powers by joint note
from three ambassadors (French, British and
Russian) on October 13-15 demand reforms. On
October 31 a decree is issued, providing for
reforms. |
1895
October 5 |
Mass obliteration of
Armenians takes place in Trebizond and its
villages. Armenians of Sassun share the same
fate. |
1895
October 7 |
Armenians of Derjan
province are slaughtered by the Turks. |
1895
October 8 |
Massacres of Armenians
by Turks begin in the vilayet of Trebizond
as confirmed by the report of Gillieres, the
French Consul in Trebizond. |
1895
October 9 |
The carnage of
Armenians at Erzingan and Kamakh by the
Turks. |
1895
October 10 |
In Kghi province more
than 1000 Armenians are killed, and dozens
of villages destroyed. In Bitlis, 102
villages are destroyed. On the same day the
carnage of Armenians at Charsanjak and in
its villages begins, taking almost 700
lives. In Balu, the body count of Armenian
victims reaches 1200, Arabkir – 2800, Torgom
– 500 |
1895
October 13 |
Most of the Armenians
in Baghesh are killed by the Turks. |
1895
October 16 |
Urfa in Yedesia is
attacked and in spite of persistent defense,
the Turkish army and the Turkish mob succeed
in slaying around 10,000 Armenians. On the
same day, the Turks inflict similiar carnage
in Shapin-Garahisar. 2000 Armenians are
slain in the town and 3000 in 30 villages. |
1895
October 21 |
The Armenian
population in Erzingan, a town of Erzerum
vilayet, is slaughtered by the Turks. 1000
Armenians are killed. |
1895
October 23 |
3000 Armenians of
Malatia are killed. 1000 houses are burned. |
1895
October 25 |
Massacres follow in
Bitlis, in the vilayet of Bitlis. |
1895
October 26 |
Almost the entire
Armenian population of Kharput is
slaughtered by the Turks. The body count
exceeds 4000. Mass massacres take place in
Bayburd, vilayet of Erzerum. 165 villages
are destroyed. |
1895
October 27-28 |
Massacres in Urfa,
vilayet of Aleppo, the first by the Hamidie
Kurdish regiments organized by the Turks for
this purpose, confirmed by the report of the
British consul, Fitzmaurice, dated March 16,
1896. |
1895
October 30 |
Massacres in Erzerum,
vilayet of Erzerum. 400 killed by the
Turkish mob and soldiers. |
1895
October 31 |
Massacres occur in
Garin and in the vilayet of Erzerum. Around
2000 Armenians are killed; 43 villages are
destroyed. |
1895
October |
Organized massacres of
Armenians by Turks in Constantinople and
Trebizond. |
1895
November 1 |
Diarbekir carnage
begins. 1000 Armenians are killed in the
town and 30,000 more in the villages. 119
villages are destroyed. Massacres in Arabkir,
vilayet of Kharput. 2,800 dead. Massacres in
Diarbekir, vilayet of Diarbekir. Confirmed
by a telegram of Meyrier, the French consul
in Diarbekir, sent on November 3 to P.
Cambon, the French ambassador in
Constantinople. He estimates incorrectly:
5000 dead. 119 villages are pillaged and set
on fire. |
1895
November 3 |
Almost the whole
Armenian population in Marzvan, around 700
people, are killed by the Turks. |
1895
November 4 |
3,800 killed in the
vilayet of Kharput by the Turks. |
1895
November 10 |
Systematic Turkish
army attacks on Van take place. The city of
Van, in the vilayet of Van, is attacked by
the Turkish Hamidie forces. Forced
conversions to Islam in Kharput, vilayet of
Kharput. |
1895
November 11 |
Turkish army attacks
the town of Balu, in the vilayet of Kharput.
It results in 1680 Armenian deaths. Turkey
proclaims a holy war (Djihad). |
1895
November 12 |
Turks kill 1,500
Armenians in the vilayet of Sivas, and an
equal number in Gurun. |
1895
November 15-17 |
Armies of Sultan
destroy Aintab in the vilayet of Aleppo and
kill 1500 Armenians. |
1895
November 18 |
Massacres in Marash,
vilayet of Aleppo. 1,000 Armenians are
killed. |
1895
November 18-20 |
160 villages around
the city of Van are robbed and pillaged. |
1895
November 28 |
In Zklus, 200
Armenians are killed; in Amasia, 100; and in
Aleppo, 1000. |
1895
December |
Armenians of the
villages of Norduz, Hayots Dzor, Gavash and
Karchevan in the vilayet of Bitlis are set
upon by fire and sword. 100 villages are
destroyed. On December 28 in the town of
Ourfa (Yedesia), 8000 Armenians are
slaughtered. 100 villages around Mush,
vilayet of Bitlis, are destroyed. |
1895
December 28 |
A battalion of
Turkish-led Hamidie forces, proceeding from
Aleppo, encircles the town of Urfa.
Massacres on the following day kill 8,000
Armenians. This is confirmed by the
above-mentioned report of the British
consul, Fitzmaurice, dated March 16, 1896,
as well as by the French consul. |
Global
Estimates |
Most of the figures
mentioned through 1895 come to a total of
150,000 to 300,000 dead, to which must be
added some 150,000 forced conversions and
some 100,000 emigrants forced to flee. The
report written by the agents of the European
Powers estimate 28,000 killed just in the
localities where representatives of foreign
nations were present. |
1896
June 8-15
TOP |
The population of Van
and nearby villages is destroyed. The major
Armenian population of Sgherdi is decimated
and survivors are forcibly converted to
Islam. In 40 villages of Khizan, 400 people,
and in 20 villages of Mamrzank 160 people
are slain, and the others are converted to
Islam forcibly. All Armenian villages of
Shatakh are devastated and turned to ruins.
11 villages of Gyumushkhane are destroyed
and most of their population slain. |
1896
Middle of June |
Turks break their vow
and near St. Bartholemew Church, attack
Armenians in Van seeking to defend
themselves, murdering 1500 people. The
survivors flee to Persia. |
1896
August 26 |
A
group of Armenian militants of the Dashnak
Party occupies the Ottoman Bank in
Constantinople in order to gain the
attention of foreign powers to the
oppression of the Armenians. Achieving their
purpose, they leave the bank in the evening
and are picked up by boat and taken to
France. Much attention is aroused in the
Western capitals. However, this action
results in a massacre in Constantinople, on
August 27, killing approximately 7,000
Armenian victims. |
1896
August 28 |
Representatives of the
Great Powers send a telegram of protest to
the Ottoman authorities. |
1896
September 2 |
Armenian population of
Agn is destroyed. Half the houses in the
city are burned. Joint verbal note of
protest issued by the Great Powers, accusing
the Sublime Porte directly. |
1896
September 3 |
In the city of Mush
and its villages, 250 Armenians are killed
by the Turks. |
1896
November 10 |
In Agn’s Binkaya
village, 250 Armenians are killed. Of the
250 houses there, only 12 houses remain
standing. |
1894-1896 |
300,000 Armenians
become the victims of the carnages inflicted
by the Turks. In addition, almost as many
flee the country. |
1900
August |
Mothers and children
are cut down by sword in Sassun’s Spaghanak
villages by sudden attacks late at night. |
1904
May |
7500 Armenians are
slain in Sassun by the Turks. |
1908
April 14 |
Violent outbreaks in
Adana (in Cilicia) and in near-by towns, in
an attempted counter-revolution by Turks
supporting the Sultan. They are soon
squelched. |
1908
July |
Military coup in
Salonica by the Young Turk movement (the
Union and Progress Party). There begins a
brief period of collaboration among Turks,
Armenians and other minorities. The
subsequent massacres in Adana do not shake
this new-found cooperation. |
1908
July 24 |
The Ottoman
Constitution is proclaimed. |
1909
April 15-25 |
30,000 Armenians are
slaughtered in Adana, Tarsus and other towns
of Cilicia. The Turkish army bears direct
responsibility, but the Armenian community
is willing to consider it as an isolated
incident, and to continue to trust the Young
Turks until further events prove otherwise. |
1913
January 29 |
In Turkey, the
triumvirate of Enver, Talaat and Jemal Pasha
heads the government. |
1914
February 8
TOP |
Under the combined influence of Russia and
Great Britain, the Turkish authorities sign
the Armenian Reform Project and agree to
take certain measures in favor of the
Armenian population.The Dutch, Westemeck,
and the Norwegian, Hoft, are appointed as
General Inspectors of the Armenian
provinces, but they are rendered
ineffective. The promised measures are not
implemented. |
1914-
beginning of 1915 |
The
Armenian Patriarchate in Constantinople
estimates the Armenian population in Turkey
at 2,100,000. World War I begins July 1914.
Loyally, the Armenians participate in the
war effort. Mobilization of the entire
population, including Armenians, is decreed
and the Armenians of Turkey take part in the
war on the Caucasian and Western fronts.
Immediately preceding the war, the Armenian
population is neutral because a number of
Armenians in Russia is mobilized on the
Russian side, and a natural desire to avoid
a fratricidal war. Some Armenian presence in
the Russian Army will become an argument
used by the Turkish authorities in their
attempt to justify the measures they took
later to destroy the Armenian people. |
1915
January
TOP |
Enver is disastrously defeated in Sarikamish
at the hands of Russian troops, marking a
failure of his Pan-Turanian plans. The
Turkish authorities decree the
demobilization and disarmament of the
Armenians. The Armenians are grouped into
small work battalions used for garbage
details and similar tasks. The Armenian
soldiers in the Turkish army, under the
pretext of work details, are marched and
killed in cold blood or used for target
practice. |
1915
January 13 |
A.F. Kerensky, a
member of the National Council of Russia and
later briefly to be the leader of Russia, in
a report, describes the astounding plight of
Armenian refugees. He declares that when the
Turkish attacks on Russian territory began,
rivers of Armenian refugees stretched to the
North… "That was not an escape, it was the
great demise of a whole nation". |
1915
February 13 |
Two Armenian deputies
of the Ottoman Assembly submit a note
concerning the massacres and executions of
several such battalions. |
1915
February 26 |
War Minister Enver
convenes 75 top ranking Ittihadists. This
secret meeting finalizes the details of the
plan to carry out a genocide of the
Armenians. Evidence indicates that the
decision to carry out the Genocide was made
some years earlier. |
1915
April 8 |
The process of
removing the Armenian population of Zeitun
commences. Taking advantage of the defense
staged by a group of young Armenians, the
Turkish army invades Zeitun, with the
assistance of local Turks, to re-establish
control. The mass deportation and massacres
of Armenian inhabitants of the entire region
is immediately organized. This mountainous
region had always preserved a
quasi-autonomy. |
1915
April 15 |
Talaat, Enver and
Nazem send a secret order to the local
governments for the removal and
extermination of Armenians in Turkey. |
1915
April 15-18 |
While the Armenian
population of Van is fleeing to Russia
because of the evacuation of the Russian
army, the Turkish forces attack villages of
the vilayet. They destroy 80 villages and
slay 24,000 Armenians in the vilayet and
city of Van. The Turks accuse the Armenians
of collaboration with the Russian troops. |
1915
April 20 |
At
the news of the massacres, the mostly
Armenian population of Van takes to the
barricades. The Turkish authorities will
also use this incident on the Caucasian
front and the resistance of the Armenians as
a pretext to justify the measures of
deportation (and massacre) they are about to
inflict. |
1915
April 20- May 19 |
The remaining
Armenians of Van try to defend themselves
from the overwhelming Turkish forces. |
1915
April 24 |
800 Armenian leaders,
writers and intellectuals are arrested in
Constantinople and murdered. The barbaric
Armenian genocide begins. This is a most
important date for all Armenians today. It
represents the date for commemorating the
Armenian Genocide each year throughout the
world. |
1915
April 27-30 |
The forced removal and
deportation of Dyurt Yol’s Armenian
population begins. |
1915
May 15 |
Turkish forces begin
the process of removal and deportation of
the Armenian population from villages in the
vilayet of Erzerum. |
1915
May 16 |
Law
of May 16, 1915 is enacted with
"instructions pertaining to property and
real estate abandoned by the deported
Armenians, consequences of the war and
unusual political circumstances". This law
provides for the installation of Turkish
refugees in the homes and on the lands
belonging to the Armenians. |
1915
May 24
TOP |
The governments of
England, France and Russia jointly warn the
Turkish government publicly that "They will
hold personally responsible... all members
of the Ottoman government and those of their
agents who are implicated in such
massacres". This is the first time in the
international arena three large countries
publicly characterize the Turkish actions
against Armenians as crimes against
"humanity and civilization" for which
"personal responsibility is laid on every
member of the Turkish government who
participated in the carnages". The
communique of the Allied Powers of the
Entente, published by the Havas news agency,
accuses the Ottoman Turkish government
directly for the massacres against the
Armenian population. |
1915
May 27 |
The law of May 27,
1915 is enacted concerning the "displacement
of suspected persons." This law empowers
army officers to relocate populations upon
the simple suspicion of treason or for
military reasons. |
1915
June 1 |
12,000 Armenian
soldiers in the Turkish army are massacred
in Balu, vilayet of Diarbekir. |
1915
June 10 |
A supplementary law is
enacted regarding reporting property of
deportees. See entry under September 26 as
to supplementary law adopted September 26,
1915. |
1915
June 12-July 3 |
Turkish armies slay or
remove Armenians of Shapin Garahisar, who
tried to defend themselves. |
1915
June 15 |
21 leaders of the
Hnchukyan Party are hanged publicly in
Constantinople. |
1915
June 24 |
Massacres and
deportations of the inhabitants of Shabin
Karahissar begin. |
1915
June 25 |
The removal and
deportation of the Armenians of the city of
Sivas begin. |
1915
June 26 |
The removal of the
Armenian population of Kharput and Trebizond
vilayets are commenced by the Turkish army.
Photocopy of the original deportation order
(written in old Turkish with Arabic
characters) is to be found in the Archives
of the United States State Department in
Washington, DC. |
1915
June 27 |
Mass removals and
deportations of Armenians begin in Samsun. |
1915
July 1 |
Assyrians and
Armenians are deported from Medzpin (Nisibe),
Tel-Ermen (Hill of the Armenians), Bitlis,
vilayet of Bitlis, Mardin and surrounding
regions. |
1915
July 3 |
The massacre begins of
the Armenian population of Mush, Sassun and
Bitlis vilayets begins. |
1915
July 10 |
The Armenian
population of Malatia is deported. |
1915
July 13 |
Self-defense of Musa
mountain begins. The heroic band of
Armenians is later vividly depicted in the
best-selling novel "Forty Days of Musa Dagh"
by Franz Werfel. |
1915
July 27 |
The Armenian
population of Cilicia and Antioch is
deported. |
1915
July 28 |
The removal of the
Armenian population of the Cilician cities,
Aintab and Qilise, is carried out. In Great
Britain's House of Lords, in answer to
Viscount James Bryce’s question concerning
the slaughter of Christians in Armenia, the
president of the Military Council, Lord Grew
declares that the information received by
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows that
the Turkish crimes are increasing both in
numbers and in violence. Lord Grew declares
that "all those mass carnages and violent
removals are engaged under the pretext of
forced transmigration". |
1915
July 29 |
Deportations begin
from Aintab and Kilisse, in Cilicia. |
1915
July 30 |
Deportations begin
from Suedia, in Cilicia. |
1915
August 16 |
Deportations begin
from Marash in Cilicia and Konia in western
Asia Minor. |
1915
August 10-19 |
Removal and
deportations begin of Armenians from Smyrna
(Nikodemia), Brusa, Bartizak, Adabazar and
surrounding areas. |
1915
August 19 |
Removal and
deportation begin of Armenian population of
Urfa in Yedesia. |
1915
September 15
TOP |
Turkey’s Minister of
Interior, Talaat Pasha, cables to the Aleppo
Prefecture the confirmation of the
previously transmitted order for removal of
Armenians and their final elimination. The
original of this cable is reproduced in the
book of A. Andonian "The Memoirs of Naim Bey
(The Genocide of the Armenians by the
Turks). With a New Preface by the Armenian
Historical Association", Documentary Series,
Vol. I, Great Britain, Reprint 1964, 83 pp.
Exhibit No. 3 at the trial of Soghomon
Tehlirian, authenticated by the German
Court. (At a trial before a Berlin court in
1921, following the assassination of Talaat
by Tehlirian, Tehlirian was acquitted by the
Court because of the circumstances.) |
1915
September 15 |
Rashid, Governor of
Diarbekir, sends cable to Talaat, the
Minister of the Interior, announcing that
the number of Armenians "expelled" from
Diarbekir has reached 120,000. |
1915
September 26 |
"Provisional law concerning the property,
debts and receivables of persons relocated
elsewhere" is adopted. This law provides for
the liquidation of debts and receivables of
displaced persons (Armenians). A special
commission is "charged" with holding the
proceeds of sales in escrow. The German
Foreign Office summarized this law as
compressed to provide "1. All goods of the
Armenians are confiscated. 2. The
governments will cash in the credits of the
deportees and will repay (will not repay)
their debts". |
1915
September 30 and October 7 |
In Bern, Switzerland,
at its Central Hall, public meetings are
held deploring the ongoing Armenian tragedy. |
1915
October |
110 famous German and
Italian civilians in Switzerland, including
scientists, journalists and public figures
publish "The Call" both in French and
German, in defense of the Armenian people. |
Note |
As in Switzerland, in
many other places all over the world, there
were many, many public meetings of protest
and countless public statements by various
heads of state and other officials
condemning the Turkish massacres and
deportations of the Armenians, threatening
the Turks responsible with appropriate
punishment and promising justice and
territorial and/or monetary restitution for
the Armenians. The statements and meetings
referred to in this chronology are but a
tiny sample. |
1915
October 6
|
In Great Britain’s
House of Lords, Lord James Bryce denounces
the Turkish murderous campaign against the
Armenians. He declares the time has passed
when any harm could be caused by public
statements and the more complete the
statements, the more good it may bring,
because it remains the only chance of
preventing these carnages from continuing,
if they are not over yet. It is a pity, he
says, that his information from several
sources indicates that the number of victims
is very large. It is considered to be
800,000 as of then. He states that there is
no commandment in Islam that can justify
such slaughters. He urges every effort be
made to send help for the poor, wretched
survivors, hundreds of which are dying of
starvation and disease. "That is all that we
can do now in England and let us do it and
do it swiftly". |
1915
October 12 |
In Great Britain’s
House of Commons, the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Edward Grey declares "All the
information concerning the carnages of
Armenians in Turkey became public. Only two
feelings can describe it – horror and
disturbance." |
1915
November 16 |
As the government
spokesman for questions from members of the
House of Commons, Vice Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Lord R. Cecil declares that Turkey
intended not to punish the Armenian race,
but to destroy it. That was the only goal. |
1915
November 18 |
In Paris at the
"American Club", a public meeting urges help
to alleviate the Armenian suffering. |
1915
December 12
TOP |
Talaat, Minister of
the Interior, sends a telegram to the
Prefecture of Aleppo. He states that in view
of the rather compassionate attitude of
certain valis with respect to orphans, the
order is given that the orphans be sent away
with the caravans, with the exception of the
very young ones unable to remember the
atrocities. The original cable is reproduced
in said Andonian's book "The
Memoirs of Naim Bey (The Genocide of the
Armenians by the Turks)".
|
1916
January 11
|
In Germany’s
Reichstag, deputy Karl Libknecht, an
international socialist figure, directs a
question to the Vice Chancellor, as to
whether he is aware that in Turkey, their
ally, thousands of Armenian citizens have
been removed from their homes and
exterminated. He demands that the German
government forbid the Turks from further
terrifying actions against the remaining
Armenian population. |
1916
February 9 |
The United States
Senate votes (with the concurrence of
the House of Representatives) to ask the
President of the United States of America to
set a special day when citizens of this
country can help Armenians with financial
support, considering that many of them,
being in the country that was at war, were
forced to leave their houses and belongings
without any opportunity to care even for
their primal needs, are afflicted with
hunger, disease and untold sufferings.
President Wilson designates August 21 and
August 22 for making contributions for the
suffering Armenians. |
1916
February 9 |
In the Russian Duma,
Minister of Foreign Affairs S.D. Sazonov
declares "I have mentioned before about the
awful sufferings of that wretched race.
Under the tacit assent of its ally, Germany,
the Turks hoped to bring alive their desire
to exterminate the entire Armenian race..." |
1916
March 7 |
Talaat, Minister of
the Interior, sends a cable to the Aleppo
Prefecture, ordering the extermination of
children at military installations. |
1916
April 9 |
"Homage to Armenia"
gathering takes place in Paris’ Sorbonne
University, attracting thousands of people.
Speaking at that gathering, France’s
Minister of Education declares that "For
more than a year carnages paint Armenia red
in blood and have surpassed other crimes in
scale and in violence. Germany can be proud
of its horrid deeds". At the same program,
the opening words of the president of the
National Council of France, Paul Deshnanel,
firmly condemns the slaughter of Armenians
at the hands of the Turkish executioners. |
1916
July 29 |
"France-Armenia"
company is formed in Paris, members of which
are ministers of the French government,
senators, deputies, Georges Clemenceau,
writer Anatole France and other dignitaries. |
1916
August 19 |
Decree abolishes the
national Armenian constitution of 1863, in
violation of Article 61 of the Treaty of
Berlin concerning religious freedom. |
1916
November 16 |
In Berlin’s Missionary
Union, Doctor Karl Accenfeld sends a
statement to the German Chancellor
Bettman-Holveg in which he asserts "In
neutral countries large accusations are
spreading against Germany about not only
calmly watching, but also helping to realize
the extinction of a whole Christian race".
Note: In the bibliography in this web-site
is listed a volume by Dadrian dealing with
the German involvement. |
1917
January 1 |
By a special
decree/law the government of Turkey condemns
the 1978 Treaty of Berlin and especially
Article 61. |
1917
March 29 |
In Stockholm, a large
meeting takes place dedicated to repudiation
of the mass murder of Armenians. The members
of the meeting deplore the insensitivity of
Sweden towards Armenians. |
1917
November 6
TOP |
In Great Britain’s
House of Commons, Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Arthur Balfour declares "Do we need
to ignore that Armenia should be given back,
as respected gentlemen wish to give it back
with their formula, under the reign of
Turkey. I don’t want to ruin the Turkish
community – consisting of Turks, in Turkish
fitting style, commanding the Turks. No, our
constant goal is the emancipation of
non-Turks from Turkish governance. What is
imperialistic in wishing to see Poland
independent, Armenia liberated from Turks,
Alsace Lorraine rejoined to France, to see
Italy having its own population, language,
area and civilization". |
1917
December 4 |
Speaking in the
Congress of the United States, President
Wilson states "We hope to provide the right
and opportunity for people living in the
Turkish Empire to make their lives safe and
their fate secure from aggression and
injustice, orders of foreign courts and
parties. |
1918
January 6 |
In the name of the "Germano
- Armenian community", Paul Rorbach, Edward
Kir and Martin Rade urge the government of
Germany to promote autonomy for Armenia. |
1918
January 8 |
President Wilson’s
Declaration of Fourteen Points is published.
The 12th Point extends promise to
the Armenians of security of life and an
unmolested opportunity for autonomous
development. |
1918
March |
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk is signed between
Russia and Turkey after Russia's withdrawal
brought about by the Russian Revolution.
Turkish invasion of Russian Armenia causes
more killings of Armenians including those
fleeing from Turkish Armenia. Fighting
continues on the Caucasian front involving
Armenian units. |
1918
May 28
|
The Armenian National
Council, of necessity to fill a vacuum,
announces itself the supreme and only
administrative body for the comparatively
small remaining territory in what was
Russian Armenia. Such words as
"independence" or "republic" are
intentionally avoided pending the outcome of
a nearby battle with the invading Turkish
forces (which the Armenians do win). |
1918
June 4 |
In Batum, the Treaty
of Peace and Friendship is signed between
Ottoman Turkey and the Republic of Armenia,
proclaiming, hollowly, peace and eternal
friendship. It provided, among other terms,
detailed provisions dealing with conduct at
or near their common boundary. |
1918
mid-October |
United States
Congressman Edward Little presents a
resolution to the Congress advocating that
the "Armenian people have the right to be
free and independent, have an outlet to the
sea and be the masters of the Christian
culture for which their sons had been
sacrificed". |
1918
October 30 |
The
armistice of Moudros ends the war between
the Allies and Turkey. Global estimates of
the campaign of extermination: close to
1,500,000 Armenians dead. |
1918
November |
Defeated Turkey
recognizes the small Armenian Republic whose
territory consists only of a small fraction
of former Armenian lands. Turkey also cedes
to it the vilayets of Kars and Ardahan the
following year. This transfer proves to be
only temporary. |
1918
November 13
TOP |
In Great Britain’s
House of Lords, James Bryce, speaking about
Armenia and Cilicia, severely criticizes the
Turkish government. He states in part: "As
Your Highness and Lords already know, the
present Turkish government includes people
that were involved in the astonishing
carnages (that happened in 1915). Every
respected Lord that wants to refresh his
memory can read the Blue Book published by
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1916, in
which you’ll find the description of the
awful massacres that are written in history
everywhere, in spite of all the attempts not
to allow or justify them. Not only is Talaat
Pasha in the group of criminals that created
the Union and Progress Committee, but also
others who still are active in the present
Turkish government must take the
responsibility for those carnages". |
1918
December 10 |
United States Senator
Henry Cabot Lodge presented a proposal for
the Senate to express the view that Armenia,
including the six vilayets in Turkey and
Cilicia should be independent and the peace
conference should help Armenia to create an
independent republic. While Lodge was very
sympathetic to the Armenian cause, he later
opposed the United States accepting a
mandate of Armenia to avoid possible
military involvement. |
1919
January 8 |
By the order of Sultan
Mahmed VI it was ordered that the First,
Second and Third Military Tribunals
prosecute criminally the leaders of the
"Young Turks" and other implicated members
of the government. |
1919
April 8 |
A Military Tribunal
finds a number of Turkish leaders guilty of
carnages in the Yozkhat area. The Court
finds that Kemal Bey ordered the Moslems of
the area to eliminate all the Armenian
population, and sentences him to death. |
1919
April 27 |
In Constantinople, the
trial begins of members of the Union and
Progress Party, and other leaders of the
Turkish government. The trial continues
until June 26, 1919. |
1919
May 22 |
The special Military
Court tries the organizers of deportations
and slaughter in Trebizond and punishes
eight as criminals. |
1919
May 28 |
By secret order of the
British Military Government, 77 Turkish
criminals are transferred from a prison at
Constantinople to Malta and their
convictions are expunged. |
1919
June 25 |
In the name of the the
Supreme Allied Council, Georges Clemenceau
declares at the Peace Conference that Turkey
officially has accepted guilt for the
Armenian massacres. |
1919
July 5
|
Following the trial of the Unionists (these
were the members of the Union and Progress
Committee, in power since 1909), Talaat
Pasha, Enver Pasha, Djemal Pasha and Dr.
Nazim "are adjudged to be the principal
criminals and their guilt has been decided
by unanimous vote". All four are sentenced
to death in absentia. It is to be noted that
this trial took place during the period
Constantinople was occupied by the Allied
armies. |
1919
October 17 |
The Supreme Council of
the Allies, at the San Remo Conference,
proposes that the United States accept a
mandate over Armenia. |
1920
January 13 and for months following |
Various other trials
take place in Constantinople and a number of
Turkish officials and Young Turks are
convicted and sentenced to death for their
involvement in the crimes against the
Armenian people. |
1920
February |
French forces in
post-war occupation of Cilicia unexpectedly
withdraw. Turks take advantage of the
opportunity and kill 30,000 Armenians.
|
1920
May 24 |
The President of the
United States, Woodrow Wilson, asks the
Congress to give him the right to accept a
mandate over Armenia and send troops there.
Ultimately, the United States decides not to
accept a mandate because of the inherent
risks, even though still widely sympathetic
to the Armenian cause. |
1920
August 10
|
The Treaty of Sevres,
signed by Turkey, Britain, France, Italy,
Japan, Armenia, Belgium, Greece, Lebanon,
Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbian-Croatian-Slovenic
Republic and Czechoslovakia, recognizes the
Armenian Republic and ordains that the
borders between Turkey and Armenia in the
vilayets of Erzerum, Trebizond, Van and
Bitlis be determined by President Wilson.
According to the peace agreement, Turkey
accepts its responsibility for the crimes
against the Armenians during the war and
undertakes the obligation to compensate for
the losses sustained by the Armenians. It
also agrees to hand over to the Allies the
persons responsible for the massacres.
President Wilson appoints a commision which
sets the boundaries of a much expanded
Armenia, including significant seacoast, but
all to naught. The Treaty of Sevres is never
carried out. It was repudiated by Turkey and
eventually replaced by the Treaty of
Lausanne, which had no provisions dealing
with Armenia. |
1921
May 16 |
The independent
Armenian Republic, in existence since May
28, 1918, is tranformed into the Soviet
Socialist Republic of Armenia. |
1922
September |
Kemal Ataturk's forces
seize and set fire to the city of Smyrna and
engage in a rampage, killing Greeks and
Armenians. 150,000 perish. |
1923
April 25 |
Unrepentant Turkey
enacts the law of "abandoned property" which
provides for the confiscation of all
property abandoned by Armenians absent from
the country, regardless of the date, reason
or conditions of their departure. |
1923
July 24 |
The Treaty of Lausanne
is signed by the new Republic of Turkey and
the Great Powers. The Treaty recognizes full
Turkish sovereignty over all its territory,
and contains no provisions about Armenia.
Winston Churchill has written: "In the
Treaty of Lausanne, which re-establishes
peace between Turkey and the Allies, history
will search in vain for the word Armenia". |
1923
September |
Turkey adopts a law
which prohibits the return of Armenians who
left Cilicia or any of the eastern vilayets
whether or not they had left voluntarily. |