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Battle of Qbaada

Coordinates: 43°40′43″N 40°12′19″E / 43.67861°N 40.20528°E / 43.67861; 40.20528
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Battle of Qbaada
Part of the Russo-Circassian War

End of the Caucasian War (1900) by François "Franz" Jean Roubaud
Date2 June [O.S. 21 May] 1864
Location
Qbaada (now Krasnaya Polyana)
43°40′43″N 40°12′19″E / 43.67861°N 40.20528°E / 43.67861; 40.20528
Result Russian victory
Territorial
changes
Completion of the Russian conquest of the Caucasus
Belligerents
 Russia  Circassia
Commanders and leaders
Unknown
Units involved
Imperial Russian Army Militias (Abreks, etc.)
Strength
250,000[citation needed] 20,000[citation needed]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 20,000 killed[citation needed]
During the Circassian genocide, approximately 1,500,000[1][2][3][4] Circassians and other Caucasians were expelled from their ancestral homeland. The majority of this figure was displaced to the Ottoman Empire and a much smaller amount to Qajar Iran. An unknown amount of these deportees died before reaching their destination.[5]
Krasnaya Polyana is located in Krasnodar Krai
Krasnaya Polyana
Krasnaya Polyana
Krasnaya Polyana is located in Southern Federal District
Krasnaya Polyana
Krasnaya Polyana
Krasnaya Polyana is located in European Russia
Krasnaya Polyana
Krasnaya Polyana

The Battle of Qbaada[a] took place in today's Krasnaya Polyana on 2 June [O.S. 21 May] 1864.[6][2][7][8] It is widely accepted as the final military engagement of the Russo-Circassian War,[9][10][11][4][12] as the Circassian people could no longer continue to resist the invading Imperial Russian Army.

A significant development in the wider Caucasian War, it was after the Battle of Qbaada that the Russian Empire annexed Circassia and initiated the Circassian genocide, in which 95% to 97% of the country's population was ethnically cleansed, leading to the creation of the Circassian diaspora.

Events

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Battle

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The Circassians gathered 20,000 men and women, mostly local villagers, Abreks, and tribal horsemen. The Imperial Russian Army advanced from four sides with 250,000 soldiers, mostly Cossacks and Russians. Circassian fighters attempted to break through the Russian lines, but were hit with artillery before they managed to reach the front, and were soon defeated by Russian infantry.[citation needed]

Aftermath

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A military parade was held after the battle and 100 surviving Circassian warriors were publicly executed.[citation needed] Russian troops then continued raiding and torching Circassian villages, driving many of their inhabitants into the Black Sea and destroying much of the landscape to prevent them from returning.[12] The ensuing Circassian genocide saw millions of Circassians and other Caucasians killed or expelled from Circassia and the rest of the Caucasus. Most of the deportees were sent to the Ottoman Empire, but many succumbed to injuries, disease, or starvation and exhaustion. The annexation of Circassia by the Russian Empire marked the end of the Caucasian War and thereby the Russian conquest of the Caucasus.[citation needed]

Notes

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  1. ^ Adyghe: Ӏаткъуадж зауэ, romanized: 'atqwadj zawə; Abkhaz: Гәбаадәы аибашьра, romanized: Gubaadu aibashra; Russian: Кра́снополя́нская битва

References

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  1. ^ Richmond, Walter (2013). The Circassian Genocide. Rutgers University Press. back cover. ISBN 978-0-8135-6069-4.
  2. ^ a b "Çerkes Soykırımı nedir? 21 Mayıs 1864 Çerkes Sürgünü tarihçesi". Milliyet (in Turkish). 21 May 2019. Archived from the original on 20 July 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  3. ^ Неизвестные войны России. Взятие Кбааде и завершение Кавказской войны в 1864 г.
  4. ^ a b Ufuk Tavkul, "Kazaklar", Birleşik Kafkasya dergisi, Ankara, 2007, Sayı 6-7, sf. 33
  5. ^ McCarthy 1995:53, fn. 45
  6. ^ Semen Esadze. Çerkesya'nın Ruslar Tarafından İşgali. Ankara, 1995, sf. 123-132.
  7. ^ Jineps,2006,ek-1,s.2
  8. ^ T.V.Polovinkina, Çerkesya Gönül Yaram. Ankara, 2007, sf. 258
  9. ^ Semen Esadze. Çerkesya'nın Ruslar Tarafından İşgali. Ankara, 1995, sf. 123-132.
  10. ^ Jineps,2006,ek-1,s.2
  11. ^ T.V.Polovinkina, Çerkesya Gönül Yaram. Ankara, 2007, sf. 258
  12. ^ a b Weismann, Ein Blick auf die Circassianer