Publication | Closed Access
The Naim-Andonian Documents on the World War I Destruction of Ottoman Armenians: The Anatomy of a Genocide
54
Citations
3
References
1986
Year
World WarTurkish PoliticsNaim-andonian DocumentsNationalismColonialismMassacresGenocideInternational RelationsWar CrimeOttoman ArmeniansCrime Against HumanityLawMass AtrocityArmenian SurvivorsProtracted Turko-armenian ConflictCultural HistoryHistorical EvidenceArmenian Population
The protracted Turko-Armenian conflict, marked by intermittent massacres, was violently resolved during World War I. By governmental decree the bulk of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire was uprooted from its ancestral territories and was committed to a process of deportation that became a process of destruction. The provinces in the interior of Turkey with heavy concentrations of Armenians were thus completely denuded of their indigenous population. Volumes have been produced regarding the instruments and dimensions of this destruction. The carnage was attested to by multitudes of Armenian survivors; by German, Swiss, and American missionaries; and by European and American consuls in the provinces and their ambassadors in Istanbul, the Ottoman capital. The testimony of Austrian and German officers of all ranks who fought in and directed that war alongside the Turks as political and military allies is even more striking.
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