11 Nisan 2022 Pazartesi

TNT Ukraine War Edition: Russian Slaughter in Bucha Recalls Another in İzmail, 232 Years Ago

türkçe links to original Turkish article

(Hürryet Newspaper, 11 April 2022)


















                          Russian siege of İzmail in 1790.

The Russian massacre of civilians in Bucha, Ukraine, called to mind 
another Russian massacre 232 years ago when about 20,000 people were 
slaughtered in the city of İsmail, now İzmail, in southern Ukraine.  At 
that time, İsmail was part of the Ottoman Empire. 

Russian Foreign Intelligence Chief Sergey Narishkin spoke with pride 
about the seizure of İsmail, explaining at an exhibition that a Russian
soldier-artist went to İsmail, painted the Ottoman fortifications and
terrain and passed his pictures on to Russian intelligence.

The city of İsmail was founded along the Danube River and the Black 
Sea shore in the 1480s, when the Black Sea was a “Turkish lake”.  
According to the Turkish traveler Evliya Çelebi, the city’s name came 
from Captain Ismail Bey, who seized the area in 1484.  Another legend 
has it that the name came from “İsmail Baba”, an Islamic lodge shaikh.  
The city prospered and became a target for Russian and Cossack 
marauders, so strong fortifications were built to fend off the attackers.  
Along with Moslem Turks, the city’s population was made up of 
Russians, Greeks, Armenians and Bulgarians. 

With the start of wars between the Russian and Ottomans, İsmail was 
caught in the middle of the fighting.  The Russians occupied İsmail in 
1770 but it was returned to the Ottomans with the Treaty of Küçük 
Kaynarca four years later.  The fortifications were strengthened and 
more Ottoman soldiers were sent there.  Nevertheless, Russian attacks 
continued and in 1790 İsmail was surrounded by a Russian force under 
General Kutuzov.  Cezayirli Hasan Paşa, famous for raising lions, was 
forced to flee from İsmail. (General Kutuzov was the character in Lord 
Byron’s book ‘Don Juan’ who joins the Russian Army and fights for the
conquest of İsmail.)

When the Russians entered the city they took no pity on civilians, 
slaughtering some 20,000 of them.  Some of the city’s citizens jumped 
into the Danube to escape but drowned instead.  The Russians lost many 
of their own, as well.  A number of Christians were taken to Moscow as 
prisoners.  The fall of the city was a surprise to Istanbul and with the 
Treaty of Yaş in 1792, İsmail was returned to the Ottomans.  However, 
another war in 1809 resulted in İsmail again being occupied by the 
Russians and this was finalized by an agreement between Russia and 
the Ottoman Empire in 1812.
















                                      ...in happier times.

Intelligence Chief Narishkin gained notoriety recently when he was 
criticized by President Putin on TV.  In 2019, Narishkin had spoken 
about the siege of İsmail with great pride at a conference on intelligence 
at the Russian Historical Society in Moscow, noting how the paintings 
of a young lieutenant named Sergeyev had made the siege a success 
because of the detail his pictures provided about the Ottoman 
fortifications and the city’s terrain.  Narishkin stated that “the Ottomans 
didn't suspect him at all. He drew the views of the city in great detail 
that showed Ottoman defense weaknesses and the lay of the land. Then 
he provided these paintings to Russian intelligence.”


 

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