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History of modern Europe 6.2.3 Europe between 1871 and 1914 Eastern Questions 1. Introduction In the nineteenth century Czarist Russia had embarked on a policy of aggrandizement towards south-eastern Europe. The lengthening shadows of the Czarist Russian Empire on Europe was accompanied by a progressive weakening of the centuries old Ottoman Empire, as it was forced to retreat from the Balkans and the Dalmatian peninsula. The Eastern Question essentially refers to the series of international crises generated by Ottoman decline, steady Russian advance, and the attempt of the other European powers to somehow prevent the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire which would allow the Russians to move closer to the Mediterranean Sea. The Background In order to understand the nature of the Eastern Question one needs to look at the manner in which the Ottoman Empire came to play such a pivotal role in shaping the international relations of Europe in the nineteenth century. The Ottoman Empire spanned over three continents. On the Mediterranean in the East, to the south, it spanned over the north African coastline, touching Egypt and Libya, it spanned over Asia along the Levantine regions, including the plateau of Anatolia, and in Europe itself it had its space in the Dalmatian peninsula and the Balkans. The capital of such a sprawling empire was in the former Byzantine Empire imperial capital of Constantinople, which the Turks renamed Istanbul, when they captured it in 1453. The Ottoman Empire was in its true sense a multi-national empire although the central ruling cadre remained concentrated in the Turkish dynasty or the Ottoman dynasty. Nevertheless the various component nationalities and ethnicities of the Ottoman royalty, came to have a kind of a partnership in the running of this empire, which basically meant that in Africa there were the Arabs and Berbers, in Asia the Arabs and Turks, and in Europe it was the Balkan people such as the Serbs, Croats, Albanians, Bulgarians, Romanians and the Greeks, although these are terms we use today, but in those days it was principally denoted by the languages they spoke,- so the Rumanians were not recognized as a people, they were principally people living in the principalities, for instance of Moldavia-Wallachia, and Bessarabia. The various provinces of the Ottoman Empire were governed by individual traditional elite of these regions. As a result this partnership lasted for a fairly long period, while the Ottoman Empire was expanding. 2. Ottoman Decline The defeat at the gates of Vienna in the seventeenth century marked more or less the end of the Ottoman imperial expansion. Thereafter the Ottoman Empire in south-eastern Europe was basically hanging on till it was eventually pushed out. The process of the decline of the Ottoman Empire, properly speaking began in the eighteenth century because of changing economic realities around the Mediterranean as commercial revolution began to push the older ways of doing business out of the market, and the Ottoman Empire which had been for such a long time an important trading destination for European manufacture, began to shift its character, towards the end of the eighteenth century this led to disintegration, or internal crumbling as it were in the Ottoman Empire and was accompanied by the growing desire of Tsarist Russia to move southwards. The basic condition of the Eastern Question emerging was primarily to do with the Ottoman attempt at stalling Russian expansion, and also preventing its own disintegration. The first major reverse in the Ottoman scenario is to be noticed essentially in the year 1740, long before Russia had embarked southwards. In 1740, the Ottoman Empire which was unable to maintain a major naval presence in the eastern Mediterranean anymore, decided to reach out to France and signed a treaty under which France was to come forth and give some it sort of military security in the eastern Mediterranean in return for which France was to gain a privileged commercial position in the Ottoman Empire. For all practical purposes, this was the beginning of Ottoman dependence on foreign powers, specifically European powers, for its own survival. The nature and origins of the eastern question By the second half of the eighteenth century as France was going through its own period of turmoil, the Russian Empire began to grow more and more powerful, it began to play with the options of searching for ‘warm-water ports’, or ports that would not freeze up during the winter. This could be found only to the Russian south in the three nearest water bodies,- the Caspian Sea, Black Sea and the Mediterranean, and from the second half of the eighteenth century Russia therefore began a policy of steady expansion towards the south vis a vis the Persian Empire in the Caspian Sea, vis a vis the Ottoman in the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. 3. Russian ‘warm-water’ policy For Russia in terms of their ‘warm-water’ policy the preferred alternative was direct military conquest of the concerned regions, and Russia in fact embarked on such a policy of conquest vis a vis the kingdom of Persia in the Caspian regions. The Ottomans however proved a little tricky because repeatedly Russia had to witness greater European opposition to Russian policy of expansionism and direct control of these regions. Russia’s primary aim was to push the Ottomans out altogether of the Black Sea, and more particularly of their possession of the Straits of Dardanelles and Bosporus which connected the Black Sea with the Mediterranean Sea. Their preferred alternative was to dismantle the Ottoman Empire. To this in effect in fact, in the second half of the eighteenth century Tsarina Catherine had actually proposed to the Habsburgs who were presiding over an imperial formation that had fought the Ottomans for long from the seventeenth century if not longer, the Tsarina had actually proposed to the Habsburg Emperor that the Ottoman Empire in Europe should be divided up between Vienna and St.Petersburg. The idea of Russian presence on the Mediterranean however or the Russian domination of the Straits of Dardanelles and Bosphorus was not a welcome suggestion, neither for the Habsburgs nor for the British, and nor indeed for the French. The Habsburgs were of the opinion that if the Habsburgs reached the Danubian principalities of the south such as Moldavia Wallachia and Bessarabia then it would only be a brief time before which Russia would advance westwards and upwards into the Danubian principalities ruled by the Habsburgs, so they were determined to keep Russia out. Britain was also becoming increasingly alarmed at the prospect of Russian expansion into the region because from the later half of the eighteenth century Britain was developing its British-Indian empire and was unwilling to let Russia come anywhere near the eastern Mediterranean which was pivotal in Britain’s passage to India. France was moving with a defensive impulse, - they had substantial commercial presence in the Levantine region and were unwilling to see Russia probe deeper into this. So when in the 1770’s a major war was fought between the Russians and the Ottoman Turkish Empire, the Ottomans were defeated and Russia ran over the Danubian principalities of Bessarabia Moldavia and Wallachia, but they had to- under international pressure, leave this region. The Russians left however with, They signed the treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji in 1773, under the terms of which Russia secured from the Ottomans the right of the guardianship of the orthodox Christians who lived in that region which basically meant that, if there was to be any Ottoman interference in the lives of the Orthodox Christian subjects in the region, Russia could intervene and use this as a further foray into the Ottoman Empire. Thereafter the affairs of Europe occupied the minds of everyone as Napoleon knocked hard into the Ottoman Empire in the south in the 1790’s and early 1800’s and for a time the Ottoman Empire was left undisturbed by Russia. They had to look after its defence vis a vis France. By the 1820’s as the Napoleonic Empire crumbled and France became a pale shadow of its former self the Ottoman Empire in fact began to lean closer towards an aggressive Russia. 4. Greek Independence The real problem for the Ottoman Empire in the first half of the nineteenth century however came from the Greeks. Given the progressive weakening of the Ottoman Empire and given the changing nature of European commerce the Greeks who used to constitute the main frame of Ottoman commerce with Europe began to look for their own independent space outside the Ottoman Empire which was declining, and stagnating, and they began to look to the West as their natural economic partner. By the 1820’s the Greek merchants were keener to move towards Europe and they began to fund secret societies that would ultimately work for Greek independence. The most important of these societies was the Hetairia Philika, which was triggered by a team of three Greek merchants spreading national consciousness among the Greeks. By the early 1820’s there were a number of fanatic leaders who began to associate themselves with the Hetairia Philika and in 1822 a full fledged demand for independence or at least autonomy for the Greeks within the Ottoman Empire. This Ottomans were determined to subdue. So Mohammad Ali Pasha (1769-1849) from Egypt was given the brief of subduing the Greek demand for independence. Pitched battles were fought before Russia decided to intervene claiming to defend the rights of the Orthodox Christians that the Greeks were. Using the proviso of the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji Russian intervention turned to be fairly decisive in the first phase of the battle. The British were alarmed at the growing Russian influence in this region and were afraid that this might mean that Russia would gain both in Istanbul and the newly emergent Greek region. So Britain also began to intervene and so did France to such an extent that in the late 1820’s at a time when the Egyptian fleet of Mohammad Ali Pasha was almost about to subdue the entire Greek demand for independence, British and French intervention prevented a decisive Ottoman victory. This led to a period of cooling off as it were of but it was becoming fairly clear by the 1830’s that Greece was going to go a different path from the rest of the Ottoman Empire. In 1831 Russian mediation in favour of the Greeks was almost about to bring the Greeks an autonomous status within the Ottoman Empire, which alarmed London and Paris. So Britain and France began to push for a demand that the Ottoman Empire should ultimately allow Greece to break away from it, and Greece was to be set up as an independent state. This was the understanding that was arrived at in 1832 and in order to make certain that the Greeks did not get the opportunity of bringing the Russians into the Balkans it was decided that the Wittelsbach dynasty of Bavaria which was a German speaking dynasty, which was quite removed from the Russian sphere of influence would provide Greece with its first king. So in 1833 when the independent state of Greece came into being it was headed ironically not by a Greek, but by a German speaking prince. 5. Unkiar Skelessi treaty So even as the Russians were being made to withdraw under Anglo-French pressure, the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi (1833) with Russia. This was to prove a crucial development because there were two dimensions to the Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi. On the one hand the Ottomans and the Russians were to enter into an offensive and defensive military alliance, which basically meant that if the Ottoman Empire was under attack from any other power, the Russians would step forth and if the Russians were to be under attack from any other power, the Ottomans would step forward. For the Ottomans this was an important thing as around this time in the 1830’s Mohammad Ali Pasha of Egypt was trying to carve his independent space by creating a hereditary succession in Egypt by nominally within the Ottoman Empire but virtually preparing for a secession. So the Ottoman Sultan was trying to take out some sort of guarantee or insurance from the Russians. Now in return for giving this offensive and defensive alliance or guarantee, the Russians demanded that the Ottoman Empire should allow the Straits of Bosphorus and Dardanelles to remain open to the Russians even in times of war. The general practice till that point of time had been that the Straits of Bosphorus and Dardanelles would remain open for all powers, but in times of war the Ottomans used to close the Straits. Russia was simply securing the guarantee that even in times of war, Russia would have the freedom to navigate into the Mediterranean Sea. The period between 1832 to 1852-53 was one of turbulence in the Ottoman Empire, because all through the 1830’s the Ottoman Empire had to struggle with its own protégé in Egypt, Mohammad Ali Pasha, and there were several occasions when the differences almost came to the verge of conflict. Towards the closing years of the 1830’s in 1839 it was the possibility of a conflict that pushed the Ottomans to seek Russian support once again. When the forces of Mohammad Ali Pasha ran over Levantine Asia-the entire region between Aleppo and Damascus and established its control, the Ottoman Sultan in a bid to fight back decided to bring in Russian troops. Twenty thousand Russian troops were promptly dispatched to the aid of the Ottoman Sultan. Alarmed at this prospect the British and French intervened. They demanded that the Sultan that the Russian forces should be asked to withdraw. In return they offered to mediate between the Ottoman Sultan and Mohammad Ali Pasha. The outcome of this resolution in 1840 was that Mohammad Ali Pasha was recognized as the hereditary ruler of Egypt, and was also given the Governorship of Syria, Aleppo and Damascus but on the condition that these regions would continue to remain within the Ottoman Empire. 6. Russian intervention The British and the French further pledged to uphold the unity and integrity of the Empire. This pledge was finally formalized in the Straits Convention of 1841. Under the Straits Convention the Ottoman Empire was made to agree to the idea that in future in times of conflict, the Straits of Dardanelles and Bosphorus would have to be closed to all powers. Now this remained in violation of the secret provision that the Ottomans had already signed in the Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi. The complications generated by this Straits Convention were to have momentous significance in the years that followed. In the course of the 1840’s France decided to step up its diplomatic presence in this region, and particularly with the coming of Napoleon III, the French decision to increase French profile in the region began to have a more hard consequence. Napoleon III desirous of soliciting Catholic support in the domestic arena began to push for a change in the status of the Ottoman Empire’s disposition towards Christians. The Ottoman Empire in Levantine Asia ruled over the lands which the Christians considered holy- Bethlehem and Jerusalem, and some of the holiest churches of Christendom happened to be in Levantine Asia. When this diplomatic offensive was brought into being the Russian Tsar was very concerned, and he decided to make another push. In 1853 he is supposed to have told the British Ambassador Philip Seymour that ‘we have a very sick man in our hands and unless something is done about it he will bring all of us down with him.’ The British Ambassador is supposed to have said that ‘the sick man actually needs a physician not a surgeon’. This was clearly indicative of what Tsar Nicholas was planning to do. Tsar Nicholas (1796- 1855) meant to give the Ottoman Empire a push and when the French diplomatic offensive looked like displacing the significance of the Russians as a guardian of the Orthodox Christians, the Russians decided to go to war. When the Russian advance in this region began, the British and the French immediately decided to give the Ottomans military support, which allowed them to push them back in 1853. 7. Conclusion But even after Russian withdrawal had been staged, the British and the French decided that the problem had to be solved once and for all. So in 1853 Russia was asked to pull out of the Danubian provinces of Moldavia and Wallachia and even from the province of Bessarabia and from their status of guardianship and that Russia was not to use their guardianship of the Orthodox Christians as a diplomatic counter against the Ottoman Empire. Several other proposals were also forwarded. It was argued that apart from the guardianship of the Danubian provinces Russia had to stop meddling unnecessarily in the internal affairs of the Ottoman Empire on the grounds of protecting Orthodox Christians. Further it was argued that the Straits Convention of 1841 would have to be re-evaluated to consider whether the Russians would have access to the Mediterranean even in peacetime without consulting the other powers. Finally it was argued that the Danube would have to be open to all. The last provision Russia could live, with but idea of re-evaluating of the Straits Convention and also stopping interfering in the lives of Orthodox Christians were provisions that the Russians could not stomach. This led to the Crimean War, where the Russians had to fight the joint forces of the British and the French and the Austrian Empire joined in as it was keen on expelling Russia from the Danubian principalities. In 1856 when the war came to a close, the Treaty of Paris in 1856 more or less framed the terms on which the Eastern Question was to turn from this point of time. One of the most important provisions of the Treaty of Paris, at the end of the Crimean War was to bring about de-militarization of the Black Sea region – none of the powers were allowed to have a naval station in the Black Sea region. Since none but Russia had a presence in the region it was basically urging the Russians to move out of the Black Sea. The second most important provision was that the Ottomans had to reform their state structure in such a manner that Orthodox Christians would not give the Russians the pretext of returning to the region. The last provision was about Russia pulling out of Danubian principalities was also indicative that in future Austria-Hungary would have a major stake in the unity and integrity of the Ottoman Empire. From this point of time the Eastern Question began to transpose itself as Balkan nationalism.