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{{Short description|1853–1856 war}}
{{Use British English|date=November 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2013}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2021}}

{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict = Crimean War
| conflict = Crimean War
|partof = [[Ottoman wars in Europe]] and the [[Russo-Turkish wars]]
| partof = the [[Ottoman wars in Europe]] and the [[Russo-Turkish Wars]]
|image = [[File:Panorama dentro.JPG|300px]]
| image = William Simpson - Attack on the Malakoff.jpg
| image_size = 300px
|caption = Detail of [[Franz Roubaud]]'s [[panoramic painting]] ''The [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–55)|Siege of Sevastopol]]'' (1904)
| caption = ''[[Battle of Malakoff|Attack on the Malakoff]]'', by [[William Simpson (Scottish artist)|William Simpson]]
|date = October 1853 – February 1856
| date = {{start and end dates|1853|10|16|1856|3|30|df= yes}}<br>(2 years, 5 months and 2 weeks)
|place = [[Crimea|Crimean Peninsula]], [[Caucasus]], [[Balkans]], [[Black Sea]], [[Baltic Sea]], [[White Sea]], [[Far East]]
| place = [[Crimea]], [[North Caucasus]], [[Balkans]], [[Black Sea]], [[Baltic Sea]], [[White Sea]], [[Far East]]
|casus =
|territory =
| result = Allied victory
| territory = Russia loses the [[Danube Delta]] and [[Southern Bessarabia]].
|result = Allied victory, [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]]
|combatant1 = {{ubl| {{flagicon|France}} [[Second French Empire|French Empire]] | {{flag|Ottoman Empire}} | {{flag|UKGBI|name=British Empire}} | {{flag|Kingdom of Sardinia|1848}} }}
| combatant1 = {{flag|Ottoman Empire}}<br>{{flagcountry|Second French Empire}}{{efn|From 1854|name="from1854"}}<br>{{flag|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|name=United Kingdom}}{{efn|From 1854|name="from1854"}}<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1851}} [[Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861)|Sardinia]]{{efn|From 1855|name="from1855"}}<br>
|combatant2 = {{ubl| {{flag|Russian Empire}} }}
| combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Russian Empire}}<hr>{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Greece|1833}}{{efn|Until 1854|name="until1854"}}
|commander1 = {{Unbulleted list
| commander1 = {{Unbulleted list
| {{flagdeco|Ottoman Empire}} [[Abdulmejid I]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[Napoleon III|Napoléon III]]
| {{flagdeco|Ottoman Empire}} [[Omar Pasha]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[Jacques Leroy de Saint Arnaud]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[François Certain Canrobert|Maréchal Canrobert]]
| {{flagdeco|Second French Empire}} [[Napoleon III|Napoléon III]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[Aimable Pélissier]]
| {{flagdeco|Second French Empire}} [[Jacques Leroy de Saint-Arnaud|J. L. de Saint-Arnaud]]
| {{flagdeco|UKGBI}} [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|George Hamilton-Gordon]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[François Achille Bazaine]]
| {{flagdeco|UKGBI}} [[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston|Lord Palmerston]]
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] [[Patrice de Mac-Mahon, Duke of Magenta|Patrice de Mac-Mahon]]
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[Queen Victoria]]
| {{flagdeco|UKGBI}} [[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan|FitzRoy Somerset]]
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|Earl of Aberdeen]]
| {{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1851}} [[Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora|Alfonso La Marmora]]
}}
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan|Lord Raglan]]
| commander2 = {{Unbulleted list
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[James Simpson (British Army officer)|Sir James Simpson]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Nicholas I of Russia|Nicholas I]]
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[William John Codrington|Sir William Codrington]]
| {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} [[Omar Pasha]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]]
| {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} [[Antoni Aleksander Iliński|İskender Pasha]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov|Prince Menshikov]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Mikhail Dmitrievich Gorchakov|Prince Gorchakov]]
| {{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1848}} [[Victor Emmanuel II of Italy|Victor Emmanuel II]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Ivan Paskevich|Prince Paskevich]]
| {{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1848}} [[Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora|Alfonso La Màrmora]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov|Prince Vorontsov]]
}}
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Nikolay Muravyov-Karsky|Nikolay Muravyov]]
|commander2 = {{Unbulleted list
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Nicholas I of Russia|Nicholas I]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Pavel Nakhimov]]{{KIA}}
}}
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]]
| strength1 = '''Total: 673,900'''<br>{{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} 235,568{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=280}}<br>{{flagicon|Second French Empire}} 309,268{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>{{flagicon|UK}} 97,864{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1851}} 21,000{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov|Prince Menshikov]]
| strength2 = '''Total: 889,000{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}–1,774,872'''<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brooks |first=E. Willis |title=Reform in the Russian Army, 1856-1861 |journal=Slavic Review |volume=43 |issue=1 |date=1984 |pages=63–82 |jstor=2498735 }}</ref><br>{{flagdeco |Russian Empire}}<br>888,000 mobilised<br>324,478 deployed
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Pavel Nakhimov]]{{KIA}}
| casualties1 = '''Total: 165,363 dead'''<br>45,770 combat deaths<br>119,593 non-combat deaths
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Vasily Zavoyko]]
*{{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} '''45,400 dead'''{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>20,900 combat deaths<br>24,500 non-combat deaths
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky|Nikolay Muravyov]]<!-- Not "-Amursky" until 1858 -->
* {{flagdeco |Second French Empire}} '''95,615 dead'''{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>20,240 combat deaths<br>75,375 non-combat deaths
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Yevfimy Putyatin]]
* {{flagicon|UK}} '''22,182 dead'''{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>4,602 combat deaths<br>17,580 non-combat deaths
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Vladimir Istomin]]{{KIA}}
* {{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1851}} '''2,166 dead'''{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<br>28 combat deaths<br>2,138 non-combat deaths
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Yegor Tolstoy|Count Tolstoy]]
| casualties2 = {{nowrap|'''Total: 450,015 dead'''{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=489}}{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=180}}<ref>Mara Kozelsky, "The Crimean War, 1853–56." ''Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History'' 13.4 (2012): 903–917 [http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v013/13.4.kozelsky.html online].</ref>}}<br>73,125 combat deaths<br>376,890 non-combat deaths
}}
| notes = Casualties include death by disease. In all cases, death by disease exceeded the sum of "killed in action" or "died of wounds".
|strength1 = '''Total: 1,000,000''' {{unbulleted list
| [[File:Flag of France.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of France|link=Second French Empire]] 400,000 French
| {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} 300,000 Ottoman
| {{flagicon|UKGBI}} 250,000 British
| {{flagicon|Kingdom of Sardinia|1848}} 18,000 Sardinians<ref>Page 39 of the scan of this book [http://www.sardegnadigitallibrary.it/mmt/fullsize/2009042212370900050.pdf] (in formato PDF) reporting a summary of the Sardinian expedition in Crimea</ref>
| [[File:Flag of the German Confederation (war).svg|22px|border|alt=War flag of the German Confederation|link=German Confederation]] 4,250 German legion{{Citation needed|date=February 2012}}
| [[File:Flag of Switzerland.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of Switzerland|link=Switzerland as a federal state]] 2,200 Swiss legion{{Citation needed|date=February 2012}}
| [[File:Flag of the Kingdom of Slavonia.gif|22px|border|alt=Flag of The Kingdom of Slavonia|link=Kingdom of Slavonia]] 1,400 Slavic legion{{Citation needed|date=February 2012}}
}}
|strength2 = '''Total: 720,000''' {{unbulleted list
| {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} 700,000 Russians<ref name="Voyenizdat">Военная Энциклопедия, М., Воениздат 1999, т.4, стр.315</ref>
| [[File:Civil Ensign of Serbia and Montenegro.svg|22px|border|alt=Flag of the First Bulgarian Legion, 1862|link=National awakening of Bulgaria]] 3,000 Bulgarian legion{{Citation needed|date=February 2012}}<!-- Flag from http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/bg_nmmh.html#bg1862 -->
| {{flagicon|Principality of Montenegro}} 2,000 Serbian-Montenegrin legion{{Citation needed|date=February 2012}}
| {{flagicon|Kingdom of Greece|1863}} 1,000 Greek legion
}}
|
|casualties1 = '''Total: 300,000–375,000 dead'''<ref name="canalacademie.com">[http://www.canalacademie.com/1854-la-Guerre-de-Crimee.html '''Napoleon III''', Pierre Milza, Perrin edition, 2004]{{dead link|date=November 2011}}</ref><br><br>
'''{{flag|Ottoman Empire}}'''<br>Total dead est. 95,000<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100">The War Chronicles: From Flintlocks to Machine Guns: A Global Reference of ... , Joseph Cummins, 2009, p. 100</ref>-175,300<ref name="Voyenizdat"/><br><br>
'''{{flagicon|France}} [[Second French Empire|French Empire]]'''<br>Total dead: 95,000<ref name="canalacademie.com"/> of which:<br>10,240<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100"/> killed in action;<br>20,000 died of wounds;<br>c. 60,000<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100"/> died of disease<br><br>
'''{{flag|UKGBI|name=British Empire}}'''<br>Total dead: 21,097<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100"/> of which :<br>2,755<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100"/> killed in action;<br>2,019 died of wounds;<br>16,000<ref name="The War Chronicles 2009, p. 100"/>-16,323 died of disease<br><br>
'''{{flag|Kingdom of Sardinia|1848}}'''<br>2,050 died from all causes<ref name="autogenerated1">John Sweetman, ''Crimean War, Essential Histories 2'', Osprey Publishing, 2001, ISBN 1-84176-186-9, p.89</ref>
|casualties2 = '''Total: 220,000 dead''':<br>80,000 killed in action <br>40,000 died of wounds <br>100,000 died of disease<ref name="autogenerated2002">Зайончковский А. М. Восточная война 1853–1856. СПб:Полигон, 2002</ref>
}}
}}
{{Campaignbox Crimean War}}
{{Campaignbox Crimean War}}
{{Campaignbox Russo-Ottoman Wars}}
{{Campaignbox Russo-Ottoman Wars}}


The '''Crimean War''' (pronounced {{IPAc-en|k|r||'|m|i:|ə|n}} or {{IPAc-en|k|r|ɪ-|'|m|i:|ə|n}}) (October 1853 February 1856)<ref name="Kinglake 1863:354">Kinglake (1863:354)</ref><ref name="Sweetman2001">{{cite book |first=John |last=Sweetman |title=Crimean War, Essential Histories 2 |publisher=Osprey |year=2001 |isbn=1-84176-186-9}}</ref>{{rp|7}} was a conflict in which [[Russian Empire|Russia]] lost to an alliance of [[Second French Empire|France]], [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]], the [[Ottoman Empire]], and [[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]]. While neutral, [[Austrian Empire|Austria]] played a role in stopping the Russians.
The '''Crimean War'''{{efn|{{bulleted list|{{Langx|fr|Guerre de Crimée}}|{{Langx|ru|Крымская война|translit=Krymskaya voyna}} or {{lang|ru|Восточная война}}, ''Vostochnaya voyna'', {{lit|Eastern War}}|{{Langx|tr|Kırım Savaşı}}|{{Langx|it|Guerra di Crimea}}|{{crh|Qırım cenki}}}}}} was fought from October 1853 to February 1856<ref name="Britannica" /> between the [[Russian Empire]] and an ultimately victorious alliance of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Second French Empire|France]], the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]], and [[Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861)|Sardinia-Piedmont]].

Geopolitical causes of the war included the [[decline of the Ottoman Empire]] (the "[[Eastern Question]]"), the expansion of Russia in the preceding [[History of the Russo-Turkish wars|Russo-Turkish Wars]], and the British and French preference to preserve the Ottoman Empire to maintain the [[European balance of power|balance of power]] in the [[Concert of Europe]]. The flashpoint was a disagreement over the rights of Christian minorities in [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]], (now divided between [[Israel]] and Palestine), then part of the Ottoman Empire, with the French promoting the rights of [[Roman Catholics]], and Russia promoting those of the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]].<ref name=GG-NGG-CAS-C1843-MP-CNMP-X91>{{cite web|url=https://www.historytoday.com/archive/months-past/crimean-war|title=The Crimean War |publisher=historytoday.com|access-date=3 June 2024}}</ref>

The churches worked out their differences with the Ottomans and [[Status Quo (Jerusalem and Bethlehem)|came to an agreement]], but both the [[Emperor of the French|French Emperor]] [[Napoleon III]] and the Russian tsar [[Nicholas I of Russia|Nicholas I]] refused to back down. Nicholas issued an ultimatum that demanded the [[Christianity in the Ottoman Empire|Orthodox subjects of the Ottoman Empire]] be placed under his protection. Britain attempted to mediate and arranged a compromise to which Nicholas agreed. When the Ottomans demanded changes to the agreement, Nicholas recanted and prepared for war.

In July 1853, Russian troops occupied the [[Danubian Principalities]]<ref name="Britannica" /> (now part of [[Romania]] but then under Ottoman [[suzerainty]]). On {{OldStyleDate|16 October |1853|4 October}},<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.prlib.ru/en/history/619634|title=Crimea war of 1853–1856 began – 16 October 1853|publisher=[[Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library]]}}</ref> having obtained promises of support from France and Britain, the Ottomans declared war on Russia.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kerr|first=Paul|title=The Crimean War|publisher=Mcmillan|year=2000|page=17|isbn=978-0752272481}}</ref> Led by [[Omar Pasha]], the Ottomans fought a strong defensive campaign and stopped the Russian advance at [[Silistra]] (now in [[Bulgaria]]). A separate action on the fort town of [[Kars]], in the Ottoman Empire, led to a siege, and an Ottoman attempt to reinforce the garrison was destroyed by a Russian fleet at the [[Battle of Sinop]] in November 1853.

Fearing the growth of influence of the Russian Empire, the British and French fleets entered the [[Black Sea]] in January 1854.<ref name="Britannica">{{cite encyclopedia |date=27 September 2020 |title=Crimean War |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Crimean-War |access-date=28 January 2022 }}</ref> They moved north to [[Varna, Bulgaria|Varna]] in June 1854 and arrived just in time for the Russians to abandon Silistra. In the [[Baltic Sea|Baltic]], near the Russian capital of [[Saint Petersburg]], an Anglo-French fleet instituted a naval blockade and bottled up the outnumbered Russian [[Baltic Fleet]], causing economic damage to Russia by blockading trade while also forcing the Russians to keep a large army guarding St. Petersburg from a potential allied attack.

After a minor skirmish at Köstence (now [[Constanța]]), the allied commanders decided to attack Russia's main naval base in the Black Sea, [[Sevastopol]], in [[Crimea]]. After extended preparations, allied forces landed on the peninsula in September 1854 and marched their way to a point south of Sevastopol after they had won the [[Battle of the Alma]] on 20 September 1854. The Russians counterattacked on 25 October in what became the [[Battle of Balaclava]] and were repulsed, but the [[British Army during the Victorian Era|British Army]]'s forces were seriously depleted as a result. A second Russian counterattack at [[Battle of Inkerman|Inkerman]] ended in a stalemate.

By 1855, the Italian Kingdom of Sardinia sent an [[Sardinian expeditionary corps in the Crimean War|expeditionary force]] to Crimea, siding with France, Britain and the Ottoman Empire. The front settled into the [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]], involving brutal conditions for troops on both sides. Smaller military actions took place in the [[Caucasus]] (1853–1855), the [[White Sea]] (July–August 1854) and the [[North Pacific]] (1854–1855).

Sevastopol finally fell after eleven months, after the French [[Battle of Malakoff|assaulted Fort Malakoff]]. Isolated and facing a bleak prospect of invasion by the West if the war continued, Russia [[suing for peace|sued for peace]] in March 1856. France and Britain welcomed the development, owing to the conflict's domestic unpopularity. The [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]], signed on 30 March 1856, ended the war. It forbade Russia to base warships in the Black Sea. The Ottoman [[vassal state]]s of [[Wallachia]] and [[Moldavia]] became largely independent. Christians in the Ottoman Empire gained a degree of official equality, and the Orthodox Church regained control of the Christian churches in dispute.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=415}}

The Crimean War was one of the first conflicts in which military forces used modern technologies such as explosive naval [[shell (projectile)|shells]], [[railways]] and [[telegraphy|telegraphs]].{{sfn|Royle|2000|loc= Preface}} The war was also one of the first to be documented extensively in written reports and in [[war photography|photographs]]. The war quickly became a symbol of logistical, medical and tactical failures and of mismanagement. The reaction in Britain led to a demand for the professionalisation of medicine, most famously achieved by [[Florence Nightingale]], who gained worldwide attention for pioneering modern [[nursing]] while she treated the wounded.

The Crimean War marked a turning point for the Russian Empire. The war weakened the [[Imperial Russian Army]], drained the treasury and undermined Russia's influence in Europe. The empire would take decades to recover. Russia's humiliation forced its educated elites to identify its problems and recognise the need for fundamental reforms. They saw rapid modernisation as the sole way to recover the empire's status as a [[European powers|European power]]. The war thus became a catalyst for [[Government reforms of Alexander II of Russia|reforms of Russia's social institutions]], including the [[emancipation reform of 1861|abolition of serfdom]] and overhauls in the justice system, local self-government, education and military service.

==Eastern question==
{{see also|Eastern question}}
[[File:Southeast Europe 1812 map en.PNG|thumb|Southeastern Europe after the [[Treaty of Bucharest (1812)]]]]
As the Ottoman Empire [[decline and modernization of the Ottoman Empire|steadily weakened]] during the 19th century, the Russian Empire stood poised to take advantage by expanding southward. In the 1850s, the British and the French Empires were allied with the Ottoman Empire and were determined to prevent that from happening.<ref>Matthew Smith Anderson, ''The Eastern Question, 1774–1923: A Study in International Relations''. p. 37.</ref> The historian [[A. J. P. Taylor]] argued that the war had resulted not from aggression, but from the interacting fears of the major players:
{{blockquote|In some sense the Crimean War was predestined and had deep-seated causes. Neither Nicholas I nor Napoleon III nor the British government could retreat from the conflict for prestige once it was launched. Nicholas needed a subservient Turkey for the sake of Russian security; Napoleon needed success for the sake of his domestic position; the British government needed an independent Turkey for the security of the Eastern Mediterranean... Mutual fear, not mutual aggression, caused the Crimean War.{{sfn|Taylor|1954|pp=60–61}}}}

===Weakening of the Ottoman Empire: 1820–1840s===
In the early 1800s, the Ottoman Empire suffered a number of existential challenges. The [[Serbian Revolution]] in 1804 resulted in the autonomy of the first [[Balkan]] Christian nation under the empire. The [[Greek War of Independence]], which began in early 1821, provided further evidence of the empire's internal and military weakness, and the commission of atrocities by Ottoman military forces (see [[Chios massacre]]) further undermined the empire. The disbandment of the centuries-old [[Janissaries|Janissary]] corps by Sultan [[Mahmud II]] on 15 June 1826 ([[Auspicious Incident]]) helped the empire in the longer term but deprived it of its existing standing army in the short term.{{clarify|date=February 2017}} In 1827, the Anglo-Franco-Russian fleet destroyed almost all of the Ottoman naval forces at the [[Battle of Navarino]]. In 1830, [[Kingdom of Greece|Greece]] became independent after ten years of war and the [[Russo-Turkish War (1828–29)]]. The [[Treaty of Adrianople (1829)]] granted Russian and Western European commercial ships free passage through the [[Dardanelles|Black Sea straits]]. Also, [[Principality of Serbia|Serbia]] received autonomy, and the Danubian Principalities ([[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]]) became territories under Russian protection.

France took the opportunity to [[French conquest of Algeria|occupy Algeria]], which had been under Ottoman rule, in 1830. In 1831, [[Muhammad Ali of Egypt]], the most powerful [[vassal]] of the Ottoman Empire, declared independence. Ottoman forces were [[Egyptian–Ottoman War (1831–1833)|defeated in a number of battles]], which forced Mahmud II to seek Russian military aid. A Russian army of 10,000 landed on the shores of the [[Bosphorus]] in 1833 and helped prevent the Egyptians from capturing [[Constantinople]].

[[File:Navarino.jpg|thumb|left|The naval [[Battle of Navarino]] (1827), as depicted by [[Ambroise Louis Garneray]].]]

"The reasons for the Tsar's disquietude are not obscure. Not Turkey alone was threatened by the advance of [[Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt|Ibrahim]]. The rights secured to Russia by a succession of treaties were also directly jeopardized. The substitution of a virile Albanian dynasty at Constantinople in place of the effete [[Ottoman dynasty|Osmanlis]] was the last thing desired by the Power which wished, naturally enough, to command the gate into the Mediterranean".{{sfn|Marriott|1917|p=222}} Russia was satisfied with the weak government in Constantinople (Istanbul).

As a result, the [[Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi]] was signed and greatly benefited Russia. It provided for a military alliance between the Russian and the Ottoman Empires if one of them was attacked, and a secret additional clause allowed the Ottomans to opt out of sending troops but to close the Straits to foreign warships if Russia were under threat. [[Egypt Eyalet|Egypt]] remained nominally under Ottoman sovereignty but was ''de facto'' independent.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}

In 1838 in a situation similar to that of 1831, Muhammad Ali of Egypt was not happy about his lack of control and power in [[Ottoman Syria|Syria]], and he [[Egyptian–Ottoman War (1839–41)|resumed military action]]. The Ottomans lost to the Egyptians at the [[Battle of Nezib]] on 24 June 1839 but were saved by Britain, [[Austrian Empire|Austria]], [[Prussia]] and Russia, who signed a [[Convention of London (1840)|convention in London]] on 15 July 1840 that granted Muhammad Ali and his descendants the right to inherit power in Egypt in exchange for the removal of Egyptian forces from Syria and [[Lebanon]]. Moreover, Muhammad Ali had to admit a formal dependence on the Ottoman sultan. After Muhammad Ali refused to obey the requirements of the convention, the allied Anglo-Austrian fleet blockaded the [[Nile Delta]], bombarded [[Beirut]] and [[Battle of Acre (1840)|captured Acre]]. Muhammad Ali then accepted the convention's conditions.

On 13 July 1841, after the expiry of the Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi, the [[London Straits Convention]] was signed under pressure from the European countries. The new treaty deprived Russia of its right to block warships from passing into the Black Sea in case of war. Thus, the way to the Black Sea was open for British and French warships during a possible Russo-Ottoman conflict.

Russian historians tend to view that history as evidence that Russia lacked aggressive plans. The Russian historian V. N. Vinogradov writes: "The signing of the documents was the result of deliberate decisions: instead of bilateral (none of the great powers recognized this Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi), the new Treaty of London was obligatory for all, it closed the Bosphorus and Dardanelles. In the absence of expansion plans, this was a sound decision".<ref name="Vinogradov">{{Cite journal |last=V. N. Vinogradov |year=2006 |title=Lord Palmerston in European diplomacy |journal={{Interlanguage link|New and Recent History|ru|Новая и новейшая история}} |language=ru |issue=5 |pages=182–209}}</ref>{{verify source|date=August 2020}}


In 1838, Britain lost interest in crushing the Ottoman Empire. On the contrary, after the conclusion of the trade treaty of 1838 (see [[Treaty of Balta Liman]]), Britain received unlimited access to the markets of the Ottoman Empire. "Britain imposed on the Porte a Tariff Convention which in effect transformed the Ottoman Empire into a virtual free-trade zone.{{sfn|Figes|2011|p=32}}
The immediate issue involved the rights of Christians in the Holy Land, which was controlled by the Ottoman Empire. The French promoted the rights of Catholics, while Russia promoted those of the Orthodox. The longer-term causes involved the [[decline of the Ottoman Empire]], and the unwillingness of Britain and France to allow Russia to gain territory and power at Ottoman expense. Russia lost and the Ottomans gained a twenty-year respite from Russian pressure. The Christians were granted a degree of official equality and the Orthodox gained control of the Christian churches in dispute.<ref name="Figes2010">{{cite book |last=Figes |first=Orlando |title=Crimea: The Last Crusade |year=2010 |location=London |publisher=Allen Lane |isbn=978-0-7139-9704-0 }}</ref>{{rp|415}} Russia survived, gained a new appreciation for its religious diversity, and launched a reform program with far-reaching consequences.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Leonid E. |last=Gorizontov |title=The Crimean War as a Test of Russia's Imperial Durability |journal=Russian Studies in History |year=2012 |volume=51 |issue=1 |pages=65–94 |doi=10.2753/RSH1061-1983510103 }}</ref> According to Shepard Clough, professor of history at [[Columbia University]], the war:
Therefore its trade interests pushed it to protect the integrity of the Ottoman Empire. In the long term, the Ottoman Empire lost the opportunity to modernize and industrialize, but in the short term, it gained the opportunity to receive the support of European powers (primarily Britain) in opposing the desire of the conquered peoples for self-determination and Russia, which sought to crush its influence in the [[Balkans]] and Asia.
:"was not the result of a calculated plan, nor even of hasty last-minute decisions made under stress. It was the consequence of more than two years of fatal blundering in slow-motion by inept statesmen who had months to reflect upon the actions they took. It arose from Napoleon's search for prestige; Nicholas’s quest for control over the Straits; his naïve miscalculation of the probable reactions of the European powers; the failure of those powers to make their positions clear; and the pressure of public opinion in Britain and Constantinople at crucial moments."<ref>{{cite book |editor-first=Shepard B. |editor-last=Clough |title=A History of the Western World |year=1964 |location= |publisher= |page=917 }}</ref>


Publicly, European politicians made broad promises to the Ottomans. Lord [[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston|Palmerston]], the British [[Foreign Secretary]], said in 1839: "All that we hear about the decay of the Turkish Empire, and its being a dead body or a sapless trunk, and so forth, is pure and unadulterated nonsense. Given 10 years of peace under European protection, coupled with internal reform, there seemed to him no reason why it should not become again a respectable Power".{{sfn|Marriott|1917|p=214}}
Russia and the Ottoman Empire went to war in October 1853 over Russia's rights to protect Orthodox Christians. Russia gained the upper hand after [[Battle of Sinop|destroying]] the Ottoman fleet at the [[Black Sea]] port of [[Sinop, Turkey|Sinope]]; to stop Russia's conquest, France and Britain entered in March 1854. Most of the fighting took place for control of the Black Sea, with land battles on the [[Crimean peninsula]] in southern Russia. The Russians held their great fortress at [[Sevastopol]] for over a year. After it fell, peace became possible, and was arranged at Paris in March 1856. The religion issue had already been resolved. The main results were that the Black Sea was neutralised—Russia would not have any warships there—and the two vassals [[Wallachia]] and [[Moldavia]] became largely independent under nominal Ottoman rule.


[[Orlando Figes]] has claimed that "The motives of the British in promoting liberal reforms were not just to secure the independence of the Ottoman Empire against Russia. They were also to promote the influence of Britain in Turkey", also: "to promote British free-trade interests (which may have sounded splendid but was arguably damaging to the Ottoman Empire)".{{sfn|Figes|2011|p=58}}
There were smaller campaigns in eastern [[Anatolia]], [[Caucasus]], the [[Baltic Sea]], the Pacific Ocean and the [[White Sea]]. In Russia, this war is also known as the "'''Eastern War'''" ({{lang-ru|link=no|Восточная война}}, ''Vostochnaya Voina'').


"British exports to the Ottoman Empire, including Egypt and the Danubian principalities, increased nearly threefold from 1840 to 1851 (...) Thus it was very important, from the financial point of view, for Britain to prevent the Ottoman Empire from falling into other hands."{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=59}}
The war transformed the region. Because of battles, population exchanges, and nationalist movements incited by the war, the present-day states of Ukraine, Moldova, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, and regions such as Crimea and the Caucasus all changed in small or large ways due to this conflict.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Kozelsky |first=Mara |title=The Crimean War, 1853–56 |journal=Kritika |year=2012 |volume=13 |issue=4 |url=http://www.questia.com/library/1G1-319613789/the-crimean-war-1853-56 }}</ref>


"From this moment (1838) the export of British manufactured goods to Turkey rose steeply. There was an elevenfold increase by 1850".{{sfn|Figes|2011|p=32}}
The Crimean War is notorious for logistical, medical and tactical failure on both sides. The naval side saw both a successful Allied campaign which eliminated most of the ships of the Russian Navy in the Black Sea, and a successful blockade by the Royal Navy in the Baltic. It was one of the first "modern" wars because it saw the first use of major technologies, such as railways and telegraphs.<ref name="Royle2000">{{cite book |last=Royle |first=Trevor |title=Crimea: The Great Crimean War, 1854–1856 |year=2000 |location= |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=1-4039-6416-5 }}</ref>{{rp|at=Preface}} It is also famous for the work of [[Florence Nightingale]] and [[Mary Seacole]], who pioneered contrasting modern medical practices while treating the wounded.


Assistance from Western European powers or Russia had twice saved the Ottoman Empire from destruction, but the Ottomans also lost their independence in foreign policy. Britain and France desired more than any other states to preserve the integrity of the Ottoman Empire because they did not want to see Russia gaining access to the [[Mediterranean Sea]]. Austria had the same fears.
The Crimean War was one of the first wars to be documented extensively in written reports and [[war photography|photographs]]: notably by [[William Howard Russell|William Russell]] (writing for ''[[The Times]]'' newspaper) and the photographs of [[Roger Fenton]].<ref name="Figes2010"/>{{rp|306–309}} News from war correspondents reached all nations involved in the war and kept the public citizenry of those nations better informed of the day-to-day events of the war than had been the case in any other war to that date. The British public was very well informed regarding the day-to-day realities of the war in the Crimea. After the French extended the telegraph to the coast of the Black Sea during the winter of 1854, the news reached London in two days. When the British laid an underwater cable to the Crimean peninsula in April 1855, news reached London in a few hours. The daily news reports energised public opinion, which brought down the Aberdeen government and carried Lord Palmerston into office as prime minister.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|304–11}}


==Pre-battle tensions: "The Eastern Question"==
{{see also|Eastern Question}}
===Russian expansionism===
===Russian expansionism===
[[File:Siege of Varna 1828.jpg|thumb|Russian [[siege of Varna]] in [[Ottoman Bulgaria|Ottoman-ruled Bulgaria]], July–September 1828]]
Russia, as a member of the [[Holy Alliance]], had operated as the "police of Europe", maintaining the balance of power that had been established in the [[Congress of Vienna|Treaty of Vienna]] in 1815. Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1848]], and expected gratitude. It wanted a free hand in settling its problems with the Ottoman Empire – the "[[sick man of Europe]]". Britain could not tolerate Russian dominance of Ottoman affairs as that would challenge the British role in the eastern Mediterranean.<ref>{{cite book |first=Hugh |last=Seton-Watson |title=The Russian Empire 1801–1917 |year=1988 |location=Oxford |publisher=Clarendon Press |isbn=0-19-822152-5 |pages=280–319 }}</ref>
Russia, as a member of the [[Holy Alliance]], had operated as the "police of Europe" to maintain the [[balance of power (international relations)|balance of power]] that had been established in the [[Congress of Vienna]] in 1815. Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1848]], and expected a free hand in settling its problems with the Ottoman Empire, the "[[sick man of Europe]]". However, Britain could not tolerate Russian dominance of Ottoman affairs, which would challenge its domination of the eastern Mediterranean.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Seton-Watson|first=Hugh|author-link=Hugh Seton-Watson|title=The Russian Empire 1801–1917|publisher=Clarendon Press|year=1988|isbn=978-0-19-822152-4|location=Oxford|pages=280–319}}</ref>


For over 200 years, Russia had been expanding in a southerly direction toward the warm water ports of the Black Sea. Warm water ports that did not freeze over in the winter were essential for the development of Russian year-round trade and development of a strong navy.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|11}} This brought the emerging Russian state into conflict with the [[Ukrainian Cossacks]] and then with the Ukrainian [[Tatars]].<ref>{{cite book |first=W. Bruce |last=Lincoln |title=The Romanovs |publisher=Dial Press |location=New York |year=1981 |isbn=0-385-27187-5 |pages=114–116 }}</ref> When Russia conquered these groups and gained possession of the [[Ukraine]], the Ottoman Empire lost its buffer zone against Russian expansion, and Russia and the Ottoman Empire fell into direct conflict. The conflict with the Ottoman Empire also presented a religious issue of importance, as Russia saw itself as the protector of Orthodox Christians, many of whom lived under Ottoman control.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|at=ch 1}}
Starting with [[Peter the Great]] in the early 1700s, after centuries of Ottoman [[Ottoman wars in Europe|northward expansion]] and [[Crimean–Nogai raids into East Slavic lands|Crimean-Nogai raids]], Russia began a [[Russo-Turkish War (1686–1700)|southwards expansion]] across the sparsely-populated "[[Wild Fields]]" toward the warm water ports of the Black Sea, which does not freeze over, unlike the handful of ports controlled by Russia in the north. The goal was to promote year-round trade and a year-round navy.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=11}} Pursuit of that goal brought the emerging Russian state into conflict with the [[Ukrainian Cossacks]] and then the [[Crimean Tatars|Tatars]] of the [[Crimean Khanate]]<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lincoln |first=W. Bruce |url=https://archive.org/details/romanovsautocr00linc/page/114 |title=The Romanovs |publisher=Dial Press |year=1981 |isbn=978-0-385-27187-5 |location=New York |pages=[https://archive.org/details/romanovsautocr00linc/page/114 114–116]}}</ref> and [[Circassians]].<ref name="James Stanislaus Bell">{{Cite web |last=Bell |first=James Stanislaus |date=1840 |title=Journal of a residence in Circassia during the years 1837, 1838, and 1839 |url=https://archive.org/search.php?query=creator:%22Bell,%20James%20Stanislaus%22 |access-date=25 January 2015 |via=archive.org |publisher=Edward Moxon |location=London |oclc=879553602}}</ref>


"The plan to develop Russia as a southern power had begun in earnest in 1776, when [[Catherine the Great|Catherine]] placed [[Grigory Potemkin|Potemkin]] in charge of New Russia (Novorossiia), the sparsely populated territories newly conquered from the Ottomans on the Black Sea’s northern coastline, and ordered him to colonize the area".{{sfn|Figes|2011|p=23}}
===The immediate causes of the war===
When Russia conquered those groups and gained possession of their territories, the Ottoman Empire lost its buffer zone against Russian expansion, and both empires came into direct conflict. The conflict with the Ottoman Empire also presented a religious issue of importance, as Russia saw itself as the protector of history of the Eastern Orthodox Church under the [[Christianity in the Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Orthodox Christians]], who were [[Dhimmi|legally treated as second-class citizens]].{{sfn|Figes|2010|loc=ch. 1}} The [[Ottoman Reform Edict of 1856]], promulgated after the war, largely reversed much of the second-class status, most notably the [[jizya|tax that only non-Muslims paid]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lapidus, Ira M. (Ira Marvin) |title=A history of Islamic societies |date=2002 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=0-521-77056-4 |edition=2nd |location=Cambridge |oclc=50227716}}</ref>
The immediate chain of events leading to France and Britain declaring war on Russia on 27 and 28 March 1854 came from the ambition of the French emperor [[Napoleon III]] to restore the grandeur of France. He wanted Catholic support that would come his way if he attacked Eastern Orthodoxy, as sponsored by Russia.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|103}} The Marquis [[Charles, marquis de La Valette|Charles de La Valette]] was a zealous Catholic and a leading member of the "clerical party" which demanded French protection of the Roman Catholic rights to the holy places in Palestine. Napoleon appointed La Valette in May 1851 as his ambassador to the Porte (the Ottoman Empire).<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|7–9}} The appointment was made with the intent to force the Ottomans to recognise France as the "sovereign authority" over the Christian population.<ref name="Royle2000" />{{rp|19}} Russia disputed this attempted change in authority. Pointing to two more treaties, one in 1757 and the 1774 [[Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca]], the Ottomans reversed their earlier decision, renouncing the French treaty and insisting that Russia was the protector of the [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox Christians]] in the Ottoman Empire.


Britain's immediate fear was Russia's expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. The British desired to preserve Ottoman integrity and were concerned that Russia might make advances toward [[British India]] or move toward [[Scandinavia]] or [[Western Europe]]. A distraction (in the form of the Ottoman Empire) on the Russian southwest flank would mitigate that threat. The [[Royal Navy]] also wanted to forestall the threat of a powerful [[Imperial Russian Navy]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Strachan |first=Hew |date=June 1978 |title=Soldiers, Strategy and Sebastopol |journal=The Historical Journal |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=303–325 |doi=10.1017/s0018246x00000558 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |jstor=2638262|s2cid=154085359 | issn=0018-246X }}</ref>{{page range too broad|date=January 2022}} Taylor stated the British perspective:
Napoleon&nbsp;III responded with a show of force, sending the [[ship of the line]] ''[[French ship Charlemagne (1852)|Charlemagne]]'' to the [[Black Sea]]. This action was a violation of the [[London Straits Convention]].<ref name="Royle2000" />{{rp|19}} However, the Ottomans knew that the ''Charlemagne'' sailed at a speed of 8½ knots and could defeat the technologically inferior Russian and Ottoman navies combined.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|104}} Thus, France's show of force presented a real threat, and when combined with [[Gunboat diplomacy|aggressive diplomacy]] and money, induced [[Abdülmecid I|Sultan Abdülmecid&nbsp;I]] to accept a new treaty, confirming France and the Roman Catholic Church as the supreme Christian authority with control over the Roman Catholic holy places and possession of the keys to the [[Church of the Nativity]], previously held by the [[Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem|Greek Orthodox Church]].<ref name="Royle2000" />{{rp|20}}
{{blockquote|The Crimean war was fought for the sake of Europe rather than for the Eastern question; it was fought against Russia, not in favour of Turkey.... The British fought Russia out of resentment and supposed that her defeat would strengthen the European Balance of Power.{{sfn|Taylor|1954|p=61}} }}


[[File:Kars 1828.jpg|thumb|Russian siege of [[Kars]], [[Russo-Turkish War (1828–29)|Russo-Turkish War]] of 1828–1829]]
Tsar [[Nicholas I of Russia|Nicholas&nbsp;I]] then deployed his 4th and 5th army corps along the River [[Danube]], and had Count [[Karl Nesselrode]], his foreign minister, undertake talks with the Ottomans. Nesselrode confided to Sir [[George Hamilton Seymour]], the British ambassador in [[Saint Petersburg]]:
Because of "British commercial and strategic interests in the Middle East and India",<ref name="RCowley">{{Cite book|editor-last1=Cowley|editor-first1=Robert|editor1-link=Robert Cowley|title=The Reader's Companion to Military History|editor-first2=Geoffrey|editor-last2=Parker|editor2-link=Geoffrey Parker (historian)|date=2001 |publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Trade & Reference Publishers |isbn=978-0618127429 |edition=1st |location=Boston}}</ref> the British joined the French, "cement[ing] an alliance with Britain and... reassert[ing] its military power".<ref name="RCowley" /> Among those who supported the British strategy were [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]].<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Kissin |first=S. F. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-gzMDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT29 |title=War and the Marxists: Socialist Theory and Practice in Capitalist Wars, 1848–1918 |year=2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-000-00980-4}}</ref> In his articles for the ''[[New-York Tribune]]'' around 1853, Marx saw the Crimean War as a conflict between the democratic ideals of the west that started with the "great movement of 1789" against "Russia and Absolutism". He described the Ottoman Empire as a buffer against a pattern of expansionism by the Tsar.<ref>{{Cite book|first1=Karl|last1=Marx|author1-link=Karl Marx|first2=Frederick|last2=Engels|author2-link=Frederick Engels|title= The Russian Menace to Europe |editor-first1=Paul |editor-last1=Blackstock |editor-first2=Bert |editor-last2=Hoselitz |publisher=George Allen and Unwin |location=London |date=1953 |pages=121–202 |url=https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/subject/russia/crimean-war.htm|access-date=2021-06-16|via=www.marxists.org |quote=Originally published in ''[[New-York Tribune|New York Tribune]]'', 7 April 1853}}</ref> Marx and Engels also accused Lord Palmerston of playing along with the interests of Russia and being unserious in preparing for the conflict.<ref>Franz Mering. "Karl Marx. His life story". Moscow. Gospolitizdat. 1957. p. 264 (in Russian)</ref><ref name=":02">{{Cite book |last=Wheen |first=Francis |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RY85Wf7jeEMC&pg=PA211 |title=Karl Marx: A Life |date=2000 |publisher=W. W. Norton|isbn=978-0-393-04923-7 |page=211 |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> Marx believed Palmerston to be bribed by Russia, and shared this belief with [[David Urquhart]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Story of the Life of Lord Palmerston by Karl Marx |url=https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1853/palmerston/ch06.htm |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=www.marxists.org}}</ref><ref name=":02" /> Urquhart, for his part, was a British politician who was a major advocate for the Ottoman Empire.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Karl Marx: A Life|quote=Chapter 7 |url=https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/bio/marx/wheen/ch07.htm |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=www.marxists.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=When the West wanted Islam to curb Christian extremism|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2014/10/15/when-the-west-wanted-islam-to-curb-christian-extremism/ |access-date=2022-05-21}}</ref>


[[Mikhail Pogodin]], a professor of history at [[Moscow State University|Moscow University]], gave Nicholas I a summary of Russia's policy towards the Slavs in the war. Nicholas' answer was filled with grievances against the West. Nicholas shared Pogodin's sense that Russia's role as the protector of [[Christianity in the Ottoman Empire|Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire]] was not understood and that Russia was unfairly treated by the West. Nicholas especially approved of the following passage:{{sfn|Figes|2011|page=134}}
<blockquote>''[The dispute over the holy places]'' had assumed a new character—that the acts of injustice towards the Greek church which it had been desired to prevent had been perpetrated and consequently that now the object must be to find a remedy for these wrongs. The success of French negotiations at Constantinople was to be ascribed solely to intrigue and violence—violence which had been supposed to be the ''ultima ratio'' of kings, being, it had been seen, the means which the present ruler of France was in the habit of employing in the first instance.<ref name="Royle2000" />{{rp|21}}</blockquote>


{{blockquote|[[French conquest of Algeria|France takes Algeria from Turkey]], and almost every year [[British India|England annexes another Indian principality]]: none of this disturbs the balance of power; but when Russia occupies [[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]], albeit only temporarily, that disturbs the balance of power. [[Roman Republic (19th century)#French siege|France occupies Rome]] and stays there several years during peacetime: that is nothing; but Russia only thinks of occupying Constantinople, and the peace of Europe is threatened. [[First Opium War|The English declare war on the Chinese]], who have, it seems, offended them: no one has the right to intervene; but Russia is obliged to ask Europe for permission if it quarrels with its neighbour. England threatens [[Kingdom of Greece|Greece]] to support the [[Don Pacifico affair|false claims]] of a miserable Jew and burns its fleet: that is a lawful action; but Russia demands a treaty to protect millions of Christians, and that is deemed to strengthen its position in the East at the expense of the balance of power. We can expect nothing from the West but blind hatred and malice.... (''comment in the margin by Nicholas I'': 'This is the whole point').|Mikhail Pogodin's memorandum to Nicholas I, 1853<ref name="slate">{{Cite news |date=21 March 2014 |title=The Long History of Russian Whataboutism |work=Slate |url=https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2014/03/russia-and-western-double-standards-the-long-history-of-russian-complaints-about-unfair-treatment.html}}</ref>}}
As conflict emerged over the issue of the holy places, Nicholas I and Nesselrode began a diplomatic offensive, which they hoped would prevent either Britain's or France's interfering in any conflict between Russia and the Ottomans, as well as to prevent their allying.
[[File:Cornet Wilkin 11th Hussars.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Cornet (military rank)|Cornet]] assistant surgeon Henry Wilkin, [[11th Hussars]]. He survived the Charge of the Light Brigade. Photo: Roger Fenton.]]


Russia was militarily weak, technologically backward and administratively incompetent. Despite its grand ambitions toward the south, it had not built its railway network in that direction, and its communications were poor. Its bureaucracy was riddled with graft, corruption and inefficiency and was unprepared for war. Its navy was weak and technologically backward. Its army, although very large, suffered from colonels who pocketed their men's pay, from poor morale, and from a technological deficit relative to Britain and France. By the war's end, the profound weaknesses of the Russian armed forces had become readily apparent, and the Russian leadership was determined to reform it.<ref>Barbara Jelavich, ''St. Petersburg and Moscow: Tsarist and Soviet Foreign Policy, 1814–1974'' (1974) p. 119</ref><ref>William C. Fuller, ''Strategy and Power in Russia 1600–1914'' (1998) pp. 252–259</ref>
Nicholas began courting Britain by means of conversations with the British ambassador, George Hamilton Seymour, in January and February 1853.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|105}} Nicholas insisted that he no longer wished to expand Imperial Russia<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|105}} but that he had an obligation to the Christian communities in the Ottoman Empire.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|105}}

However, no matter how great the problems of Russia were, Russia believed those of the Ottomans were greater. "In a one-to-one fight Nikolai (Tsar) had no doubt of beating the Ottoman armies and navy".{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=62}} Russian foreign policy failed to understand the importance of Britain's trade interests and did not understand the changes in the situation after the conclusion of the Anglo-Ottoman Treaty in 1838 (see [[Treaty of Balta Liman]]). Russia attempted to "honestly" negotiate with the United Kingdom on the partition of the Ottoman Empire and made concessions in order to eliminate all objections from the United Kingdom.

"The Tsar Nicholas had always, as we have seen, been anxious to maintain a cordial understanding with England in regard to the Eastern Question, and early in the spring of 1853 he had a series of interviews with Sir [[George Hamilton Seymour]], then [[British Ambassador to Russia|British ambassador]] at St. Petersburg."{{sfn|Marriott|1917|p=229}} Emperor Nicholas I assured that he did not intend to seize Constantinople and territories in the Balkans, he himself offered Britain to take over Egypt and Crete.{{sfn|Marriott|1917|p=230}} Concessions at the conclusion of the London Straits Convention were made earlier in 1841. "By signing the convention, the Russians had given up their privileged position in the Ottoman Empire and their control of the Straits, all in the hope of improving relations with Britain and isolating France".{{sfn|Figes|2011|p=68}} But Britain after 1838 was interested in preserving the integrity of the Ottoman Empire and rejected all Russian proposals. "The fall of the Ottoman Empire was not, however, a requirement of British policy in the East. A weak Ottoman state best suited British interests".{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=68}}

===Immediate causes of war===
[[File:Napoleon3.PNG|thumb|upright|French Emperor [[Napoleon III]]]]

French Emperor [[Napoleon III]]'s ambition to restore France's grandeur<ref>{{Cite book |title=Revolutionary situations in Europe, 1917–1922 : Germany, Italy, Austria-Hungary = Situations revolutionnaires en Europe, 1917–1922 : Allemagne, Italie, Autriche-Hongrie : proceedings &#91;of the&#93; 2nd International Colloquium &#91;held&#93; March 25, 26, 27, 1976 |publisher=Interuniversity Centre for European Studies |year=1977 |editor-last=Bertrand |editor-first=Charles L. |location=Montreal |pages=201–233 |oclc=21705514}}</ref> initiated the immediate chain of events that led to France and Britain declaring war on Russia on 27 and 28 March 1854, respectively. He pursued [[Catholic]] support by asserting France's "sovereign authority" over the Christian population of [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]],{{sfn|Royle|2000|p=19}} to the detriment of Russia{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=103}} (the sponsor of [[Eastern Christianity|Eastern Orthodoxy]]). To achieve that, he in May 1851 appointed [[Charles, marquis de La Valette]], a zealous leading member of the Catholic clericalists, as his ambassador to the [[Sublime Porte]] of the Ottoman Empire.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=7–9}}

Russia disputed that attempted change in authority. Referring to two previous treaties (one from 1757 and the [[Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca]] from 1774), the Ottomans reversed their earlier decision, renounced the French treaty and declared that Russia was the protector of the [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox Christians]] in the Ottoman Empire.

Napoleon III responded with a show of force by sending the [[ship of the line]] ''[[French ship Charlemagne (1851)|Charlemagne]]'' to the Black Sea and thereby violated the London Straits Convention.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=104}}{{sfn|Royle|2000|p=19}} The [[gunboat diplomacy]] show of force, together with money{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}, induced Ottoman Sultan [[Abdülmecid I]] to accept a new treaty confirming France and the Catholic Church's supreme authority over Catholic holy places, including the [[Church of the Nativity]], which had been held by the [[Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem|Greek Orthodox Church]].{{sfn|Royle|2000|p=20}}

Tsar [[Nicholas I of Russia|Nicholas I]] then deployed his 4th and 5th Army Corps along the River [[Danube]] in Wallachia, as a direct threat to the Ottoman lands south of the river. He had Foreign Minister Count [[Karl Nesselrode]] undertake talks with the Ottomans. Nesselrode confided to Seymour:

{{blockquote|''[The dispute over the holy places]'' had assumed a new character—that the acts of injustice towards the Greek church which it had been desired to prevent had been perpetrated and consequently that now the object must be to find a remedy for these wrongs. The success of French negotiations at Constantinople was to be ascribed solely to intrigue and violence—violence which had been supposed to be the [[ultima ratio]] of kings, being, it had been seen, the means which the present ruler of France was in the habit of employing in the first instance.{{sfn|Royle|2000|p=21}} }}

The agreement referred to by the French was in 1740.{{sfn|Royle|2000|p=18}} At present most historians (except for the new Russian Orthodox nationalists) accept that the question of the holy places was no more than a pretext for the Crimean War.{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=65}} As conflict emerged over the issue of the holy places, Nicholas I and Nesselrode began a diplomatic offensive, which they hoped would prevent either British or French interference in any conflict between Russia and the Ottomans and prevent both from forming an anti-Russian alliance.

Nicholas began courting Britain by means of conversations with Seymour in January and February 1853.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=105}} Nicholas insisted that he no longer wished to expand the Russian Empire{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=105}} but that he had an obligation to the Christian communities in the Ottoman Empire.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=105}}
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{{Anchor|Sened}}
The Tsar next dispatched a diplomat, [[Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov|Prince Menshikov]], on a special mission to the [[Ottoman Porte|Ottoman Sublime Porte]] in February 1853.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|107}} By previous treaties, the sultan was committed "to protect the (Eastern Orthodox) Christian religion and its churches". Menshikov attempted to negotiate a new ''sened'', a formal convention with the power of an international treaty, under which the Ottomans would allow to Russia the same rights of intervention in the affairs of the Orthodox religion as recently allowed France with respect to Catholic churches and churchmen.<ref>{{cite book|last=Jelavich|first=Barbara|authorlink=Barbara Jelavich|title=Russia's Balkan Entanglements, 1806–1914|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, England|year=2004|pages=118–122|isbn=978-0-521-52250-2}}</ref> Such a treaty would allow Russia to control the Orthodox Church's hierarchy in the Ottoman Empire. Menshikov arrived at Istanbul on 16 February 1853, on the steam-powered warship ''Gromovnik'' (''Thunderer'').<ref name="MarxEngels British Politics">{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |first2=Frederick |last2=Engels |chapter=British Politics—Disraeli—The Refugees—Mazzini in London—Turkey |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=12 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1979 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0512-3 }}</ref>{{rp|4–5}} The ship (''Thunderer'') that Menshikov sailed to Constantinople aboard was aptly named.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|108}} Once in Constantinople, Menshikov proceeded to break protocol at the Porte. At his first meeting with the sultan, he insulted the Turks by appearing in civilian clothes rather than customary and traditional military uniform for his official welcome to the Porte.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|109}} He then proceeded to condemn the Ottomans' concessions to the French. Menshikov also began demanding the replacement of highly placed Ottoman civil servants—particularly [[Fuad Efendi]] the Ottoman foreign minister.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|109}}
He next dispatched a highly-abrasive diplomat, [[Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov|Prince Menshikov]], on a special mission to the Ottoman Sublime Porte in February 1853. By previous treaties, the sultan had committed "to protect the (Eastern Orthodox) Christian religion and its churches". Menshikov demanded a Russian protectorate over all 12&nbsp;million Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire with control of the Orthodox Church's hierarchy. A compromise was reached regarding Orthodox access to the Holy Land, but the Sultan, strongly supported by the British ambassador, [[Stratford Canning, 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe]], rejected the most sweeping demands.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jelavich |first=Barbara |title=Russia's Balkan Entanglements, 1806–1914 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-521-52250-2 |pages=118–122 |author-link=Barbara Jelavich}}</ref>


Russian historian Vinogradov V.N. point out that Menshikov's demands did not go beyond the limits of previous treaties. "The agreement was reached on the administration of church rites of both clergy in respected temples and, secondly, that the tsar rejected the idea of expanding his right of patronage and, in fact, insisted on confirming the terms of the Kucuk-Kaynardzhiy treaty of 1774, which allowed giving advice to the Sultan, but did not oblige them to accept".<ref name="Vinogradov"/>
Since the departure in January 1853 of [[Stratford Canning]], the British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, the British embassy at Constantinople had been run by [[Hugh Rose, 1st Baron Strathnairn|Hugh Rose]], [[chargé d'affaires]] for the British.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|110}} Using his abundant resources within the Ottoman Empire, Rose gathered intelligence on Russian troop movements along the Danube frontier, and became concerned about the extent of Menshikov's mission to the Porte. On 8 March 1853, Rose, using his authority as the British representative to the Ottomans, ordered Vice-Admiral Sir [[James Whitley Deans Dundas]], stationed on the island of [[Malta]], to bring a British squadron of warships to [[Urla, İzmir]], on the Ionian coast of Turkey.<ref name="MarxEngels British Politics" />{{rp|5}} However, Sir James Dundas refused to leave Malta<ref name="MarxEngels British Politics" />{{rp|5}} and resented the diplomat (Rose) for believing he could interfere in the [[Admiralty]]'s business. Within a week, Rose's actions were cancelled.<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |chapter=Turkey and Russia—Connivance of the Aberdeen Ministry with Russia—The Budget—Tax on Newspaper Supplements—Parliamentary Corruption |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=12 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1979 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0512-3 |page=145 }}</ref> The French fleet sailed from [[Toulon]] on 22 March 1853, and headed for the [[Bosporus]].<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|112}} Their intent was to head off any naval attack on Constantinople on the west side of the narrows at Bosporus. Thus, only the French sent a naval task force to support the Ottomans.


"By the early 1850s Stratford Canning had become far more than an ambassador or adviser to the Porte. The ‘Great Elchi’, or Great Ambassador, as he was known in Constantinople, had a direct influence on the policies of the Turkish government. (...) His presence was a source of deep resentment among the Sultan's ministers, who lived in terror of a personal visit from the dictatorial ambassador".{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=64}}
===First hostilities===
[[File:Battle of Sinop.jpg|thumb|''[[Battle of Sinope]]'', by [[Ivan Aivazovsky]]]]


Nicholas fumed at "the infernal dictatorship of this Redcliffe" whose name and political ascendancy at the Porte personified for him the whole Eastern Question,<ref>Lord Kinross The Ottoman Centuries</ref> The British and the French sent in naval task forces to support the Ottomans, as Russia had prepared to seize the [[Danubian Principalities]].{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=111–115}}
In February 1853, the British government of [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|Lord Aberdeen]], the prime minister, re-appointed Stratford Canning as British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|110}} Having resigned the ambassadorship in January, he had been replaced by [[Hugh Rose, 1st Baron Strathnairn|Baron Strathnairn]]. Lord Stratford then turned around and sailed back to Constantinople, arriving there on 5 April 1853. There he convinced the Sultan to reject the Russian treaty proposal, as compromising the independence of the Turks. The Leader of the Opposition in the British House of Commons, [[Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield|Benjamin Disraeli]], blamed Aberdeen and Stratford's actions for making war inevitable, thus starting the process which would eventually force the Aberdeen government to resign in January 1855, over the war.

All the calculations of the Russian emperor turned out to be erroneous. Britain refused his proposals, it was not possible to prevent the Anglo-French rapprochement, Austria opposed his policy, the Ottoman Empire showed intransigence. On the contrary, a favourable situation was developing for Britain. Britain had great naval power and a powerful economy, but did not have a strong land army. The alliance with France, which had a strong land army, made it possible to strike at Russia. "With the help of French infantry, it was possible to overturn Russia's positions with one blow"<ref>V. N. Vinogradov (2006). "Lord Palmerston in European diplomacy". New and Recent History [ru] (in Russian) (5): 182–209.</ref>

===First hostilities===
[[File:Russo-French skirmish during Crimean War.PNG|thumb|upright| The death of Colonel Filhol de Camas of the French 6th Infantry Regiment at the [[Battle of Inkermann]]. Watercolour c1897 by [[Julien Le Blant]]. ]]
In February 1853, the British government of Prime Minister [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|Lord Aberdeen]] reappointed Lord Stratford as British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=110}} Having resigned the ambassadorship in January, he had been replaced by [[Hugh Rose, 1st Baron Strathnairn|Colonel Rose]] as ''[[chargé d'affaires]]''. Lord Stratford then turned around, sailed back to Constantinople, arriving there on 5 April 1853 and convinced the Sultan there to reject the Russian treaty proposal as compromising Ottoman independence. The [[Leader of the Opposition (United Kingdom)|Leader of the Opposition]] in the British [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]], [[Benjamin Disraeli]], blamed Aberdeen and Stratford's actions for making war inevitable, which started the process that would force the [[Aberdeen ministry|Aberdeen government]] to resign in January 1855 over the war.


Shortly after he learned of the failure of Menshikov's diplomacy toward the end of June 1853, the Tsar sent armies under the commands of Field Marshall [[Ivan Paskevich]] and General [[Mikhail Dmitrievich Gorchakov|Mikhail Gorchakov]] across the Pruth River into the Ottoman-controlled [[Danubian Principalities]] of [[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]]. Fewer than half of the 80,000 Russian soldiers who crossed the Pruth in 1853 survived. By far, most of the deaths would result from sickness rather than combat,<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|118–119}} for the Russian army still suffered from medical service that ranged from bad to none.
Shortly after the Tsar had learned of the failure of Menshikov's diplomacy toward the end of June 1853, he sent armies under the commands of Field Marshal [[Ivan Paskevich]] and General [[Mikhail Dmitrievich Gorchakov|Mikhail Gorchakov]] across the River [[Prut]] into the Ottoman-controlled Danubian Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia. Fewer than half of the 80,000 Russian soldiers who crossed the Prut in 1853 survived. By far, nearly all of the deaths would result from sickness, rather than action,{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=118–119}} since the Russian Army still suffered from medical services that ranged from bad to none.


Russia had previously obtained from the Ottoman Empire recognition of the Tsar's role as special guardian of the Orthodox Christians in Moldavia and Wallachia. Now Russia used the Sultan's failure to resolve the issue of the protection of the Christian sites in the Holy Land as a pretext for Russian occupation of these Danubian provinces. Nicholas believed that the European powers, especially [[Austrian Empire|Austria]], would not object strongly to the annexation of a few neighbouring Ottoman provinces, especially considering that Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1848|Hungarian Revolution in 1849]].
Russia had obtained recognition from the Ottoman Empire of the Tsar's role as special guardian of the Orthodox Christians in Moldavia and Wallachia. Russia now used the Sultan's failure to resolve the issue of the protection of the Christian sites in the Holy Land as a pretext for Russian occupation of those Danubian provinces. Nicholas believed that the European powers, especially Austria, would not object strongly to the annexation of a few neighbouring Ottoman provinces, especially since Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the Hungarian Revolution in 1849.


The United Kingdom, hoping to maintain the Ottoman Empire as a bulwark against the expansion of Russian power in [[Asia]], sent a fleet to the Dardanelles, where it joined a fleet sent by France.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lawrence Sondhaus |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aYcUQ4XRqOoC&pg=PA1852-IA16 |title=Naval Warfare, 1815–1914 |publisher=Routledge |year=2012 |isbn=978-1134609949 |pages=1852–1855}}</ref>
[[File:Russo-French skirmish during Crimean War.PNG|thumb|left|upright|Russo-French skirmish during Crimean War]]


====Battle of Sinop====
In July 1853, the Tsar sent his troops into the Danubian Principalities. Britain, hoping to maintain the Ottoman Empire as a bulwark against the expansion of Russian power in Asia, sent a fleet to the [[Dardanelles]], where it joined another fleet sent by France.<ref>{{cite book|author=Lawrence Sondhaus|title=Naval Warfare, 1815–1914|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=aYcUQ4XRqOoC&pg=PA1852-IA16|year=2012|publisher=Routledge|pages=1852–55}}</ref>
{{main|Battle of Sinop}}
[[File:Battle of Sinop.jpg|thumb|The Russian destruction of the Ottoman fleet at the [[Battle of Sinop]] on 30 November 1853 sparked the war (painting by [[Ivan Aivazovsky]]).]]
The European powers continued to pursue diplomatic avenues. The representatives of the four Great Powers (the United Kingdom, France, Austria and [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]]) met in [[Vienna]], where they drafted a note, which they hoped would be acceptable to both the Russians and the Ottomans. The peace terms arrived at by the four powers at the Vienna Conference (1853) were delivered to the Russians by Austrian Foreign Minister [[Count Karl Ferdinand von Buol|Count Karl von Buol]] on 5 December 1853. The note met with the approval of Nicholas I, but Abdülmecid I rejected the proposal since he felt that the document's poor phrasing left it open to many different interpretations. The United Kingdom, France and Austria united in proposing amendments to mollify the Sultan, but the court of St. Petersburg ignored their suggestions.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=143}} The United Kingdom and France then set aside the idea of continuing negotiations, but Austria and Prussia did not believe that the rejection of the proposed amendments justified the abandonment of the diplomatic process.


On 23 November, a small Russian naval force discovered the Ottoman fleet harboured in Sinop and began a blockade. Once the Russian blockade was reinforced, a squadron of 6 Russian ships of the line supported by 5 smaller warships, assaulted the harbour on 30 November 1853. During [[Battle of Sinop]], the Russian squadron destroyed a patrol squadron of 11 Ottoman warships—mostly frigates—while they were anchored in port under defence of the onshore artillery garrison.{{sfn|Tucker|2009|p={{page needed|date=November 2022}}}} The Ottoman fleet suffered a crushing defeat. The Russian victory in the naval battle in Sinope was called "the massacre of Sinope".{{sfn|Marriott|1917|p=234}} Although Russia and the Ottoman Empire were already at war, and there was no evidence of Russian atrocities, the phrase was used as propaganda in the West.<ref>O.Figes, The Crimean War. Metropolitan Books. New York. 2014, p. 137</ref> The press in both United Kingdom and France used Sinop as the ''[[casus belli]]'' ("cause of war") to shape the public opinion in favour of war against Russia. By 28 March 1854, after Russia ignored an Anglo-French ultimatum to withdraw from the Danubian Principalities, the United Kingdom and France had both declared war.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |first=Andrew |last=Lambert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GCVyIZEdc6kC&pg=PA94 |title=The Crimean War: British Grand Strategy Against Russia, 1853–56 |publisher=Ashgate |year=2011 |isbn=978-1409410119 |pages=94, 97}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |first=Christopher John |last=Bartlett |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aXi7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA51 |title=Defence and Diplomacy: Britain and the Great Powers, 1815–1914 |publisher=Manchester UP |year=1993 |isbn=978-0719035203 |pages=51–52}}</ref>
At the same time, however, the European powers hoped for a diplomatic compromise. The representatives of the four neutral [[Great Power]]s—Britain, France, Austria and [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]]—met in Vienna, where they drafted a note which they hoped would be acceptable to both the Russians and the Ottomans. The peace terms arrived at by the four powers at the [[Vienna Conference (1853)|Vienna Conference]] were delivered to the Russians by the Austrian Foreign Minister Count Karl Von Buol on 5 December 1853. The note met with the approval of Nicholas I; however, [[Abdülmecid&nbsp;I]] rejected the proposal, feeling that the document's poor phrasing left it open to many different interpretations. Britain, France, and Austria united in proposing amendments to mollify the Sultan, but the court of St Petersburg ignored their suggestions.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|143}}


===Dardanelles===
Britain and France set aside the idea of continuing negotiations, but Austria and Prussia did not believe that the rejection of the proposed amendments justified the abandonment of the diplomatic process. Nonetheless, the Sultan formally declared war on Russia on 23 October 1853,<ref name="Kinglake 1863:354"/> and proceeded to the attack, his armies moving on the Russian army near the Danube later that month. Russia and the Ottoman empire massed forces on two main fronts, the Caucasus and the Danube. Ottoman leader [[Omar Pasha]] managed to achieve some victories on the Danubian front.<ref>{{cite book|author=Candan Badem|title=The Ottoman Crimean War: (1853–1856)|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DXoYJikZ7ygC|year=2010|publisher=BRILL|pages=passim}}</ref>In the Caucasus, the Ottomans were able to stand ground with the help of [[Chechen people|Chechen]] Muslims led by [[Imam Shamil]].<ref>{{cite book|author=Badem|title=The Ottoman Crimean War: (1853–1856)|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DXoYJikZ7ygC&pg=PA149|pages=149–55}}</ref>
Britain was concerned about Russian activity and Sir [[John Fox Burgoyne|John Burgoyne]], a senior advisor to Lord Aberdeen, urged for the Dardanelles to be occupied and works of sufficient strength to be built to block any Russian move to capture Constantinople and gain access to the Mediterranean. The [[Corps of Royal Engineers]] sent men to the Dardanelles, and Burgoyne went to Paris and met with the British ambassador and the French emperor. [[Henry Wellesley, 1st Earl Cowley|Lord Cowley]] wrote on 8 February to Burgoyne, "Your visit to Paris has produced a visible change in the Emperor's views, and he is making every preparation for a land expedition in case the last attempt at negotiation should break down".{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=411}}


Burgoyne and his team of engineers inspected and surveyed the Dardanelles area in February. They were fired on by Russian riflemen when they went to [[Varna, Bulgaria|Varna]]. A team of [[sapper]]s arrived in March, and major building works commenced on a seven-mile line of defence, which was designed to block the [[Gallipoli Peninsula]]. French sappers worked on half of the line, which was finished in May.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=412}}
Nicholas responded by dispatching warships, which in the [[Battle of Sinop]] on 30 November 1853 destroyed a patrol squadron of Ottoman frigates and corvettes while they were anchored in port in northern [[Anatolia]]. The destruction of the Ottoman ships provided Britain and France with the ''[[casus belli]]'' ("case for war") for declaring war against Russia on the side of the Ottoman Empire. By 28 March 1854, after Russia ignored an Anglo-French ultimatum to withdraw from the Danubian Principalities, Britain and France formally declared war.<ref>{{cite book|author=Andrew Lambert|title=The Crimean War: British Grand Strategy Against Russia, 1853–56|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=GCVyIZEdc6kC&pg=PA94|year=2011|publisher=Ashgate |pages=94, 97}}</ref>


===Peace attempts===
===Peace attempts===
[[File:Valley of the Shadow of Death, 2.jpg|thumb|''[[Valley of the Shadow of Death (Roger Fenton)|Valley of the Shadow of Death]]'', by Roger Fenton, one of the most famous pictures of the Crimean War<ref>Figes 2012, p. 307.{{incomplete short citation|date=October 2022}}</ref>]]
Nicholas felt that because of Russian assistance in suppressing the [[Hungarian revolution of 1848]], Austria would side with him, or at the very least remain neutral. Austria, however, felt threatened by the Russian troops. When Britain and France demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from the principalities, Austria supported them and, though it did not immediately declare war on Russia, it refused to guarantee its neutrality.
Nicholas felt that because of Russian assistance in suppressing the [[Hungarian revolution of 1848]], Austria would side with him or at the very least remain neutral. Austria, however, felt threatened by the Russian troops in the Balkans. On 27 February 1854, the United Kingdom and France demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from the principalities. Austria supported them and, without declaring war on Russia, refused to guarantee its neutrality. Russia's rejection of the ultimatum proved to be the justification used by Britain and France to enter the war.


Russia then withdrew its troops from the Danubian principalities, which were then occupied by [[Austria]] for the duration of the war. This removed the original grounds for war, but Britain and France continued with hostilities. Determined to address the [[Eastern Question]] by putting an end to the Russian threat to the Ottoman Empire, the allies proposed several conditions for a peaceful resolution, including:
Russia soon withdrew its troops from the Danubian Principalities, which were then occupied by Austria for the duration of the war.{{sfn|Arnold|2002|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PA13 13]}} That removed the original grounds for war, but the British and the French continued with hostilities. Determined to address the Eastern Question by putting an end to the Russian threat to the Ottomans, the allies in August 1854 proposed the "Four Points" for ending the conflict in addition to the Russian withdrawal:
* Russia was to give up its protectorate over the Danubian Principalities;
* Russia was to give up its protectorate over the Danubian Principalities.
* The Danube was to be opened up to foreign commerce.
* It was to abandon any claim granting it the right to interfere in Ottoman affairs on behalf of Orthodox Christians;
* The [[London Straits Convention|Straits Convention of 1841]] was to be revised;
* The [[London Straits Convention|Straits Convention of 1841]], which allowed only Ottoman and Russian warships in the Black Sea, was to be revised.
* Russia was to abandon any claim granting it the right to interfere in Ottoman affairs on behalf of Orthodox Christians.
* All nations were to be granted access to the River [[Danube]].


Those points, particularly the third, would require clarification through negotiations, which Russia refused. The allies, including Austria, therefore agreed that Britain and France should take further military action to prevent further Russian aggression against the Ottomans. Britain and France agreed on the invasion of Crimea as the first step.{{sfn|Small |2007 |pp=23, 31}}
When the Tsar refused to comply with these Four Points, the Crimean War commenced. {{clr}}


==Battles==
==Battles==
<gallery widths="220">
File:Crimean war map 1853.svg|Map of Crimean War, year 1853
File:Crimean war map 1854.svg|Map of Crimean War, year 1854
File:Crimean war map 1855.svg|Map of Crimean War, year 1855
File:CrimeanWarBattles.png|All battles and sieges in the Crimean War
</gallery>

===Danube campaign===
===Danube campaign===
{{see also|Wallachian Revolution of 1848|Moldavian Revolution of 1848 |Convention of Balta Liman}}
[[File:Mahmudiye (1829).jpg|thumb|''[[Mahmudiye (ship)|Mahmudiye]]'' (1829) participated in numerous important naval battles, including the [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]]]]
[[File:Ottoman ship of the line Mahmudiye.png|thumb|upright|''[[Mahmudiye (ship)|Mahmudiye]]'' (1829) participated in numerous important naval battles, including the [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]]]]
[[File:Crimean-war-1853-56.png|thumb|right|Map of Crimean War]]
[[File:Fall of Sevastopol.jpg|thumb|right|French [[zouave]]s and Russian soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat at [[Malakhov Kurgan]]]]
The Danube campaign opened when the Russians occupied the [[Danubian Principalities]] of [[Moldavia]] and [[Wallachia]] in May 1853, bringing their forces to the north bank of the river [[Danube]]. In response, the Ottoman Empire also moved its forces up to the river. It established strongholds at [[Vidin]] in the west, and [[Silistra]],<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|172–84}} which was located in the east, near the mouth of the Danube.


The Turkish/Ottoman move up the Danube River was also of concern to the [[Austrian Empire|Austrians]], who moved forces into [[Transylvania]] in response. However, the Austrians had begun to fear the Russians more than the Turks. Indeed, like the British, the Austrians were now coming to see that an intact Ottoman Empire was necessary as a bulwark against the Russians. Accordingly, the Austrians resisted Russian diplomatic attempts to join the war on the Russian side. Austria remained neutral in the Crimean War.<ref>{{cite book |first=A. J. P. |last=Taylor |title=The Struggle for Mastery in Europe: 1848–1918 |year=1954 |location= |publisher= |pages=64–81 }}</ref>
The Danube campaign opened when the Russians occupied the Danubian Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in July 1853,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Edgerton |first=Robert B |url=https://archive.org/details/deathorglory00robe/mode/2up |title=Death or glory : the legacy of the Crimean War |year=1999 |page=15}}</ref> which brought their forces to the north bank of the River Danube. In response, the Ottoman Empire also moved its forces up to the river, establishing strongholds at [[Vidin]] in the west and [[Silistra]]{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=172–184}} in the east, near the mouth of the Danube. The Ottoman move up the River Danube was also of concern to the Austrians, who moved forces into [[Transylvania]] in response. However, the Austrians had begun to fear the Russians more than the Ottomans. Indeed, like the British, the Austrians were now coming to see that an intact Ottoman Empire was necessary as a bulwark against the Russians. Accordingly, Austria resisted Russian diplomatic attempts to join the war but remained neutral during the Crimean War.{{sfn|Taylor|1954|loc=[https://archive.org/details/dli.bengal.10689.13016/page/n106 pp. 64]–81}}


Following the Ottoman ultimatum in September 1853, forces under the Ottoman general [[Omar Pasha]] crossed the Danube at Vidin and captured [[Kalafat]] in October 1853. Simultaneously, in the east, the Ottomans crossed the Danube at Silistra and attacked the Russians at [[Oltenitza]]. The resulting [[Battle of Oltenitza]] was the first engagement following the declaration of war. The Russians counterattacked, but were beaten back.<ref>{{cite book|author=Candan Badem|title=“The" Ottoman Crimean War: (1853–1856)|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DXoYJikZ7ygC&pg=PA102|year=2010|publisher=BRILL|pages=101–109}}</ref> On 31 December 1853, the Ottoman forces at Kalafat moved against the Russian force at Chetatea or [[Cetate, Dolj|Cetate]], a small village nine miles north of Kalafat, and engaged them on 6 January 1854. The battle began when the Russians made a move to recapture Kalafat. Most of the [[Battle of Cetate|heavy fighting]], however, took place in and around Chetatea until the Russians were driven out of the village. Despite the setback at Chetatea, on 28 January 1854, Russian forces laid siege to Kalafat. The siege would continue until May 1854 when the Russians lifted the siege. The Ottomans would also later beat the Russians in battle at Caracal.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|130–43}}
After the Ottoman ultimatum in September 1853, forces under Ottoman General [[Omar Pasha]] crossed the Danube at Vidin and captured [[Calafat]] in October 1853. Simultaneously, in the east, the Ottomans crossed the Danube at Silistra and attacked the Russians at [[Oltenița]]. The resulting [[Battle of Oltenița]] was the first engagement since the declaration of war. The Russians counterattacked but were beaten back.{{sfn|Badem|2010|pp=101–109}} On 31 December 1853, the Ottoman forces at Calafat moved against the Russian force at Chetatea or [[Cetate, Dolj|Cetate]], a small village nine miles north of Calafat, and engaged it on 6 January 1854. The battle began when the Russians made a move to recapture Calafat. Most of the [[Battle of Cetate|heavy fighting took place in and around Chetatea]] until the Russians were driven out of the village. Despite the setback at Chetatea, Russian forces on 28 January 1854 laid [[Siege of Calafat|siege to Calafat]]. The siege would continue until May 1854 when it was lifted by the Russians. The Ottomans would also later beat the Russians in [[Caracal, Romania|battle at Caracal]].{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=130–143}}


In the spring of 1854 the Russians again advanced, crossing the Danube River into the Turkish province of Bulgaria. Soon they occupied the whole of the Bulgarian district of [[Dobruja]]. By April 1854, the Russians had reached the lines of [[Trajan's Wall]] where they were finally halted. In the center, the Russian forces crossed the Danube and laid [[Siege of Silistra|siege to Silistra]] from 14 April until 23 June 1854.<ref>{{cite book|author=James J. Reid|title=Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839–1878|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Zgg6c_Ndtu4C&pg=PA242|year=2000|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|pages=242–62}}</ref>
In early 1854, the Russians again advanced by crossing the River Danube into the Turkish province of [[Dobruja]]. By April 1854, the Russians had reached the lines of [[Trajan's Wall]], where they were finally halted. In the centre, the Russian forces crossed the Danube and laid [[Siege of Silistra|siege to Silistra]] from 14 April with 60,000 troops. The defenders had 15,000 troops and supplies for three months.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=415}} The siege was lifted on 23 June 1854.<ref>{{Cite book |last=James J. Reid |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zgg6c_Ndtu4C&pg=PA242 |title=Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839–1878 |publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag |year=2000 |isbn=978-3515076876 |pages=242–262}}</ref> The British and the French could not then take the field for lack of equipment.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=415}}


[[File:Fall of Sevastopol.jpg|thumb|left|French [[zouave]]s and Russian soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat at [[Malakhov Kurgan]]]]
In the west, the Russians were dissuaded from attacking Vidin by the presence of the Austrian forces, which had swelled to 280,000 men. On 28 May 1854 a protocol of the Vienna Conference was signed by Austria and Russia. One of the aims of the Russian advance had been to encourage the Orthodox Christian Serbs and Bulgarians living under Ottoman rule to rebel. However, when the Russian troops actually crossed the River Pruth into Wallachia, the Orthodox Christians still showed no interest in rising up against the Turks.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|131, 137}} Adding to the worries of Nicholas I was the concern that Austria would enter the war against the Russians and attack his armies on the western flank. Indeed, after attempting to mediate a peaceful settlement between Russia and Turkey, the Austrians entered the war on the side of Turkey with an attack against the Russians in the Principalities which threatened to cut off the Russian supply lines. Accordingly, the Russians were forced to raise the siege of Silistra on 23 June 1854, and begin abandoning the Principalities.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|185}}


In the west, the Russians were dissuaded from attacking Vidin by the presence of the Austrian forces, which had swollen to 280,000 men. On 28 May 1854, a protocol of the Vienna Conference was signed by Austria and Russia. One of the aims of the Russian advance had been to encourage the Orthodox Christian [[Serbs]] and [[Bulgarians]] who were living under Ottoman rule to rebel. When the Russian troops crossed the River Pruth into Moldavia, the Orthodox Christians showed no interest in rising up against the Ottomans.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=131, 137}} Adding to Nicholas I's worries was the concern that Austria would enter the war against the Russians and attack his armies on the western flank. Indeed, after attempting to mediate a peaceful settlement between Russia and the Ottomans, the Austrians entered the war on the side of the Ottomans with an attack against the Russians in the Danubian Principalities which threatened to cut off the Russian supply lines. Accordingly, the Russians were forced to raise the siege of Silistra on 23 June 1854 and to begin abandoning the principalities.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=185}} The lifting of the siege reduced the threat of a Russian advance into Bulgaria.
In June 1854 the Allied expeditionary force landed at [[Varna]], but made little advance from their base there.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|175–176}} In July 1854, the Turks under [[Omar Pasha]] crossed the Danube into Wallachia and on 7 July 1854, engaged the Russians in the village of Giurgevo and conquered that village. The capture of Giurgevo by the Turks immediately threatened Bucharest in Wallachia with capture by the same Turk army. On 26 July 1854, Tsar Nicholas I ordered the withdrawal of Russian troops from the Principalities. Also in late July 1854, following up on the Russian retreat, the French staged an expedition against the Russian forces still in Dobruja, but this was a failure.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|188–190}}


In June 1854, the Allied expeditionary force landed at Varna, a city on the Black Sea's western coast, but made little advance from its base there.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=175–176}} Karl Marx was noted to have quipped that "there they are, the French doing nothing and the British helping them as fast as possible".{{sfn|Troubetzkoy|2006|p=192}} In July 1854, the Ottomans, under Omar Pasha, crossed the Danube into Wallachia and on 7 July 1854 engaged the Russians in the city of [[Giurgiu]] and conquered it. The capture of Giurgiu by the Ottomans immediately threatened [[Bucharest]] in Wallachia with capture by the same Ottoman army. On {{awrap|26 July}} 1854, Nicholas I, responding to an Austrian ultimatum, ordered the withdrawal of Russian troops from the principalities. Also, in late July 1854, following up on the Russian retreat, the French staged an expedition against the Russian forces still in Dobruja, but it was a failure.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=188–190}}
By then the Russian withdrawal was complete, except for the fortress towns of northern Dobruja, while their place in the Principalities was taken by the Austrians, as a neutral peacekeeping force.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|189}} There was little further action on this front after the autumn of 1854 and in September the allied force boarded ships at Varna to move up the Dardanelles to the Black Sea to invade the [[Crimean Peninsula]].<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|198}}

By then, the Russian withdrawal was complete, except for the fortress towns of northern Dobruja, and Russia's place in the principalities was taken by the Austrians as a neutral peacekeeping force.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=189}} There was little further action on that front after late 1854, and in September, the allied force boarded ships at Varna to invade [[Crimea]].{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=198}}


===Black Sea theatre===
===Black Sea theatre===
[[File:Turkish troops storming Fort Shefketil (cropped).jpg|thumb|Turkish troops storming Fort Shefketil]]
[[File:Turkish troops storming Fort Shefketil (cropped).jpg|thumb|Turkish troops storming [[Shekvetili|Fort Shefketil]]]]
The naval operations of the Crimean war commenced with the dispatch, in summer of 1853, of the French and British fleets to the Black Sea region, to support the Ottomans and to dissuade the Russians from encroachment. By June 1853 both fleets were stationed at [[Beşik Bay, Çanakkale|Besikas bay]], outside the [[Dardanelles]]. With the Russian occupation of the Danube Principalities in October they moved to the [[Bosphorus]] and in November entered the [[Black Sea]].
The naval operations of the Crimean War commenced with the dispatch in mid-1853 of the French and the British fleets to the Black Sea region, to support the Ottomans and to dissuade the Russians from encroachment. By June 1853, both fleets had been stationed at [[Beşik Bay, Çanakkale|Besikas Bay]], outside the Dardanelles. With the Russian occupation of the Danube Principalities in July 1853, they moved to the Bosphorus, and on 3 January 1854, they entered the Black Sea.<ref name="Britannica"/>


During this period the Russian [[Black Sea Fleet]] was operating against Ottoman coastal traffic between Constantinople (no called Istanbul) and the Caucasus ports, while the Ottoman fleet sought to protect this supply line. The clash came on 30 November 1853 when a Russian fleet [[Battle of Sinop|attacked]] an Ottoman force in the harbor at [[Sinop, Turkey|Sinop]], and destroyed it.<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |chapter=Debates in Parliament |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=12 }}</ref> There was little additional naval action until March 1854 when on the declaration of war the British frigate ''Furious'' was fired on outside [[Odessa]] harbour. In response the British fleet bombarded the port, causing much damage to the town.
Meanwhile, the Russian [[Black Sea Fleet]] operated against Ottoman coastal traffic between Constantinople and the Caucasus ports, and the Ottoman fleet sought to protect the supply line. The clash came on 30 November 1853, when a Russian fleet attacked an Ottoman force in the harbour at [[Sinop, Turkey|Sinop]] and destroyed it at the Battle of Sinop. The battle outraged British public opinion, which called for war.{{sfn|Arnold|2002|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PR95 95]}} There was little additional naval action until March 1854, when after the declaration of war, the British frigate {{HMS|Furious|1850|6}} was fired on outside [[Odessa]] Harbour. In response an Anglo-French fleet [[Bombardment of Odessa|bombarded the port]] and caused much damage to the town. To show support for the Ottomans after the Battle of Sinop, on 22 December 1853, the Anglo-French squadron entered the Black Sea and the steamship HMS ''Retribution'' approached the [[Port of Sevastopol]]. Its commander received an ultimatum not to allow any ships in the Black Sea.
[[File:Debarquement des Français et des Anglais dans la baie de Kalamita le 14 septembre 1854.jpg|thumb|The French landing near [[Yevpatoria]], Crimea, 1854]]
In June, the fleets transported the Allied expeditionary forces to Varna to support the Ottoman operations on the Danube. In September they again transported the armies, this time to Crimea. The Russian fleet then declined to engage the allies but preferred to maintain a "[[fleet in being]]", a strategy that failed when Sevastopol, the main port and the base of most of the Black Sea fleet, came under siege. The Russians were reduced to scuttling their warships as [[blockship]]s after they had stripped them of their guns and men to reinforce batteries on shore. During the siege, the Russians lost four 110- or 120-gun, three-decker ships of the line, twelve 84-gun two-deckers and four 60-gun [[frigate]]s in the Black Sea, as well as a large number of smaller vessels. During the rest of the campaign, the allied fleets remained in control of the Black Sea and ensured that the various fronts were kept supplied.


In May 1855, the allies successfully invaded [[Kerch]] and [[Siege of Taganrog|operated against Taganrog]] in the [[Sea of Azov]]. In September, they moved against Russian installations in the [[Dnieper]] estuary by [[Battle of Kinburn (1855)|attacking Kinburn]] in the first use of [[ironclad]] ships in naval warfare.
In June the fleets transported the Allied expeditionary forces to [[Varna]], in support of the Ottoman operations on the Danube; in September they again transported the armies, this time to the Crimea. The Russian fleet during this time declined to engage the allies, preferring to maintain a "[[fleet in being]]"; this strategy failed when [[Sevastopol]], the main port and where most of the Black Sea fleet was based, came under siege. The Russians were reduced to [[scuttling]] their warships as [[blockships]], after stripping them of their guns and men to reinforce batteries on shore. During the siege, the Russians lost four 110- or 120-gun, 3-decker [[ship of the line|ships of the line]], twelve 84-gun 2-deckers and four 60-gun [[frigate]]s in the Black Sea, plus a large number of smaller vessels.During the rest of the campaign the allied fleets remained in control of the Black Sea, ensuring the various fronts were kept supplied.

In April 1855 they supported an invasion of [[Kerch]] and operated against [[Siege of Taganrog|Taganrog]] in the [[Sea of Azov]]. In September they moved against Russian installations in the [[Dnieper]] estuary, [[Battle of Kinburn (1855)|attacking Kinburn]] in the first use of [[ironclad]] ships in naval warfare.


===Crimean campaign===
===Crimean campaign===
[[File:Russo-British skirmish during Crimean War.png|thumb|upright|Russo-British skirmish during the Crimean War. By [[Harry Payne (artist)|Harry Payne]] ]]
{{Main|Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)}}
The Russians evacuated Wallachia and Moldavia in late July 1854. Therefore, the immediate cause of war had now been withdrawn, and the war might have then ended.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=192}} However, war fever among the public in both Britain and France had been whipped up by the press in both countries to the degree that politicians found it untenable to propose immediately ending the war. The coalition government of George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen, fell on 30 January 1855 on a no-confidence vote, as Parliament voted to appoint a committee to investigate the mismanagement of the war.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=311}}


French and British officers and engineers were sent on 20 July on ''[[HMS Fury (1845)|Fury]]'', a wooden ''Bulldog''-class paddle sloop, to survey the harbour of Sevastopol and the coast near it. They managed to get close to the harbour mouth to inspect the formidable batteries. Returning, they reported that they believed that 15,000–20,000 troops were encamped.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=421}} Ships were prepared to transport horses, and siege equipment was both manufactured and imported.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=422}}
[[File:Vernet - La prise de Malakoff.jpg|thumb|upright|The [[Battle of Malakoff|final assault of the French]] brought about the [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|capture of Sevastopol]] after one of the most memorable sieges of the 19th century.]]


The Crimean campaign opened in September 1854. In seven columns, 360 ships sailed, each steamer towing two sailing ships.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=422}} Anchoring on 13 September in the bay of [[Yevpatoria]], the town surrendered, and 500 marines landed to occupy it. The town and the bay would provide a fallback position in case of disaster.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=201}} The ships then sailed east to make the landing of the allied expeditionary force on the sandy beaches of [[Kalamita Bay]], on the south-west coast of Crimea. The landing surprised the Russians, as they had expected a landing at [[Kacha, Sevastopol|Katcha]]. The last-minute change proved that Russia had known the original campaign plan. There was no sign of the enemy and so all of the invading troops landed on 14 September 1854. It took another four days to land all of the stores, equipment, horses and artillery.
The Russians evacuated Wallachia and Moldavia in late July 1854. With the evacuation of the Danubian Principalities the immediate cause of war was withdrawn and the war might have ended at this time.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|192}} However, war fever among the public in both Britain and France had been whipped up by the press in both countries to the degree that politicians found it untenable to propose ending the war at this point. Indeed the [[Peelite]] Government of [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen]] fell on 30 January 1855 on a no-confidence vote<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |first2=Frederick |last2=Engels |chapter=The Late British Government |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |pages=620–621 }}</ref> because Aberdeen was reluctant to sign on to a plan of extending the war.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|311}} Accordingly, allied troops sailed from Varna, on the coast of the Turkish province of Bulgaria to land in the Crimea, with the intent of besieging the city of [[Sevastopol]], home of the Tsar's [[Black Sea]] Fleet. In the eyes of the British and the French, the Russian fleet was a threat to the Mediterranean. The British and the French both wished to keep the Russians an effectively landlocked power for as long as possible. If the Russian Black Sea Fleet were allowed through the Straits of the Dardanelles, the Mediterranean might then effectively be under contested control between British, French, and Russian interests. Additionally, Russian maritime and military access to the Mediterranean meant that the balance of power in Europe might thereafter be forever changed to the detriment of the Western European powers. Seeing this as an unacceptable outcome of a Russian victory in their war with the Turks—as the war had indeed begun, and which the Turks, whom the Allies came to aid, had started.
[[File:Russo-British skirmish during Crimean War.png|thumb|left|upright|Russo-British skirmish during Crimean War]]


The landing took place north of Sevastopol and so the Russians had arrayed their army in expectation of a direct attack. The allies advanced and on the morning of 20 September came up to the River [[Alma (Crimea)|Alma]] and engaged the Russian Army. The Russian position was strong, but after three hours,{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=424}} the allied frontal attack had driven the Russians out of their dug-in positions with losses of 6,000 men. The [[Battle of the Alma]] resulted in 3,300 Allied losses. Failing to pursue the retreating forces was one of many strategic errors made during the war, and the Russians themselves noted that if the allies had pressed south that day, they would have easily captured Sevastopol.
The Crimean campaign opened in September 1854 with the landing of the allied expeditionary force on the sandy beaches of Calamita Bay on the south west coast of the Crimean Peninsula.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|201}} Their main strategic goal was to capture the Russian fortresses at Sevastopol located to the south of Calamita Bay.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|194}} However, to protect the allies' left flank from attack by the Russians, the allied armies first moved north and west along the coast of the Peninsula to occupy the city of [[Yevpatoria|Eupatoria]].<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|201}} After the [[Battle of the Alma|crossing the Alma River]] on 30 September 1854,<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The News from the Crimea |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |pages=477–479 }}</ref> the allies moved on to invest Sevastopol. The Russian army retreated to the interior. A Russian assault on the allied supply base at [[Battle of Balaclava|Balaclava]] was rebuffed on 25 October 1854.<ref name="Engels The War in the East">{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The War in the East |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 }}</ref>{{rp|521–527}} The [[Battle of Balaclava]] is noteworthy for the bravery of two British units. The [[93rd&nbsp;Highlanders]] stood solidly against repeated attacks by a larger Russian force.<ref name="Engels The War in the East" />{{rp|523}} This stand led the 93rd Highlanders to be remembered in history as the "[[The Thin Red Line (Battle of Balaclava)|Thin Red Line]]". The second British unit to gain immortality in the Battle of Balaclava was the Light Cavalry Brigade under the command of the [[James Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan|Earl of Cardigan]]. An extremely ambiguous order sent the brigade on the near suicidal [[charge of the Light Brigade]] into the north Valley of the Balaclava battlefield.<ref name="Engels The War in the East" />{{rp|524}} The heights around the north Valley were brimming with Russian artillery which bombarded the Light Brigade. Of the original nearly 700-man strength of the Light Brigade, 278 were killed or wounded. The Light Brigade was memorialised in the famous poem by [[Alfred Lord Tennyson]] called the "[[The Charge of the Light Brigade (poem)|Charge of the Light Brigade]]". Although traditionally, the charge of the Light Brigade was looked upon as a glorious but wasted sacrifice of good men and horses, recent historians have revised this conclusion somewhat by stating that the charge of the Light Brigade did succeed in at least some of its objectives.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|252}} The aim of any cavalry charge is to scatter the enemy lines and frighten the enemy off the battlefield. In this regard, even the Russians admitted that the charge of Light Brigade had so un-nerved the Russian cavalry, which had previously been routed by the [[Battle of Balaclava#Charge of the Heavy Brigade|Heavy Brigade]], that the Russian Cavalry was set to full-scale flight by the subsequent charge of the Light Brigade.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|252}} Thus, the charge of the Light Brigade is now viewed in some circles as having achieved at least part of its objective.
[[File:Sebastopol-1854.jpg|thumb|Russian defence line in Sevastopol in 1854.]]


Believing the northern approaches to the city too well defended, especially because of the presence of a large [[star fort]] and the city being on the south side of [[Sevastopol Bay]], Sir John Burgoyne, the engineer advisor, recommended for the allies attack to Sevastopol from the south. The joint commanders, [[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan|Raglan]] and [[Jacques Leroy de Saint-Arnaud|Saint-Arnaud]], agreed.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=426}} On 25 September, the whole army began to march southeast and encircled the city from the south after it had established port facilities at [[Balaklava|Balaclava]] for the British and at [[Kamiesch]] ({{langx |ru| Камышовая бухта | translit = Kamyshovaya bukhta}}) for the French. The Russians retreated into the city.<ref>The famous dispatches of a British war correspondent appear in William Howard Russell, ''The Great War with Russia: The Invasion of the Crimea; a Personal Retrospect of the Battles of the Alma, Balaclava and Inkerman, and of the Winter of 1854–55'' (Cambridge University Press, 2012)</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Engels|first=Frederick|author-link=Frederick Engels|title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |publisher=International Publishers |year=1980 |isbn=978-0-7178-0513-6 |volume=13 |location=New York |pages=477–479 |chapter=The News from the Crimea |orig-year=1853–54}}</ref>
The failure of the British and French to follow up on the Battle of Balaclava led directly to another and much more bloody battle—the [[Battle of Inkerman]].<ref name="Engels The War in the East" />{{rp|526}} On 5 November 1854, the Russians attempted to raise the siege at Sevastopol with an attack against the allies near the town of [[Inkerman]] which resulted in another allied victory.<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The Battle of Inkerman |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |pages=528–535 }}</ref>


The Allied armies moved without problems to the south, and the heavy artillery was brought ashore with batteries and connecting trenches built. By 10 October, some batteries were ready, and by 17 October, when the bombardment commenced—126 guns were firing, 53 of them French.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=430}} The fleet meanwhile engaged the shore batteries. The British bombardment worked better than that of the French, who had smaller-calibre guns. The fleet suffered high casualties during the day. The British wanted to attack that afternoon, but the French wanted to defer the attack.
Meanwhile at Sevastopol, the allies had surrounded the city with entrenchments and, in October 1854, unleashed an all–out bombardment (the first of many) against the city's defences. Winter, and a deteriorating supply situation on both sides, led to a halt in ground operations. Sevastopol remained invested by the allies, while the allied armies were hemmed in by the Russian army in the interior.


A postponement was agreed, but on the next day, the French were still not ready. By 19 October the Russians had transferred some heavy guns to the southern defences and had outgunned the allies.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=431}}
In February 1855 the Russians attacked the allied base at Eupatoria,<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|321–322}} where an Ottoman army had built up and was threatening Russian supply routes. [[Battle of Eupatoria|The battle]] saw the Russians defeated<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|321}} and led to a change in command. The strain of directing the war had taken its toll on the health of Tsar Nicholas.<ref name="Radzinsky2005">{{cite book |first=Edvard |last=Radzinsky |title=Alexander II: The Last Great Tsar |publisher=Free Press |location=New York |year=2005 |isbn=0-7432-7332-X }}</ref>{{rp|96}} With his resistance down, Nicholas caught a cold in February 1855. On 8 February 1855, the Tsar's cold developed into influenza.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|321}} News of the Russian defeat at Eupatoria reached the Tsar in St. Petersburg on 16 February 1855 and depressed him more than before. The Tsar's condition worsened and he caught pneumonia.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|322}} He died on 18 February 1855 according to the Julian calendar.<ref name="Radzinsky2005" />{{rp|98}}


Reinforcements for the Russians gave them the courage to send out probing attacks. The Allied lines, beginning to suffer from cholera as early as September, were stretched. The French, on the west, had less to do than the British on the east, with their siege lines and the large nine-mile open wing back to their supply base on the south coast.
On the allied side the emphasis of the siege at Sevastopol shifted to the right-hand sector of the lines, against the fortifications on [[Battle of Malakoff|Malakoff hill]].<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|339}} In March there was fighting by the French over the fort at [[Mamelon (fort)|Mamelon]], located on a hill in front of the Malakoff. Several weeks of fighting saw little change in the front line, and the Mamelon remained in Russian hands.
[[File:Welsford-Parker Monument at the entrance to the Old Burying Ground in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.jpg|thumb|left|[[Welsford-Parker Monument|Monument to Sevastopol]], [[Halifax Regional Municipality|Halifax, Nova Scotia]]—the only Crimean War Monument in North America]]


===Battle of Balaclava===
In April 1855, the allies staged a second all-out bombardment, leading to an artillery duel with the Russian guns,<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|340}} but no ground assault followed.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|341}} On 24 May 1855, sixty ships containing 7,000 French, 5,000 Turkish and 3,000 British troops set off for a raid on the city of [[Kerch]] east of Sevastopol in an attempt to open another front on the Crimean peninsula and to cut off Russian supplies.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|344}} The allies landed the force at [[Kerch]]. The plan was to outflank the Russian army. The landings were successful, but the force made little progress thereafter. In June a third bombardment was followed by a successful attack on the Mamelon, but a follow-up assault on the Malakoff failed with heavy losses. During this time the garrison commander, [[Pavel Nakhimov|Admiral Nakhimov]], suffered a fatal bullet wound to the head and died on 30 June 1855.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|378}}
{{Main|Battle of Balaclava}}
[[File:Relief of the Light Brigade.png|thumb|British cavalry charging against Russian forces at Balaclava]]
A large Russian assault on the allied supply base to the southeast at Balaclava was rebuffed on 25 October 1854.{{rp|521–527}} The [[Battle of Balaclava]] is remembered in Britain for the actions of two British units. At the start of the battle, a large body of Russian cavalry charged the [[93rd Highlanders]], who were posted north of the village of [[Kadikoi]]. Commanding them was Sir [[Colin Campbell, 1st Baron Clyde|Colin Campbell]]. Rather than "[[infantry square|form square]]", the traditional method of repelling cavalry, Campbell took the risky decision to have his Highlanders form a single line two men deep. Campbell had seen the effectiveness of the new [[Minié rifle]]s with which his troops were armed at the Battle of Alma, a month earlier, and he was confident that his men could beat back the Russians. His tactics succeeded.{{sfn|Greenwood|2015|loc= ch. 8}} From up on the ridge to the west, ''[[The Times|Times]]'' correspondent [[William Howard Russell]] saw the Highlanders as a "thin red streak topped with steel", a phrase which soon became the "[[The Thin Red Line (Battle of Balaclava)|Thin Red Line]]".<ref>John Millin Selby, ''The thin red line of Balaclava'' (London: Hamilton, 1970)</ref>


Soon afterward, a Russian cavalry movement was countered by the [[Charge of the Heavy Brigade|Heavy Brigade]], which charged and fought hand to hand until the Russians retreated. That caused a more widespread Russian retreat, including a number of their artillery units. After the local commanders had failed to take advantage of the retreat, Lord Raglan sent out orders to move up and to prevent the withdrawal of naval guns from the recently captured redoubts on the heights. Raglan could see those guns because of his position on the hill. In the valley, that view was obstructed, and the wrong guns were in sight to the left. The local commanders ignored the demands, which led to the British [[aide-de-camp]], Captain [[Louis Nolan]], personally delivering the quickly-written and confusing order to attack the artillery. When [[George Bingham, 3rd Earl of Lucan|Lord Lucan]] questioned to which guns the order referred, the aide-de-camp pointed to the first Russian battery that he could see and allegedly said "There is your enemy, there are your guns", because of his obstructed view, which were wrong. Lucan then passed the order to the [[James Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan|Earl of Cardigan]], which resulted in the [[Charge of the Light Brigade]].
In August the Russians again made an attack on the base at Balaclava. The resulting [[Battle of Chernaya River|battle of Tchernaya]] was a defeat for the Russians, who suffered heavy casualties.
September saw the final assault. On 5 September another French bombardment (the sixth) was followed by an assault by the French Army on 8 September resulting in the [[Battle of Malakoff|capture of the Malakoff]] by the French, and the collapse of the Russian defences. Meanwhile the British captured the Great Redan, just south of the city of Sevastopol. The city fell on 9 September 1855 after a year-long siege.<ref name="Radzinsky2005" />{{rp|106}}


In that charge, Cardigan formed up his unit and charged the length of the Valley of the Balaclava, under fire from Russian batteries in the hills. The charge of the Light Brigade caused 278 casualties of the 700-man unit. The Light Brigade was memorialised in the famous poem by [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson]], "[[The Charge of the Light Brigade (poem)|The Charge of the Light Brigade]]". Although traditionally, the charge of the Light Brigade was looked upon as a glorious but wasted sacrifice of good men and horses, recent historians believe that the charge of the Light Brigade succeeded in at least some of its objectives.<ref>{{citation |first=John |last=Sweetman |title=Balaclava 1854: The charge of the light brigade |publisher=Osprey Publishing |date=1990}}</ref>{{page needed|date=January 2022}} The aim of any cavalry charge is to scatter the enemy's lines and frighten the enemy off the battlefield. The Charge of the Light Brigade so unnerved the Russian cavalry, which had been routed by the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, that the Russians were set to full-scale flight.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=252}}{{sfn|Small |2007}}
At this point both sides were exhausted, and there were no further military operations in the Crimea before the onset of winter.

The shortage of men led to the failure of the British and the French to follow up on the Battle of Balaclava, which led directly to the much bloodier [[Battle of Inkerman]]. On 5 November 1854, the Russians attempted to raise the siege at Sevastopol with an attack against the allies, which resulted in another allied victory.<ref>{{citation |first=Patrick |last=Mercer |title=Inkerman 1854: The Soldiers' Battle |date=1998}}</ref>{{page needed|date=January 2022}}

===Winter of 1854–1855===
[[File:Weller Siege of Sebastopol 1854-1855.jpg|thumb|Historical map showing the territory between Balaclava and Sevastopol at the time of the Siege of Sevastopol]]
Winter weather and a deteriorating supply of troops and [[materiel]] on both sides led to a halt in ground operations. Sevastopol remained invested by the allies, whose armies were hemmed in by the [[Imperial Russian Army]] in the interior. On 14 November, the "[[Great Storm of 1854|Balaklava Storm]]," a major weather event, sank 30 allied transport ships,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Crimean War, 1853–1856 |url=http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_crimean.html |access-date=25 January 2015 |website=historyofwar.org}}</ref> including {{HMS|Prince|1854|6}}, which was carrying a cargo of winter clothing.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=435}}

The storm and the heavy traffic caused the road from the coast to the troops to disintegrate into a quagmire, which required engineers to devote most of their time to its repair, including by quarrying stone. A [[plateway|tramway]] was ordered and arrived in January with a civilian engineering crew, but it took until March before it had become sufficiently advanced to be of any appreciable value.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=439}} An [[electrical telegraph]] was also ordered, but the frozen ground delayed its installation until March, when communications from the base port of Balaklava to the British HQ was established. The [[pipe-and-cable-laying plough]] failed because of the hard frozen soil, but nevertheless {{convert|21|mi|km}} of cable were laid.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=449}}

The troops suffered greatly from cold and sickness, and the shortage of fuel led them to start dismantling their defensive [[gabion]]s and [[fascine]]s.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=442}} In February 1855, the Russians attacked the allied base at Eupatoria, where an Ottoman army had built up and was threatening Russian supply routes. The Russians were defeated at the [[Battle of Eupatoria]],{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=321–322}} leading to a change in their command.

The strain of directing the war had taken its toll on the health of Tsar Nicholas. Full of remorse for the disasters that he had caused, he caught pneumonia and died on 2 March.<ref name="Radzinsky2005">{{Cite book |last=Radzinsky |first=Edvard |url=https://archive.org/details/alexanderiilastg00radz |title=Alexander II: The Last Great Tsar |publisher=Free Press |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7432-7332-9 |location=New York}}</ref>{{rp|96}}

===Siege of Sevastopol===
{{Main|Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)}}
[[File:Crimea Sevastopol Istorychny boulevard Memorial complex-55.jpg|thumb|Siege of Sevastopol]]
[[File:Combat dans la gorge de Malakoff, le 8 septembre 1855 (par Adolphe Yvon).jpg|thumb|[[Battle of Malakoff]]]]
The allies had had time to consider the problem, and the French were brought around to agree that the key to the defence was the Malakoff.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=441}} Emphasis of the siege at Sevastopol shifted to the British left against the fortifications on Malakoff Hill.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=339}} In March, there was fighting by the French over a new fort being built by the Russians at [[Mamelon (fort)|Mamelon]], on a hill in front of the Malakoff. Several weeks of fighting resulted in little change in the front line, and the Mamelon remained in Russian hands.

In April 1855, the allies staged a second all-out bombardment, which led to an artillery duel with the Russian guns, but no ground assault followed.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=340–341}}

On 24 May 1855, 60 ships, containing 7,000 French, 5,000 Turkish and 3,000 British troops, set off for a raid on the city of Kerch, east of Sevastopol, in an attempt to open another front in Crimea and to cut off Russian supplies.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=344}} When the allies landed the force at Kerch, the plan was to outflank the Russian Army. The landings were successful, but the force made little progress thereafter.

Many more artillery pieces had arrived and had been dug into batteries. The first general assault of Sevastopol took place on 18 June 1855. There is a legend that the assault was scheduled for that date in favour of Napoleon III in the 40th anniversary of the [[Battle of Waterloo]], but the legend is not confirmed by historians.{{sfn|Tarle|1950|p=367}} However, the appearance of such a legend is undoubtedly symptomatic since the war in France was understood as a certain revanche for the [[French invasion of Russia|defeat of 1812]].

In June, a third bombardment was followed after two days by a successful attack on the Mamelon, but a follow-up [[Battle of Malakoff|assault on the Malakoff]] failed with heavy losses. Meanwhile, the garrison commander, Admiral [[Pavel Nakhimov]], fell on 30 June 1855,{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=378}} and Raglan died on 28 June.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=460}} Losses in those battles were so great that by agreement of military opponents short-term truces for removal of corpses were signed (these truces were described in the work of [[Leo Tolstoy]] "[[Sevastopol Sketches]]"). The assault was beaten back with heavy casualties and in an undoubted victory for Russia. It is worth mentioning that the Russian [[Siege of Sevastopol (panorama)]] depicts the moment of the assault of Sevastopol on 18 June 1855.

In August, the Russians again made an attack towards the base at Balaclava, which was defended by the French, newly arrived [[Sardinian expeditionary corps in the Crimean War|Sardinian]] and Ottoman troops.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=461}} The resulting [[Battle of the Chernaya]] was a defeat for the Russians, who suffered heavy casualties.

For months, each side had been building forward rifle pits and defensive positions, which resulted in many skirmishes. Artillery fire aimed to gain superiority over the enemy guns.{{sfn|Porter|1889|pp=450–462}} The final assault was made on {{awrap|5 September}}, when another French bombardment (the sixth) was followed by an assault by the [[French Army]] on {{awrap|8 September}} and resulted in the French capture of the Malakoff fort. The Russians failed to retake it and their defences collapsed. Meanwhile, the British assaulted the [[Battle of the Great Redan|Great Redan]], a Russian defensive battlement just south of the city of Sevastopol, a position that had been attacked repeatedly for months. Whether the British captured the Redan remains in dispute: Russian historians recognise only the loss of the Malakhov Kurgan, a key point of defence, claiming that all other positions were retained.{{sfn|Tarle|1950|p=462}} What is agreed is that the Russians abandoned the positions, blew up their powder magazines and retreated to the north. The city finally fell on 9 September 1855, after a 337-day-long siege.<ref name="Radzinsky2005" />{{rp|106}}<ref>Leo Tolstoy, ''Sebastopol'' (2008) {{ISBN|1-4344-6160-2}}; Tolstoy wrote three firsthand battlefield observations "Sebastopol Sketches."</ref>

Both sides were now exhausted, and no further military operations were launched in Crimea before the onset of winter. The main objective of the siege was the destruction of the Russian fleet and docks and took place over the winter. On 28 February, multiple mines blew up the five docks, the canal, and three locks.{{sfn|Porter|1889|p=471}}


===Azov campaign===
===Azov campaign===
{{Main|Siege of Taganrog}}
{{Main|Siege of Taganrog}}
[[File:Simpson Disembarkation of the expedition to Kertch at Kamish Bournou.jpg|thumb|left|Disembarkation of the expedition to [[Kerch]]]]
In spring 1855, the allied British–French commanders decided to send an Anglo-French naval squadron into the [[Azov Sea]] to undermine Russian communications and supplies to besieged [[Sevastopol]]. On 12 May 1855, British–French warships entered the [[Kerch Strait]] and destroyed the coast battery of the Kamishevaya Bay. On 21 May 1855 the [[gunboats]] and armed steamers attacked the seaport of [[Taganrog]], the most important hub in proximity to [[Rostov on Don]]. The vast amounts of food, especially bread, wheat, barley, and rye that were amassed in the city after the outbreak of war were prevented from being exported.


In early 1855, the allied Anglo-French commanders decided to send an Anglo-French naval squadron into the [[Azov Sea]] to undermine Russian communications and supplies to besieged [[Sevastopol]]. On 12 May 1855, Anglo-French warships entered the [[Kerch Strait]] and destroyed the coast battery of the Kamishevaya Bay. Once through the Kerch Strait, British and French warships struck at every vestige of Russian power along the coast of the Sea of Azov. Except for [[Rostov, Yaroslavl Oblast|Rostov]] and [[Azov]], no town, depot, building or fortification was immune from attack, and Russian naval power ceased to exist almost overnight. This Allied campaign led to a significant reduction in supplies flowing to the besieged Russian troops at Sevastopol.
[[File:Firing-at-Taganrog.jpg|thumb|Bombardment of [[Taganrog]] from a British raft during the first siege attempt]]
The [[Governor of Taganrog]], [[Yegor Tolstoy]], and lieutenant-general [[Ivan Krasnov]] refused the ultimatum, responding that "Russians never surrender their cities". The British–French squadron bombarded [[Taganrog]] for 6½&nbsp;hours and landed 300 troops near the [[Depaldo stone stairs|Old Stairway]] in downtown Taganrog, but they were thrown back by [[Don Cossacks]] and a volunteer corps.


On 21 May 1855, the [[gunboat]]s and armed steamers attacked the seaport of [[Taganrog]], the most important hub near [[Rostov on Don]]. The vast amounts of food, especially bread, wheat, barley and rye, that were amassed in the city after the outbreak of war were prevented from being exported.
In July 1855 the allied squadron tried to go past Taganrog to [[Rostov on Don]], entering the [[Don River (Russia)|Don River]] through the [[Mius River]]. On 12 July 1855 HMS&nbsp;''Jasper'' grounded near Taganrog thanks to a fisherman who repositioned the buoys into shallow waters. The [[Cossacks]] captured the gunboat with all of its guns and blew it up. The third siege attempt was made 19–31 August 1855, but the city was already fortified and the squadron could not approach close enough for landing operations. The allied fleet left the [[Gulf of Taganrog]] on 2 September 1855, with [[HMS Grinder (1855)|minor military operations]] along the [[Azov Sea]] coast continuing until late autumn 1855.


The [[Governor of Taganrog]], [[Yegor Tolstoy]], and Lieutenant-General [[Ivan Krasnov]] refused an allied ultimatum by responding, "Russians never surrender their cities". The Anglo-French squadron bombarded Taganrog for 6{{frac|2}}&nbsp;hours and landed 300 troops near the [[Depaldo stone stairs|Old Stairway]] in the centre of Taganrog, but they were thrown back by [[Don Cossacks]] and a volunteer corps.
===Caucasus theater===
The Caucasus was already a scene of confrontation for the Russians and the Ottomans, as both had sought to extend their influence in the region.


In July 1855, the allied squadron tried to go past Taganrog to [[Rostov-on-Don]] by entering the [[Don River (Russia)|River Don]] through the [[Mius River]]. On 12 July 1855 HMS&nbsp;''Jasper'' grounded near Taganrog thanks to a fisherman who moved [[buoy]]s into shallow water. The [[Cossacks]] captured the gunboat with all of its guns and blew it up. The third siege attempt was made 19–31 August 1855, but the city was already fortified, and the squadron could not approach close enough for landing operations. The allied fleet left the [[Gulf of Taganrog]] on 2 September 1855, with [[HMS Grinder (1855)|minor military operations]] along the Azov Sea coast continuing until late 1855.
Russian expansion into the region had been resisted by local peoples in [[Chechnya]], [[Dagestan]], and [[Circassia]]. In the region the Russians were opposed by [[Circassia]]ns and [[Murid]]ists of the [[Caucasian Imamate]], but were grudgingly supported by [[Georgian people|Georgians]] and [[Kakhetian]]s, who valued their independence, but were at odds with their neighbours.


===Caucasus theatre===
In 1853 the leader of the mountain peoples, [[Imam Shamil]], staged an insurrection against the occupying Russian forces.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|335}} His forces fought the Russians at [[Zaqatala (city)|Zaqatala]], and [[Meselderg]], but were beaten back by the Russian forces. In 1854 he tried again, advancing on [[Tiflis]] before being defeated at Shulda.
[[File:The Armenian Front During the Crimean War, 1853-56.gif|thumbnail|230px|The Armenian front during the Crimean War]]
[[File:The Armenian Front During the Crimean War, 1853-56.gif|thumb|upright=1.6|Caucasus front during the Crimean War]]
In summer of 1853 the Ottoman forces held strongholds at [[Kars]], [[Batum]], and [[Erzurum]], with lesser forts at [[Ardahan]] and [[Doğubeyazıt|Bayazid]].
The Ottoman forces planned an invasion of [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] but after some initial success were unable to maintain this and were forced to retreat.
Russian forces in the region were spread thinly, due to the demands of holding down the region against insurrection, but during 1853 were reinforced.
In September 1853 there were a number of clashes between Russian and Ottoman forces. Additionally, there were later battles at Fort St. Nicolas in October 1853 and twice at [[Alexandropol]] in October 1853 and again in December 1853. On 26 November 1853, the Russians beat the Ottoman armed forces at the battle of [[Akhaltsikh]]. On 1 December General [[Vasili Bebutov|Bebutov]] led 10,000 soldiers and 32 guns to win a victory over a 36,000-man Ottoman Army under Ahmed Pasha at the battle of Bashkadiklar.<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=Progress of the Turkish War |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=12 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1979 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0512-3 |page=547 }}</ref>


As in the [[Russo-Turkish Wars|previous wars]], the Caucasus front was secondary to what happened in the west. Perhaps because of better communications, western events sometimes influenced the east. The main events were the [[Siege of Kars|second capture of Kars]] and a landing on the [[Georgia (country)|Georgian]] coast. Several commanders on both sides were either incompetent or unlucky, and few fought aggressively.<ref>This section summarizes [[William Edward David Allen]] and [[Pavel Muratov]], ''Caucasian Battlefields'', 1953, Book II</ref>
In the spring of 1854 the Russians planned an invasion of Ottoman territory. On 16 June Prince Andronikov with 10,000 soldiers and 18 guns achieved a victory over a 34,000-man Ottoman Army at the Cholok river; on 31 July Russian forces seized [[Doğubeyazıt|Bayazid]]; on 5 August General [[Vasili Bebutov|Bebutov]] with 18,000 men and 64 guns had successfully waged the [[battle of Kurekdere]], 11 miles from Kars. Following these encounters there was little further action that year.


'''1853:''' There were four main events. 1. In the north, the Ottomans captured the border fort of Saint Nicholas in a surprise night attack (27/28 October). They then pushed about 20,000 troops across the [[Choloki]] river border. Being outnumbered, the Russians abandoned [[Poti]] and [[Redoubt Kali]] and drew back to [[Marani, Georgia|Marani]]. Both sides remained immobile for the next seven months. 2. In the centre the Ottomans moved north from [[Ardahan]] to within cannon-shot of [[Akhaltsike]] and awaited reinforcements (13 November), but the Russians routed them. The claimed losses were 4,000 Turks and 400 Russians. 3. In the south about 30,000 Turks slowly moved east to the main Russian concentration at [[Gyumri]] or Alexandropol (November). They crossed the border and set up artillery south of town. Prince [[Vakhtang Orbeliani]] tried to drive them off and found himself trapped. The Ottomans failed to press their advantage; the remaining Russians rescued Orbeliani and the Ottomans retired west. Orbeliani lost about 1,000 men from 5,000. The Russians now decided to advance. The Ottomans took up a strong position on the [[Kars]] road and attacked-only to be defeated in the [[Battle of Başgedikler]], losing 6,000 men, half their artillery and all of their supply train. The Russians lost 1,300, including Prince Orbeliani. This was Prince Ellico Orbeliani, whose wife was later kidnapped by [[Imam Shamil]] at [[Tsinandali]]. 4. At sea the Turks sent a fleet east, which was destroyed by Admiral Nakhimov at Sinope.
In 1855 both sides returned to the offensive; after initial maneuverings the Russians staged two assaults on Kars, beginning from 16 June and then on 29 September, which were beaten back with huge losses. However they settled down to a [[Siege of Kars|siege]] on 18 June, which had became almost total from the middle of August. The siege had been successful and Kars surrendered on 28 November 1855. Commander of its garrison [[Mehmet Vasif Pasha]] had yielded the fortress keys, 12 Ottoman banners and 18,500 soldiers as captives. As a result of this operation the Russian Army assumed control not merely over the forts and city, but also over the whole area including [[Ardahan]], [[Kağızman|Kagyzman]], [[Oltu]] and part of [[Pasinler|Basen]] district.
Meanwhile the Ottoman army at Batum invaded Georgia, but after an inconclusive clash at the Ingur river the offensive collapsed and they retreated to Batum.


[[File:Kuruk-Dara1.jpg|thumb|General [[Vasili Bebutov|Bebutashvili]] defeated the Ottomans at the [[Battle of Kurekdere]].]]
In 1856 the Russians had plans to advance on [[Erzurum]], but the peace of Paris in March 1856 put an end to further operations.


'''1854:''' The British and French declared war on 28 March.<ref name="Britannica"/> Early in the year on 3 January, the Anglo-French fleet appeared in the Black Sea,<ref name="Britannica"/> and the Russians abandoned the Black Sea Defensive Line from Anapa south. [[Nikolay Muravyov-Karsky|Nikolay Muravyov]], who replaced [[Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov|Vorontsov]], fearing an Anglo-French landing in conjunction with [[Shamil, 3rd Imam of Dagestan]] and the [[Persia]]ns, recommended withdrawal north of the Caucasus. For that purpose, he was replaced by [[Aleksandr Baryatinsky]]. When the allies chose a land attack on Sevastopol, any plan for a landing in the east was abandoned.
===Baltic theater===
{{See also|Charles John Napier#Baltic Campaign}}
The [[Baltic Sea|Baltic]] was a forgotten theater of the Crimean War. The popularisation of events elsewhere had overshadowed the significance of this theater, which was close to [[Saint Petersburg]], the Russian capital. In April 1854 an Anglo-French fleet was sent into the Baltic to attack the Russian seaport of [[Kronstadt]] and the Russian fleet stationed there.<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The Battle of Inkerman |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=347 }}</ref> In August 1854 the combined British and French fleet returned to Kronstadt for another attempt. The outnumbered [[Russian Baltic Fleet]] confined its movements to the areas around its fortifications. At the same time, British and French commanders [[Charles Napier (naval officer)|Sir Charles Napier]] and [[Alexandre Ferdinand Parseval-Deschenes]]—although they led the largest fleet assembled since the [[Napoleonic Wars]]—considered the [[Suomenlinna|Sveaborg]] fortress too well-defended to engage. Thus, shelling of the Russian batteries was limited to two attempts in the summers of 1854 and 1855, and initially, the attacking fleets limited their actions to blockading the Russian trade in the [[Gulf of Finland]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |first2=Frederick |last2=Engels |chapter=State of the Russian War |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=251 }}</ref> Naval attacks on other ports, such as the ones at [[Gogland|Hogland]], were more successful.<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The War |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=201 }}</ref> Additionally, they conducted raids on less fortified sections of the [[Grand Duchy of Finland|Finnish]] coast.


In the north, [[Georgiy Evseevich Eristov]] pushed southwest, fought two battles, forced the Ottomans back to [[Batumi]], retired behind the Cholok river and suspended action for the rest of the year (June). In the far south, Wrangel pushed west, fought a battle and occupied [[Doğubayazıt|Bayazit]]. In the centre. the main forces stood at Kars and Gyumri. Both slowly approached along the Kars-Gyumri road and faced each other, neither side choosing to fight (June–July). On 4 August, Russian scouts saw a movement which they thought was the start of a withdrawal, the Russians advanced and the Ottomans attacked first. [[Battle of Kurekdere|They were defeated]] and lost 8,000 men to the Russian 3,000. Also, 10,000 irregulars deserted to their villages. Both sides withdrew to their former positions. About then, the [[Qajar Iran|Persians]] made a semi-secret agreement to remain neutral in exchange for the cancellation of the indemnity from the previous war.
[[File:Bombardment of Bomarsund.jpg|thumb|left|Bombardment of [[Battle of Bomarsund|Bomarsund]] during the Crimean War, after [[William Simpson (artist)|William Simpson]]]]
Russia was dependent on imports for both the domestic economy and the supply of her military forces, and the blockade seriously undermined the Russian economy. Raiding by allied British and French fleets destroyed forts on the Finnish coast including the newly constructed [[Bomarsund, Åland|Bomarsund]] on the [[Åland Islands]] which was raided on 3 July through 16 July 1854,<ref>{{cite book |first=Frederick |last=Engels |chapter=The Capture of Bomarsund: Article&nbsp;I |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=378 }}</ref> and Fort Slava. Other such attacks were not so successful, and the poorly planned attempts to take [[Hanko]],<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |chapter=The Actions of the Allied Fleet |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=463 }}</ref> [[Ekenäs (Finland)|Ekenäs]], [[Kokkola]], and [[Turku]] were repulsed.


[[File:Thomas Jones Barker The Capitulation of Kars 1855.jpg|thumb|The Capitulation of Kars]]
The burning of [[tar]] warehouses and ships in [[Oulu]] and [[Raahe]] led to international criticism and, in Britain, MP [[Thomas Milner Gibson|Thomas Gibson]] demanded in the [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] that the First Lord of the Admiralty explain "a system which carried on a great war by plundering and destroying the property of defenceless villagers".


'''1855: Siege of Kars:''' Up to May 1855, Ottomans forces in the east were reduced from 120,000 to 75,000, mostly by disease. The local [[Armenia]]n population kept Muravyov well-informed about the Ottomans at Kars and he judged they had about five months of supplies. He therefore decided to control the surrounding area with cavalry and starve them out. He started in May and by June was south and west of the town. A relieving force fell back and there was a possibility of taking [[Erzurum]], but Muravyov chose not to. In late September he learned of the fall of Sevastopol and a Turkish landing at Batum. This led him to reverse policy and try a direct attack. It failed, the Russians losing 8,000 men and the Turks 1,500 (29 September). The blockade continued and Kars surrendered on 28 November.
In 1855 the Western Allied Baltic Fleet tried to destroy heavily defended Russian dockyards at [[Battle of Suomenlinna|Sveaborg]] outside [[Helsinki]]. More than 1,000 enemy guns tested the strength of the fortress for two days. Despite the shelling, the sailors of the 120-gun ship ''Rossiya'', led by Captain Viktor Poplonsky, defended the entrance to the harbor. The Allies fired over twenty thousand shells but were unable to defeat the Russian batteries. A massive new fleet of more than 350 gunboats and mortar vessels was prepared, but before the attack was launched, the war ended. [[File:Napadka.jpg|thumb|"Bombardment of the [[Solovetsky Monastery]] in the [[White Sea]] by the [[Royal Navy]]". A [[lubok]] (popular print) from 1868]]


'''1855: Georgian coast:''' Omar Pasha, the Turkish commander at Crimea had long wanted to land in Georgia, but the western powers vetoed it. When they relented in August most of the campaigning season was lost. In 8 September Turks landed at Batum, but the main concentration was at [[Sukhumi|Sukhum Kale]]. This required a 100-mile march south through a country with poor roads. In essence, it was a military demonstration in order to frighten the Russian command and force it to lift the siege of the fortress of Kars. "All luck depended on whether Muravyov (the Russian commander) would be scared or not".{{sfn|Tarle|1950|p=493}} But the Russian command did not see a serious threat, the Siege of Kars was continued. The Russians planned to hold the line of the [[Enguri|Ingur]] river which separates Abkhazia from Georgia proper. Omar crossed the Ingur on 7 November and then wasted a great deal of time, the Russians doing little. By 2 December he had reached the [[Tskhenistsqali]], the rainy season had started, his camps were submerged in mud and there was no bread. Learning of the fall of Kars he withdrew to the Ingur. The Russians did nothing and he evacuated to Batum in February of the following year.
Part of the Russian resistance was credited to the deployment of newly created blockade mines. Perhaps the most influential contributor to the development of naval mining was inventor and civil engineer [[Immanuel Nobel]], the father of [[Alfred Nobel]]. Immanuel helped the war effort for Russia by applying his knowledge of industrial explosives such as nitroglycerin and gunpowder. Modern [[naval mine|naval mining]] is said to date from the Crimean War: "[[Torpedo]] mines, if I may use this name given by Fulton to self-acting mines underwater, were among the novelties attempted by the Russians in their defenses about Cronstadt and Sevastopol", as one American officer put it in 1860.<ref name=mines>{{Wayback |url=http://www.exwar.org/Htm/8000PopH2.htm |title=Mining in the Crimean War |date=20030428045336 }}</ref>

===Baltic theatre===
{{See also|Charles John Napier#Baltic Campaign|Åland War}}
[[File:Escadre franco-anglaise devant Bomarsund.jpg|thumb|left|[[Battle of Bomarsund|Bombardment of Bomarsund]] during the Crimean War, by [[Antoine Léon Morel-Fatio]]]]

The [[Baltic Sea|Baltic]] was a forgotten theatre of the Crimean War.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Anderson |first=Edgar |year=1969 |title=The Scandinavian Area and the Crimean War in the Baltic |journal=Scandinavian Studies |volume=41 |issue=3 |pages=263–275 |jstor=40917005}}</ref> Popularisation of events elsewhere overshadowed the significance of this theatre, which was close to Saint Petersburg, the Russian capital. In April 1854, an Anglo-French fleet entered the Baltic to attack the Russian naval base of [[Kronstadt]] and the [[Baltic Fleet|Russian fleet]] that was stationed there.<ref name=Colvile1>{{cite journal |first=R.F. |last=Colvile |title= The Baltic as a Theatre of War: The Campaign of 1854. |journal=The RUSI Journal |date=1941 |volume=86 |issue=541 |pages=72–80 |doi=10.1080/03071844109424963 |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03071844109424963 }}</ref> In August 1854, the combined British and French fleet returned to Kronstadt for another attempt. The outnumbered Russian Baltic Fleet confined its movements to the areas around its fortifications. At the same time, the British and French commanders Sir [[Charles Napier (naval officer)|Charles Napier]] and [[Alexandre Ferdinand Parseval-Deschenes]] although they led the largest fleet assembled since the [[Napoleonic Wars]], considered the [[Suomenlinna|Sveaborg]] fortress too well-defended to engage. Thus, shelling of the Russian batteries was limited to two attempts in 1854 and 1855, and initially, the attacking fleets limited their actions to blockading Russian trade in the [[Gulf of Finland]].<ref name=Colvile1/> Naval attacks on other ports, such as the ones in the island of [[Gogland|Hogland]] in the Gulf of Finland, proved more successful. Additionally, allies conducted raids on less fortified sections of the [[Grand Duchy of Finland|Finnish]] coast.<ref>{{cite journal |first=R.F. |last=Colvile |title=The Navy and the Crimean War |journal=The RUSI Journal |date=1940 |volume=85 |issue=537 |pages=73–78 |doi=10.1080/03071844009427344 |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03071844009427344 }}</ref> These battles are known in [[Finland]] as the [[Åland War]].

Russia depended on imports—both for its domestic economy and for the supply of its military forces: the blockade forced Russia to rely on more expensive overland shipments from Prussia. The blockade seriously undermined the Russian export economy and helped shorten the war.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clive Ponting |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C7lo1UBTp74C&pg=SA2-PA24 |title=The Crimean War: The Truth Behind the Myth |publisher=Random House |year=2011 |isbn=978-1407093116 |pages=2–3}}</ref>

The burning of tar warehouses and ships led to international criticism, and in London the MP [[Thomas Milner Gibson]] demanded in the House of Commons that the [[First Lord of the Admiralty]] explain "a system which carried on a great war by plundering and destroying the property of defenceless villagers".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Burke |first=Edmund |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DbYHAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA93 |title=The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year |year=1855 |page=93}}</ref>
In fact, the operations in the Baltic sea were in the nature of binding forces. It was very important to divert Russian forces from the south or, more precisely, not to allow Nicholas to transfer to Crimea a huge army guarding the Baltic coast and the capital.<ref>Tarle E.V. Crimean war. М.-L.: 1941–1944. p. 88</ref> This goal Anglo-French forces achieved. The Russian Army in Crimea was forced to act without superiority in forces.

In August 1854 a Franco-British naval force captured and destroyed the [[Battle of Bomarsund|Russian Bomarsund fortress]] on [[Åland|Åland Islands]]. In the August 1855, the Western Allied Baltic Fleet [[Battle of Suomenlinna|tried to destroy heavily defended Russian dockyards at Sveaborg]] outside [[Helsinki]]. More than 1,000 enemy guns tested the strength of the fortress for two days. Despite the shelling, the sailors of the 120-gun ship ''[[Russian ship of the line Rossiya|Rossiya]]'', led by Captain Viktor Poplonsky, defended the entrance to the harbour. The Allies fired over 20,000 shells but failed to defeat the Russian batteries. The British then built a massive new fleet of more than 350 gunboats and mortar vessels,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lowe |first=Norman |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XppMDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA106 |title=Mastering Modern British History |date=2017 |publisher=Palgrave |isbn=978-1137603883 |edition=5th |location=London, England |page=106 }}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> which was known as the [[Great Armament]], but the war ended before the attack was launched.

Part of the Russian resistance was credited to the deployment of newly invented [[naval mine]]s. Perhaps the most influential contributor to the development of naval mining was a Swede resident in Russia, the inventor and civil engineer [[Immanuel Nobel]] (the father of [[Alfred Nobel]]). Immanuel Nobel helped the Russian war effort by applying his knowledge of industrial explosives, such as [[nitroglycerin]] and [[gunpowder]]. An account given in 1860 by [[United States Army]] Major [[Richard Delafield]] dates modern naval mining to the Crimean War: "[[Torpedo]] mines, if I may use this name given by [[Robert Fulton|Fulton]] to 'self-acting mines underwater', were among the novelties attempted by the Russians in their defences about Cronstadt and Sevastopol."<ref name="mines">{{Cite web |title=Mining in the Crimean War |url=http://www.exwar.org/Htm/8000PopH2.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030428045336/http://www.exwar.org/Htm/8000PopH2.htm |archive-date=28 April 2003 |access-date=28 April 2006}}</ref>

For the campaign of 1856, Britain and France planned an attack on the main base of the Russian Navy in the Baltic sea—Kronstadt. The attack was to be carried out using armoured floating batteries. The use of the latter proved to be highly effective in the attack on Kinburn on the Black Sea in 1855. Undoubtedly, this threat contributed on the part of Russia the decision on the conclusion of peace on unfavourable terms.


===White Sea theatre===
===White Sea theatre===
[[File:The British Attack of Solovetsky Monastery.jpg|thumb|"Bombardment of the [[Solovetsky Monastery]] in the [[White Sea]] by the [[Royal Navy]]", a ''[[lubok]]'' (popular print) from 1868]]
In autumn 1854 a squadron of three British warships led by [[HMS Miranda (1851)|HMS&nbsp;''Miranda'']] left the Baltic for the [[White Sea]], where they shelled [[Kola (town)|Kola]] (which was utterly destroyed) and the [[Solovetsky Islands|Solovki]]. Their attempt to storm [[Arkhangelsk]] proved unsuccessful.

In late 1854, a squadron of three British warships led by [[HMS Miranda (1851)|HMS&nbsp;''Miranda'']] left the Baltic for the [[White Sea]], where they shelled [[Kola (town)|Kola]] (which was destroyed)<ref>''Administrative-Territorial Division of Murmansk Oblast'', pp. 18–19</ref> and the [[Solovetsky Islands|Solovki]].


===Pacific theatre===
===Pacific theatre===
{{Main|Siege of Petropavlovsk}}
{{Main|Siege of Petropavlovsk}}
Minor naval skirmishes also occurred in the Far East, where at [[Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky|Petropavlovsk]] on the [[Kamchatka Peninsula]] a strong British and French Allied squadron including {{HMS|Pique|1834|6}} under Rear Admiral [[David Price (British captain)|David Price]] and a French force under Counter-Admiral [[Auguste Febvrier Despointes]] [[Siege of Petropavlovsk|besieged]] a smaller Russian force under Rear Admiral [[Yevfimy Putyatin]]. In September 1854 an Allied landing force was beaten back with heavy casualties, and the Allies withdrew. The Russians escaped under the cover of snow in early 1855 after Allied reinforcements arrived in the region.
Minor naval skirmishes also occurred in the Far East, where at [[Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky|Petropavlovsk]] on the [[Kamchatka Peninsula]] a British and French Allied squadron including {{HMS|Pique|1834|6}} under Rear Admiral [[David Price (Royal Navy officer)|David Price]] and a French force under Counter-Admiral [[Auguste Febvrier Despointes]] [[Siege of Petropavlovsk|besieged]] a smaller [[Pacific Fleet (Russia)|Russian force]] under Rear Admiral [[Yevfimiy Putyatin]]. In September 1854, an Allied landing force was beaten back with heavy casualties, and the Allies withdrew. The victory at Petropavlovsk was for Russia in the words of the future [[Ministry of War of the Russian Empire|Minister of War]] [[Dmitry Milyutin]] "a ray of light among the dark clouds". The Russians escaped under the cover of snow in early 1855 after Allied reinforcements arrived in the region.

The Anglo-French forces in the [[Far East]] also made several small landings on [[Sakhalin]] and [[Urup]], one of the [[Kuril Islands]].<ref>Mikhail Vysokov: [http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/history.htm A Brief History of Sakhalin and the Kurils] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100409063243/http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/history.htm |date=9 April 2010 }}: [http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/book/late_19th.htm Late 19th] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090412042134/http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/book/late_19th.htm |date=12 April 2009 }}</ref>

===Piedmontese involvement===
{{main|Sardinian expeditionary corps in the Crimean War}}
[[File:Crimea Cernaia DeStefani.JPG|thumb|The Italian [[Bersaglieri]] halt the Russian attack during the [[Battle of the Chernaya]].]]

[[Camillo di Cavour]], under orders of [[Victor Emmanuel&nbsp;II]] of [[Kingdom of Sardinia (1720-1861)|Piedmont-Sardinia]], sent an expeditionary corps of 15,000 soldiers, commanded by General [[Alfonso La Marmora]], to side with French and British forces during the war.{{sfn|Arnold|2002|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PA112 111–112}} This was an attempt at gaining the favour of the French, especially when the issue of uniting Italy would become an important matter. The deployment of Italian troops to Crimea, and the gallantry shown by them in the Battle of the Chernaya (16 August 1855) and in the Siege of Sevastopol, allowed the Kingdom of Sardinia to be among the participants at the peace conference at the end of the war, where it could address the issue of the ''[[Risorgimento]]'' to other European powers.


===Greece===
The Anglo-French forces in the Far East also made several small landings on [[Sakhalin]] and [[Urup]], one of the [[Kuril Islands]].<ref>Mikhail Vysokov: [http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/history.htm A Brief History of Sakhalin and the Kurils]: [http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/book/late_19th.htm Late 19th]</ref>
{{main|Greek Volunteer Legion}}
[[File:Greek volunteers in Sevastopol 1854.jpg|thumb|A [[Greek Volunteer Legion|Greek legion]] fought for Russia at Sevastopol]]


Greece played a peripheral role in the war. When Russia attacked the Ottoman Empire in 1853, King [[Otto of Greece]] saw an opportunity to expand north and south into Ottoman areas that had large Greek Christian majorities. Greece did not coordinate its plans with Russia, did not declare war, and received no outside military or financial support. Greece, an Orthodox nation, had considerable support in Russia, but the Russian government decided it was too dangerous to help Greece expand its holdings.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=32–40}} When the Russians invaded the Principalities, the Ottoman forces were tied down so Greece invaded [[Thessaly]] and [[Epirus]]. To block further Greek moves, the British and French occupied the main Greek port at [[Piraeus]] from April 1854 to February 1857,<ref>{{Cite book|first=Spencer C.|last=Tucker|author-link=Spencer C. Tucker|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h5_tSnygvbIC&pg=PA1210|title=A Global Chronology of Conflict|publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]]|year=2009|isbn=978-1851096725|page=1210}}</ref> and effectively neutralized the [[Hellenic army|Greek Army]]. The Greeks, gambling on a Russian victory, incited the large-scale [[Epirus Revolt of 1854]] as well as uprisings in [[Ottoman Crete]]. The insurrections were failures that were easily crushed by the Ottomans' allied [[Egyptian Army#Under the Muhammad Ali Dynasty|Egyptian Army]]. Greece was not invited to the peace conference and made no gains out of the war.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=139}}{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=183}} The frustrated Greek leadership blamed the King for failing to take advantage of the situation; his popularity plunged and he was forced to abdicate in 1862.
===Piedmont-Sardinian involvement===
[[Camillo di Cavour]], under orders by [[Victor Emmanuel&nbsp;II]] of Piedmont-Sardinia sent an expeditionary corps of around 15,000 soldiers, commanded by General [[Alfonso La Marmora]], to side with French and British forces during the war.<ref name="Arnold2002">{{cite book |first=Guy |last=Arnold |title=Historical Dictionary of the Crimean War|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PA112|year=2002|publisher=Scarecrow Press}}</ref>{{rp|111–12}} This was an attempt at gaining the favour of the French especially when the issue of uniting Italy would become an important matter. The deployment of Italian troops to the Crimea, and the gallantry shown by them in the [[Battle of Chernaya River|Battle of the Chernaya]] (16 August 1855) and in the siege of Sevastopol, allowed the Kingdom of Sardinia to be among the participants at the peace conference at the end of the war, where it could address the issue of the ''[[Risorgimento]]'' to other European powers.


In addition, a 1,000-strong [[Greek Volunteer Legion]] was formed in the Danubian Principalities in 1854 and later fought at Sevastopol.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Todorova |first=Maria |year=1984 |title=The Greek Volunteers in the Crimean War |url=https://ojs.lib.uom.gr/index.php/BalkanStudies/article/view/5133 |journal=Balkan Studies |volume=25 |pages=539–563 |issn=2241-1674}}</ref>
===Greek rebellions===
[[File:Greek volunteers in Sevastopol 1854.jpg|thumb|Greek battalion during the siege of Sevastopol]]
When the Crimean War broke out, many Greeks felt that it was an opportunity to regain Ottoman-occupied Greek territory to add to the recently liberated territory of the independent Kingdom of Greece. The [[Greek War of Independence]] (1821–1829) was still fresh in people's minds, as well as the [[Russo-Turkish War (1828–1829)|Russian intervention]] that had helped secure Greek independence. Just before the Greek War of Independence a leader of [[Filiki Eteria]], [[Alexander Ypsilantis (1792–1828)|Alexander Ypsilantis]], and his brother [[Demetrios Ypsilantis]] had led Russian troops into Moldavia and Wallachia and coordinated the preparations for uprisings throughout Ottoman-occupied Greece which they later led. Moreover, Greeks had always considered [[Orthodox Church|Orthodox Christian]] Russia as an ally and viewed the Crimean War as a grave injustice against Russia and any support of the Ottoman Empire a grave threat to Greece's recent independence.{{fact|date=February 2014}}


===Kiev Cossack revolt===
Although the official Greek state, under severe diplomatic and military pressure from the British and French (allies of the Ottomans), which included a naval blockade and the occupation of the country's main port of [[Piraeus]], refrained from actively entering the conflict, a number of uprisings broke out in Albania in January 1854<ref>Note 31 contained in the {{cite book |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=674 }}</ref> and soon spread to [[Epirus Revolt of 1854|Epirus]], [[Thessaly]], and Macedonia.<ref>{{cite book |first=Karl |last=Marx |chapter=Parliamentary Debates of February 22—Pozzo Di Borgo's Dispatch—The Policy of the Western Powers |title=Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels |volume=13 |publisher=International Publishers |location=New York |year=1980 |origyear=1853–54 |isbn=0-7178-0513-1 |page=32 }}</ref> A revolt also broke out in [[Cretan Revolt (1866-1869)|Crete]], with support from individuals and groups within independent Greece and [[Constantinople]]. However, all Greek revolts in the Turkish provinces were soon suppressed. A small Greek volunteer force under Colonel Panos Koronaios went to Russia and fought during the Siege of Sevastopol. However, more Greek nationals fought in the Crimean War with the "[[Greek Battalion of Balaklava]]" which had been in the ranks of the Russian army since the first [[Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774)|Russo-Turkish war]] (1768–1774).
A peasant revolt that began in the [[Vasylkiv]] county of [[Kiev Governorate]] (province) in February 1855 spread across the whole Kiev and [[Chernigov Governorate|Chernigov governorates]], with peasants refusing to participate in [[corvée labour]] and other orders of the local authorities and, in some cases, attacking priests who were accused of hiding a decree about the liberation of the peasants.<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CK%5CY%5CKyivCossacks.htm |title=Kiev Cossacks |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopedia of Ukraine]]}}</ref>{{Better source needed|date=August 2019}}


==End of the war==
==End of the war==
===British position===
[[File:Arundel Russian Bell 6.JPG|thumb|right|Three 17th century church bells in [[Arundel Castle]], United Kingdom. These were taken from [[Sevastopol]] as trophies at the end of the Crimean War]]
[[File:Arundel Russian Bell 6.JPG|thumb|One of three 17th-century church bells in [[Arundel Castle]], England, which were taken from [[Sevastopol]] as trophies at the end of the Crimean War]]
Dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war was growing with the public in Britain and in other countries, aggravated by reports of fiascos, especially the humiliating defeat of the [[Charge of the Light Brigade]] at the [[Battle of Balaclava]]. In parliament, Tories demanded an accounting of all soldiers, cavalry and sailors sent to the Crimea and accurate figures as to the number of casualties that had been sustained by all British armed forces in the Crimea; they were especially concerned with the Battle of Balaclava. When Parliament passed a bill to investigate by the vote of 305 to 148, Aberdeen said he had lost a vote of no confidence and resigned as prime minister on 30 January 1855.<ref>{{cite book|first=Dick |last=Leonard|title=The Great Rivalry: Gladstone and Disraeli|url={{Google books|7Kosl75aYPAC|The Great Rivalry: Gladstone and Disraeli|page=98|plainurl=yes}}|year=2013|publisher=I.B. Tauris|location=London|page=98}}</ref> The veteran former Foreign Secretary [[Lord Palmerston]] formed a Whig government with backing from the Irish MPs.<ref>{{cite book |first=Jasper |last=Ridley |title=Lord Palmerston |location=New York |publisher=Dutton |year=1970 |pages=431–436 |isbn=0-525-14873-6 }}</ref>


Dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war was growing with the public in Britain and other countries and was worsened by reports of fiascos, especially the devastating losses of the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava. On Sunday, 21 January 1855, a "snowball riot" occurred in [[Trafalgar Square]] near [[St Martin-in-the-Fields]] in which 1,500 people gathered to [[anti-war movement|protest against the war]] by pelting cabs and pedestrians with snowballs.<ref name="autogenerated599">[[Karl Marx]], "The Aims of the Negotiations – Polemic Against Prussia – A Snowball Riot", in ''Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 13'', p. 599.</ref> When the police intervened, the snowballs were directed at the constables. The riot was finally put down by troops and police acting with truncheons.<ref name="autogenerated599" /> In [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|Parliament]], the Conservatives demanded an accounting of all soldiers, cavalry and sailors sent to Crimea and accurate figures as to the number of casualties sustained by all British armed forces in Crimea, especially concerning the Battle of Balaclava. When Parliament passed a bill to investigate by the vote of 305 to 148, Aberdeen said he had lost a vote of no confidence and resigned as prime minister on 30 January 1855.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Leonard |first=Dick |url={{Google books|7Kosl75aYPAC|The Great Rivalry: Gladstone and Disraeli|page=98|plainurl=yes}} |title=The Great Rivalry: Gladstone and Disraeli |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2013 |location=London |page=98}}</ref> The veteran former Foreign Secretary [[Lord Palmerston]] became prime minister.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Ridley |first=Jasper |url=https://archive.org/details/lordpalmerston00ridl/page/431 |title=Lord Palmerston |publisher=Dutton |year=1970 |isbn=978-0-525-14873-9 |location=New York |pages=[https://archive.org/details/lordpalmerston00ridl/page/431 431–436]}}</ref> Palmerston took a hard line and wanted to expand the war, foment unrest inside the Russian Empire and reduce the Russian threat to Europe permanently. [[Union between Sweden and Norway|Sweden–Norway]] and Prussia were willing to join Britain and France, and Russia was isolated.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=400–402, 406–408}}
Peace negotiations at the [[Congress of Paris (1856)|Congress of Paris]] resulted in the signing of the [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]] on 30 March 1856. In compliance with art. III Russia restored to the Ottoman Empire the city and citadel of Kars in common with "all other parts of the Ottoman territory of which the Russian troop were in possession." By art. IV England, France, Sardinia and Turkey restored to Russia "the towns and ports of Sevastopol, Balaklava, Kamish, Eupatoria, Kerch, Jenikale, Kinburn, as well as all other territories occupied by the allied troops." In conformity with art. XI and XIII the Tsar and the Sultan agreed not to establish any naval or military arsenal on the Black Sea coast. The Black Sea clauses weakened Russia, and it no longer posed a naval threat to the Ottomans. The principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia were nominally returned to the Ottoman Empire; in practice they became independent. The Great Powers pledged to respect the independence and territorial integrity of the Ottoman Empire.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|432–33}}


===Peace negotiations===
==Historical analysis==
France, which had sent far more soldiers to the war and suffered far more casualties than Britain had, wanted the war to end, as did Austria.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=402–405}}
The [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]] stood until 1871, when France was defeated by Prussia in the [[Franco-Prussian War]] of 1870–1871. While Prussia and several other German states united to form a powerful [[German Empire]], the Emperor of the French, [[Napoleon III]], was deposed to permit the formation of a [[Third French Republic]]. During his reign, Napoleon&nbsp;III, eager for the support of Great Britain, had opposed Russia over the Eastern Question. Russian interference in the Ottoman Empire, however, did not in any significant manner threaten the interests of France. Thus, France abandoned its opposition to Russia after the establishment of a republic. Encouraged by the decision of the French and supported by the German minister [[Otto von Bismarck]], Russia renounced the Black Sea clauses of the treaty agreed to in 1856. As Great Britain alone could not enforce the clauses, Russia once again established a [[Black Sea Fleet|fleet in the Black Sea]].


Negotiations began in Paris in February 1856 and were surprisingly easy. France, under the leadership of Napoleon III, had no special interests in the Black Sea and so did not support the harsh British and Austrian proposals.{{sfn|Tarle|1950|p=533}}
Although it was Russia that was punished by the Paris Treaty, in the long run it was Austria that would lose the most from the Crimean War despite having barely taken part in the war.<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|433}} Having abandoned its alliance with Russia, Austria was diplomatically isolated following the war,<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|433}} which contributed to its defeat in the 1866 [[Austro-Prussian War]]<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|433}} and its loss of influence in most German-speaking lands. With France, now hostile to Germany, allied with Russia, and Russia competing with the newly renamed [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]] for an increased role in the Balkans at the expense of the Ottoman Empire, the foundations were in place for creating the diplomatic alliances that would lead to [[World War&nbsp;I]].


Peace negotiations at the [[Congress of Paris (1856)|Congress of Paris]] resulted in the signing of the [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]] on 30 March 1856.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mosse |first=W.E. |date=1955 |title=How Russia made peace September 1855 to April 1856 |journal=Cambridge Historical Journal |volume=11 |issue=3 |pages=297–316|doi=10.1017/S1474691300003085 }}</ref> In compliance with Article III, Russia restored to the Ottoman Empire the city and the citadel of Kars and "all other parts of the Ottoman territory of which the Russian troop were in possession". Russia returned the [[Southern Bessarabia]] to Moldavia.{{sfn|Small|2007|pp=188–190}}<ref name="Baumgart">{{Cite book |last=Baumgart |first=Winfried |title=The Crimean War 1853–1856 |publisher=Arnold |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-340-61465-5 |page=212 |author-link=Winfried Baumgart}}</ref> By Article IV, Britain, France, Sardinia and Ottoman Empire restored to Russia "the towns and ports of Sevastopol, Balaklava, Kamish, Eupatoria, Kerch, [[Yeni-Kale|Jenikale]], Kinburn as well as all other territories occupied by the allied troops". In conformity with Articles XI and XIII, the Tsar and the Sultan agreed not to establish any naval or military arsenal on the Black Sea coast. The Black Sea clauses weakened Russia, which no longer posed a naval threat to the Ottomans. The Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia were nominally returned to the Ottoman Empire, and the Austrian Empire was forced to abandon its annexation and to end its occupation of them,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tarle |first= Yevgeny Viktorovich |author-link= Yevgeny Tarle |title=Krymskai͡a︡ voĭna. М.-L.: 1941–1944 |volume=2 |date=1944 |ol=192735M |language=ru |page=545}}</ref> but they in practice became independent. The Treaty of Paris admitted the Ottoman Empire to the Concert of Europe, and the great powers pledged to respect its independence and territorial integrity.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=432–433}}
Notwithstanding the guarantees to preserve Ottoman territories specified in the Treaty of Paris, Russia, exploiting nationalist unrest in the Ottoman states in the Balkans and seeking to regain lost prestige, once again declared war on the Ottoman Empire on 24 April 1877. In this later [[Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)|Russo-Turkish War]] the states of [[Romania]], [[Serbia]], [[Montenegro]] and [[Bulgaria]] achieved their autonomy from direct Ottoman rule.


===Aftermath in Russia===
The Crimean War marked the ascendancy of France to the position of pre-eminent power on the Continent<ref name="Figes2010" />{{rp|411}} and the beginning of a decline for Tsarist Russia. Thus, the Crimean War represented one of the main causes of the demise of the [[Concert of Europe]], the balance of power that had dominated Europe since the [[Congress of Vienna]] in 1815, and which had included [[French Third Republic|France]], [[Russian Empire|Russia]], [[Austrian Empire|Austria]] and Britain.
Some members of the Russian intelligentsia saw defeat as a pressure to modernise their society. [[Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia|Grand Duke Constantine]], a son of the Tsar, remarked:<ref>Lieven, Dominic (1993): "Nicholas II: Emperor of all the Russias". London: Pimlico. p. 6</ref>
{{cquote|We cannot deceive ourselves any longer; we must say that we are both weaker and poorer than the first-class powers, and furthermore poorer not only in material terms but in mental resources, especially in matters of administration.}}


==Long-term effects==
==Criticisms and reform==
{{Main|Treaty of Paris (1856)}}
[[File:Balaklava sick 2.jpg|thumb|A tinted lithograph by [[William Simpson (artist)|William Simpson]] illustrating conditions of the sick and injured in [[Balaklava]]]]
[[File:Edouard Dubufe Congrès de Paris.jpg|thumb|''[[The Congress of Paris]]'' by [[Edouard Dubufe]]. The [[Treaty of Paris (1856)|Treaty of Paris]] brought an end to the war.]]
The Crimean War was notorious for the military and logistical immaturity of the [[British army]]. However, it highlighted the work of women who served as army nurses. War correspondents for newspapers reported the scandalous treatment of wounded soldiers in the desperate winter that followed and prompted the work of [[Florence Nightingale]], [[Mary Seacole]], [[Frances Margaret Taylor]] and others and led to the introduction of modern nursing methods.


[[Orlando Figes]] points to the long-term damage Russia suffered:
The Crimean War also saw the first tactical use of railways and other modern inventions such as the electric [[telegraph]], with the first "live" war reporting to ''[[The Times]]'' by [[William Howard Russell]]. Some credit Russell with prompting the resignation of the sitting British government through his reporting of the lacklustre shape of the British forces deployed to the Crimea. Additionally, the telegraph reduced the independence of British overseas possessions from their commanders in London due to such rapid communications. Newspaper readership informed public opinion in the United Kingdom and France as never before.<ref>{{cite book |first=Ian V. |last=Hogg |title=The British Army in the 20th Century |location=London |publisher=Ian Allan |year=1985 |page=11 |isbn=0-7110-1505-8 }}</ref> It was the first European war to be photographed.
"The demilitarization of the Black Sea was a major blow to Russia, which was no longer able to protect its vulnerable southern coastal frontier against the British or any other fleet... The destruction of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, Sevastopol and other naval docks was a humiliation. No compulsory disarmament had ever been imposed on a great power previously... The Allies did not really think that they were dealing with a European power in Russia. They regarded Russia as a semi-Asiatic state... In Russia itself, the Crimean defeat discredited the armed services and highlighted the need to modernize the country's defences, not just in the strictly military sense, but also through the building of railways, industrialization, sound finances and so on... The image many Russians had built up of their country—the biggest, richest and most powerful in the world—had suddenly been shattered. Russia's backwardness had been exposed... The Crimean disaster had exposed the shortcomings of every institution in Russia—not just the corruption and incompetence of the military command, the technological backwardness of the army and navy, or the inadequate roads and lack of railways that accounted for the chronic problems of supply, but the poor condition and illiteracy of the serfs who made up the armed forces, the inability of the serf economy to sustain a state of war against industrial powers, and the failures of autocracy itself."{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=442–443}}


[[File:CrimeaWarMemorialLondon.jpg|upright|thumb|[[Crimean War Memorial]] at Waterloo Place, [[St James's]], London]]
The war also employed modern military tactics, such as trenches and blind artillery fire. The use of the [[Minié ball]] for shot, coupled with the rifling of barrels, greatly increased Allied rifle range and damage.


The Treaty of Paris stood until 1871, when Prussia defeated France in the [[Franco-Prussian War]] of 1870–71. While Prussia and several other German states united to form a powerful [[German Empire]] in January 1871, the French deposed Emperor Napoleon III and proclaimed the [[French Third Republic]] (September 1870). During his reign, Napoleon, eager for the support of the United Kingdom, had opposed Russia over the Eastern Question. Russian interference in the Ottoman Empire did not in any significant manner threaten the interests of France ([[Kissinger]] uses Napoleon's pandering to journalists and public opinion on this subject—at the expense of the true interests of France—as an example of [[strategic frivolity]]{{sfn | Kissinger | 2012 | p=}}), and France abandoned its opposition to Russia after the establishment of the republic. Encouraged by the new attitude of French diplomacy after the surrenders of the besieged French Army at [[Battle of Sedan|Sedan]] and later [[Siege of Metz (1870)|Metz]] and supported by the German Chancellor [[Otto von Bismarck]], Russia in October 1870 renounced the Black Sea clauses of the treaty agreed to in 1856. As the United Kingdom with [[Austria-Hungary]]<ref>{{cite book|first=Hugh |last=Ragsdale |title=Imperial Russian Foreign Policy |publisher=Cambridge University Press |date= 1993 |page=227}}</ref> could not enforce the clauses, Russia once again established a fleet in the Black Sea.
The [[British Army]] system of [[sale of commissions]] came under great scrutiny during the war, especially in connection with the [[Battle of Balaclava]], which saw the ill-fated [[Charge of the Light Brigade]]. This scrutiny eventually led to the abolition of the sale of commissions.


[[File:Welsford-Parker Monument at the entrance to the Old Burying Ground in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.jpg|thumb|[[Sebastopol Monument]], [[Halifax Regional Municipality|Halifax, Nova Scotia]] – the only Crimean War Monument in North America]]
The Crimean War was a contributing factor in the Russian [[Emancipation reform of 1861|abolition of serfdom]] in 1861: Tsar [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander&nbsp;II]] (Nicholas I's son and successor) saw the military defeat of the Russian serf-army by free troops from Britain and France as proof of the need for emancipation.<ref>{{cite book
| last = Moon
| first = David
| title = The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia, 1762–1907
| publisher = Pearson Education
| year = 2001
| location = Harlow, England
| pages = 49–55
| isbn = 0-582-29486-X}}</ref> The Crimean War also led to the eventual realisation by the Russian government of its technological inferiority, in military practices as well as weapons.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.russianwarrior.com/STMMain.htm |title=STMMain |publisher=Russianwarrior.com |date= |accessdate=29 November 2011}}</ref>{{clr}}


After being defeated in the Crimean War, Russia feared that [[Russian Alaska]] would be easily captured in any future war with the British; therefore, Alexander II opted to [[Alaska Purchase|sell the territory]] to the [[United States]].<ref>{{Citation |title=U.S. cuts deal to buy Alaska from Russia, March 30, 1867 |work=Politico |url=https://www.politico.com/story/2018/03/30/us-cuts-deal-to-buy-alaska-from-russia-march-30-1867-491433 |first=Andrew |last=Glass |date=30 March 2018 }}</ref>
Russia had incurred so large a war debt from the Crimean War that Alexander II, realising the difficulty of defending Alaska, decided to [[Alaska Purchase|sell it to a third party]], the United States, in 1867. (No valuable minerals, let alone gold or oil, were discovered in Alaska until 1880, thirteen years after the sale.)


A [[Greek tortoise]] named [[Timothy (tortoise)|Timothy]] was found on a Portuguese ship by Captain John Guy Courtenay-Everard on {{HMS|Queen|1839|6}} in 1854. Serving as a [[mascot]] throughout the war, when she died in 2004 this made her the last living [[veteran]] of the Crimean war.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2004-04-07 |title=Timmy the tortoise dies aged 160 |language=en-GB |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/devon/3607053.stm |access-date=2022-07-16}}</ref>
Meanwhile, Russian military medicine saw dramatic progress: [[Nikolay Ivanovich Pirogov|N.&nbsp;I.&nbsp;Pirogov]], known as the father of Russian field surgery, developed the use of anaesthetics, plaster casts, enhanced amputation methods, and five-stage [[triage]] in Crimea, among other things.


Historian Norman Rich argues that the war was not an accident, but was sought out by the determination of the British and French not to allow Russia an honourable retreat. Both insisted on a military victory to enhance their prestige in European affairs when a non-violent peaceful political solution was available. The war then wrecked the Concert of Europe, which had long kept the peace.<ref>Norman Rich, ''Why the Crimean War?: A Cautionary Tale'' (1985).</ref>
The war also led to the establishment of the [[Victoria Cross]] in 1856 (backdated to 1854), the British Army's first universal award for valour.

Turkish historian Candan Badem wrote, "Victory in this war did not bring any significant material gain, not even a war indemnity. On the other hand, the Ottoman treasury was nearly bankrupted due to war expenses". Badem adds that the Ottomans achieved no significant territorial gains, lost the right to a navy in the Black Sea, and failed to gain status as a great power. Further, the war gave impetus to the [[United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia|union of the Danubian principalities]] and ultimately to their independence.{{sfn|Badem|2010|p=403}}

The treaty punished the defeated Russia, but in the long run, Austria lost the most from the war despite having barely taken part in it.{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=433}} Having abandoned its alliance with Russia, Austria remained diplomatically isolated following the war,{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=433}} which contributed to its disastrous defeats in the 1859 [[Franco-Austrian War]] that resulted in the cession of [[Lombardy]] to the [[Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861)|Kingdom of Sardinia]] and later in the loss of the Habsburg rule of [[Grand Duchy of Tuscany|Tuscany]] and [[Duchy of Modena and Reggio|Modena]], which meant the end of Austrian influence in peninsular Italy. Furthermore, Russia did not do anything to assist its former ally, Austria, in the 1866 [[Austro-Prussian War]],{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=433}} when Austria lost [[Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia|Venetia]] and, more importantly, its influence in most German-speaking lands. The status of Austria as a great power, with the unifications of [[German unification|Germany]] and [[Italian unification|Italy]], now became very precarious. It had to [[Ausgleich|compromise]] with [[Kingdom of Hungary|Hungary]]; the two countries shared the Danubian Empire. With France now hostile to Germany and gravitating towards Russia, and with Russia competing with the newly renamed [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]] for an increased role in the Balkans at the expense of the Ottoman Empire, the foundations were in place for building the diplomatic alliances that would shape the [[First World War]].

The Treaty's guarantees to preserve Ottoman territories were broken 21 years later when Russia, exploiting nationalist unrest in the Balkans and seeking to regain lost prestige, once again declared war on the Ottoman Empire on 24 April 1877. In this later [[Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)|Russo-Turkish War]] the states of [[Romania]], Serbia, and [[Principality of Montenegro|Montenegro]] gained international recognition of their independence and [[Principality of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] achieved its autonomy from direct Ottoman rule. Russia took over Southern Bessarabia,<ref>Frederick Kellogg, Purdue University Press, 1995, The Road to Romanian Independence, p. 191</ref> lost in 1856. The regions of Batum and Kars, as well as those inhabited by [[Adjarians]] (Muslim [[Georgians]]) and [[Armenians]], were also annexed to Russia in the Caucasus. At the same time, "protectors" of the Ottoman Empire Britain received [[Cyprus]] as a colonial possession, while Austria-Hungary [[Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina|occupied]] and [[Bosnian Crisis|annexed]] [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] in 1908. Finally, Ottoman rule in the Balkans ended after the [[First Balkan War]] of 1912, when the combined forces of the Balkan states defeated it.

The Crimean War marked the re-ascendancy of France to the position of pre-eminent power on the Continent,{{sfn|Figes|2010|p=411}} the continued decline of the Ottoman Empire and a period of crisis for Imperial Russia. As Fuller notes, "Russia had been beaten on the Crimean Peninsula, and the military feared that it would inevitably be beaten again unless steps were taken to surmount its military weakness."<ref>{{Cite book |last=William C. Fuller |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BNF318Pgq9kC&pg=PA273 |title=Strategy and Power in Russia 1600–1914 |year=1998 |isbn=978-1439105771 |page=273| publisher=Simon and Schuster }}</ref> To compensate for its defeat in the Crimean War, the Russian Empire then embarked in more intensive expansion in Asia, partially to restore national pride and partially to distract Britain on the world stage, intensifying the [[Great Game]].<ref name=":22">{{Cite web|title=The Great Game, 1856–1907: Russo-British Relations in Central and East Asia |url=https://reviews.history.ac.uk/review/1611|access-date=2021-08-09|website=reviews.history.ac.uk|language=en}}</ref><ref name=":04">{{Cite book|last=Jelavich|first=Barbara|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/796911|title=St. Petersburg and Moscow : Tsarist and Soviet foreign policy, 1814–1974|date=1974|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=0-253-35050-6|location=Bloomington|pages=200–201|oclc=796911}}</ref>

The war also marked the demise of the first phase of the [[Concert of Europe]], the balance-of-power system that had dominated Europe since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and had included France, Russia, Prussia, Austria and the United Kingdom. From 1854 to 1871, the Concert of Europe concept was weakened, leading to the crises that were the [[Unification of Germany|unifications of Germany]] and of [[Unification of Italy|Italy]], before a resurgence of great power conferences.<ref>{{Cite web|title=diplomacy – The Concert of Europe to the outbreak of World War I|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/diplomacy|access-date=2021-09-09|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en}}</ref>

In 1870, Prussia persuaded Russia to remain neutral in the Franco-Prussian war.<ref>Vinogradov V. N. 2005. "Was there a connection between the triumph of France in the Crimean war and its defeat at Sedan?" ''New and Recent History''. No. 5.</ref> Bismarck, having declared it impossible to keep 100&nbsp;million Russians in a humiliated position without sovereign rights to their Black Sea coastline,<ref>Bismarck (1940), ''Thoughts and Memories'', Vol.2, p. 97.</ref> supported Russia against the Treaty of Paris, and in return, Prussia achieved freedom of action against France in 1870–71 and inflicted a crushing defeat on it.

=== Historical analysis ===
According to historian [[Shepard B. Clough|Shepard Clough]], the war

{{blockquote|was not the result of a calculated plan, nor even of hasty last-minute decisions made under stress. It was the consequence of more than two years of fatal blundering in slow-motion by inept statesmen who had months to reflect upon the actions they took. It arose from Napoleon's search for prestige; Nicholas's quest for control over the Straits; his naïve miscalculation of the probable reactions of the European powers; the failure of those powers to make their positions clear; and the pressure of public opinion in Britain and Constantinople at crucial moments.<ref>{{Cite book |title=A History of the Western World |year=1964 |editor-last=Clough |editor-first=Shepard B. |page=917}}</ref>}}
The view of "diplomatic drift" as the cause of the war was first popularised by [[A. W. Kinglake]], who portrayed the British as victims of newspaper sensationalism and duplicitous French and Ottoman diplomacy.

More recently, historians [[Andrew Lambert]] and [[Winfried Baumgart]] have argued that Britain was following a geopolitical strategy in aiming to destroy the fledgling Russian Navy, which might challenge the Royal Navy for control of the seas, and that the war was also a joint European response to a century of Russian expansion not just southwards but also into Western Europe.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=Baumgart />

==Documentation==
Documentation of the war was provided by William Howard Russell, who wrote for ''The Times'' newspaper, and by [[Roger Fenton]]'s photographs.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=306–309}} News from war correspondents reached all of the nations involved in the war and kept the public citizenry of those nations better informed of the day-to-day events of the war than had been the case in any earlier war. The British public was very well informed on the day-to-day realities of the war. After the French extended the telegraph to the coast of the Black Sea in late 1854, news reached [[London]] in two days. When the British laid an underwater cable to Crimea in April 1855, news reached London in a few hours. The daily news reports energised public opinion, which brought down the Aberdeen government and carried Lord Palmerston into office as prime minister.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=304–311}}<ref>Bektas Y. (2017). "The Crimean War as a Technological Enterprise."&nbsp;''Notes and Records'': the Royal Society Journal of the History of Science. 71(3):233–262.</ref>

[[Leo Tolstoy]] wrote a few short sketches on the Siege of Sevastopol, collected in ''[[Sevastopol Sketches]]''. The stories detail the lives of the Russian soldiers and citizens in Sevastopol during the siege. Because of this work, Tolstoy has been called the world's first [[war correspondent]].<ref>{{Cite web
|last1=Self
|first1=John
|title=The stories that reveal the soul of Ukraine
|website=bbc.com
|publisher=BBC
|date=22 March 2022
|url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220322-the-stories-that-reveal-the-soul-of-ukraine
|access-date=16 March 2024
}}</ref>

==Criticisms and reform==
[[File:Florence Nightingale three quarter length.jpg|thumb|upright|During the Crimean War, [[Florence Nightingale]] and her team of nurses used new statistical approaches to raise awareness, clean up the military hospitals and set up the first training school for nurses in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{Cite book |last= Starry Dog |title=Encyclopedia of World History |publisher=WS Pacific Publications |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-4454-2576-4 |page=172 |chapter=Revolution and Industry: The British Empire}}</ref>]]

Historian [[R. B. McCallum]] points out the war was enthusiastically supported by the British populace as it was happening, but the mood changed very dramatically afterwards. Pacifists and critics were unpopular but:
{{blockquote|in the end they won. [[Richard Cobden|Cobden]] and [[John Bright|Bright]] were true to their principles of foreign policy, which laid down the absolute minimum of intervention in European affairs and a deep moral reprobation of war... When the first enthusiasm was passed, when the dead were mourned, the sufferings revealed, and the cost counted, when in 1870 Russia was able calmly to secure the revocation of the Treaty, which disarmed her in the Black Sea, the view became general of the war was stupid and unnecessary, and effected nothing... The Crimean war remained as a classic example... of how governments may plunge into war, how strong ambassadors may mislead weak prime ministers, how the public may be worked up into a facile fury, and how the achievements of the war may crumble to nothing. The Bright-Cobden criticism of the war was remembered and to a large extent accepted [especially by the Liberal Party]. Isolation from European entanglements seemed more than ever desirable.<ref>R. B. McCallum in Elie Halevy, ''The Victorian Years: 1841–1895'' (1951) p. 426</ref>{{sfn|Figes|2011|pp=467–480}}}}

As the memory of the "Charge of the Light Brigade" demonstrates, the war became an iconic symbol of logistical, medical and tactical failures and mismanagement. Public opinion in Britain was outraged at the logistical and command failures of the war; the newspapers demanded drastic reforms, and parliamentary investigations demonstrated the multiple failures of the army.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Hughes |first1=Gavin |last2=Trigg |first2=Jonathan |year=2008 |title=Remembering the Charge of the Light Brigade: Its Commemoration, War Memorials and Memory |journal=Journal of Conflict Archaeology |volume=4 |issue=1 |pages=39–58 |doi=10.1163/157407808X382755 |s2cid=161431952}}</ref> The reform campaign was not well organised, and the traditional aristocratic leadership of the army pulled itself together, and blocked all serious reforms. No one was punished. The outbreak of the [[Indian Rebellion of 1857]] shifted attention to the heroic defence of British interest by the army, and further talk of reform went nowhere.<ref>Peter Burroughs, "An Unreformed Army? 1815–1868," in David Chandler, ed., ''The Oxford History of the British Army'' (1996), pp. 183–184</ref> The demand for professionalisation was achieved by [[Florence Nightingale]], who gained worldwide attention for pioneering and publicising modern nursing while treating the wounded.{{sfn|Figes|2010|pp=469–471}} Another nurse, a Jamaican named [[Mary Seacole]], also made an impact providing care for wounded and dying soldiers. ''[[The Times]]'' war correspondent [[William Howard Russell]] spoke highly of Seacole's skill as a healer, writing "A more tender or skilful hand about a wound or a broken limb could not be found among our best surgeons."<ref>{{cite news|title=''Mary Seacole'', by Jane Robinson|author=Jan Marsh|newspaper=[[The Independent]]|date=21 January 2005|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/mary-seacole-by-jane-robinson-748262.html|access-date= 28 October 2020}}</ref>

Outstanding achievements in battlefield surgery were done during the war of 1853–56. "[[Nikolai Pirogov]], who pioneered the system of field surgery that other nations came to only in the First World War".{{sfn|Figes|2011|pp=295}}

The Crimean War also saw the first tactical use of railways and other modern inventions, such as the electric telegraph, with the first "live" war reporting by Russell. Some credit Russell with prompting the resignation of the sitting British government through his reporting of the lacklustre condition of British forces deployed in Crimea. Additionally, the telegraph reduced the independence of [[British Empire|British overseas possessions]] from their commanders in London due to such rapid communications. Newspaper readership informed public opinion in the United Kingdom and France as never before.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hogg |first=Ian V. |title=The British Army in the 20th Century |publisher=Ian Allan |year=1985 |isbn=978-0-7110-1505-0 |location=London |page=11}}</ref>

The Crimean War was a contributing factor in the Russian [[Emancipation reform of 1861|abolition of serfdom]] in 1861: Tsar [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander&nbsp;II]] (Nicholas I's son and successor) saw the military defeat of the Russian serf-army by free troops from Britain and France as proof of the need for emancipation.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Moon |first=David |title=The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia, 1762–1907 |publisher=Pearson Education |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-582-29486-8 |location=Harlow, England |pages=49–55}}</ref> The Crimean War also led to the realisation by the Russian government of its technological inferiority, in military practices as well as weapons.<ref>{{Cite web |title=STMMain |url= http://www.russianwarrior.com/STMMain.htm |access-date=29 November 2011 |publisher=Russian warrior}}</ref>{{Better source needed|reason=The current source is insufficiently reliable. Views of historians are likely reflected, but this is moderated through a third party source ([[WP:NOTRS]]).|date=June 2023}} Alexander also initiated the [[Government reforms of Alexander II of Russia|Great Reforms]], which were aimed at strengthening and modernising the Russian state in the light of weaknesses revealed by the war.


==Chronology of major battles of the war==
==Chronology of major battles of the war==
[[File:Roglan, Omer-Pasha & Pelisier.jpg|thumb|upright|[[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan|FitzRoy Somerset]], [[Omar Pasha]] and [[Marshal Pélissier]]]]
* [[Battle of Sinop]], 30 November 1853
* [[Battle of Sinop]], 30 November 1853
* [[Siege of Silistra]], 5 April – 25 June 1854
* First [[Battle of Bomarsund]], 21 June 1854
* Second [[Battle of Bomarsund]], 15 August 1854
* [[Siege of Petropavlovsk]], 30–31 August 1854, on the Pacific coast
* [[Siege of Petropavlovsk]], 30–31 August 1854, on the Pacific coast
* [[Battle of Alma]], 20 September 1854
* [[Battle of the Alma]], 20 September 1854
* [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]], 25 September 1854 to 8 September 1855
* [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]], 25 September 1854 to 8 September 1855
* [[Battle of Balaclava]], 25 October 1854 (''see also'' [[Charge of the Light Brigade]] and [[The Thin Red Line (Battle of Balaclava)|The Thin Red Line]])
* [[Battle of Balaclava]], 25 October 1854 (''see also'' [[Charge of the Light Brigade]] and [[The Thin Red Line (Battle of Balaclava)|the Thin Red Line]])
* [[Battle of Inkerman]], 5 November 1854
* [[Battle of Inkerman]], 5 November 1854
* [[Battle of Eupatoria]], 17 February 1855
* [[Battle of Eupatoria]], 17 February 1855
* [[Battle of Chernaya River]] (aka "Traktir Bridge"), 25 August 1855
* [[Battle of the Chernaya]] (aka "Battle of Traktir Bridge"), 16 August 1855
* [[Sea of Azoff naval campaign]], May to November 1855
* [[Battle of Kinburn (1855)]], 17 October 1855
* [[Sea of Azov naval campaign (1855)|Sea of Azov naval campaign]], May to November 1855
* [[Siege of Kars]], June to 28 November 1855
* [[Siege of Kars]], June to 28 November 1855
[[File:Roglan, Omer-Pasha & Pelisier.jpg|thumb|upright|[[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan|FitzRoy Somerset]], [[Omar Pasha]] and [[Marshal Pélissier]]]]
[[File:CrimeaWarMemorialLondon.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Crimean War Memorial]] at Waterloo Place, [[St James's]], London]]

==Prominent military commanders==
* [[Russian Empire|Russian]] commanders
** Prince [[Gorchakov|Mikhail Dmitriyevich Gorchakov]]
** Count and Namestnik [[Ivan Paskevich|Ivan Feodorovich Paskevich]]
** Admiral [[Pavel Stepanovich Nakhimov]]
** General [[Eduard Ivanovich Totleben]]
** Prince [[Aleksandr Sergeyevich Menshikov]]
* [[Second French Empire|French]] commanders
** Marshal [[Jacques Leroy de Saint Arnaud]]
** Marshal [[François Certain Canrobert]]
** Marshal [[Aimable Pélissier]]
* [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|British]] commanders
** [[James Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan]]
** [[FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan]]
** Sir Thomas James Harper
** [[Edmund Lyons, 1st Baron Lyons|Sir Edmund Lyons (later 1st Baron Lyons)]]
** ((George Charles Bingham, 3rd Earl of Lucan))
* [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] commanders
** General [[Abdülkerim Nadir Pasha]]
** General [[Omar Pasha]]
* [[Kingdom of Sardinia]] commander
** General [[Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora]]

==Last veterans==
* Yves Prigent (1833–1938). French sailor.<ref name="derniersveterans.free.fr">{{cite web|url=http://derniersveterans.free.fr/crimee.html |title=dernier vétéran de la guerre de crimée et du siège de sébastopole |publisher=Derniersveterans.free.fr |date= |accessdate=29 November 2011}}</ref>
* Charles Nathan (1834–1934). Last French soldier, also saw action in Italy, Syria, Mexico and the Franco-Prussian War.<ref name="derniersveterans.free.fr"/>
* [[Edwin Hughes (soldier)|Edwin Hughes]] (1830–1927). Last survivor of the [[Charge of the Light Brigade]].<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/northeastwales/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8170000/8170593.stm | work=BBC News | title=Hall of Fame: Balaclava Ned | date=27 July 2009 | accessdate=30 April 2010}}</ref>
* [[R. E. B. Crompton|Colonel Rookes Evelyn Bell Crompton]] (1845–1940). Repeatedly claimed that he was a cadet on HMS ''Dragon'' during the [[siege]] of Sevastopol, earning two campaign medals before his twelfth birthday. There is no record of his having enrolled in the Navy; at the time of his visits to the Crimea (mid-May to mid-July 1856), nobody was entitled to the award of the British Crimea Medal.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theiet.org/about/libarc/archives/biographies/crompton.cfm |title=IET Archives, history, biographies, online exhibitions and research guides |publisher=The IET |date= |accessdate=29 November 2011}}</ref>
* [[Timothy (tortoise)|Timothy the Tortoise]] (1839–2004). The naval mascot of [[HMS Queen (1839)|HMS ''Queen'']]<ref>{{Wayback |date=* |url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-115062480.html |title= }}</ref>

==In culture==
<!---please don't put offhand references in here. There are too many legitimate ones to consider which are completely about the war. They should be famous and reasonably old and therefore not suspect or unrelated.[[WP:PR]]---->
* "[[The Charge of the Light Brigade (poem)|The Charge of the Light Brigade]]" by [[Alfred Lord Tennyson|Alfred, Lord Tennyson]] depicted a brave but disastrous [[cavalry]] [[charge (warfare)|charge]] during the [[Battle of Balaclava]].
* [[Leo Tolstoy]] wrote a few short sketches on the [[Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)|Siege of Sevastopol]], collected in ''The Sebastopol Sketches''. The stories detail the lives of the Russian soldiers and citizens in Sevastopol during the siege. Because of this work, Tolstoy has been called the world's first [[war correspondent]].
* ''Jack Archer: A Tale of the Crimea'' by [[G.&nbsp;A.&nbsp;Henty]], 1883, a historical novel, details the adventures of two British midshipmen in the Crimean War.
* The events of the Crimean War are depicted in the 1973 novel ''[[Flashman at the Charge]]'' in which the eponymous antihero participates in the battles of Sevastopol and Balaclava.
* [[Franz Roubaud]]. Panorama Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855)
* [[The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936 film)|Charge of the Light Brigade]] – 1936 film starring [[Errol Flynn]]
* [[The Charge of the Light Brigade]] – 1968 film starring [[John Gielgud]] and [[Trevor Howard]]
* [[The Trooper]] 1983 song by [[Iron Maiden]]
* The 2006 song by Kasabian called Empire was an anti-war song where the video is set during the Crimea war (also shot on location)


==See also==
==See also==
{{cols}}
{{Portal|Military history of the Ottoman Empire}}
* British [[Crimea Medal]] and [[Turkish Crimea Medal]]
* [[Crimean War Research Society]]
* [[Crimean War Research Society]]
* [[Foreign policy of the Russian Empire]]
* [[Egyptian intervention in the Crimean War]]
* [[Grand Crimean Central Railway]]
* [[Grand Crimean Central Railway]]
* [[Fort Queenscliff]]
* [[History of the Balkans]]
* [[International relations (1814–1919)]]
* [[International relations (1814–1919)]]
* [[Internationalization of the Danube River]]
* [[List of Crimean War Victoria Cross recipients]]
* [[List of Crimean War Victoria Cross recipients]]
* [[List of British recipients of the Légion d'Honneur for the Crimean War]]
* [[List of British recipients of the Légion d'Honneur for the Crimean War]]
* [[Peace Concluded]] (painting)
* [[Order of Nakhimov]]
* [[The Great Game]] (1813–1917)
* ''[[Peace Concluded]]'' (painting)
{{colend}}
* [[Nikolskaya sopka]]


==Notes==
==Notes and references==
===Notes===
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Notelist}}


==References==
===References===
{{Reflist}}
* Badem, Candan. ''The Ottoman Crimean War (1853–1856)'' (Leiden: Brill, 2010). 432 pp.

* Bridge and Bullen, ''The Great Powers and the European States System 1814–1914'', (Pearson Education: London), 2005
===Sources===
* Bamgart, Winfried ''The Crimean War, 1853–1856'' (2002) Arnold Publishers ISBN 0-340-61465-X
* {{cite book |last=Егоршина |first=Петрова |lang=ru |script-title=ru:История русской армии |trans-title=The history of the Russian Army |location=Moscow |publisher=Moskva |date=2023 |isbn=978-5-699-42397-2}}
* Curtiss, John Shelton. ''Russia's Crimean War'' (1979)
* {{Cite book|last=Arnold|first=Guy|author-link=Guy Arnold|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PA13|title=Historical Dictionary of the Crimean War|publisher=Scarecrow Press|year=2002|isbn=978-0-81086613-3}}
* Figes, Orlando, ''Crimea: The Last Crusade'' (2010) Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-9704-0; the standard scholarly study; American edition published as ''The Crimean War: A History'' (2010) [http://www.amazon.com/Crimean-War-History-Orlando-Figes/dp/1250002524/ excerpt and text search]
* * {{cite book |last=Badem |first=Candan |title=The Ottoman Crimean War (1853-1856) |publisher=BRILL |year=2010 |isbn=978-90-04-18205-9 |doi=10.1163/ej.9789004182059.i-432 |doi-access=free |jstor=10.1163/j.ctt1w8h1kf |id={{OCLC|1247557705|668221743}}}}
* Gorizontov, Leonid E. "The Crimean War as a Test of Russia's Imperial Durability," ''Russian Studies in History'' (2012) 51#1 pp 65–94.
* {{Cite book |last=Clodfelter |first=M. |title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |publisher=McFarland |year=2017 |isbn=978-0786474707 |edition=4th |location=Jefferson, North Carolina}}
* Lambert, Andrew. "Preparing for the Russian War: British Strategic Planning, March, 1853 – March 1854," ''War & Society'' (1989) 7#2 pp 15–39.
* {{Cite book|last=Figes|first=Orlando|author-link=Orlando Figes|title=Crimea: The Last Crusade|publisher=Allen Lane|year=2010|isbn=978-0-7139-9704-0|location=London}}
* Lambert, Andrew. ''The Crimean War'' (2011)
* {{Cite book|last=Figes|first=Orlando|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dimVhWPx_88C&pg=PA134|title=The Crimean War: A History|date=2011|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|isbn=978-1429997249}}
* Markovits, Stefanie. ''The Crimean War in the British Imagination'' (2010)
* {{Cite book |last=Greenwood |first=Adrian |url=http://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/index.php/victoria-s-scottish-lion-26465.html |title=Victoria's Scottish Lion: The Life of Colin Campbell, Lord Clyde |publisher=History Press |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-7509-5685-7 |location=UK |page=496 |author-link=Adrian Greenwood |access-date=26 November 2015 |archive-date=21 February 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160221172547/http://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/index.php/victoria-s-scottish-lion-26465.html/ |url-status=dead }}
* Pearce, Robert. "The Results of the Crimean War," ''History Review'' (2011) #70 pp 27–33.
* {{cite book | last=Kissinger | first=H. | title=Diplomacy | publisher=Simon & Schuster UK | year=2012 | isbn=978-1-4711-0449-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HhfceQZ3pmoC | access-date=2024-05-29}}
* Ponting, Clive ''The Crimean War'' (2004) Chatto and Windus ISBN 0-7011-7390-4
* {{cite book|title=The Eastern Question. An Historical Study in European Diplomacy |first=J.A.R. |last=Marriott |publisher=Oxford at the Clarendon Press |date=1917 }}
* Pottinger Saab, Anne ''The Origins of the Crimean Alliance'' (1977) University of Virginia Press ISBN 0-8139-0699-7
* {{citation |last=Small |first= Hugh |title=The Crimean War: Queen Victoria's War with the Russian Tsars |publisher=Tempus |date=2007 }}<!-- diplomacy, pp.&nbsp;62–82-->
* Puryear, Vernon J. "New Light on the Origins of the Crimean War", ''Journal of Modern History'' Vol. 3, No. 2 (Jun. 1931), pp.&nbsp;219–234 [http://www.jstor.org/stable/1871715 in JSTOR]
* {{cite book|last= Tarle |first=Evgenii Viktorovich |language=ru |title=Crimean War |volume=II |location=Moscow and Leningrad |publisher= Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk |date=1950 }}
* Rich, Norman ''Why the Crimean War: A Cautionary Tale'' (1985) McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-052255-3
* {{Cite book |last=Porter |first=Maj Gen Whitworth |title=History of the Corps of Royal Engineers |volume=I |publisher=The Institution of Royal Engineers |year=1889 |location=Chatham}}
* Royle, Trevor ''Crimea: The Great Crimean War, 1854–1856'' (2000) Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 1-4039-6416-5
* {{citation |last= Royle |first= Trevor |title=Crimea: The Great Crimean War, 1854–1856 |date=2000 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=1-4039-6416-5}}
* Schroeder, Paul W. ''Austria, Great Britain, and the Crimean War: The Destruction of the European Concert'' (1972) Cornell University Press ISBN 0-8014-0742-7
* {{cite book|first=A. J. P.|last=Taylor |title= The Struggle for Mastery in Europe: 1848–1918 |date=1954 |publisher=Oxford University Press }}
* Schmitt, Bernadotte E. "The Diplomatic Preliminaries of the Crimean War", ''American Historical Review,'' (1919) 25#1 pp.&nbsp;36–67 [http://www.jstor.org/stable/1836373 in JSTOR]
* {{Cite book |last=Troubetzkoy |first=Alexis S. |title=A Brief History of the Crimean War |publisher=Constable & Robinson |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-84529-420-5 |location=London |author-link=Alexis S. Troubetzkoy}}
* Taylor, A.J.P. ''The Struggle for Mastery in Europe: 1848–1918'' (1954)

* Wetzel, David ''The Crimean War: A Diplomatic History'' (1985) Columbia University Press ISBN 0-88033-086-4
==Further reading==
* {{cite book |last1=Zayonchkovski |first1=Andrei |authorlink1=Andrei Zayonchkovski | title=Восточная война 1853—1856 |trans_title=Northern War 1853–1856 |url=http://militera.lib.ru/h/zayonchkovsky_am02/index.html |archiveurl= |archivedate= |format= |accessdate= |type= |edition= |series=Великие противостояния |volume= |date= |year=2002 |month= |origyear=1908–1913 |publisher=Poligon |location=Petersburg |language= |isbn=5-89173-157-6 |oclc= |zbl= |doi= |id= |page= |pages= |at= |trans_chapter= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= |ref= |bibcode= }}
{{div col|colwidth=45em}}
* {{Cite book |author1=Bridge |author2=Bullen |title=The Great Powers and the European States System 1814–1914 |publisher=Pearson Education |location=London |date=2005 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation |last1=Cox |first1=Michael |title=Crimean War Basics: Organisation and Uniforms: Russia and Turkey |date=1997 |ref=none |last2=Lenton |first2=John}}
* {{Citation |last=Curtiss |first=John Shelton |title=Russia's Crimean War |date=1979 |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=0-8223-0374-4 |ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Goldfrank |first=David M. |title=The Origins of the Crimean War |date=1993 |ref=none}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Gorizontov |first=Leonid E. |year=2012 |title=The Crimean War as a Test of Russia's Imperial Durability |journal=Russian Studies in History |volume=51 |issue=1 |pages=65–94 |doi=10.2753/rsh1061-1983510103 |ref=none |s2cid=153718909}}
* {{Cite book |last=Hoppen |first=K. Theodore |title=The Mid-Victorian Generation, 1846–1886 |date=1998 |pages=167–183 |url=https://www.questia.com/read/35631622/the-mid-victorian-generation-1846-1886#/25 |ref=none |access-date=26 August 2017 |archive-date=8 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160308043151/https://www.questia.com/read/35631622/the-mid-victorian-generation-1846-1886#/25 |url-status=dead}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Lambert |first=Andrew |year=1989 |title=Preparing for the Russian War: British Strategic Planning, March, 1853 – March 1854 |journal=War & Society |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=15–39 |doi=10.1179/106980489790305605 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation |last=Martin |first=Kingsley |title=The triumph of Lord Palmerston: a study of public opinion in England before the Crimean War |date=1963 |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.191245 |publisher=Hutchinson |ref=none |via=archive.org}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Pearce |first=Robert |title=The Results of the Crimean War |journal=History Review |date=2011 |issue=70 |pages=27–33 |ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Ponting |first=Clive |title=The Crimean War |date=2004 |publisher=Chatto and Windus |isbn=0-7011-7390-4 |ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Pottinger Saab |first=Anne |title=The Origins of the Crimean Alliance |date=1977 |publisher=University of Virginia Press |isbn=0-8139-0699-7 |ref=none}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Puryear |first=Vernon J |year=1931 |title=New Light on the Origins of the Crimean War |journal=Journal of Modern History |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=219–234 |doi=10.1086/235723 |jstor=1871715 |ref=none |s2cid=143747863}}
* Ramm, Agatha, and B. H. Sumner. "The Crimean War." in J. P. T. Bury, ed., ''The New Cambridge Modern History: Vol. 10: The Zenith of European Power, 1830–1870'' (1960) pp.&nbsp;468–492, short survey [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.110153 online]
* Rath, Andrew C. ''The Crimean War in Imperial Context, 1854–1856'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
* Rich, Norman ''Why the Crimean War: A Cautionary Tale'' (1985) McGraw-Hill {{ISBN|0-07-052255-3}}
* Ridley, Jasper. ''Lord Palmerston'' (1970) pp.&nbsp;425–454 [https://archive.org/details/lordpalmerston00ridl online]
* Schroeder, Paul W. ''Austria, Great Britain, and the Crimean War: The Destruction of the European Concert'' (Cornell Up, 1972) [https://www.questia.com/read/24100854/austria-great-britain-and-the-crimean-war-the-destruction#/ online] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309184304/https://www.questia.com/read/24100854/austria-great-britain-and-the-crimean-war-the-destruction#/ |date=9 March 2016 }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Schmitt |first=Bernadotte E |year=1919 |title=The Diplomatic Preliminaries of the Crimean War |journal=American Historical Review |volume=25 |issue=1 |pages=36–67 |doi=10.2307/1836373 |jstor=1836373 |ref=none |hdl-access=free |hdl=2027/njp.32101066363589}}
* {{Citation |last=Seton-Watson |first=R.W. |title=Britain in Europe, 1789–1914 |date=1938 |url=https://archive.org/download/in.ernet.dli.2015.226175/2015.226175.Britain-In.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210817221701/https://archive.org/download/in.ernet.dli.2015.226175/2015.226175.Britain-In.pdf |archive-date=2021-08-17 |url-status=live |ref=none |via=archive.org}}
* Temperley, Harold W. V. ''England and the Near East: The Crimea'' (1936) [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.174587 online]
* Trager, Robert F. "Long-term consequences of aggressive diplomacy: European relations after Austrian Crimean War threats." ''Security Studies'' 21.2 (2012): 232–265. [http://www.roberttrager.com/Research_files/SS2012.pdf Online] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210307202651/http://www.roberttrager.com/Research_files/SS2012.pdf |date=7 March 2021 }}
* Wetzel, David ''The Crimean War: A Diplomatic History'' (1985) Columbia University Press {{ISBN|0-88033-086-4}}
* {{Cite book |last=Zayonchkovski |first=Andrei |url=http://militera.lib.ru/h/zayonchkovsky_am02/index.html |title=Восточная война 1853–1856 |publisher=Poligon |year=2002 |isbn=978-5-89173-157-8 |series=Великие противостояния |location=Saint Petersburg |language=ru |trans-title=Eastern War 1853–1856 |ref=none |author-link=Andrei Zayonchkovski |orig-year=1908–1913}}
{{div col end}}


===Historiography and memory===
===Historiography and memory===
{{div col|colwidth=45em}}
* [[Brison D. Gooch|Gooch, Brison D.]] "A Century of Historiography on the Origins of the Crimean War", ''American Historical Review'' Vol. 62, No. 1 (Oct. 1956), pp.&nbsp;33–58 [http://www.jstor.org/stable/1848511 in JSTOR]
* {{Cite journal |last=Benn |first=David Wedgwood |date=2012 |title=The Crimean War and its lessons for today |url=https://www.chathamhouse.org/publications/ia/archive/view/182483/88_2wedgBenn.pdf |journal=[[International Affairs (journal)|International Affairs]]|volume=88 |issue=2 |pages=387–391|doi=10.1111/j.1468-2346.2012.01078.x|ref=none}}{{Dead link|date=January 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}
* Kozelsky, Mara. "The Crimean War, 1853–56," ''Kritika'' (2012) 13#4 [http://www.questia.com/library/1G1-319613789/the-crimean-war-1853-56 online]
*{{Cite journal |last=Gooch |first=Brison D. |author-link=Brison D. Gooch |date=October 1956 |title=A Century of Historiography on the Origins of the Crimean War |journal=The American Historical Review |volume=62 |pages=33–58 |doi=10.2307/1848511 |jstor=1848511 |ref=none |number=1}}
* Markovits, Stefanie. ''The Crimean War in the British Imagination'' (Cambridge University Press: 2009) 287 pp.
*{{Cite journal |last=Gooch |first=Brison D. |author-link=Brison D. Gooch |date=March 1958 |title=The Crimean War in Selected Documents and Secondary Works since 1940 |journal=Victorian Studies |volume=1 |pages=271–279 |jstor=3825628 |ref=none |number=3}}
* Russell, William Howard, "The Crimean War: As Seen by Those Who Reported It". (Louisiana State University Press, 2009) ISBN 978-0-8071-3445-0
* {{Cite book |title=The origins of the Crimean War |date=1969 |publisher=Heath |editor-last=Gooch |editor-first=Brison D. |editor-link=Brison D. Gooch|ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Edgerton |first=Robert B. |url=https://www.questia.com/library/96342340/death-or-glory-the-legacy-of-the-crimean-war |title=Death or Glory: The Legacy of the Crimean War |date=1999 |ref=none |access-date=26 August 2017 |archive-date=8 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150908234104/https://www.questia.com/library/96342340/death-or-glory-the-legacy-of-the-crimean-war |url-status=dead }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Hopf |first=Ted |date=2016 |title='Crimea is ours': A discursive history |journal=[[International Relations (journal)|International Relations]] |volume=30 |issue=2 |pages=227–255|doi=10.1177/0047117816645646 |s2cid=148091132|ref=none}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Kozelsky |first=Mara |date=2012 |title=The Crimean War, 1853–56 |url=https://www.questia.com/library/1G1-319613789/the-crimean-war-1853-56 |journal=Kritika |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=903–917 |doi=10.1353/kri.2012.0047 |s2cid=159610919 |ref=none }}{{Dead link|date=August 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Lambert |first=Albert |year=2003 |editor-last=Loades |editor-first=David |title=Crimean War 1853–1856 |volume=1 |pages=318–319 |ref=none |journal=Reader's Guide to British History}}
* {{Cite book |last=Markovits |first=Stefanie |title=The Crimean War in the British Imagination |date=2009 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-11237-6|ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Russell |first=William Howard |title=The Crimean War: As Seen by Those Who Reported It |date=2009 |publisher=Louisiana State University Press |isbn=978-0-8071-3445-0|ref=none}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Small |first=Hugh |date=2014 |title=Sebastopol Besieged |journal=[[History Today]]|volume=64 |issue=4 |pages=20–21|ref=none}}
* {{Cite book |last=Young |first=Peter |url=https://internationalhistory.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/historiography-of-the-origins-of-the-crimean-war |title=Historiography of the Origins of the Crimean War |date=2012 |work=International History: Diplomatic and Military History since the Middle Ages|ref=none}}
{{div col end}}


===Contemporary sources===
===Contemporary sources===
{{div col|colwidth=45em}}
* {{cite book | title=A Review of the Crimean War to the winter of 1854–5 | author=[[John Miller Adye]] | year=1860 | publisher=[[Hurst and Blackett]] | url=http://books.google.com.au/books?id=HNggFdfSqqEC}}
* {{Cite book |first=John Miller |last=Adye |url=https://archive.org/details/areviewcrimeanw00adyegoog |title=A Review of the Crimean War to the winter of 1854–5 |publisher=[[Hurst and Blackett]] |year=1860 |ref=none |author-link=John Miller Adye}}
* {{cite book | title=The Invasion of the Crimea, (nine volumes, London) | author=[[Alexander William Kinglake]] | date=1863–87}} [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea01kinguoft vol1] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea02kinguoft vol2] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea03kinguoft vol3] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime04king vol4] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime05king vol5] – [https://archive.org/details/invasioncrimeai11kinggoog vol6] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea07kinguoft vol7] – [https://archive.org/details/cu31924071199750 vol8] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime09king vol9]
* {{Cite book |first=Alexander William |last=Kinglake |title=The Invasion of the Crimea, (nine volumes, London) |date=1863–1887 |ref=none |author-link=Alexander William Kinglake}} [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea01kinguoft Vol. 1] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea02kinguoft Vol. 2] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea03kinguoft Vol. 3] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime04king Vol. 4] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime05king Vol. 5] – [https://archive.org/details/invasioncrimeai11kinggoog Vol. 6] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrimea07kinguoft Vol. 7] – [https://archive.org/details/cu31924071199750 Vol. 8] – [https://archive.org/details/invasionofcrime09king Vol. 9]
* {{cite book | title=The War (volume 1): from the Landing at Gallipoli to the Death of Lord Raglan | author=[[William Howard Russell]] | year=1855 | publisher=[[Routledge|George Routledge & Co.]] | url=https://archive.org/details/warrussell01russ}}
* {{cite book | title=The War (volume 2): from the death of Lord Raglan to the evacuation of the Crimea | author=William Howard Russell | year=1856 | publisher=[[Routledge|George Routledge & Co.]] | url=https://archive.org/details/warfromdeathoflo02russ}}
* {{Cite book |first=William Howard |last=Russell |url=https://archive.org/details/warrussell01russ |title=The War (volume 1): from the Landing at Gallipoli to the Death of Lord Raglan |publisher=George Routledge |year=1855 |ref=none |author-link=William Howard Russell}}
* {{Cite book | first=William Howard |last=Russell |url=https://archive.org/details/warfromdeathoflo02russ |title=The War (volume 2): from the death of Lord Raglan to the evacuation of the Crimea | publisher=George Routledge |year=1856 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book | title=The British expedition to the Crimea | author=William Howard Russell | year=1877 | publisher=[[Routledge|G. Routledge and Sons]] | url=https://archive.org/details/britishexpeditio00russ}}
* {{Cite book | first=William Howard |last=Russell |url=https://archive.org/details/britishexpeditio00russ |title=The British expedition to the Crimea |publisher=George Routledge |year=1877 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book | title=Turkey and the Crimean War: a narrative of historical events | author=[[Adolphus Slade]] | year=1867 | publisher=[[Smith, Elder & Co.]] | url=https://archive.org/details/turkeycrimeanwar00sladuoft}}
* {{Cite book |first=Adolphus |last=Slade |url=https://archive.org/details/turkeycrimeanwar00sladuoft |title=Turkey and the Crimean War: a narrative of historical events |publisher=Smith, Elder & Co. |year=1867 |ref=none |author-link=Adolphus Slade}}
* {{Cite book |title=Medical and Surgical History of the British Army which served in Turkey and the Crimea during the War against Russia in the Years 1854–55–56 |date=1858}}<br />[https://collections.nlm.nih.gov/ext/dw/62510370RX1/PDF/62510370RX1.pdf Volume I: History of individual Corps] [https://collections.nlm.nih.gov/ext/dw/62510370RX2/PDF/62510370RX2.pdf Volume II: History of disease, wounds and injuries]
{{div col end}}


==External links==
==External links==
<!-- Please, do not insert external links without discussion. Thank you! -->
{{Commons|Crimean War}}
{{Library resources box}}
{{NIE Poster|Crimean War}}
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Crimean War|author=Charles Francis Atkinson|ref=none}}
* [http://boar.org.uk/abiwxo3Bournedoc001.htm A small peace celebration: 29 May 1856]
* {{Commons-inline}}
* [http://www.crimeanwar.org/ Crimean War Research Society.]

* [http://www.victorianweb.org/history/crimea/immcauses.html Immediate causes of the War detailed in context.]
* [http://www.militaryheritage.com/enfield1853.htm Loading and Firing British Muskets in the Crimean War 1854–1856]
* [http://www.john-leech-archive.org.uk/keyword/crimean-war.htm Punch Sketches on Crimean War]
* [http://www.closebracket.com/genealogy/hastingsintro.html The Army Service of Hastings McAllister]
* [http://dl.lib.brown.edu/libweb/collections/askb/ Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection, Brown University Library] Prints, drawings, and watercolours
* [http://www.allworldwars.com/Balaclava%20and%20the%20Sevastopol%20Inquiry.html Commander W. Gordon, R.N. (H.M.S Sansapareil). Balaclava and the Sevastopol Inquiry, 1855]
* [http://www.britishembassy.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1044360079988 The Baltic Campaign of the Crimean War]
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062790/ The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968 Movie)]
* [http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/19thcentury/articles/tunisiacrimea.aspx The Tunisian Army in the Crimean War: A Military Mystery] by Dr. Andrew McGregor
* [http://histclo.com/essay/war/war-crimea.html The Crimean War]
{{Crimea topics}}
{{Crimea topics}}
{{British colonial campaigns}}
{{British colonial campaigns}}
{{Russian Conflicts}}
{{Russian Conflicts}}
{{Risorgimento}}

{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Crimean War| ]]
[[Category:Crimean War| ]]
[[Category:1850s in the Ottoman Empire]]
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Latest revision as of 16:46, 26 November 2024

Crimean War
Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe and the Russo-Turkish Wars

Attack on the Malakoff, by William Simpson
Date16 October 1853 – 30 March 1856 (1853-10-16 – 1856-03-30)
(2 years, 5 months and 2 weeks)
Location
Result Allied victory
Territorial
changes
Russia loses the Danube Delta and Southern Bessarabia.
Belligerents
 Ottoman Empire
 France[a]
 United Kingdom[a]
Kingdom of Sardinia Sardinia[b]
 Russia
 Greece[c]
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Total: 673,900
Ottoman Empire 235,568[1]
Second French Empire 309,268[2]
United Kingdom 97,864[2]
Kingdom of Sardinia 21,000[2]
Total: 889,000[2]–1,774,872[3]

888,000 mobilised
324,478 deployed
Casualties and losses

Total: 165,363 dead
45,770 combat deaths
119,593 non-combat deaths

  • Ottoman Empire 45,400 dead[2]
    20,900 combat deaths
    24,500 non-combat deaths
  • 95,615 dead[2]
    20,240 combat deaths
    75,375 non-combat deaths
  • United Kingdom 22,182 dead[2]
    4,602 combat deaths
    17,580 non-combat deaths
  • Kingdom of Sardinia 2,166 dead[2]
    28 combat deaths
    2,138 non-combat deaths
Total: 450,015 dead[4][2][5]
73,125 combat deaths
376,890 non-combat deaths
Casualties include death by disease. In all cases, death by disease exceeded the sum of "killed in action" or "died of wounds".

The Crimean War[d] was fought from October 1853 to February 1856[6] between the Russian Empire and an ultimately victorious alliance of the Ottoman Empire, France, the United Kingdom, and Sardinia-Piedmont.

Geopolitical causes of the war included the decline of the Ottoman Empire (the "Eastern Question"), the expansion of Russia in the preceding Russo-Turkish Wars, and the British and French preference to preserve the Ottoman Empire to maintain the balance of power in the Concert of Europe. The flashpoint was a disagreement over the rights of Christian minorities in Palestine, (now divided between Israel and Palestine), then part of the Ottoman Empire, with the French promoting the rights of Roman Catholics, and Russia promoting those of the Eastern Orthodox Church.[7]

The churches worked out their differences with the Ottomans and came to an agreement, but both the French Emperor Napoleon III and the Russian tsar Nicholas I refused to back down. Nicholas issued an ultimatum that demanded the Orthodox subjects of the Ottoman Empire be placed under his protection. Britain attempted to mediate and arranged a compromise to which Nicholas agreed. When the Ottomans demanded changes to the agreement, Nicholas recanted and prepared for war.

In July 1853, Russian troops occupied the Danubian Principalities[6] (now part of Romania but then under Ottoman suzerainty). On 16 October  [O.S. 4 October] 1853,[8] having obtained promises of support from France and Britain, the Ottomans declared war on Russia.[9] Led by Omar Pasha, the Ottomans fought a strong defensive campaign and stopped the Russian advance at Silistra (now in Bulgaria). A separate action on the fort town of Kars, in the Ottoman Empire, led to a siege, and an Ottoman attempt to reinforce the garrison was destroyed by a Russian fleet at the Battle of Sinop in November 1853.

Fearing the growth of influence of the Russian Empire, the British and French fleets entered the Black Sea in January 1854.[6] They moved north to Varna in June 1854 and arrived just in time for the Russians to abandon Silistra. In the Baltic, near the Russian capital of Saint Petersburg, an Anglo-French fleet instituted a naval blockade and bottled up the outnumbered Russian Baltic Fleet, causing economic damage to Russia by blockading trade while also forcing the Russians to keep a large army guarding St. Petersburg from a potential allied attack.

After a minor skirmish at Köstence (now Constanța), the allied commanders decided to attack Russia's main naval base in the Black Sea, Sevastopol, in Crimea. After extended preparations, allied forces landed on the peninsula in September 1854 and marched their way to a point south of Sevastopol after they had won the Battle of the Alma on 20 September 1854. The Russians counterattacked on 25 October in what became the Battle of Balaclava and were repulsed, but the British Army's forces were seriously depleted as a result. A second Russian counterattack at Inkerman ended in a stalemate.

By 1855, the Italian Kingdom of Sardinia sent an expeditionary force to Crimea, siding with France, Britain and the Ottoman Empire. The front settled into the Siege of Sevastopol, involving brutal conditions for troops on both sides. Smaller military actions took place in the Caucasus (1853–1855), the White Sea (July–August 1854) and the North Pacific (1854–1855).

Sevastopol finally fell after eleven months, after the French assaulted Fort Malakoff. Isolated and facing a bleak prospect of invasion by the West if the war continued, Russia sued for peace in March 1856. France and Britain welcomed the development, owing to the conflict's domestic unpopularity. The Treaty of Paris, signed on 30 March 1856, ended the war. It forbade Russia to base warships in the Black Sea. The Ottoman vassal states of Wallachia and Moldavia became largely independent. Christians in the Ottoman Empire gained a degree of official equality, and the Orthodox Church regained control of the Christian churches in dispute.[10]

The Crimean War was one of the first conflicts in which military forces used modern technologies such as explosive naval shells, railways and telegraphs.[11] The war was also one of the first to be documented extensively in written reports and in photographs. The war quickly became a symbol of logistical, medical and tactical failures and of mismanagement. The reaction in Britain led to a demand for the professionalisation of medicine, most famously achieved by Florence Nightingale, who gained worldwide attention for pioneering modern nursing while she treated the wounded.

The Crimean War marked a turning point for the Russian Empire. The war weakened the Imperial Russian Army, drained the treasury and undermined Russia's influence in Europe. The empire would take decades to recover. Russia's humiliation forced its educated elites to identify its problems and recognise the need for fundamental reforms. They saw rapid modernisation as the sole way to recover the empire's status as a European power. The war thus became a catalyst for reforms of Russia's social institutions, including the abolition of serfdom and overhauls in the justice system, local self-government, education and military service.

Eastern question

[edit]
Southeastern Europe after the Treaty of Bucharest (1812)

As the Ottoman Empire steadily weakened during the 19th century, the Russian Empire stood poised to take advantage by expanding southward. In the 1850s, the British and the French Empires were allied with the Ottoman Empire and were determined to prevent that from happening.[12] The historian A. J. P. Taylor argued that the war had resulted not from aggression, but from the interacting fears of the major players:

In some sense the Crimean War was predestined and had deep-seated causes. Neither Nicholas I nor Napoleon III nor the British government could retreat from the conflict for prestige once it was launched. Nicholas needed a subservient Turkey for the sake of Russian security; Napoleon needed success for the sake of his domestic position; the British government needed an independent Turkey for the security of the Eastern Mediterranean... Mutual fear, not mutual aggression, caused the Crimean War.[13]

Weakening of the Ottoman Empire: 1820–1840s

[edit]

In the early 1800s, the Ottoman Empire suffered a number of existential challenges. The Serbian Revolution in 1804 resulted in the autonomy of the first Balkan Christian nation under the empire. The Greek War of Independence, which began in early 1821, provided further evidence of the empire's internal and military weakness, and the commission of atrocities by Ottoman military forces (see Chios massacre) further undermined the empire. The disbandment of the centuries-old Janissary corps by Sultan Mahmud II on 15 June 1826 (Auspicious Incident) helped the empire in the longer term but deprived it of its existing standing army in the short term.[clarification needed] In 1827, the Anglo-Franco-Russian fleet destroyed almost all of the Ottoman naval forces at the Battle of Navarino. In 1830, Greece became independent after ten years of war and the Russo-Turkish War (1828–29). The Treaty of Adrianople (1829) granted Russian and Western European commercial ships free passage through the Black Sea straits. Also, Serbia received autonomy, and the Danubian Principalities (Moldavia and Wallachia) became territories under Russian protection.

France took the opportunity to occupy Algeria, which had been under Ottoman rule, in 1830. In 1831, Muhammad Ali of Egypt, the most powerful vassal of the Ottoman Empire, declared independence. Ottoman forces were defeated in a number of battles, which forced Mahmud II to seek Russian military aid. A Russian army of 10,000 landed on the shores of the Bosphorus in 1833 and helped prevent the Egyptians from capturing Constantinople.

The naval Battle of Navarino (1827), as depicted by Ambroise Louis Garneray.

"The reasons for the Tsar's disquietude are not obscure. Not Turkey alone was threatened by the advance of Ibrahim. The rights secured to Russia by a succession of treaties were also directly jeopardized. The substitution of a virile Albanian dynasty at Constantinople in place of the effete Osmanlis was the last thing desired by the Power which wished, naturally enough, to command the gate into the Mediterranean".[14] Russia was satisfied with the weak government in Constantinople (Istanbul).

As a result, the Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi was signed and greatly benefited Russia. It provided for a military alliance between the Russian and the Ottoman Empires if one of them was attacked, and a secret additional clause allowed the Ottomans to opt out of sending troops but to close the Straits to foreign warships if Russia were under threat. Egypt remained nominally under Ottoman sovereignty but was de facto independent.[citation needed]

In 1838 in a situation similar to that of 1831, Muhammad Ali of Egypt was not happy about his lack of control and power in Syria, and he resumed military action. The Ottomans lost to the Egyptians at the Battle of Nezib on 24 June 1839 but were saved by Britain, Austria, Prussia and Russia, who signed a convention in London on 15 July 1840 that granted Muhammad Ali and his descendants the right to inherit power in Egypt in exchange for the removal of Egyptian forces from Syria and Lebanon. Moreover, Muhammad Ali had to admit a formal dependence on the Ottoman sultan. After Muhammad Ali refused to obey the requirements of the convention, the allied Anglo-Austrian fleet blockaded the Nile Delta, bombarded Beirut and captured Acre. Muhammad Ali then accepted the convention's conditions.

On 13 July 1841, after the expiry of the Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi, the London Straits Convention was signed under pressure from the European countries. The new treaty deprived Russia of its right to block warships from passing into the Black Sea in case of war. Thus, the way to the Black Sea was open for British and French warships during a possible Russo-Ottoman conflict.

Russian historians tend to view that history as evidence that Russia lacked aggressive plans. The Russian historian V. N. Vinogradov writes: "The signing of the documents was the result of deliberate decisions: instead of bilateral (none of the great powers recognized this Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi), the new Treaty of London was obligatory for all, it closed the Bosphorus and Dardanelles. In the absence of expansion plans, this was a sound decision".[15][verification needed]

In 1838, Britain lost interest in crushing the Ottoman Empire. On the contrary, after the conclusion of the trade treaty of 1838 (see Treaty of Balta Liman), Britain received unlimited access to the markets of the Ottoman Empire. "Britain imposed on the Porte a Tariff Convention which in effect transformed the Ottoman Empire into a virtual free-trade zone.[16] Therefore its trade interests pushed it to protect the integrity of the Ottoman Empire. In the long term, the Ottoman Empire lost the opportunity to modernize and industrialize, but in the short term, it gained the opportunity to receive the support of European powers (primarily Britain) in opposing the desire of the conquered peoples for self-determination and Russia, which sought to crush its influence in the Balkans and Asia.

Publicly, European politicians made broad promises to the Ottomans. Lord Palmerston, the British Foreign Secretary, said in 1839: "All that we hear about the decay of the Turkish Empire, and its being a dead body or a sapless trunk, and so forth, is pure and unadulterated nonsense. Given 10 years of peace under European protection, coupled with internal reform, there seemed to him no reason why it should not become again a respectable Power".[17]

Orlando Figes has claimed that "The motives of the British in promoting liberal reforms were not just to secure the independence of the Ottoman Empire against Russia. They were also to promote the influence of Britain in Turkey", also: "to promote British free-trade interests (which may have sounded splendid but was arguably damaging to the Ottoman Empire)".[18]

"British exports to the Ottoman Empire, including Egypt and the Danubian principalities, increased nearly threefold from 1840 to 1851 (...) Thus it was very important, from the financial point of view, for Britain to prevent the Ottoman Empire from falling into other hands."[19]

"From this moment (1838) the export of British manufactured goods to Turkey rose steeply. There was an elevenfold increase by 1850".[16]

Assistance from Western European powers or Russia had twice saved the Ottoman Empire from destruction, but the Ottomans also lost their independence in foreign policy. Britain and France desired more than any other states to preserve the integrity of the Ottoman Empire because they did not want to see Russia gaining access to the Mediterranean Sea. Austria had the same fears.

Russian expansionism

[edit]
Russian siege of Varna in Ottoman-ruled Bulgaria, July–September 1828

Russia, as a member of the Holy Alliance, had operated as the "police of Europe" to maintain the balance of power that had been established in the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, and expected a free hand in settling its problems with the Ottoman Empire, the "sick man of Europe". However, Britain could not tolerate Russian dominance of Ottoman affairs, which would challenge its domination of the eastern Mediterranean.[20]

Starting with Peter the Great in the early 1700s, after centuries of Ottoman northward expansion and Crimean-Nogai raids, Russia began a southwards expansion across the sparsely-populated "Wild Fields" toward the warm water ports of the Black Sea, which does not freeze over, unlike the handful of ports controlled by Russia in the north. The goal was to promote year-round trade and a year-round navy.[21] Pursuit of that goal brought the emerging Russian state into conflict with the Ukrainian Cossacks and then the Tatars of the Crimean Khanate[22] and Circassians.[23]

"The plan to develop Russia as a southern power had begun in earnest in 1776, when Catherine placed Potemkin in charge of New Russia (Novorossiia), the sparsely populated territories newly conquered from the Ottomans on the Black Sea’s northern coastline, and ordered him to colonize the area".[24] When Russia conquered those groups and gained possession of their territories, the Ottoman Empire lost its buffer zone against Russian expansion, and both empires came into direct conflict. The conflict with the Ottoman Empire also presented a religious issue of importance, as Russia saw itself as the protector of history of the Eastern Orthodox Church under the Ottoman Orthodox Christians, who were legally treated as second-class citizens.[25] The Ottoman Reform Edict of 1856, promulgated after the war, largely reversed much of the second-class status, most notably the tax that only non-Muslims paid.[26]

Britain's immediate fear was Russia's expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. The British desired to preserve Ottoman integrity and were concerned that Russia might make advances toward British India or move toward Scandinavia or Western Europe. A distraction (in the form of the Ottoman Empire) on the Russian southwest flank would mitigate that threat. The Royal Navy also wanted to forestall the threat of a powerful Imperial Russian Navy.[27][page range too broad] Taylor stated the British perspective:

The Crimean war was fought for the sake of Europe rather than for the Eastern question; it was fought against Russia, not in favour of Turkey.... The British fought Russia out of resentment and supposed that her defeat would strengthen the European Balance of Power.[28]

Russian siege of Kars, Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829

Because of "British commercial and strategic interests in the Middle East and India",[29] the British joined the French, "cement[ing] an alliance with Britain and... reassert[ing] its military power".[29] Among those who supported the British strategy were Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.[30] In his articles for the New-York Tribune around 1853, Marx saw the Crimean War as a conflict between the democratic ideals of the west that started with the "great movement of 1789" against "Russia and Absolutism". He described the Ottoman Empire as a buffer against a pattern of expansionism by the Tsar.[31] Marx and Engels also accused Lord Palmerston of playing along with the interests of Russia and being unserious in preparing for the conflict.[32][33][30] Marx believed Palmerston to be bribed by Russia, and shared this belief with David Urquhart.[34][33] Urquhart, for his part, was a British politician who was a major advocate for the Ottoman Empire.[35][36]

Mikhail Pogodin, a professor of history at Moscow University, gave Nicholas I a summary of Russia's policy towards the Slavs in the war. Nicholas' answer was filled with grievances against the West. Nicholas shared Pogodin's sense that Russia's role as the protector of Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire was not understood and that Russia was unfairly treated by the West. Nicholas especially approved of the following passage:[37]

France takes Algeria from Turkey, and almost every year England annexes another Indian principality: none of this disturbs the balance of power; but when Russia occupies Moldavia and Wallachia, albeit only temporarily, that disturbs the balance of power. France occupies Rome and stays there several years during peacetime: that is nothing; but Russia only thinks of occupying Constantinople, and the peace of Europe is threatened. The English declare war on the Chinese, who have, it seems, offended them: no one has the right to intervene; but Russia is obliged to ask Europe for permission if it quarrels with its neighbour. England threatens Greece to support the false claims of a miserable Jew and burns its fleet: that is a lawful action; but Russia demands a treaty to protect millions of Christians, and that is deemed to strengthen its position in the East at the expense of the balance of power. We can expect nothing from the West but blind hatred and malice.... (comment in the margin by Nicholas I: 'This is the whole point').

— Mikhail Pogodin's memorandum to Nicholas I, 1853[38]

Russia was militarily weak, technologically backward and administratively incompetent. Despite its grand ambitions toward the south, it had not built its railway network in that direction, and its communications were poor. Its bureaucracy was riddled with graft, corruption and inefficiency and was unprepared for war. Its navy was weak and technologically backward. Its army, although very large, suffered from colonels who pocketed their men's pay, from poor morale, and from a technological deficit relative to Britain and France. By the war's end, the profound weaknesses of the Russian armed forces had become readily apparent, and the Russian leadership was determined to reform it.[39][40]

However, no matter how great the problems of Russia were, Russia believed those of the Ottomans were greater. "In a one-to-one fight Nikolai (Tsar) had no doubt of beating the Ottoman armies and navy".[41] Russian foreign policy failed to understand the importance of Britain's trade interests and did not understand the changes in the situation after the conclusion of the Anglo-Ottoman Treaty in 1838 (see Treaty of Balta Liman). Russia attempted to "honestly" negotiate with the United Kingdom on the partition of the Ottoman Empire and made concessions in order to eliminate all objections from the United Kingdom.

"The Tsar Nicholas had always, as we have seen, been anxious to maintain a cordial understanding with England in regard to the Eastern Question, and early in the spring of 1853 he had a series of interviews with Sir George Hamilton Seymour, then British ambassador at St. Petersburg."[42] Emperor Nicholas I assured that he did not intend to seize Constantinople and territories in the Balkans, he himself offered Britain to take over Egypt and Crete.[43] Concessions at the conclusion of the London Straits Convention were made earlier in 1841. "By signing the convention, the Russians had given up their privileged position in the Ottoman Empire and their control of the Straits, all in the hope of improving relations with Britain and isolating France".[44] But Britain after 1838 was interested in preserving the integrity of the Ottoman Empire and rejected all Russian proposals. "The fall of the Ottoman Empire was not, however, a requirement of British policy in the East. A weak Ottoman state best suited British interests".[45]

Immediate causes of war

[edit]
French Emperor Napoleon III

French Emperor Napoleon III's ambition to restore France's grandeur[46] initiated the immediate chain of events that led to France and Britain declaring war on Russia on 27 and 28 March 1854, respectively. He pursued Catholic support by asserting France's "sovereign authority" over the Christian population of Palestine,[47] to the detriment of Russia[48] (the sponsor of Eastern Orthodoxy). To achieve that, he in May 1851 appointed Charles, marquis de La Valette, a zealous leading member of the Catholic clericalists, as his ambassador to the Sublime Porte of the Ottoman Empire.[49]

Russia disputed that attempted change in authority. Referring to two previous treaties (one from 1757 and the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca from 1774), the Ottomans reversed their earlier decision, renounced the French treaty and declared that Russia was the protector of the Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire.

Napoleon III responded with a show of force by sending the ship of the line Charlemagne to the Black Sea and thereby violated the London Straits Convention.[50][47] The gunboat diplomacy show of force, together with money[citation needed], induced Ottoman Sultan Abdülmecid I to accept a new treaty confirming France and the Catholic Church's supreme authority over Catholic holy places, including the Church of the Nativity, which had been held by the Greek Orthodox Church.[51]

Tsar Nicholas I then deployed his 4th and 5th Army Corps along the River Danube in Wallachia, as a direct threat to the Ottoman lands south of the river. He had Foreign Minister Count Karl Nesselrode undertake talks with the Ottomans. Nesselrode confided to Seymour:

[The dispute over the holy places] had assumed a new character—that the acts of injustice towards the Greek church which it had been desired to prevent had been perpetrated and consequently that now the object must be to find a remedy for these wrongs. The success of French negotiations at Constantinople was to be ascribed solely to intrigue and violence—violence which had been supposed to be the ultima ratio of kings, being, it had been seen, the means which the present ruler of France was in the habit of employing in the first instance.[52]

The agreement referred to by the French was in 1740.[53] At present most historians (except for the new Russian Orthodox nationalists) accept that the question of the holy places was no more than a pretext for the Crimean War.[54] As conflict emerged over the issue of the holy places, Nicholas I and Nesselrode began a diplomatic offensive, which they hoped would prevent either British or French interference in any conflict between Russia and the Ottomans and prevent both from forming an anti-Russian alliance.

Nicholas began courting Britain by means of conversations with Seymour in January and February 1853.[55] Nicholas insisted that he no longer wished to expand the Russian Empire[55] but that he had an obligation to the Christian communities in the Ottoman Empire.[55] He next dispatched a highly-abrasive diplomat, Prince Menshikov, on a special mission to the Ottoman Sublime Porte in February 1853. By previous treaties, the sultan had committed "to protect the (Eastern Orthodox) Christian religion and its churches". Menshikov demanded a Russian protectorate over all 12 million Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire with control of the Orthodox Church's hierarchy. A compromise was reached regarding Orthodox access to the Holy Land, but the Sultan, strongly supported by the British ambassador, Stratford Canning, 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe, rejected the most sweeping demands.[56]

Russian historian Vinogradov V.N. point out that Menshikov's demands did not go beyond the limits of previous treaties. "The agreement was reached on the administration of church rites of both clergy in respected temples and, secondly, that the tsar rejected the idea of expanding his right of patronage and, in fact, insisted on confirming the terms of the Kucuk-Kaynardzhiy treaty of 1774, which allowed giving advice to the Sultan, but did not oblige them to accept".[15]

"By the early 1850s Stratford Canning had become far more than an ambassador or adviser to the Porte. The ‘Great Elchi’, or Great Ambassador, as he was known in Constantinople, had a direct influence on the policies of the Turkish government. (...) His presence was a source of deep resentment among the Sultan's ministers, who lived in terror of a personal visit from the dictatorial ambassador".[57]

Nicholas fumed at "the infernal dictatorship of this Redcliffe" whose name and political ascendancy at the Porte personified for him the whole Eastern Question,[58] The British and the French sent in naval task forces to support the Ottomans, as Russia had prepared to seize the Danubian Principalities.[59]

All the calculations of the Russian emperor turned out to be erroneous. Britain refused his proposals, it was not possible to prevent the Anglo-French rapprochement, Austria opposed his policy, the Ottoman Empire showed intransigence. On the contrary, a favourable situation was developing for Britain. Britain had great naval power and a powerful economy, but did not have a strong land army. The alliance with France, which had a strong land army, made it possible to strike at Russia. "With the help of French infantry, it was possible to overturn Russia's positions with one blow"[60]

First hostilities

[edit]
The death of Colonel Filhol de Camas of the French 6th Infantry Regiment at the Battle of Inkermann. Watercolour c1897 by Julien Le Blant.

In February 1853, the British government of Prime Minister Lord Aberdeen reappointed Lord Stratford as British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.[61] Having resigned the ambassadorship in January, he had been replaced by Colonel Rose as chargé d'affaires. Lord Stratford then turned around, sailed back to Constantinople, arriving there on 5 April 1853 and convinced the Sultan there to reject the Russian treaty proposal as compromising Ottoman independence. The Leader of the Opposition in the British House of Commons, Benjamin Disraeli, blamed Aberdeen and Stratford's actions for making war inevitable, which started the process that would force the Aberdeen government to resign in January 1855 over the war.

Shortly after the Tsar had learned of the failure of Menshikov's diplomacy toward the end of June 1853, he sent armies under the commands of Field Marshal Ivan Paskevich and General Mikhail Gorchakov across the River Prut into the Ottoman-controlled Danubian Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia. Fewer than half of the 80,000 Russian soldiers who crossed the Prut in 1853 survived. By far, nearly all of the deaths would result from sickness, rather than action,[62] since the Russian Army still suffered from medical services that ranged from bad to none.

Russia had obtained recognition from the Ottoman Empire of the Tsar's role as special guardian of the Orthodox Christians in Moldavia and Wallachia. Russia now used the Sultan's failure to resolve the issue of the protection of the Christian sites in the Holy Land as a pretext for Russian occupation of those Danubian provinces. Nicholas believed that the European powers, especially Austria, would not object strongly to the annexation of a few neighbouring Ottoman provinces, especially since Russia had assisted Austria's efforts in suppressing the Hungarian Revolution in 1849.

The United Kingdom, hoping to maintain the Ottoman Empire as a bulwark against the expansion of Russian power in Asia, sent a fleet to the Dardanelles, where it joined a fleet sent by France.[63]

Battle of Sinop

[edit]
The Russian destruction of the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Sinop on 30 November 1853 sparked the war (painting by Ivan Aivazovsky).

The European powers continued to pursue diplomatic avenues. The representatives of the four Great Powers (the United Kingdom, France, Austria and Prussia) met in Vienna, where they drafted a note, which they hoped would be acceptable to both the Russians and the Ottomans. The peace terms arrived at by the four powers at the Vienna Conference (1853) were delivered to the Russians by Austrian Foreign Minister Count Karl von Buol on 5 December 1853. The note met with the approval of Nicholas I, but Abdülmecid I rejected the proposal since he felt that the document's poor phrasing left it open to many different interpretations. The United Kingdom, France and Austria united in proposing amendments to mollify the Sultan, but the court of St. Petersburg ignored their suggestions.[64] The United Kingdom and France then set aside the idea of continuing negotiations, but Austria and Prussia did not believe that the rejection of the proposed amendments justified the abandonment of the diplomatic process.

On 23 November, a small Russian naval force discovered the Ottoman fleet harboured in Sinop and began a blockade. Once the Russian blockade was reinforced, a squadron of 6 Russian ships of the line supported by 5 smaller warships, assaulted the harbour on 30 November 1853. During Battle of Sinop, the Russian squadron destroyed a patrol squadron of 11 Ottoman warships—mostly frigates—while they were anchored in port under defence of the onshore artillery garrison.[65] The Ottoman fleet suffered a crushing defeat. The Russian victory in the naval battle in Sinope was called "the massacre of Sinope".[66] Although Russia and the Ottoman Empire were already at war, and there was no evidence of Russian atrocities, the phrase was used as propaganda in the West.[67] The press in both United Kingdom and France used Sinop as the casus belli ("cause of war") to shape the public opinion in favour of war against Russia. By 28 March 1854, after Russia ignored an Anglo-French ultimatum to withdraw from the Danubian Principalities, the United Kingdom and France had both declared war.[68][69]

Dardanelles

[edit]

Britain was concerned about Russian activity and Sir John Burgoyne, a senior advisor to Lord Aberdeen, urged for the Dardanelles to be occupied and works of sufficient strength to be built to block any Russian move to capture Constantinople and gain access to the Mediterranean. The Corps of Royal Engineers sent men to the Dardanelles, and Burgoyne went to Paris and met with the British ambassador and the French emperor. Lord Cowley wrote on 8 February to Burgoyne, "Your visit to Paris has produced a visible change in the Emperor's views, and he is making every preparation for a land expedition in case the last attempt at negotiation should break down".[70]

Burgoyne and his team of engineers inspected and surveyed the Dardanelles area in February. They were fired on by Russian riflemen when they went to Varna. A team of sappers arrived in March, and major building works commenced on a seven-mile line of defence, which was designed to block the Gallipoli Peninsula. French sappers worked on half of the line, which was finished in May.[71]

Peace attempts

[edit]
Valley of the Shadow of Death, by Roger Fenton, one of the most famous pictures of the Crimean War[72]

Nicholas felt that because of Russian assistance in suppressing the Hungarian revolution of 1848, Austria would side with him or at the very least remain neutral. Austria, however, felt threatened by the Russian troops in the Balkans. On 27 February 1854, the United Kingdom and France demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from the principalities. Austria supported them and, without declaring war on Russia, refused to guarantee its neutrality. Russia's rejection of the ultimatum proved to be the justification used by Britain and France to enter the war.

Russia soon withdrew its troops from the Danubian Principalities, which were then occupied by Austria for the duration of the war.[73] That removed the original grounds for war, but the British and the French continued with hostilities. Determined to address the Eastern Question by putting an end to the Russian threat to the Ottomans, the allies in August 1854 proposed the "Four Points" for ending the conflict in addition to the Russian withdrawal:

  • Russia was to give up its protectorate over the Danubian Principalities.
  • The Danube was to be opened up to foreign commerce.
  • The Straits Convention of 1841, which allowed only Ottoman and Russian warships in the Black Sea, was to be revised.
  • Russia was to abandon any claim granting it the right to interfere in Ottoman affairs on behalf of Orthodox Christians.

Those points, particularly the third, would require clarification through negotiations, which Russia refused. The allies, including Austria, therefore agreed that Britain and France should take further military action to prevent further Russian aggression against the Ottomans. Britain and France agreed on the invasion of Crimea as the first step.[74]

Battles

[edit]

Danube campaign

[edit]
Mahmudiye (1829) participated in numerous important naval battles, including the Siege of Sevastopol

The Danube campaign opened when the Russians occupied the Danubian Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in July 1853,[75] which brought their forces to the north bank of the River Danube. In response, the Ottoman Empire also moved its forces up to the river, establishing strongholds at Vidin in the west and Silistra[76] in the east, near the mouth of the Danube. The Ottoman move up the River Danube was also of concern to the Austrians, who moved forces into Transylvania in response. However, the Austrians had begun to fear the Russians more than the Ottomans. Indeed, like the British, the Austrians were now coming to see that an intact Ottoman Empire was necessary as a bulwark against the Russians. Accordingly, Austria resisted Russian diplomatic attempts to join the war but remained neutral during the Crimean War.[77]

After the Ottoman ultimatum in September 1853, forces under Ottoman General Omar Pasha crossed the Danube at Vidin and captured Calafat in October 1853. Simultaneously, in the east, the Ottomans crossed the Danube at Silistra and attacked the Russians at Oltenița. The resulting Battle of Oltenița was the first engagement since the declaration of war. The Russians counterattacked but were beaten back.[78] On 31 December 1853, the Ottoman forces at Calafat moved against the Russian force at Chetatea or Cetate, a small village nine miles north of Calafat, and engaged it on 6 January 1854. The battle began when the Russians made a move to recapture Calafat. Most of the heavy fighting took place in and around Chetatea until the Russians were driven out of the village. Despite the setback at Chetatea, Russian forces on 28 January 1854 laid siege to Calafat. The siege would continue until May 1854 when it was lifted by the Russians. The Ottomans would also later beat the Russians in battle at Caracal.[79]

In early 1854, the Russians again advanced by crossing the River Danube into the Turkish province of Dobruja. By April 1854, the Russians had reached the lines of Trajan's Wall, where they were finally halted. In the centre, the Russian forces crossed the Danube and laid siege to Silistra from 14 April with 60,000 troops. The defenders had 15,000 troops and supplies for three months.[80] The siege was lifted on 23 June 1854.[81] The British and the French could not then take the field for lack of equipment.[80]

French zouaves and Russian soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat at Malakhov Kurgan

In the west, the Russians were dissuaded from attacking Vidin by the presence of the Austrian forces, which had swollen to 280,000 men. On 28 May 1854, a protocol of the Vienna Conference was signed by Austria and Russia. One of the aims of the Russian advance had been to encourage the Orthodox Christian Serbs and Bulgarians who were living under Ottoman rule to rebel. When the Russian troops crossed the River Pruth into Moldavia, the Orthodox Christians showed no interest in rising up against the Ottomans.[82] Adding to Nicholas I's worries was the concern that Austria would enter the war against the Russians and attack his armies on the western flank. Indeed, after attempting to mediate a peaceful settlement between Russia and the Ottomans, the Austrians entered the war on the side of the Ottomans with an attack against the Russians in the Danubian Principalities which threatened to cut off the Russian supply lines. Accordingly, the Russians were forced to raise the siege of Silistra on 23 June 1854 and to begin abandoning the principalities.[83] The lifting of the siege reduced the threat of a Russian advance into Bulgaria.

In June 1854, the Allied expeditionary force landed at Varna, a city on the Black Sea's western coast, but made little advance from its base there.[84] Karl Marx was noted to have quipped that "there they are, the French doing nothing and the British helping them as fast as possible".[85] In July 1854, the Ottomans, under Omar Pasha, crossed the Danube into Wallachia and on 7 July 1854 engaged the Russians in the city of Giurgiu and conquered it. The capture of Giurgiu by the Ottomans immediately threatened Bucharest in Wallachia with capture by the same Ottoman army. On 26 July 1854, Nicholas I, responding to an Austrian ultimatum, ordered the withdrawal of Russian troops from the principalities. Also, in late July 1854, following up on the Russian retreat, the French staged an expedition against the Russian forces still in Dobruja, but it was a failure.[86]

By then, the Russian withdrawal was complete, except for the fortress towns of northern Dobruja, and Russia's place in the principalities was taken by the Austrians as a neutral peacekeeping force.[87] There was little further action on that front after late 1854, and in September, the allied force boarded ships at Varna to invade Crimea.[88]

Black Sea theatre

[edit]
Turkish troops storming Fort Shefketil

The naval operations of the Crimean War commenced with the dispatch in mid-1853 of the French and the British fleets to the Black Sea region, to support the Ottomans and to dissuade the Russians from encroachment. By June 1853, both fleets had been stationed at Besikas Bay, outside the Dardanelles. With the Russian occupation of the Danube Principalities in July 1853, they moved to the Bosphorus, and on 3 January 1854, they entered the Black Sea.[6]

Meanwhile, the Russian Black Sea Fleet operated against Ottoman coastal traffic between Constantinople and the Caucasus ports, and the Ottoman fleet sought to protect the supply line. The clash came on 30 November 1853, when a Russian fleet attacked an Ottoman force in the harbour at Sinop and destroyed it at the Battle of Sinop. The battle outraged British public opinion, which called for war.[89] There was little additional naval action until March 1854, when after the declaration of war, the British frigate HMS Furious was fired on outside Odessa Harbour. In response an Anglo-French fleet bombarded the port and caused much damage to the town. To show support for the Ottomans after the Battle of Sinop, on 22 December 1853, the Anglo-French squadron entered the Black Sea and the steamship HMS Retribution approached the Port of Sevastopol. Its commander received an ultimatum not to allow any ships in the Black Sea.

The French landing near Yevpatoria, Crimea, 1854

In June, the fleets transported the Allied expeditionary forces to Varna to support the Ottoman operations on the Danube. In September they again transported the armies, this time to Crimea. The Russian fleet then declined to engage the allies but preferred to maintain a "fleet in being", a strategy that failed when Sevastopol, the main port and the base of most of the Black Sea fleet, came under siege. The Russians were reduced to scuttling their warships as blockships after they had stripped them of their guns and men to reinforce batteries on shore. During the siege, the Russians lost four 110- or 120-gun, three-decker ships of the line, twelve 84-gun two-deckers and four 60-gun frigates in the Black Sea, as well as a large number of smaller vessels. During the rest of the campaign, the allied fleets remained in control of the Black Sea and ensured that the various fronts were kept supplied.

In May 1855, the allies successfully invaded Kerch and operated against Taganrog in the Sea of Azov. In September, they moved against Russian installations in the Dnieper estuary by attacking Kinburn in the first use of ironclad ships in naval warfare.

Crimean campaign

[edit]
Russo-British skirmish during the Crimean War. By Harry Payne

The Russians evacuated Wallachia and Moldavia in late July 1854. Therefore, the immediate cause of war had now been withdrawn, and the war might have then ended.[90] However, war fever among the public in both Britain and France had been whipped up by the press in both countries to the degree that politicians found it untenable to propose immediately ending the war. The coalition government of George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen, fell on 30 January 1855 on a no-confidence vote, as Parliament voted to appoint a committee to investigate the mismanagement of the war.[91]

French and British officers and engineers were sent on 20 July on Fury, a wooden Bulldog-class paddle sloop, to survey the harbour of Sevastopol and the coast near it. They managed to get close to the harbour mouth to inspect the formidable batteries. Returning, they reported that they believed that 15,000–20,000 troops were encamped.[92] Ships were prepared to transport horses, and siege equipment was both manufactured and imported.[93]

The Crimean campaign opened in September 1854. In seven columns, 360 ships sailed, each steamer towing two sailing ships.[93] Anchoring on 13 September in the bay of Yevpatoria, the town surrendered, and 500 marines landed to occupy it. The town and the bay would provide a fallback position in case of disaster.[94] The ships then sailed east to make the landing of the allied expeditionary force on the sandy beaches of Kalamita Bay, on the south-west coast of Crimea. The landing surprised the Russians, as they had expected a landing at Katcha. The last-minute change proved that Russia had known the original campaign plan. There was no sign of the enemy and so all of the invading troops landed on 14 September 1854. It took another four days to land all of the stores, equipment, horses and artillery.

The landing took place north of Sevastopol and so the Russians had arrayed their army in expectation of a direct attack. The allies advanced and on the morning of 20 September came up to the River Alma and engaged the Russian Army. The Russian position was strong, but after three hours,[95] the allied frontal attack had driven the Russians out of their dug-in positions with losses of 6,000 men. The Battle of the Alma resulted in 3,300 Allied losses. Failing to pursue the retreating forces was one of many strategic errors made during the war, and the Russians themselves noted that if the allies had pressed south that day, they would have easily captured Sevastopol.

Believing the northern approaches to the city too well defended, especially because of the presence of a large star fort and the city being on the south side of Sevastopol Bay, Sir John Burgoyne, the engineer advisor, recommended for the allies attack to Sevastopol from the south. The joint commanders, Raglan and Saint-Arnaud, agreed.[96] On 25 September, the whole army began to march southeast and encircled the city from the south after it had established port facilities at Balaclava for the British and at Kamiesch (Russian: Камышовая бухта, romanizedKamyshovaya bukhta) for the French. The Russians retreated into the city.[97][98]

The Allied armies moved without problems to the south, and the heavy artillery was brought ashore with batteries and connecting trenches built. By 10 October, some batteries were ready, and by 17 October, when the bombardment commenced—126 guns were firing, 53 of them French.[99] The fleet meanwhile engaged the shore batteries. The British bombardment worked better than that of the French, who had smaller-calibre guns. The fleet suffered high casualties during the day. The British wanted to attack that afternoon, but the French wanted to defer the attack.

A postponement was agreed, but on the next day, the French were still not ready. By 19 October the Russians had transferred some heavy guns to the southern defences and had outgunned the allies.[100]

Reinforcements for the Russians gave them the courage to send out probing attacks. The Allied lines, beginning to suffer from cholera as early as September, were stretched. The French, on the west, had less to do than the British on the east, with their siege lines and the large nine-mile open wing back to their supply base on the south coast.

Battle of Balaclava

[edit]
British cavalry charging against Russian forces at Balaclava

A large Russian assault on the allied supply base to the southeast at Balaclava was rebuffed on 25 October 1854.: 521–527  The Battle of Balaclava is remembered in Britain for the actions of two British units. At the start of the battle, a large body of Russian cavalry charged the 93rd Highlanders, who were posted north of the village of Kadikoi. Commanding them was Sir Colin Campbell. Rather than "form square", the traditional method of repelling cavalry, Campbell took the risky decision to have his Highlanders form a single line two men deep. Campbell had seen the effectiveness of the new Minié rifles with which his troops were armed at the Battle of Alma, a month earlier, and he was confident that his men could beat back the Russians. His tactics succeeded.[101] From up on the ridge to the west, Times correspondent William Howard Russell saw the Highlanders as a "thin red streak topped with steel", a phrase which soon became the "Thin Red Line".[102]

Soon afterward, a Russian cavalry movement was countered by the Heavy Brigade, which charged and fought hand to hand until the Russians retreated. That caused a more widespread Russian retreat, including a number of their artillery units. After the local commanders had failed to take advantage of the retreat, Lord Raglan sent out orders to move up and to prevent the withdrawal of naval guns from the recently captured redoubts on the heights. Raglan could see those guns because of his position on the hill. In the valley, that view was obstructed, and the wrong guns were in sight to the left. The local commanders ignored the demands, which led to the British aide-de-camp, Captain Louis Nolan, personally delivering the quickly-written and confusing order to attack the artillery. When Lord Lucan questioned to which guns the order referred, the aide-de-camp pointed to the first Russian battery that he could see and allegedly said "There is your enemy, there are your guns", because of his obstructed view, which were wrong. Lucan then passed the order to the Earl of Cardigan, which resulted in the Charge of the Light Brigade.

In that charge, Cardigan formed up his unit and charged the length of the Valley of the Balaclava, under fire from Russian batteries in the hills. The charge of the Light Brigade caused 278 casualties of the 700-man unit. The Light Brigade was memorialised in the famous poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, "The Charge of the Light Brigade". Although traditionally, the charge of the Light Brigade was looked upon as a glorious but wasted sacrifice of good men and horses, recent historians believe that the charge of the Light Brigade succeeded in at least some of its objectives.[103][page needed] The aim of any cavalry charge is to scatter the enemy's lines and frighten the enemy off the battlefield. The Charge of the Light Brigade so unnerved the Russian cavalry, which had been routed by the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, that the Russians were set to full-scale flight.[104][105]

The shortage of men led to the failure of the British and the French to follow up on the Battle of Balaclava, which led directly to the much bloodier Battle of Inkerman. On 5 November 1854, the Russians attempted to raise the siege at Sevastopol with an attack against the allies, which resulted in another allied victory.[106][page needed]

Winter of 1854–1855

[edit]
Historical map showing the territory between Balaclava and Sevastopol at the time of the Siege of Sevastopol

Winter weather and a deteriorating supply of troops and materiel on both sides led to a halt in ground operations. Sevastopol remained invested by the allies, whose armies were hemmed in by the Imperial Russian Army in the interior. On 14 November, the "Balaklava Storm," a major weather event, sank 30 allied transport ships,[107] including HMS Prince, which was carrying a cargo of winter clothing.[108]

The storm and the heavy traffic caused the road from the coast to the troops to disintegrate into a quagmire, which required engineers to devote most of their time to its repair, including by quarrying stone. A tramway was ordered and arrived in January with a civilian engineering crew, but it took until March before it had become sufficiently advanced to be of any appreciable value.[109] An electrical telegraph was also ordered, but the frozen ground delayed its installation until March, when communications from the base port of Balaklava to the British HQ was established. The pipe-and-cable-laying plough failed because of the hard frozen soil, but nevertheless 21 miles (34 km) of cable were laid.[110]

The troops suffered greatly from cold and sickness, and the shortage of fuel led them to start dismantling their defensive gabions and fascines.[111] In February 1855, the Russians attacked the allied base at Eupatoria, where an Ottoman army had built up and was threatening Russian supply routes. The Russians were defeated at the Battle of Eupatoria,[112] leading to a change in their command.

The strain of directing the war had taken its toll on the health of Tsar Nicholas. Full of remorse for the disasters that he had caused, he caught pneumonia and died on 2 March.[113]: 96 

Siege of Sevastopol

[edit]
Siege of Sevastopol
Battle of Malakoff

The allies had had time to consider the problem, and the French were brought around to agree that the key to the defence was the Malakoff.[114] Emphasis of the siege at Sevastopol shifted to the British left against the fortifications on Malakoff Hill.[115] In March, there was fighting by the French over a new fort being built by the Russians at Mamelon, on a hill in front of the Malakoff. Several weeks of fighting resulted in little change in the front line, and the Mamelon remained in Russian hands.

In April 1855, the allies staged a second all-out bombardment, which led to an artillery duel with the Russian guns, but no ground assault followed.[116]

On 24 May 1855, 60 ships, containing 7,000 French, 5,000 Turkish and 3,000 British troops, set off for a raid on the city of Kerch, east of Sevastopol, in an attempt to open another front in Crimea and to cut off Russian supplies.[117] When the allies landed the force at Kerch, the plan was to outflank the Russian Army. The landings were successful, but the force made little progress thereafter.

Many more artillery pieces had arrived and had been dug into batteries. The first general assault of Sevastopol took place on 18 June 1855. There is a legend that the assault was scheduled for that date in favour of Napoleon III in the 40th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, but the legend is not confirmed by historians.[118] However, the appearance of such a legend is undoubtedly symptomatic since the war in France was understood as a certain revanche for the defeat of 1812.

In June, a third bombardment was followed after two days by a successful attack on the Mamelon, but a follow-up assault on the Malakoff failed with heavy losses. Meanwhile, the garrison commander, Admiral Pavel Nakhimov, fell on 30 June 1855,[119] and Raglan died on 28 June.[120] Losses in those battles were so great that by agreement of military opponents short-term truces for removal of corpses were signed (these truces were described in the work of Leo Tolstoy "Sevastopol Sketches"). The assault was beaten back with heavy casualties and in an undoubted victory for Russia. It is worth mentioning that the Russian Siege of Sevastopol (panorama) depicts the moment of the assault of Sevastopol on 18 June 1855.

In August, the Russians again made an attack towards the base at Balaclava, which was defended by the French, newly arrived Sardinian and Ottoman troops.[121] The resulting Battle of the Chernaya was a defeat for the Russians, who suffered heavy casualties.

For months, each side had been building forward rifle pits and defensive positions, which resulted in many skirmishes. Artillery fire aimed to gain superiority over the enemy guns.[122] The final assault was made on 5 September, when another French bombardment (the sixth) was followed by an assault by the French Army on 8 September and resulted in the French capture of the Malakoff fort. The Russians failed to retake it and their defences collapsed. Meanwhile, the British assaulted the Great Redan, a Russian defensive battlement just south of the city of Sevastopol, a position that had been attacked repeatedly for months. Whether the British captured the Redan remains in dispute: Russian historians recognise only the loss of the Malakhov Kurgan, a key point of defence, claiming that all other positions were retained.[123] What is agreed is that the Russians abandoned the positions, blew up their powder magazines and retreated to the north. The city finally fell on 9 September 1855, after a 337-day-long siege.[113]: 106 [124]

Both sides were now exhausted, and no further military operations were launched in Crimea before the onset of winter. The main objective of the siege was the destruction of the Russian fleet and docks and took place over the winter. On 28 February, multiple mines blew up the five docks, the canal, and three locks.[125]

Azov campaign

[edit]
Disembarkation of the expedition to Kerch

In early 1855, the allied Anglo-French commanders decided to send an Anglo-French naval squadron into the Azov Sea to undermine Russian communications and supplies to besieged Sevastopol. On 12 May 1855, Anglo-French warships entered the Kerch Strait and destroyed the coast battery of the Kamishevaya Bay. Once through the Kerch Strait, British and French warships struck at every vestige of Russian power along the coast of the Sea of Azov. Except for Rostov and Azov, no town, depot, building or fortification was immune from attack, and Russian naval power ceased to exist almost overnight. This Allied campaign led to a significant reduction in supplies flowing to the besieged Russian troops at Sevastopol.

On 21 May 1855, the gunboats and armed steamers attacked the seaport of Taganrog, the most important hub near Rostov on Don. The vast amounts of food, especially bread, wheat, barley and rye, that were amassed in the city after the outbreak of war were prevented from being exported.

The Governor of Taganrog, Yegor Tolstoy, and Lieutenant-General Ivan Krasnov refused an allied ultimatum by responding, "Russians never surrender their cities". The Anglo-French squadron bombarded Taganrog for 612 hours and landed 300 troops near the Old Stairway in the centre of Taganrog, but they were thrown back by Don Cossacks and a volunteer corps.

In July 1855, the allied squadron tried to go past Taganrog to Rostov-on-Don by entering the River Don through the Mius River. On 12 July 1855 HMS Jasper grounded near Taganrog thanks to a fisherman who moved buoys into shallow water. The Cossacks captured the gunboat with all of its guns and blew it up. The third siege attempt was made 19–31 August 1855, but the city was already fortified, and the squadron could not approach close enough for landing operations. The allied fleet left the Gulf of Taganrog on 2 September 1855, with minor military operations along the Azov Sea coast continuing until late 1855.

Caucasus theatre

[edit]
Caucasus front during the Crimean War

As in the previous wars, the Caucasus front was secondary to what happened in the west. Perhaps because of better communications, western events sometimes influenced the east. The main events were the second capture of Kars and a landing on the Georgian coast. Several commanders on both sides were either incompetent or unlucky, and few fought aggressively.[126]

1853: There were four main events. 1. In the north, the Ottomans captured the border fort of Saint Nicholas in a surprise night attack (27/28 October). They then pushed about 20,000 troops across the Choloki river border. Being outnumbered, the Russians abandoned Poti and Redoubt Kali and drew back to Marani. Both sides remained immobile for the next seven months. 2. In the centre the Ottomans moved north from Ardahan to within cannon-shot of Akhaltsike and awaited reinforcements (13 November), but the Russians routed them. The claimed losses were 4,000 Turks and 400 Russians. 3. In the south about 30,000 Turks slowly moved east to the main Russian concentration at Gyumri or Alexandropol (November). They crossed the border and set up artillery south of town. Prince Vakhtang Orbeliani tried to drive them off and found himself trapped. The Ottomans failed to press their advantage; the remaining Russians rescued Orbeliani and the Ottomans retired west. Orbeliani lost about 1,000 men from 5,000. The Russians now decided to advance. The Ottomans took up a strong position on the Kars road and attacked-only to be defeated in the Battle of Başgedikler, losing 6,000 men, half their artillery and all of their supply train. The Russians lost 1,300, including Prince Orbeliani. This was Prince Ellico Orbeliani, whose wife was later kidnapped by Imam Shamil at Tsinandali. 4. At sea the Turks sent a fleet east, which was destroyed by Admiral Nakhimov at Sinope.

General Bebutashvili defeated the Ottomans at the Battle of Kurekdere.

1854: The British and French declared war on 28 March.[6] Early in the year on 3 January, the Anglo-French fleet appeared in the Black Sea,[6] and the Russians abandoned the Black Sea Defensive Line from Anapa south. Nikolay Muravyov, who replaced Vorontsov, fearing an Anglo-French landing in conjunction with Shamil, 3rd Imam of Dagestan and the Persians, recommended withdrawal north of the Caucasus. For that purpose, he was replaced by Aleksandr Baryatinsky. When the allies chose a land attack on Sevastopol, any plan for a landing in the east was abandoned.

In the north, Georgiy Evseevich Eristov pushed southwest, fought two battles, forced the Ottomans back to Batumi, retired behind the Cholok river and suspended action for the rest of the year (June). In the far south, Wrangel pushed west, fought a battle and occupied Bayazit. In the centre. the main forces stood at Kars and Gyumri. Both slowly approached along the Kars-Gyumri road and faced each other, neither side choosing to fight (June–July). On 4 August, Russian scouts saw a movement which they thought was the start of a withdrawal, the Russians advanced and the Ottomans attacked first. They were defeated and lost 8,000 men to the Russian 3,000. Also, 10,000 irregulars deserted to their villages. Both sides withdrew to their former positions. About then, the Persians made a semi-secret agreement to remain neutral in exchange for the cancellation of the indemnity from the previous war.

The Capitulation of Kars

1855: Siege of Kars: Up to May 1855, Ottomans forces in the east were reduced from 120,000 to 75,000, mostly by disease. The local Armenian population kept Muravyov well-informed about the Ottomans at Kars and he judged they had about five months of supplies. He therefore decided to control the surrounding area with cavalry and starve them out. He started in May and by June was south and west of the town. A relieving force fell back and there was a possibility of taking Erzurum, but Muravyov chose not to. In late September he learned of the fall of Sevastopol and a Turkish landing at Batum. This led him to reverse policy and try a direct attack. It failed, the Russians losing 8,000 men and the Turks 1,500 (29 September). The blockade continued and Kars surrendered on 28 November.

1855: Georgian coast: Omar Pasha, the Turkish commander at Crimea had long wanted to land in Georgia, but the western powers vetoed it. When they relented in August most of the campaigning season was lost. In 8 September Turks landed at Batum, but the main concentration was at Sukhum Kale. This required a 100-mile march south through a country with poor roads. In essence, it was a military demonstration in order to frighten the Russian command and force it to lift the siege of the fortress of Kars. "All luck depended on whether Muravyov (the Russian commander) would be scared or not".[127] But the Russian command did not see a serious threat, the Siege of Kars was continued. The Russians planned to hold the line of the Ingur river which separates Abkhazia from Georgia proper. Omar crossed the Ingur on 7 November and then wasted a great deal of time, the Russians doing little. By 2 December he had reached the Tskhenistsqali, the rainy season had started, his camps were submerged in mud and there was no bread. Learning of the fall of Kars he withdrew to the Ingur. The Russians did nothing and he evacuated to Batum in February of the following year.

Baltic theatre

[edit]
Bombardment of Bomarsund during the Crimean War, by Antoine Léon Morel-Fatio

The Baltic was a forgotten theatre of the Crimean War.[128] Popularisation of events elsewhere overshadowed the significance of this theatre, which was close to Saint Petersburg, the Russian capital. In April 1854, an Anglo-French fleet entered the Baltic to attack the Russian naval base of Kronstadt and the Russian fleet that was stationed there.[129] In August 1854, the combined British and French fleet returned to Kronstadt for another attempt. The outnumbered Russian Baltic Fleet confined its movements to the areas around its fortifications. At the same time, the British and French commanders Sir Charles Napier and Alexandre Ferdinand Parseval-Deschenes although they led the largest fleet assembled since the Napoleonic Wars, considered the Sveaborg fortress too well-defended to engage. Thus, shelling of the Russian batteries was limited to two attempts in 1854 and 1855, and initially, the attacking fleets limited their actions to blockading Russian trade in the Gulf of Finland.[129] Naval attacks on other ports, such as the ones in the island of Hogland in the Gulf of Finland, proved more successful. Additionally, allies conducted raids on less fortified sections of the Finnish coast.[130] These battles are known in Finland as the Åland War.

Russia depended on imports—both for its domestic economy and for the supply of its military forces: the blockade forced Russia to rely on more expensive overland shipments from Prussia. The blockade seriously undermined the Russian export economy and helped shorten the war.[131]

The burning of tar warehouses and ships led to international criticism, and in London the MP Thomas Milner Gibson demanded in the House of Commons that the First Lord of the Admiralty explain "a system which carried on a great war by plundering and destroying the property of defenceless villagers".[132] In fact, the operations in the Baltic sea were in the nature of binding forces. It was very important to divert Russian forces from the south or, more precisely, not to allow Nicholas to transfer to Crimea a huge army guarding the Baltic coast and the capital.[133] This goal Anglo-French forces achieved. The Russian Army in Crimea was forced to act without superiority in forces.

In August 1854 a Franco-British naval force captured and destroyed the Russian Bomarsund fortress on Åland Islands. In the August 1855, the Western Allied Baltic Fleet tried to destroy heavily defended Russian dockyards at Sveaborg outside Helsinki. More than 1,000 enemy guns tested the strength of the fortress for two days. Despite the shelling, the sailors of the 120-gun ship Rossiya, led by Captain Viktor Poplonsky, defended the entrance to the harbour. The Allies fired over 20,000 shells but failed to defeat the Russian batteries. The British then built a massive new fleet of more than 350 gunboats and mortar vessels,[134] which was known as the Great Armament, but the war ended before the attack was launched.

Part of the Russian resistance was credited to the deployment of newly invented naval mines. Perhaps the most influential contributor to the development of naval mining was a Swede resident in Russia, the inventor and civil engineer Immanuel Nobel (the father of Alfred Nobel). Immanuel Nobel helped the Russian war effort by applying his knowledge of industrial explosives, such as nitroglycerin and gunpowder. An account given in 1860 by United States Army Major Richard Delafield dates modern naval mining to the Crimean War: "Torpedo mines, if I may use this name given by Fulton to 'self-acting mines underwater', were among the novelties attempted by the Russians in their defences about Cronstadt and Sevastopol."[135]

For the campaign of 1856, Britain and France planned an attack on the main base of the Russian Navy in the Baltic sea—Kronstadt. The attack was to be carried out using armoured floating batteries. The use of the latter proved to be highly effective in the attack on Kinburn on the Black Sea in 1855. Undoubtedly, this threat contributed on the part of Russia the decision on the conclusion of peace on unfavourable terms.

White Sea theatre

[edit]
"Bombardment of the Solovetsky Monastery in the White Sea by the Royal Navy", a lubok (popular print) from 1868

In late 1854, a squadron of three British warships led by HMS Miranda left the Baltic for the White Sea, where they shelled Kola (which was destroyed)[136] and the Solovki.

Pacific theatre

[edit]

Minor naval skirmishes also occurred in the Far East, where at Petropavlovsk on the Kamchatka Peninsula a British and French Allied squadron including HMS Pique under Rear Admiral David Price and a French force under Counter-Admiral Auguste Febvrier Despointes besieged a smaller Russian force under Rear Admiral Yevfimiy Putyatin. In September 1854, an Allied landing force was beaten back with heavy casualties, and the Allies withdrew. The victory at Petropavlovsk was for Russia in the words of the future Minister of War Dmitry Milyutin "a ray of light among the dark clouds". The Russians escaped under the cover of snow in early 1855 after Allied reinforcements arrived in the region.

The Anglo-French forces in the Far East also made several small landings on Sakhalin and Urup, one of the Kuril Islands.[137]

Piedmontese involvement

[edit]
The Italian Bersaglieri halt the Russian attack during the Battle of the Chernaya.

Camillo di Cavour, under orders of Victor Emmanuel II of Piedmont-Sardinia, sent an expeditionary corps of 15,000 soldiers, commanded by General Alfonso La Marmora, to side with French and British forces during the war.[138] This was an attempt at gaining the favour of the French, especially when the issue of uniting Italy would become an important matter. The deployment of Italian troops to Crimea, and the gallantry shown by them in the Battle of the Chernaya (16 August 1855) and in the Siege of Sevastopol, allowed the Kingdom of Sardinia to be among the participants at the peace conference at the end of the war, where it could address the issue of the Risorgimento to other European powers.

Greece

[edit]
A Greek legion fought for Russia at Sevastopol

Greece played a peripheral role in the war. When Russia attacked the Ottoman Empire in 1853, King Otto of Greece saw an opportunity to expand north and south into Ottoman areas that had large Greek Christian majorities. Greece did not coordinate its plans with Russia, did not declare war, and received no outside military or financial support. Greece, an Orthodox nation, had considerable support in Russia, but the Russian government decided it was too dangerous to help Greece expand its holdings.[139] When the Russians invaded the Principalities, the Ottoman forces were tied down so Greece invaded Thessaly and Epirus. To block further Greek moves, the British and French occupied the main Greek port at Piraeus from April 1854 to February 1857,[140] and effectively neutralized the Greek Army. The Greeks, gambling on a Russian victory, incited the large-scale Epirus Revolt of 1854 as well as uprisings in Ottoman Crete. The insurrections were failures that were easily crushed by the Ottomans' allied Egyptian Army. Greece was not invited to the peace conference and made no gains out of the war.[141][142] The frustrated Greek leadership blamed the King for failing to take advantage of the situation; his popularity plunged and he was forced to abdicate in 1862.

In addition, a 1,000-strong Greek Volunteer Legion was formed in the Danubian Principalities in 1854 and later fought at Sevastopol.[143]

Kiev Cossack revolt

[edit]

A peasant revolt that began in the Vasylkiv county of Kiev Governorate (province) in February 1855 spread across the whole Kiev and Chernigov governorates, with peasants refusing to participate in corvée labour and other orders of the local authorities and, in some cases, attacking priests who were accused of hiding a decree about the liberation of the peasants.[144][better source needed]

End of the war

[edit]

British position

[edit]
One of three 17th-century church bells in Arundel Castle, England, which were taken from Sevastopol as trophies at the end of the Crimean War

Dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war was growing with the public in Britain and other countries and was worsened by reports of fiascos, especially the devastating losses of the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava. On Sunday, 21 January 1855, a "snowball riot" occurred in Trafalgar Square near St Martin-in-the-Fields in which 1,500 people gathered to protest against the war by pelting cabs and pedestrians with snowballs.[145] When the police intervened, the snowballs were directed at the constables. The riot was finally put down by troops and police acting with truncheons.[145] In Parliament, the Conservatives demanded an accounting of all soldiers, cavalry and sailors sent to Crimea and accurate figures as to the number of casualties sustained by all British armed forces in Crimea, especially concerning the Battle of Balaclava. When Parliament passed a bill to investigate by the vote of 305 to 148, Aberdeen said he had lost a vote of no confidence and resigned as prime minister on 30 January 1855.[146] The veteran former Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston became prime minister.[147] Palmerston took a hard line and wanted to expand the war, foment unrest inside the Russian Empire and reduce the Russian threat to Europe permanently. Sweden–Norway and Prussia were willing to join Britain and France, and Russia was isolated.[148]

Peace negotiations

[edit]

France, which had sent far more soldiers to the war and suffered far more casualties than Britain had, wanted the war to end, as did Austria.[149]

Negotiations began in Paris in February 1856 and were surprisingly easy. France, under the leadership of Napoleon III, had no special interests in the Black Sea and so did not support the harsh British and Austrian proposals.[150]

Peace negotiations at the Congress of Paris resulted in the signing of the Treaty of Paris on 30 March 1856.[151] In compliance with Article III, Russia restored to the Ottoman Empire the city and the citadel of Kars and "all other parts of the Ottoman territory of which the Russian troop were in possession". Russia returned the Southern Bessarabia to Moldavia.[152][153] By Article IV, Britain, France, Sardinia and Ottoman Empire restored to Russia "the towns and ports of Sevastopol, Balaklava, Kamish, Eupatoria, Kerch, Jenikale, Kinburn as well as all other territories occupied by the allied troops". In conformity with Articles XI and XIII, the Tsar and the Sultan agreed not to establish any naval or military arsenal on the Black Sea coast. The Black Sea clauses weakened Russia, which no longer posed a naval threat to the Ottomans. The Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia were nominally returned to the Ottoman Empire, and the Austrian Empire was forced to abandon its annexation and to end its occupation of them,[154] but they in practice became independent. The Treaty of Paris admitted the Ottoman Empire to the Concert of Europe, and the great powers pledged to respect its independence and territorial integrity.[155]

Aftermath in Russia

[edit]

Some members of the Russian intelligentsia saw defeat as a pressure to modernise their society. Grand Duke Constantine, a son of the Tsar, remarked:[156]

We cannot deceive ourselves any longer; we must say that we are both weaker and poorer than the first-class powers, and furthermore poorer not only in material terms but in mental resources, especially in matters of administration.

Long-term effects

[edit]
The Congress of Paris by Edouard Dubufe. The Treaty of Paris brought an end to the war.

Orlando Figes points to the long-term damage Russia suffered: "The demilitarization of the Black Sea was a major blow to Russia, which was no longer able to protect its vulnerable southern coastal frontier against the British or any other fleet... The destruction of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, Sevastopol and other naval docks was a humiliation. No compulsory disarmament had ever been imposed on a great power previously... The Allies did not really think that they were dealing with a European power in Russia. They regarded Russia as a semi-Asiatic state... In Russia itself, the Crimean defeat discredited the armed services and highlighted the need to modernize the country's defences, not just in the strictly military sense, but also through the building of railways, industrialization, sound finances and so on... The image many Russians had built up of their country—the biggest, richest and most powerful in the world—had suddenly been shattered. Russia's backwardness had been exposed... The Crimean disaster had exposed the shortcomings of every institution in Russia—not just the corruption and incompetence of the military command, the technological backwardness of the army and navy, or the inadequate roads and lack of railways that accounted for the chronic problems of supply, but the poor condition and illiteracy of the serfs who made up the armed forces, the inability of the serf economy to sustain a state of war against industrial powers, and the failures of autocracy itself."[157]

Crimean War Memorial at Waterloo Place, St James's, London

The Treaty of Paris stood until 1871, when Prussia defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. While Prussia and several other German states united to form a powerful German Empire in January 1871, the French deposed Emperor Napoleon III and proclaimed the French Third Republic (September 1870). During his reign, Napoleon, eager for the support of the United Kingdom, had opposed Russia over the Eastern Question. Russian interference in the Ottoman Empire did not in any significant manner threaten the interests of France (Kissinger uses Napoleon's pandering to journalists and public opinion on this subject—at the expense of the true interests of France—as an example of strategic frivolity[158]), and France abandoned its opposition to Russia after the establishment of the republic. Encouraged by the new attitude of French diplomacy after the surrenders of the besieged French Army at Sedan and later Metz and supported by the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, Russia in October 1870 renounced the Black Sea clauses of the treaty agreed to in 1856. As the United Kingdom with Austria-Hungary[159] could not enforce the clauses, Russia once again established a fleet in the Black Sea.

Sebastopol Monument, Halifax, Nova Scotia – the only Crimean War Monument in North America

After being defeated in the Crimean War, Russia feared that Russian Alaska would be easily captured in any future war with the British; therefore, Alexander II opted to sell the territory to the United States.[160]

A Greek tortoise named Timothy was found on a Portuguese ship by Captain John Guy Courtenay-Everard on HMS Queen in 1854. Serving as a mascot throughout the war, when she died in 2004 this made her the last living veteran of the Crimean war.[161]

Historian Norman Rich argues that the war was not an accident, but was sought out by the determination of the British and French not to allow Russia an honourable retreat. Both insisted on a military victory to enhance their prestige in European affairs when a non-violent peaceful political solution was available. The war then wrecked the Concert of Europe, which had long kept the peace.[162]

Turkish historian Candan Badem wrote, "Victory in this war did not bring any significant material gain, not even a war indemnity. On the other hand, the Ottoman treasury was nearly bankrupted due to war expenses". Badem adds that the Ottomans achieved no significant territorial gains, lost the right to a navy in the Black Sea, and failed to gain status as a great power. Further, the war gave impetus to the union of the Danubian principalities and ultimately to their independence.[163]

The treaty punished the defeated Russia, but in the long run, Austria lost the most from the war despite having barely taken part in it.[164] Having abandoned its alliance with Russia, Austria remained diplomatically isolated following the war,[164] which contributed to its disastrous defeats in the 1859 Franco-Austrian War that resulted in the cession of Lombardy to the Kingdom of Sardinia and later in the loss of the Habsburg rule of Tuscany and Modena, which meant the end of Austrian influence in peninsular Italy. Furthermore, Russia did not do anything to assist its former ally, Austria, in the 1866 Austro-Prussian War,[164] when Austria lost Venetia and, more importantly, its influence in most German-speaking lands. The status of Austria as a great power, with the unifications of Germany and Italy, now became very precarious. It had to compromise with Hungary; the two countries shared the Danubian Empire. With France now hostile to Germany and gravitating towards Russia, and with Russia competing with the newly renamed Austro-Hungarian Empire for an increased role in the Balkans at the expense of the Ottoman Empire, the foundations were in place for building the diplomatic alliances that would shape the First World War.

The Treaty's guarantees to preserve Ottoman territories were broken 21 years later when Russia, exploiting nationalist unrest in the Balkans and seeking to regain lost prestige, once again declared war on the Ottoman Empire on 24 April 1877. In this later Russo-Turkish War the states of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro gained international recognition of their independence and Bulgaria achieved its autonomy from direct Ottoman rule. Russia took over Southern Bessarabia,[165] lost in 1856. The regions of Batum and Kars, as well as those inhabited by Adjarians (Muslim Georgians) and Armenians, were also annexed to Russia in the Caucasus. At the same time, "protectors" of the Ottoman Empire Britain received Cyprus as a colonial possession, while Austria-Hungary occupied and annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908. Finally, Ottoman rule in the Balkans ended after the First Balkan War of 1912, when the combined forces of the Balkan states defeated it.

The Crimean War marked the re-ascendancy of France to the position of pre-eminent power on the Continent,[166] the continued decline of the Ottoman Empire and a period of crisis for Imperial Russia. As Fuller notes, "Russia had been beaten on the Crimean Peninsula, and the military feared that it would inevitably be beaten again unless steps were taken to surmount its military weakness."[167] To compensate for its defeat in the Crimean War, the Russian Empire then embarked in more intensive expansion in Asia, partially to restore national pride and partially to distract Britain on the world stage, intensifying the Great Game.[168][169]

The war also marked the demise of the first phase of the Concert of Europe, the balance-of-power system that had dominated Europe since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and had included France, Russia, Prussia, Austria and the United Kingdom. From 1854 to 1871, the Concert of Europe concept was weakened, leading to the crises that were the unifications of Germany and of Italy, before a resurgence of great power conferences.[170]

In 1870, Prussia persuaded Russia to remain neutral in the Franco-Prussian war.[171] Bismarck, having declared it impossible to keep 100 million Russians in a humiliated position without sovereign rights to their Black Sea coastline,[172] supported Russia against the Treaty of Paris, and in return, Prussia achieved freedom of action against France in 1870–71 and inflicted a crushing defeat on it.

Historical analysis

[edit]

According to historian Shepard Clough, the war

was not the result of a calculated plan, nor even of hasty last-minute decisions made under stress. It was the consequence of more than two years of fatal blundering in slow-motion by inept statesmen who had months to reflect upon the actions they took. It arose from Napoleon's search for prestige; Nicholas's quest for control over the Straits; his naïve miscalculation of the probable reactions of the European powers; the failure of those powers to make their positions clear; and the pressure of public opinion in Britain and Constantinople at crucial moments.[173]

The view of "diplomatic drift" as the cause of the war was first popularised by A. W. Kinglake, who portrayed the British as victims of newspaper sensationalism and duplicitous French and Ottoman diplomacy.

More recently, historians Andrew Lambert and Winfried Baumgart have argued that Britain was following a geopolitical strategy in aiming to destroy the fledgling Russian Navy, which might challenge the Royal Navy for control of the seas, and that the war was also a joint European response to a century of Russian expansion not just southwards but also into Western Europe.[68][153]

Documentation

[edit]

Documentation of the war was provided by William Howard Russell, who wrote for The Times newspaper, and by Roger Fenton's photographs.[174] News from war correspondents reached all of the nations involved in the war and kept the public citizenry of those nations better informed of the day-to-day events of the war than had been the case in any earlier war. The British public was very well informed on the day-to-day realities of the war. After the French extended the telegraph to the coast of the Black Sea in late 1854, news reached London in two days. When the British laid an underwater cable to Crimea in April 1855, news reached London in a few hours. The daily news reports energised public opinion, which brought down the Aberdeen government and carried Lord Palmerston into office as prime minister.[175][176]

Leo Tolstoy wrote a few short sketches on the Siege of Sevastopol, collected in Sevastopol Sketches. The stories detail the lives of the Russian soldiers and citizens in Sevastopol during the siege. Because of this work, Tolstoy has been called the world's first war correspondent.[177]

Criticisms and reform

[edit]
During the Crimean War, Florence Nightingale and her team of nurses used new statistical approaches to raise awareness, clean up the military hospitals and set up the first training school for nurses in the United Kingdom.[178]

Historian R. B. McCallum points out the war was enthusiastically supported by the British populace as it was happening, but the mood changed very dramatically afterwards. Pacifists and critics were unpopular but:

in the end they won. Cobden and Bright were true to their principles of foreign policy, which laid down the absolute minimum of intervention in European affairs and a deep moral reprobation of war... When the first enthusiasm was passed, when the dead were mourned, the sufferings revealed, and the cost counted, when in 1870 Russia was able calmly to secure the revocation of the Treaty, which disarmed her in the Black Sea, the view became general of the war was stupid and unnecessary, and effected nothing... The Crimean war remained as a classic example... of how governments may plunge into war, how strong ambassadors may mislead weak prime ministers, how the public may be worked up into a facile fury, and how the achievements of the war may crumble to nothing. The Bright-Cobden criticism of the war was remembered and to a large extent accepted [especially by the Liberal Party]. Isolation from European entanglements seemed more than ever desirable.[179][180]

As the memory of the "Charge of the Light Brigade" demonstrates, the war became an iconic symbol of logistical, medical and tactical failures and mismanagement. Public opinion in Britain was outraged at the logistical and command failures of the war; the newspapers demanded drastic reforms, and parliamentary investigations demonstrated the multiple failures of the army.[181] The reform campaign was not well organised, and the traditional aristocratic leadership of the army pulled itself together, and blocked all serious reforms. No one was punished. The outbreak of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 shifted attention to the heroic defence of British interest by the army, and further talk of reform went nowhere.[182] The demand for professionalisation was achieved by Florence Nightingale, who gained worldwide attention for pioneering and publicising modern nursing while treating the wounded.[183] Another nurse, a Jamaican named Mary Seacole, also made an impact providing care for wounded and dying soldiers. The Times war correspondent William Howard Russell spoke highly of Seacole's skill as a healer, writing "A more tender or skilful hand about a wound or a broken limb could not be found among our best surgeons."[184]

Outstanding achievements in battlefield surgery were done during the war of 1853–56. "Nikolai Pirogov, who pioneered the system of field surgery that other nations came to only in the First World War".[185]

The Crimean War also saw the first tactical use of railways and other modern inventions, such as the electric telegraph, with the first "live" war reporting by Russell. Some credit Russell with prompting the resignation of the sitting British government through his reporting of the lacklustre condition of British forces deployed in Crimea. Additionally, the telegraph reduced the independence of British overseas possessions from their commanders in London due to such rapid communications. Newspaper readership informed public opinion in the United Kingdom and France as never before.[186]

The Crimean War was a contributing factor in the Russian abolition of serfdom in 1861: Tsar Alexander II (Nicholas I's son and successor) saw the military defeat of the Russian serf-army by free troops from Britain and France as proof of the need for emancipation.[187] The Crimean War also led to the realisation by the Russian government of its technological inferiority, in military practices as well as weapons.[188][better source needed] Alexander also initiated the Great Reforms, which were aimed at strengthening and modernising the Russian state in the light of weaknesses revealed by the war.

Chronology of major battles of the war

[edit]
FitzRoy Somerset, Omar Pasha and Marshal Pélissier

See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b From 1854
  2. ^ From 1855
  3. ^ Until 1854
  4. ^

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Badem 2010, p. 280.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Clodfelter 2017, p. 180.
  3. ^ Brooks, E. Willis (1984). "Reform in the Russian Army, 1856-1861". Slavic Review. 43 (1): 63–82. JSTOR 2498735.
  4. ^ Figes 2010, p. 489.
  5. ^ Mara Kozelsky, "The Crimean War, 1853–56." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 13.4 (2012): 903–917 online.
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  10. ^ Figes 2010, p. 415.
  11. ^ Royle 2000, Preface.
  12. ^ Matthew Smith Anderson, The Eastern Question, 1774–1923: A Study in International Relations. p. 37.
  13. ^ Taylor 1954, pp. 60–61.
  14. ^ Marriott 1917, p. 222.
  15. ^ a b V. N. Vinogradov (2006). "Lord Palmerston in European diplomacy". New and Recent History [ru] (in Russian) (5): 182–209.
  16. ^ a b Figes 2011, p. 32.
  17. ^ Marriott 1917, p. 214.
  18. ^ Figes 2011, p. 58.
  19. ^ Badem 2010, p. 59.
  20. ^ Seton-Watson, Hugh (1988). The Russian Empire 1801–1917. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 280–319. ISBN 978-0-19-822152-4.
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  42. ^ Marriott 1917, p. 229.
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  48. ^ Figes 2010, p. 103.
  49. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 7–9.
  50. ^ Figes 2010, p. 104.
  51. ^ Royle 2000, p. 20.
  52. ^ Royle 2000, p. 21.
  53. ^ Royle 2000, p. 18.
  54. ^ Badem 2010, p. 65.
  55. ^ a b c Figes 2010, p. 105.
  56. ^ Jelavich, Barbara (2004). Russia's Balkan Entanglements, 1806–1914. Cambridge University Press. pp. 118–122. ISBN 978-0-521-52250-2.
  57. ^ Figes 2010, p. 64.
  58. ^ Lord Kinross The Ottoman Centuries
  59. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 111–115.
  60. ^ V. N. Vinogradov (2006). "Lord Palmerston in European diplomacy". New and Recent History [ru] (in Russian) (5): 182–209.
  61. ^ Figes 2010, p. 110.
  62. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 118–119.
  63. ^ Lawrence Sondhaus (2012). Naval Warfare, 1815–1914. Routledge. pp. 1852–1855. ISBN 978-1134609949.
  64. ^ Figes 2010, p. 143.
  65. ^ Tucker 2009, p. [page needed].
  66. ^ Marriott 1917, p. 234.
  67. ^ O.Figes, The Crimean War. Metropolitan Books. New York. 2014, p. 137
  68. ^ a b Lambert, Andrew (2011). The Crimean War: British Grand Strategy Against Russia, 1853–56. Ashgate. pp. 94, 97. ISBN 978-1409410119.
  69. ^ Bartlett, Christopher John (1993). Defence and Diplomacy: Britain and the Great Powers, 1815–1914. Manchester UP. pp. 51–52. ISBN 978-0719035203.
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  71. ^ Porter 1889, p. 412.
  72. ^ Figes 2012, p. 307.[incomplete short citation]
  73. ^ Arnold 2002, p. 13.
  74. ^ Small 2007, pp. 23, 31.
  75. ^ Edgerton, Robert B (1999). Death or glory : the legacy of the Crimean War. p. 15.
  76. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 172–184.
  77. ^ Taylor 1954, pp. 64–81.
  78. ^ Badem 2010, pp. 101–109.
  79. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 130–143.
  80. ^ a b Porter 1889, p. 415.
  81. ^ James J. Reid (2000). Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839–1878. Franz Steiner Verlag. pp. 242–262. ISBN 978-3515076876.
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  83. ^ Figes 2010, p. 185.
  84. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 175–176.
  85. ^ Troubetzkoy 2006, p. 192.
  86. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 188–190.
  87. ^ Figes 2010, p. 189.
  88. ^ Figes 2010, p. 198.
  89. ^ Arnold 2002, p. 95.
  90. ^ Figes 2010, p. 192.
  91. ^ Figes 2010, p. 311.
  92. ^ Porter 1889, p. 421.
  93. ^ a b Porter 1889, p. 422.
  94. ^ Figes 2010, p. 201.
  95. ^ Porter 1889, p. 424.
  96. ^ Porter 1889, p. 426.
  97. ^ The famous dispatches of a British war correspondent appear in William Howard Russell, The Great War with Russia: The Invasion of the Crimea; a Personal Retrospect of the Battles of the Alma, Balaclava and Inkerman, and of the Winter of 1854–55 (Cambridge University Press, 2012)
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  100. ^ Porter 1889, p. 431.
  101. ^ Greenwood 2015, ch. 8.
  102. ^ John Millin Selby, The thin red line of Balaclava (London: Hamilton, 1970)
  103. ^ Sweetman, John (1990), Balaclava 1854: The charge of the light brigade, Osprey Publishing
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  105. ^ Small 2007.
  106. ^ Mercer, Patrick (1998), Inkerman 1854: The Soldiers' Battle
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  109. ^ Porter 1889, p. 439.
  110. ^ Porter 1889, p. 449.
  111. ^ Porter 1889, p. 442.
  112. ^ Figes 2010, pp. 321–322.
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  117. ^ Figes 2010, p. 344.
  118. ^ Tarle 1950, p. 367.
  119. ^ Figes 2010, p. 378.
  120. ^ Porter 1889, p. 460.
  121. ^ Porter 1889, p. 461.
  122. ^ Porter 1889, pp. 450–462.
  123. ^ Tarle 1950, p. 462.
  124. ^ Leo Tolstoy, Sebastopol (2008) ISBN 1-4344-6160-2; Tolstoy wrote three firsthand battlefield observations "Sebastopol Sketches."
  125. ^ Porter 1889, p. 471.
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Sources

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Further reading

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  • Bridge; Bullen (2005). The Great Powers and the European States System 1814–1914. London: Pearson Education.
  • Cox, Michael; Lenton, John (1997), Crimean War Basics: Organisation and Uniforms: Russia and Turkey
  • Curtiss, John Shelton (1979), Russia's Crimean War, Duke University Press, ISBN 0-8223-0374-4
  • Goldfrank, David M. (1993). The Origins of the Crimean War.
  • Gorizontov, Leonid E. (2012). "The Crimean War as a Test of Russia's Imperial Durability". Russian Studies in History. 51 (1): 65–94. doi:10.2753/rsh1061-1983510103. S2CID 153718909.
  • Hoppen, K. Theodore (1998). The Mid-Victorian Generation, 1846–1886. pp. 167–183. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  • Lambert, Andrew (1989). "Preparing for the Russian War: British Strategic Planning, March, 1853 – March 1854". War & Society. 7 (2): 15–39. doi:10.1179/106980489790305605.
  • Martin, Kingsley (1963), The triumph of Lord Palmerston: a study of public opinion in England before the Crimean War, Hutchinson – via archive.org
  • Pearce, Robert (2011). "The Results of the Crimean War". History Review (70): 27–33.
  • Ponting, Clive (2004). The Crimean War. Chatto and Windus. ISBN 0-7011-7390-4.
  • Pottinger Saab, Anne (1977). The Origins of the Crimean Alliance. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 0-8139-0699-7.
  • Puryear, Vernon J (1931). "New Light on the Origins of the Crimean War". Journal of Modern History. 3 (2): 219–234. doi:10.1086/235723. JSTOR 1871715. S2CID 143747863.
  • Ramm, Agatha, and B. H. Sumner. "The Crimean War." in J. P. T. Bury, ed., The New Cambridge Modern History: Vol. 10: The Zenith of European Power, 1830–1870 (1960) pp. 468–492, short survey online
  • Rath, Andrew C. The Crimean War in Imperial Context, 1854–1856 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
  • Rich, Norman Why the Crimean War: A Cautionary Tale (1985) McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-052255-3
  • Ridley, Jasper. Lord Palmerston (1970) pp. 425–454 online
  • Schroeder, Paul W. Austria, Great Britain, and the Crimean War: The Destruction of the European Concert (Cornell Up, 1972) online Archived 9 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • Schmitt, Bernadotte E (1919). "The Diplomatic Preliminaries of the Crimean War". American Historical Review. 25 (1): 36–67. doi:10.2307/1836373. hdl:2027/njp.32101066363589. JSTOR 1836373.
  • Seton-Watson, R.W. (1938), Britain in Europe, 1789–1914 (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on 17 August 2021 – via archive.org
  • Temperley, Harold W. V. England and the Near East: The Crimea (1936) online
  • Trager, Robert F. "Long-term consequences of aggressive diplomacy: European relations after Austrian Crimean War threats." Security Studies 21.2 (2012): 232–265. Online Archived 7 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • Wetzel, David The Crimean War: A Diplomatic History (1985) Columbia University Press ISBN 0-88033-086-4
  • Zayonchkovski, Andrei (2002) [1908–1913]. Восточная война 1853–1856 [Eastern War 1853–1856]. Великие противостояния (in Russian). Saint Petersburg: Poligon. ISBN 978-5-89173-157-8.

Historiography and memory

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Contemporary sources

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