Crimea in war and transformation:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Oxford University Press
[2019]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Literaturverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Beschreibung: | xi, 280 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten |
ISBN: | 9780190644710 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ix
Note on Transliteration xi
Introduction 3
1. Mobilizing the Home Front 13
2. Crimea under Attack 33
3. Tatars and Cossacks 58
4. Civilians in the Line of Fire 75
5. The Feeding Ground 91
6. People s War, or War against the People? 115
7. The Kerch Strait and the Azov Sea 135
8. Between War and Peace 153
Vll
viii CONTENTS
9. Reconstruction 175
10. Transformation 199
Notes 209
Selected Bibliography 255
Index 271
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abbreviations
Archives
RGIA
RGVIA
RNB
GAOO
GAARK
Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi istoricheskii arkhiv
Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi voenno- istoricheskii arkhiv
Otdel rukopisei. Rossiiskii NatsionaTnaia Biblioteka
Gosudarstvennyi Arkhiv Odesskoi ObJasti
Gosudarstvennyi Arkhiv v Avtonomnoi Respublike Krym
Journals, Newspapers, Reference Works
AI
ASI
AHR
ASEER
CSP
GK
ITUAK
JGO
JMH
Kritika:
NK
oz
PSZRI
RR
RS
RBS
Ab Imperio
Acta Slavica Iaponica
American Historical Review
American Slavic and East European Review
Canadian Slavonic Papers/Revue canadienne des slavistes
Golos Kryma
Izvestiia Tavricheskoi Uchenoi Arkhivnoi Kommissii
Jahrbücher fur Geschichte Osteuropas
Journal of Modern History
Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History
Novorossiiskii Kalendar
Otechestvennye zapiski
Polnoe sobranie zakonov Rossiiskoi imperii
Russian Review
Russkaia Starina
Russkii biograficheskii slovar
255
256 SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
RV Russkii Vestnik
SP Severnaia Pchela
SR Slavic Review
SEER Slavonic and East European Review
VI Voprosy Istorii
Archival Notation
f. fond (collection)
op. opts (inventory)
d. delo (file)
1-, H. list listy (folio, folios)
Archives
Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi istoricheskii arkhiv (RGIA)
Fond 20: Department torgovli i manufaktur/MF
Fond 383: Pervyi Department Ministerstva Gosudarstvennykh Imushchestv
Fond 560: Obshchaia kantseliariia ministra finansov
Fond 651: Vasil’chikovi
Fond 796: Kantseliaria sinoda
Fond 797: Kantseliaria ober-prokurora sinoda
Fond 1263: Komitet Ministrov (1802-1906)
Fond 1287; Khoziaistvennyii department MVD
Fond 821: Department Dukhovnykh Del Inostrannykh Ispovedanii MVD
Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi voenno-istoricheskii arkhiv (RGVIA)
Fond 846: Voenno-uchenyi Arkhiv
Otdel rukopisei. Rossiiskii NatsionaPnaia Biblioteka (RNB)
Fond 313: Lichnyi arkhivnyi fond Arkhiepiskopa Innokentiia
Gosudarstvennyi Arkhiv Odesskoi Oblasti (GAOOJ
Fond 1: Kantseliarii Novorossii i Bessarabii
Fond 37: Khersonskaia Dukhovnaia Konsistoriia
Gosudarstvennyi Arkhiv v Avtonomnoi Respublike Krym (GAARK)
Fond 26: Kantseliariia Tavriskogo gubernatora
Fond 27: Tavriskoe gubernskoe pravlenie
Fond 52: Tavricheskii gubemskii komitet po uluchsheniiu byta pomeshchich’ikh krest’ian
Fond 64: Bakhchisaraiskii gorodskaia uprava
Fond 128: Simferopol skii uezdnyi komitet, uchrezhdennyi dlia predostavleniia pomoshchi
zhiteliam uezda postradavshim ot voiny 1853-56
Fond 165: Kerchenskii gorodskoi komitet o privedenii vedomosti ubytkov i okazaniia pomoshchii
zhiteliam Kerch-Enikal skogo gradonachal stva, g. Feodosiia i Feodoskogo uezda
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 257
Fond 197: Simferopol skaia Gorodskaia Politsiia
Fond 315: Tavricheskoe Magometanskoe dukhovnie sobranie
Fond 327: Kantseliariia Tavricheskogo gubernskogo predvoditelia dvorianstva
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INDEX
Page numbers followed by/and t refer to figures and tables, respectively.
Abdulaeva, Gulnara, 204
Adlerberg, Nikolai Vladimirovich, 12, 73,
116, 125-33,142, 147 159-62, 165-66,
168, 170-71,178
Adrianople, 38
agriculture, 7
destruction of, 81—82, 88-89,102-3,
160-61,196-97
restoration plans, 170—71,190—92
“Aisha,” 125—26
Akkerman, 38
Aleksandrov, 179
Aleshka, 13
Alexander 1,17,18, 29, 117
Alexander II, 7, 10, u, 72,106, no, 127,
133, 154-55» 162,170-71,175,177,189,
193,196, 198, 205, 207
Allies (Allied forces)
at Alma, 58
April 1854 invasion, 44—46
at Balaklava, 82, 83, 84
at Berdiansk, 143—47
at Chernaya River, 153
and Cossacks, 66, 68
departure from Varna, 43
economic warfare, 7
and Feodosia, 158-59
at Inkerman, 84—85
at Kerch, 135-43
and Orthodox Christianity, n
September 1854 invasion, 47—54
and Sevastopol, 42, 79, 154-57
Tatar collaboration with, 126—27
and Tatar mutiny, 60-63, 7^
troop numbers at time of invasion, 33
Alma, battle of, 24, 48, 58, 68, 76-79,
81, 84-85, 87, 93-94, 98, 125, 128,
130,154
Amanton, Victor, 80
Americans, 35, 40, 63, 78, 95,135-36,177 *93
Amin, Muhammad, 60
Anapa, 38
animals
and cleansing of Sevastopol, 87
decimation of population, 3
and imperial program for relief, 183
oxen, 100-104, 108, no, 180-81
as provisions for invading armies, 5
in winter of 1854—1855, 91
See also horses
271
272 INDEX
Annenkov, Nikolai Nikolaevich, 12, 50,
62-65, 76, ni-12,115,121,158,184
anti-Islamic sentiment, 9-11, 27, 200-201,
203, 207
anti-Semitism, 105
Aqmescit, 4
Arabat, 15, 21
Armenians, 4, 20
Armiansk, 50
Assan-Chilibi, Seid, 132
auls, 71
Austria, 15, 25, 38, 39, 41-42, 75, 85,119
Azov Sea, 6, 8,15, 24, 33, 37-40, 66,123,
Í34-39,141,143,145-50,149Í, 153—54,
157-58,171
Badem, Candan, 60
Baiazet, 121
Bakhchisarai, 4, 21, 64, 68—69, 78» 81,
83-84, 86, 88, 93, 95, 98-99, 102-3,
no, 126, 154-55» 160, 175,177,182,
187.191
Bakunina, Ekaterina Mikhailovna, 95,177
Balaklava, 34, 63, 68, 76-86, 88, 90f 92,
94,103, ni-12,158-59,162,167-68,
170.177.180.188.191
Baltic Fleet, 36
bashi-bozouks, 65
Bazancourt, César de, 47, 60, 79
Belarus, 117
Belbek River, 58, 78, 154, 156,
160-61,187
Bender, Moldavia, 41
Benderskol, 179
Berdiansk, 4, 20, 22, 71,104-5, IIO I27
D5-36 140-41» 143-49» 158,161,180,
184,190, 202
Berislav, 21, 65
Bernadaki estate, 69
Bessarabia, 15, 24, 41-42, 58, 75-76,101,
105, hi, 119-20,129,163,176,178-79,
183, 204
Birliuk, 87
Black Sea Fleet, 9, 23, 36, 39, 58, 81,156
Bradke, Egor Fedorovich von, 22, 29,116,
in, 124,128, 207
Britain and British
at Balaklava, 80-83,167
economic warfare, 136
entry into war, 22
historical perspective on war, 8
at Kerch, 138,140,141,148
Kinburn campaign, 156-57
and prisoners, 158-59,169
and September 1854 invasion, 47-54
and Tatar mutiny, 60, 61, 63
brothels, 165
Bug River, 30,178
Bukhta, 48
Bulgaria and Bulgarians, 24, 61,119,142,
168-69,191, 202, 203-5
Calthorpe, Somerset John, 49, 52, 54, 61,
83,103
camels, 101
carriages, 181
Catherine the Great, 4—5,11, 27—29, 34, 36,
68, 88,122,157, 171, 206
Cattley, Charles, 127,145
census, 176
“Charge of the Light Brigade”
(Tennyson), 6, 83
charity, 17-21
Charykov, Valerii Ivanovich, 59, 62,
64-65, 78
Chernaev, G. N., 144-45,147,158
Chernaya River, 58, n^fi 163
Chernigov, 29, 202
Chersonesos, 11, 79
Chodasiewicz, Roberto Adolfo, 40, 78, 127
cholera, 3, 42-43, 47-4$, 5°» 54» 62, 65,
81-82, 86-87, 96» 103,107,122,
138,164
cholera riots, 42, 47, 82
Chorgun, 62, 68, 80, 83, 88,170
civilians, 75-89
in Balaklava, 80-84
effect of military obligations on, 102-6
in Inkerman, 84-85
occupations effect on, 85-89
in Sevastopol, 77-79
Clement, Pope, 84
Codman, John, 40, 42, 63,135,164
commanders, 12,14-15,17-18, 24, 38,
41-43, 76, 82, 92-93» 99» lo7 120»
129,136,148,160, 206
Committee of Ministers, 112,179-80
Constantine, Grand Duke, 17,18, 136,193
INDEX 273
Cossacks
in Berdiansk, 144-47
in Caucasus, 16
conditions in winter of 1854—1855, 91—92
in Evpatoria, 49
and horses, 101
in Kerch, 143
plundering of provisions, 99
and Tatar mutiny, 60—73
and Tatar relocation, 128-31
Crimea
1783 Russian annexation of, 4
maps, 12/-13/ 3 if,tff-wf
Crimean Tatar Life Guard Squadron, 29
Crimean Tatars. See Tatars
Dannenberg, Piotr Andreevich, 85
Danube River, 178
Danubian Principalities, 15
“Daria of Sevastopol/’ 79
Davydov, Denis Vasilievich, 117
Decembrists, 176
Delane, John, 206
demography, 8
Dneprov, 179
Dneprovsk, 4, 45-46, 71,104, no, 157, 184
Dnepr River, 178
Dolgorukov, Vasily Andreevich, 13,15, 18,
22-24, 38-39
donations, 17—21
Don Cossacks, 15, 65-66, 76, 99,131,
135,181
Duberly, Frances, Lady, 48, 81, 84
Dubrovin, Nikolai Fedorovich, 139-40
Dzhankichev, Selim Murza, 87—88,187
Eastern Question, 205
Ekaterinoslav, 15, 41, 67, 76, 105, in,
123, 127-28, 141, 157,169,176,180,
182-83, 191
Elena Pavlovna, Grand Duchess, 79,
95, 188
environmental impact of war
along Azov Sea, 148,149?, 150
along road between Sevastopol and
Yalta, 175
in Balakiava, 81
in Chorgun, 88
in Crimean villages, 69
foraging and, 109
landscape alteration, 3, 5
from Russian military, 183
Evpatoria
as Allied base of operations, 34
Allied occupation, 75-76
and April 1854 invasion, 44
compensation for war damage, 182,
183, 190
contributions of provisions, 20
currency shortages, 23
damage sustained in, 161-62
disease in French bases, 164
petition for relief from fees, 191
post-war conditions in, 166—67, 194
and September 1854 invasion, 48-54
and Tatar mutiny, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64,
66, 67, 69, 71, 72,115,127-28
and Tatar relocation, 130-31
vacant Tatar land in, 172,192
wars effect on civilians, 104
famine, 162
Fenton, Roger, 6
Feodosia, 4,15-16, 22-23, 29, 36-37, 64, 85,
92-93, 100, 104-5, x37 I39 15B,
159,161, 164, 181-84, x9° 192-94, 202
Filaret (Drozdov), Metropolitan, 25
Finland, 136, 140
First World War, 10
Focçani, 42—43
Food and War (Zweineger-Barielowska), 112
food supplies, 16, 91-93, 96—99,101—4,
108—12. See also grain production
(grain stores)
Foros, 126
“The Fountain of Bakhchisarai”
(Pushkin), 177
Fourteenth Artillery, 13
France and French
at Balakiava, 82, 83
in Berdiansk, 144
and cholera, 42, 43
disease rates among soldiers, 164
entry into war, 22
invasion of Russia (See Patriotic War
of 1812)
in Kerch, 138,140,148
and Orthodox Christianity, 11
274 INDEX
France and French (cont.)
and partisan warfare, 117
and Tatar mutiny, 60, 61, 63, 64,
65, 66, 72
and Tatars, 126
Frederick Wilhelm IV, king of Prussia, 13
Fuller, William, 10
Gatrell, Peter, 10
Genichesk, 21, 89,135,137,145,147,149,
157,180
German Mennonites, 4—5
Giray, Mussad, 61
Glinka, Fedor Nikolaevich, 2$
Golitsyn family, 185
Gorchakov, Mikhail Dmitrievich
attempts at guessing Allied strategy,
41-43, 85
at Berdiansk, 145-47
early days as
commander-in-chief, 106-10
and Evpatoria, 75-76
expansion of authority, 76
fortification of interior, 159-61
and hospitals, 93
at Karasubazar, 139
and Kerch, 136
in Melitopol, 147
preparation for batde, 13
and prisoners, 169
and refugees, 157-59
on role of clergy, 117-18
on role of partisans, 117-20
and Sevastopol, 138,153-56
and Simferopol, 165,166, 182
and southern army, 16
and Tatars, 63,127-33
on unprecedented nature of
Crimean War, 6
and vacated Tatar land, 172
and Wrangel, 137
Gowen, John, 193
Gowing, Timothy, 47-48
grain production (grain stores), 20-22,
29-30, 40, 45, 49, 52-54, 62, 66-67,
69, 71, 81, 87-88, 93, 97-99,102,
104-5,112,125,129,131,135, 139-40,
146-47,149,158,170,179,190, 192,
197, 201, 204
Great Britain. See Britain and British
Great Muslim Exodus, 205
Great Reforms, 7, 9,11,192,199, 205,
206, 207
Greeks, 4, 34, 36-37, 43, 49 5* 53 70-71,
80-81, 88,125,141,162-63,168-69,
191,193, 203, 205
Greek War of Independence, 25
guilds, 191
gunpowder, 77, 79, 85, 91,102
Hamelin, François (French admiral), 44
hijra, 195
Holy Synod, 27,118, 203
horses
in Balaklava, 81, 84
as casualties of battle, 101,103,104?
Crimiean military s use of, 100—101
distribution as part of
reconstruction, 181
food supplies for Southern Army, 1081
in Inker man, 101
in Karasubazar, 181
from Melitopol, 20
requisitioning of, 100
in Simferopol, 166
Tambov contribution of, 19
in Tauride, 92
in winter of 1854-1855, 91, 92
hospitals, 93-96
industry
and costs of war, 7
destruction of, 7-8,136,161
influence on war, 6
railways and, 193, 205-6
restoration plans, 180,191
and Tatar exodus, 196-97
wartime transformation of, 93
See also specific industries, e.g.: viticulture
inflation, 91,109-10,125,181-82,190
Inkerman, 77, 84-87, 94,101,115
Innocents Abroad (Twain), 8
Innokentii (Borisov), Archbishop, 25,
64-65, 203
intendancy, 22
“internal enemies,” 10
Islam, 4, 27. See also anti-Islamic sentiment
Islamic law. See Sharia.
INDEX 275
Istanbul, 25
Izmail fortress, 41—42
Jews, 4, 5, 34, 49, 77, 96, 98,105-6,125,
145, 162, 165
jihad, 60
Kacha River, 58
kadi, 100
Kadi-koi, 8o 81, 83
Kagul, 179
Kamary, 80, 83
Kandirov regiment, 68
Karaim, 4, 49, 51, 53, 59, 96,104,168
Karasubazar, 21, 93, 96, 98—99, 102,130,
139,159,164,169,181
Karpat, Kemal, 195
Kars, battle of, 9, 66, 154, 162
Kazan, 28,189
Kerch, 135-43, 152/
and Azov defenses, 24
emergency relief committee, 184—85
as likely target, 36—37
map, 134/
refugees from, 157, 158
salary disbursements for civil
servants, 181—82
Sardinian refugees in, 168-69
Kerch-Enikale, 33, 37, 76, 89,135,147,166,
168,177, 184
Kerch Strait, 134^
Kharkov, 76,100, m, 181,192
Kherson, 15, 68, 76, 93, 105, 111-12, 123,
141-42, 154, 157, 165, 176, 178-80,
183-84, 191, 203
Khomiakov, Aleksei Stepanovich, 25
Khomutov, Mikhail Grigorievich, 15, 22,
24 33 37-38, 66, 76-77, 107,136-38
Kiev, 17, 62, 75-77, in, 118-19
Kinburn fortress, 8, 33,155-57,159,194
Kinglake, Alexander, 72—73
Kinmli, Hakan, 61
kirimtatar, 4,147
Kiselev, Pavel Dmitrievich, 10, 20, 22,116,
122-24, 129,133, 164,171,180-81, 200,
205, 207
Kishinev, 85,107
Knorring, Roman Ivanovich, 63
Kola, 51
Korf, Vasily Sergeevich, 62, 66, 101,189
Kornilov, Vladimir Alekseevich, 78, 79
Korostelina, Karina, 9
Korsun, 119
Kostiukov, Fedor, 51—54
Kotzebue, Pavel Evstafievich, 153,159
Kronenthal, 99
Kronstadt, 29, 95,124
Krymchaki, 4, 98
kulaks., 10,125
Kursk, 68, in, 127, 131-32,144,182, 202
landscape. See environmental
impact of war
land taxes, 179
Langeron, Alexandre, 41
Lanskoi, Sergei Stepanovich, 190—91, 200
Lazarev, Mikhail Petrovich, 23, 35
Leontiev, Konstantin, 6, 94—95, 143
Liders, Alexander Nikolaevich, 41—42, 85
Lieven, Dominic, 16
Liprandi, Pavel Petrovich, 75—76, 83
Lithuania, 117, 200
Livadia, 83
London, England, 82
Lukomskii, A. S., 194
Lyons, Edmund (British admiral), 136,137,
139,147,148, 153
MacKenzie, Thomas, 68
Mairyk, 54
Malakhov Kurgan, 83,156
Mamaiskii, Abdula Aga, 29
Manchikov, Abduri, 132—33
Man to, M. A., 82
Maria Fedorovna, Dowager Empress, 188
Markur, 126
Marseilles, France, 86
martial law, 14-17, 30, 77, 96-97
Marx, Karl, 6, 26, 47
Massandra, 83
Mavromikhaili, Pavel Stepanovich, 88
Mavromikhaili family, 88, 170, 185, 188
McClellan, George, 35, 78
Melitopol, 4, 20-22, 40, 59, 71, 75,100,
104,108, no, 123,139,141, 145,147,
182,184,191, 202
Melnikov, Pavel Petrovich, 192
Mends, William Robert, 140—41, 148
2 j6 INDEX
Mennonites, 4-5, 96, 100, 142,170,
171, 203
Menshid, Ahmed, 127-28
Menshikov, Alexander Sergeevich
at Alma, 58
and April 1854 invasion, 43, 45, 46
at Balaklava, 83
as commander-in-chief, 14-15,
14-16, 35-36
communications problems, 75
Cossack criticism of, 92
defense of southwest coast and
Sevastopol, 33
destruction of crops and grain
reserves, 66
early strategy, 42-43
and food supplies, 97
Gorchakov and, 76,106,107
and gunpowder supplies, 77
at Inkerman, 84, 85
limits of authority, 30-31
limits of power as commander, 16
and Military Districts, 120,121
and military medicine, 86-87
and projections of enemy attack on
Crimea, 37, 38
and provision budget, 21
and religious justification for war, 26
and September 1854 invasion, 48,
49» 50, 5*
and Sevastopol, 24,59, 64, 65, 78
and Simferopol Provision
Committee, 22-23
at Sinope, 18
Tatar deportation, 122,123,133
and Tatar mutiny, 72, 73
and transportation requests, 100
Metelino, Fedor, 184
Mikhno, Nikolai Vasilievich, 48, 63
military districts, 120-21
Military Reforms, 92, 207
Military Regulation of 1846, 14-16,
45-46, 96
Ministry of Finance, 12, 23, 97,105,123,
163,179,183, 190-91
Ministry of Internal Afiairs, 53, 70, 97,141,
150, 200
Ministry of State Domains, 10,12, 20, 22,
29, 46, 97,100,116,121-24,129-32,
163,171,181,183, 200-202, 205
Ministry of the Interior, 12,19,112, 115,159,
181-84,188-92,199-200
Minsk regiment, 99
Miskhor, 126
Mistrov, Piotr Vasilievich, 184
Mithridates, 135
Mogilev, 180
Moldavia, 41
Moldova, 15
Montenegro, 13
Moscow, 5,119,178
mufti, 27-29, 60,115-16,118,120, 203
Muraviev, Mikhail Nikolaevich, 171-72,
200, 201
Muslim Spiritual Administration, 72
Muslim Spiritual Society of Simferopol, 20
Nakhimov, Pavel Stepanovich, 17,18
Napoleon Bonaparte, 5, 26, 94, in, 116-17,
119.179- 80
Napoleonic Wars, 5,16, 29, 41, 61, 70,108,
115.119.179- 80
Napoleon III (Louis Napoleon), 26, 43, 47
‘native Russians,” 177
natural environment, 3
The Naval Journal, (Morskoi Sbornik) 17
New Russia, 12, 23
New Russian Calendar (Novorossiiskii
kalendar), 98
New York Times, 147-48
New York Tribune, 6, 26, 47
Nicholas I, 8-9,11,13,16-18, 20, 23, 26,
28, 30, 36, 39, 43, 48, 68, 72, 75, 95,
106,115,117,123-24,127,129,171,
191-92, 205
Nightingale, Florence, 6, 79
Nikolaev, 30, 38-39» 4*» ¿5» 75» «2,154, 157
Nobel, Immanuel, 6
Nogai Tatars, 4, 5, 20, 21, 29, 40, 71,
122-23,145-47,158,195-96
The Northern Bee (Severnaia Pchela), 17-19,
25, 27, 29-30, 96, 206
Novorossiisk, 38, 43,137-38
Novospasskaia, 147
INDEX 277
obligations, 17—21
Ochakov fortress, 157
Odessa, 17-18, 25, 38, 41-44» 47» 53» 65, 76,
95»112,132,140, 144, 154, 166-67,179,
183-84, 188, 201-2
Ogarev, Nikolai Platonovich, 94
Orekhov, 141,157,184
Orlov, 144
Osmanov, Seid Ibraim, 187
Osten-Sacken, Dmitrii Erofeevich, 12,15,
41-43, 106-7, 153
Ottomans and Ottoman Empire, 90f
asylum seekers from, 191
and Balaklava Greeks, 80
Crimean Tatars cultural/historical
linkages to, 27
failure of diplomatic talks, 13
Girays and, 61
and irregular soldiers, 65
losses at Sinope, 18
naval defeat at Sinope, 17-18
and religious causes of war, 14
religious overtones of war, 60
and Tatar Migration, 195-97, 202,
204, 205
and Tatar mutiny, 72
and Tatars, 124,162
and Treaty of Paris, 169
See also Russian-Ottoman War
oxen, 10Q-104,108, no, 180—81
Paget, George, 3, 58, 61-62, Si
partisan warfare, 116-20
Paskevich, Ivan Fedorovich, 15-16, 24-25,
39, 4i~42, 75» 107
Patriotic War of 1812, 5, 26, 178-83
Pavlovsk fortress, 24
Peninsular War, 117
Penza, 117
Perekop
cholera in, 103
and communication routes, 75
and Cossack deployment, 64, 65,
66, 70, 71
evacuation of local authorities, 50
as gateway to Russia, 40
Pirogov in, 100
and Tatar deportation, 122,123, 125,127,
128, 130,131,132
and Tatar emigration, 201, 202
periodicals, 17
Perm, 117
Pestel, Pavel Ivanovich, 20-21
Pestel, Vladimir Ivanovich, 12, 23, 29, 45-
46, 49-50» 59, 64, 67, 70, 73, 87, 93,
100, 116, 122-25
Peter the Great, 18, 27
Petropavlovsk, 6
photography, 6
Piedmont-Sardinia, 25
Pirogov, Nikolai Ivanovich, 86—87, 94—95»
98,100, 106, 156, 165
Podolia, 76, in, 119
Pogodin, Mikhail Petrovich, 25
Poland, 39, 41, 75,105,107,120
poll taxes, 179
Poltava, 76, in, 144, 181, 189, 202, 205
property compensation, 185, i86f, 187
prostitution, 165
provision committees, 16, 21—23
provisioning system, 16—17
Prussia, 15, 36, 75
Prut River, 178
Pushkin, Alexander, 177
Quran, 28, 60
Raglan, Fitzroy Somerset, 82, 127
railroads, 6, 90,112,192-94, 205—6
Rakov, V. S., 44, 46, 49, 54, 64, 67,182
refugees, 157—59, *62,
and Balaklava, 84
bureaucrats as, 12
and disease, 86, 87, 166
from Kerch, 141-43, 152^ 184
in Melitopol, 123,147
relief measures for, in, 112,179,192
in Simferopol, 58-59
relief, imperial program for, 183-88
Reveliotti, Aristide, 69, 199
Richelieu, Armand-Emmanuel de Plessis,
Duke, 88
Romania, 15
Rostov, 179
278 INDEX
Rothbart, Daniel, 9
Russell, William, 6,156, 206
Russian Orthodox Church, 5,11,19, 25, 27,
84,118, 203, 206
Russian-Ottoman War, 29, 61, 80, 88,
117,193
Russian Veteran (Russkii Invalid), 17, 27-28, 30
sackmen, 22
St. Arnaud, Jacques Leroy de, 42-44, 47
St. George monastery, 81, 83
St. Petersburg, 29, 96,175-76
St. Petersburg Yacht Club, 18
Saki, 29, 40, 66,131,163
Samov, 69
sarai, 5
scorched-earth policy, 66,107,128,138,
15 o 175
Seacole, Mary, 6
Sebastopol Sketches (Tolstoy), 34
Seid-Dzhelil-Efendi, Mufti, 27-29,115-16
Seipp, Adam, 155
serfs and serfdom, 9,10,18, 19, 20, 35,105,
117,122-23,164,169,171,199, 205
Sevastopol
Allies plans for siege, 42
and Balaklava Greeks, 80
bombardment of, 6,174/*
and British Navy, 47, 48,136
British strategy, 137
civilians in, 77-79
civil servants during siege, 50
communications problems, 75
defense as Menshikovs primary goal, 64
devastation after fall of, 177-78,
194,198/
fall of, 154-57
fortification of, 24
Lazarevs plans for, 23
McClellans tour of, 35
Menshikovs report on potential
invasion, 38
Menshikovs troops around, 33
military hospitals, 95
as naval city, 34
pre-war growth of, 39
removal of sunken ships from
harbor, 193
and Russian supply crisis, 92,102,
no, 112
Russian troop losses, 176
sanitization of, 167
siege of, 58, 76-79, 81, 83, 85, 86, 87, 88,
89, 93,116, 129,138,153-54
Tatars and, 124,126
tax relief after fall of, 191
Twains description of, 8
Sevastopol Sketches (Tolstoy), 89
Shamil, Imam, 60-61, 64
Sharia, 4, 28, 30, 71, 72,195, 207
Shevchenko, Taras, 88
shipping industry, 7-8
Shirinskii, Murza, 29
Simferopol, 198f
and Allied attack on Evpatoria,
48, 49 50
Balaklava refugees in, 159
cholera in, 87,138
contributions of provisions, 20
Cossacks in, 68-71
evacuation of, 50, 58, 59
and food supplies, 97-99
medals for bureaucrats in, 163
overcrowding in, 160
prostitutes in, 165
provision committees in, 17
as provision site, 16
refugees in, 88-89
relief committee in, 184, 185,
186t, 187—88
sanitization of, 166
and Tatar deportation, 126,127,
130,131
Tatar emigration, 202
Tatar village destruction, 161
temporary hospitals in, 167
Thirteenth Artillery and Infantry in, 13
wounded and ill in, 93, 94, 96, 100
Simferopol Provision Committee,
21-23, 2.2-23
Sinope, battle of, 17,18
Sisters of Mercy, 6, 79, 88, 95, 166,
170, 206
Sixteenth Division, 41
Smolensk, 180
Snow, John, 82
INDEX 279
Social Darwinism, 10
social estates, 105
Society of Steamship and Trade, 193
Solovetsky monastery, 118
Southern Army, estimated supplies needed
for, 1081
Soviet Union, 36
Stalin, Joseph, 36
Stroganov, A. G., 12,158,167—68,170-72,
178-80,182-85,190-91, 193, 196,
200—201
sukhari, 97-98
Sukhozanet, Nikolai Onufrievich,
General, 160
Sultanovka, 138-39
Taganrog, 15, 135, I45 149
Taman, 37
Tambov, 19, 202, 206
Tarakhanlar, 87
Tarkhankut, 33
Tarle, Evgeny Viktorovich, 35—36, 86
Tash-Basty, 160
Tatars, 4—5
and Adlerberg report, 161-62
Alexander IPs deportation of, 11
and Allied invasion, 48—49
at Balaklava, 80, 83
in Berdiansk, 145-47
and cavalry, 29
cultural/historical linkages to
Ottomans, 27
deportation of, 121—33
donations provided by, 20
in Evpatoria, 52—54
food shortages, 104,109
forced migration of, 10
and horses for military, 100, 101
as “internal enemies,” 10
in Kerch, 136,137, 139, 140, 143
loyalty demonstrations by, 27—28
medals for, 163
migration, 8,195—97,199-204
mutiny, 54, 58-73, 72,115-16, 171
postwar conditions, 170-72, 177,
192, 202-6
relocation, 46—47
in Sevastopol, 34
and tsars, 30
villages as troop obstacle, 40
See also Crimean Tatars
Tauride Muslim Spiritual Assembly, 71
Tauxide province, 4, 7, 8,12,15, 21, 23
Tauride Statistical Committee, 202
tax relief, 104—5, 189—92
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, 83
Third Infantry, 160
Third Section, 8—9
Thirteenth Artillery and Infantry, 13
Times (London), 6,156, 206
Tiraspol, 179
tobacco industry, 104
Toktar, 126
Tolstoy, Leo, 6, 7, 20, 34, 89, 95
Todeben, Eduard Ivanovich, 35, 79,153,
200—201, 206
Totman, 69, 70
Toulon, France, 86
transportation, 100-102
Treaty of Paris, 203
Tulchin, 77
Turgenev, Ivan, 94
Tver, 117
Twain, Mark, 8
typhus, 53, 96,122,164,167
Uhlans, 62, 66, 67
Ukraine, 8
“Ura!” (Glinka), 25
Ural Cossacks, 131
U.S. CivilWar, 35
Uvarov, Sergei Semionovich, 26
Varna, Bulgaria, 16, 38, 42-43, 47, 60-61,
65, 81,178
Vasilchikov, Viktor Ilarionovich, m, 200,
201, 204
Vitebsk, 180
viticulture, 3, 7, 36, 39, 81-82, 88, 156, 160,
183,187,190-92
Vladimir (town), 189
Vladimir, Prince, 11, 203
Vlastari, Andrei Dmitrievich, 184
Voronezh, m, 118, 202, 205
Vorontsov, Mikhail Semionovich, 12,
39-40, 50, 68, 80, 83, 86
28o INDEX
Voznesensk, 41, 95
Vunsh, 107
War and memory, 26, 34, 62,12SS0
War and Peace (Tolstoy), 7
War of 1812. See Patriotic War of 1812
Why They Die (Rothbart and Korostelina), 9
winemaking. See viticulture
women, plight of, 165
work animals, 100-101,103,104?, 180-81,
183,190
Wrangel, Alexander Evstafevich, 1x6,
120-21,131,136-38,140,143,146
Yalta, 4, 39-40, 47, 53, 59, 62, 70, 76,
83» 85, 92, 104, hi, 126, 132-33,
161-62, 170, 172, 175,179-82,
184, 190-92
Yaroslavl, 17
Zatler, Fedor Karlovich, 6-7, 92,101-2,
107-12,125,180, 206
Zhukovskii, Grigorii Vasilievich, 12,168,
170,178, 202
Zmacha, Ivan Ivanovich, 184
Zweineger-Barielowska, Ina, 112
{ Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek
München
x__________
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Kozelsky, Mara |
author_GND | (DE-588)107092377X |
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author_sort | Kozelsky, Mara |
author_variant | m k mk |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV045267703 |
classification_rvk | NP 6003 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1079416153 (DE-599)BVBBV045267703 |
discipline | Geschichte |
era | Geschichte 1853-1864 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1853-1864 |
format | Book |
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spelling | Kozelsky, Mara Verfasser (DE-588)107092377X aut Crimea in war and transformation Mara Kozelesky New York Oxford University Press [2019] © 2019 xi, 280 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte 1853-1864 gnd rswk-swf Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd rswk-swf Auswirkung (DE-588)4112646-4 gnd rswk-swf Krimkrieg (DE-588)4165750-0 gnd rswk-swf Krim (DE-588)4033166-0 gnd rswk-swf Krimkrieg (DE-588)4165750-0 s Auswirkung (DE-588)4112646-4 s Geschichte 1853-1864 z DE-604 Krim (DE-588)4033166-0 g Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 s 1\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-19-064474-1 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Literaturverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Kozelsky, Mara Crimea in war and transformation Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd Auswirkung (DE-588)4112646-4 gnd Krimkrieg (DE-588)4165750-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077587-2 (DE-588)4112646-4 (DE-588)4165750-0 (DE-588)4033166-0 |
title | Crimea in war and transformation |
title_auth | Crimea in war and transformation |
title_exact_search | Crimea in war and transformation |
title_full | Crimea in war and transformation Mara Kozelesky |
title_fullStr | Crimea in war and transformation Mara Kozelesky |
title_full_unstemmed | Crimea in war and transformation Mara Kozelesky |
title_short | Crimea in war and transformation |
title_sort | crimea in war and transformation |
topic | Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd Auswirkung (DE-588)4112646-4 gnd Krimkrieg (DE-588)4165750-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Sozialer Wandel Auswirkung Krimkrieg Krim |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030655531&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kozelskymara crimeainwarandtransformation |