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Lines of Uncertainty: The Frontiers of the North Caucasus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Thomas M. Barrett*
Affiliation:
Department of History, St. Mary's College of Maryland

Extract

“The Caucasus may be likened to a mighty fortress, marvelously strong by nature, artificially protected by military works, and defended by a numerous garrison.” This oft-quoted line was written by General A.A. Veliaminov in 1828 in a memoir which advocated the use of powerful military force to subdue the tribes of the north Caucasus. To take this fortress, a wise commander must “lay his parallels; advance by gap and mine and so master the place.” The extension of a fortified line further and further towards the mountains, using it as a base for attacks, was essential to Veliaminov's strategy of conquest.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 1995

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References

A version of this paper was originally presented at a conference sponsored by the Social Science Research Council, "Visions, Institutions, and Experiences of Imperial Russia," Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC, September 1993.

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3. I use “mountain people” (gortsy) in the same loose sense that Russians of the time did, to designate the mountain-and foothill-dwelling peoples of the north Caucasus. This term encompassed a bewildering array of ethnicities, ranging from the Adyge in the west to the numerous peoples of Dagestan in the east. Whenever possible, I will use a more precise ethnic designation. Of course the peoples of the north Caucasus were also steppe nomads, such as the Nogais. Further, many Ukrainians in the north Caucasus were classified as Russians; I am forced to use “Russian” to mean primarily Russians and Ukrainians.

4. The leading military historian of Russia in the Caucasus was probably V.A. Potto. See his Kavkazskaia voina v otdel'nykh ocherkakh, epizodakh, legendakh i biografiiakh, 5 vols. (St. Petersburg: Tipografiia R. Golike, 1885–1891) and Utverzhdenie russkogo vladychestva na Kavkaze, 3 vols. (Tiflis: Tipografiia Ia.K. Libermana, 1901–1904).

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42. Narochnitskii, Istoriia narodov Severnogo Kavkaza, 59; Predtechenskii, A.V., ed., Krest'ianskoe dvizhenie v Rossii v 1826–1849 gg. Sbornik dokumentov (Moscow: Sotsekgiz, 1961), 223–25Google Scholar; Varadinov, N., Istoriia Ministerstva vnutrennykh del (St. Petersburg: Tipografiia Ministersvta vnutrennykh del, 1861), 3: book 2, 292 Google Scholar; Shcherbina, F, “Beglye i krepostnye v Chernomorii,” Kievskaia starina 16 (June 1883): 239, 244.Google Scholar

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46. Wagner, Moritz, Travels in Persia, Georgia, and Koordistan (London: Hurst and Blackett, 1856), 1: 127.Google Scholar

47. Potto, Kavkazskaia voina, 2: part 1, 86–87; Wagner, Travels in Persia, 1: 129.

48. Butkov, Materialy, 1: 79; AKAK, 1: 84, 87–88.

49. Dvizhenie gortsev severo-vostochnogo Kavkaza v 20–50 gg. XIX veka. Sbornik dokumentov (Makhachkala: Dagknigoizdat, 1959), 356–57, 486.

50. AKAK, 12: 1398; Dvizhenie, 471, 498; Baddeley, The Russian Conquest, 397; Wagner, Friedrich, Schamyl and Circassia, trans. Mackenzie, Kenneth R.H. (London: G. Routledge and Co., 1854), 88 Google Scholar; von Haxthausen, Baron August, The Tribes of the Caucasus, trans. Taylor, J.E. (London: Chapman and Hall, 1855), 98 Google Scholar. There were also rumors that Shamil himself was Bestuzhev-Marlinskii, that he had joined a gortsy robber band, escaped to Persia or was living in the mountains with five wives. See Zisserman, A. L., Dvadtsat’ piat’ let na Kavkaze (1842–1867) (St. Petersburg: Tipografiia A.S. Suvorina, 1879), 1: 329 Google Scholar; Leighton, Lauren G., Alexander Bestuzhev-Marlinsky (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1975), 35.Google Scholar

51. Pushkin, Alexander, A Journey to Arzrum, trans. Ingermanson, Birgitta (Ann Arbor: Ardis, 1974), 3031 Google Scholar. An incredible fact that further testifies to the nativization of Russian forces is that Ermolov, the most repressive and chauvinistic Russian “hero” of the Caucasus, was “married” to three Moslem women. See Berzhe, A. P., “Aleksei Petrovich Ermolov i ego kebinnyia zheny na Kavkaze 1816–1827 gg.,” Russkaia starina 15 (September 1884): 523–28.Google Scholar

52. AKAK, 1: 88; Mavrodin, Krest'ianskaia voina, 76.

53. Samarin, “Dorozhnyia zametki,” 550; Potto, Kavkazskaia voina, 1: 76–79; Potto, Pamiatniki, 1: 19–20.