Middle Eastern theatre of World War I

Middle Eastern theatre of World War I
Part of World War I

From left to right: The Ottoman Shaykh al-Islām who declared Jihad against the Entente Powers; Burning oil tanks in the port of Novorossiysk after the Ottoman Empire's strike on Russian ports; Fifth Army during the Gallipoli Campaign; Third Army on the Caucasus campaign; The heliograph team of the Ottoman army in the Sinai and Palestine campaign; Ottoman soldiers during the Siege of Kut in Baghdad vilayet.
Date30 October 191430 October 1918
(4 years)
Location
Result

Entente victory

Territorial
changes
Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire
Belligerents
Entente Powers:
 Russia (until 1917)
 Italy (from 1915)
Hejaz (from 1916)
Armenia (from 1918)
Local allies:
Assyrian volunteers
Central Powers:
 Ottoman Empire
 Germany
 Austria-Hungary[1][2]
Emirate of Jabal Shammar Jabal Shammar
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Azerbaijan (from 1918)
Democratic Republic of Georgia Georgia (from 1918)
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Julian Byng
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Archibald Murray
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Edmund Allenby
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Ian Hamilton
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland John Nixon
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Percy Lake
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Stanley Maude #
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Lionel Dunsterville
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland T. E. Lawrence
Russian Empire I. Vorontsov-Dashkov
Russian Empire Grand Duke Nikolai
Russian Empire Nikolai Yudenich
Russian Empire Nikolai Baratov
French Third Republic Henri Gouraud (WIA)
French Third Republic Maurice Bailloud
First Republic of Armenia Hovhannes Hakhverdyan
First Republic of Armenia Tovmas Nazarbekian
First Republic of Armenia Andranik Ozanian
Kingdom of Hejaz Hussein bin Ali
Kingdom of Hejaz Faisal bin Hussein
Abdulaziz Ibn Saud
Ottoman Empire Enver Pasha
Ottoman Empire Djemal Pasha
Ottoman Empire Cevat Pasha
Ottoman Empire Vehip Pasha
Ottoman Empire Nuri Pasha
Ottoman Empire Ahmed Izzet Pasha
Ottoman Empire Mustafa Kemal Pasha (WIA)[3]
Ottoman Empire Fevzi Pasha
Ottoman Empire Abdul Kerim Pasha
Ottoman Empire Halil Pasha
Ottoman Empire Nureddin Pasha
Ottoman Empire Mehmet Esat Pasha
Ottoman Empire Fakhri Pasha
German Empire F. B. von Schellendorf
German Empire Otto Liman von Sanders
German Empire Colmar von der Goltz 
German Empire Erich von Falkenhayn
German Empire F. K. von Kressenstein
Emirate of Jabal Shammar Saud bin Abdulaziz
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Fatali Khan Khoyski
Democratic Republic of Georgia Noe Zhordania
Strength
British Empire 2,550,000[4]
Russian Empire 1,000,000[5]
French Third Republic Several 100,000's[5]
First Republic of Armenia Several 100,000's[5]
Arab Revolt 30,000 (1916)[6]
50,000+ (1918)[7]
20,000+[8]
Total: 4,000,000+
Ottoman Empire 3,059,205[9]
800,000 (peak)[9][10]
323,000 (during Armistice)[11]
German Empire 6,500 (1916)
20,000 (1918)[9]
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic ~6,000 (1918)[12]
Emirate of Jabal Shammar 9,000 (1918)[13]
Total: 3,100,000
Casualties and losses
British Empire United Kingdom
105,000 dead
204,000 wounded
16,800 captured
700,000 non-combat/sick
Russian Empire Russia
22,000 killed
71,000 wounded
6,000 captured
French Third Republic France
9,000 dead
18,000 wounded
20,000 evacuated sick
  • Military casualties:
  • 1,250,000

  • Civilian dead:
  • 2,275,000

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire
305,085 killed[14]
466,759 dead of disease[15]
763,753 wounded
242,746 captured
250,000 missing
German Empire Germany
3,200 captured[Note 1]


  • Military casualties:
  • 1,785,000

  • Civilian dead:
  • 1,200,000–2,500,000[16][17]

2,000,000 Persian civilians dead from famine exacerbated by Russian, British, and Ottoman occupation

Total dead: 7,000,000+

Pictorial map of the Middle East in 1915

The Middle Eastern theatre of World War I saw action between 30 October 1914 and 30 October 1918. The combatants were, on one side, the Ottoman Empire (including the majority of Circassians and Kurdish tribes, some Arabs, and some Iranian peoples), with some assistance from the other Central Powers; and on the other side, the British (with the help of a small number of Jews, Greeks, Assyrians, some Kurdish tribes and Arab states, along with Hindu, Sikh and Muslim colonial troops from India) as well as troops from the British Dominions of Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, the Russians (with the help of Armenians, Assyrians, and occasionally some Kurdish tribes), and the French (with its North African and West African Muslim, Christian and other colonial troops) from among the Allied Powers. There were five main campaigns: the Sinai and Palestine, Mesopotamian, Caucasus, Persian, and Gallipoli campaigns.

Both sides used local asymmetrical forces in the region. On the Allied side were Arabs who participated in the Arab Revolt and the Armenian militia who participated in the Armenian resistance supported by Russia during the War; along with Armenian volunteer units, the Armenian militia formed the Armenian Corps of the First Republic of Armenia in 1918. In addition, the Assyrians joined the Allies and saw action in Southeastern Turkey, northern Mesopotamia (Iraq), northwestern Iran and northeastern Syria following the Assyrian genocide, instigating the Assyrian war of independence.[18] Turks were persecuted by the invading Russian troops in the east and by Greek troops and Armenian fedayis in the west, east, and south of Anatolia. The theatre covered the largest territory of all theatres in the war.

Russian participation in the theatre ended as a result of the Armistice of Erzincan (5 December 1917), after which the revolutionary Russian government withdrew from the war under the terms of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (3 March 1918). The Armenians attended the Trebizond Peace Conference (14 March 1918) which resulted in the Treaty of Batum on 4 June 1918. The Ottomans accepted the Armistice of Mudros with the Allies on 30 October 1918, and signed the Treaty of Sèvres on 10 August 1920 and later the Treaty of Lausanne on 24 July 1923.

  1. ^ Austro-Hungarian Army in the Ottoman Empire 1914–1918 Archived 18 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Jung, Peter (2003). Austro-Hungarian Forces in World War I. Oxford: Osprey. p. 47. ISBN 1841765945.
  3. ^ Konyalı Saat. "Atatürk'ü Ölmekten Kurtaran Saate Ne Oldu?". Konyalı Saat. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
  4. ^ Fleet, Kate; Faroqhi, Suraiya; Kasaba, Reşat (2006). The Cambridge History of Turkey: Turkey in the Modern World. Cambridge University Press. p. 94. ISBN 0521620961.
  5. ^ a b c Erickson, Edward J. (2007). Ottoman Army Effectiveness in World War I: a comparative study. Taylor & Francis. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-415-77099-6.
  6. ^ Murphy, p. 26.
  7. ^ Mehmet Bahadir Dördüncü, Mecca-Medina: the Yıldız albums of Sultan Abdülhamid II, Tughra Books, 2006, ISBN 1-59784-054-8, p. 29. Number refers only to those laying siege to Medina by the time it surrendered and does not account for Arab insurgents elsewhere.
  8. ^ The French gave us 20,000 Lebel rifles, whilst several French officers, together with the few Russian officers who had remained behind, set about organisms our Assyrian army, the numbers of which had grown to more than 20,000
  9. ^ a b c Broadberry, S. N.; Harrison, Mark (2005). The Economics Of World War I. Cambridge University Press. p. 117. ISBN 0521852129.
  10. ^ Gerd Krumeich: Enzyklopädie Erster Weltkrieg, UTB, 2008, ISBN 3825283968, p. 761 (in German).
  11. ^ A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire, M. Sükrü Hanioglu, page 181, 2010
  12. ^ "MK/QİO ilə işğalçı qoşunların say tərkibi, silah və hərbi texnikasına BAXIŞ (FOTOLAR) - I Yazı".
  13. ^ Kostiner, Joseph (1993). The Making of Saudi Arabia, 1916–1936: From Chieftaincy to Monarchical State. Oxford University Press. p. 28. ISBN 0195360702.
  14. ^ Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War, Edward J. Erickson. p. 211.
  15. ^ Erickson, Edward J. 2001. p. 211
  16. ^ Olson, Robert W. (1989). The Emergence of Kurdish Nationalism and the Sheikh Said Rebellion, 1880-1925. University of Texas Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-292-77619-7.
  17. ^ Eller, Jack David (1999). From Culture to Ethnicity to Conflict: An Anthropological Perspective on International Ethnic Conflict. University of Michigan Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-472-08538-5.
  18. ^ Naayem, Shall This Nation Die?, p. 281


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