Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792)

Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792)
Date 1787–1792
Location Eastern Europe
Result Decisive Russian victory
Treaty of Jassy
Territorial
changes
Yedisan region passed from Ottoman to Russian
Belligerents
Russian Empire Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Catherine II

Grigory Potemkin
Alexander Suvorov
Pyotr Rumyantsev
Nicholas Repnin
Fyodor Ushakov

Abdul Hamid I

Koca Yusuf Pasha
Hassan el Ghazi
Hassan Pasha
Hussein Pasha

Strength
100,000 ?

The Russo–Turkish War of 1787–1792 involved a futile attempt by the Ottoman Empire to regain lands lost to Russia in the course of the previous Russo–Turkish War, 1768–1774. It took place concomitantly with the Austro-Turkish War of 1787-1791.

In 1786, Catherine II of Russia made a triumphal procession through the annexed Crimea in company with her ally, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II. These events and the friction caused by mutual complaints of infringements of the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji, which had closed the previous war, stirred up public opinion in Constantinople, while the British and French ambassadors lent their unconditional support to the Ottoman war party.

In 1788, war was declared and the Russian ambassador to the Ottomans, Yakov Bulgakov, was thrown into prison, but Ottoman preparations were inadequate and the moment was ill-chosen, now that Russia and Austria were in alliance, a fact of which the Ottomans became aware only when the horsetails were planted for the campaign. The Ottomans drove back the Austrians from Mehadia and overran the Banat (1789); but in Moldavia, Field Marshal Pyotr Rumyantsev captured Iaşi and Khotin. After a long winter siege, Ochakov fell to Prince Potemkin. This news affected the Ottoman Sultan so deeply as to cause his death.

Accordingly, the Treaty of Jassy was signed with Russia on 9 January 1792, recognizing Russia's 1783 annexation of the Crimean Khanate. Yedisan (Hacıbey and Özi) was also ceded to Russia, and the Turla was made the frontier in Europe, while the Asiatic frontier — the Kuban River — remained unchanged. The Ottoman generals were incompetent and the army mutinous; expeditions for the relief of Bender and Akkerman failed, Belgrade was taken by Laudon of Austria, the supposedly impenetrable fortress of Izmail was captured by Suvorov by surprise attacks using combined infantry and artillery, Ushakov shattered the Ottoman fleet at Fidonisi, Tendra, Kerch Strait, and Cape Caliacria, and the fall of Anapa to Ivan Gudovich in 1791 completed the series of Ottoman disasters.

The young Sultan Selim III was anxious to restore his country's prestige by a victory before making peace, but the condition of his troops made this hope impossible. On 31 January 1790, Prussia signed an offensive treaty with the Ottoman Empire, but gave her no help during the war.

References