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The Armistice of Erzincan (also spelled Erzindzhan or Erzinjan) was an agreement to suspend hostilities during World War I signed by the Ottoman Empire and Transcaucasian Commissariat in Erzincan on 18 December 1917 (5 December O.S.).[1][2] The armistice brought temporary peace to the Anatolian and Persian Fronts until 12 February, when the fighting was resumed.

The status of the Commissariat was unclear at the time: the Ottomans regarded it as an independent entity, while the Commissariat still considered itself a part of Russia. The Ottomans were already party to an armistice with Russia (15 December) that covered the Anatolian and Persian Fronts. After receiving a ceasefire proposal from Vehib Pasha, commander of the Ottoman Third Army, the Commissariate authorised the commander of the Russian Caucasus Front, General Przhevalski, to negotiate an armistice with his Ottoman opposite. The result was Erzincan, after which the Russian troops began to withdraw, leaving the Transcaucasian Commissariate completely undefended.

A supplement to the armistice was signed on the same day, demarcating the line of occupation between the two sides.[2] On 12 February, the Ottomans began advancing across the line in defiance of the armistice, having rejected the Transcaucasian Commissariat's authority to sign it and accused the Armenians of massacring Muslims behind the Ottoman line on 15–16 January. On 24 February the Brest-Litovsk armistice was broken by Germany and became of no effect. Both armstices were superseded by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Russia, signed on 3 March 1918, and the Treaty of Batum with the successor states of the Transcaucasian Commissariat, signed 4 June.

References[]

  1. Tadeusz Swietochowski, Russian Azerbaijan, 1905–1920, p. 119.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Robert M. Slusser and Jan F. Triska (1959), A Calendar of Soviet Treaties, 1917–1957 (Stanford University Press), p. 2.


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