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Siege of Geok Tepe
Part of Russian conquest of Central Asia
Siege of Geok Tepe
DateDecember 1880 – January 1881
LocationGeok Tepe, Turkmenistan
Result Russian victory
Belligerents
Russian Empire Turkmens
Commanders and leaders
Mikhail Skobelev
Strength
7,100[1]
72 artillery pieces

20–25,000 people in the fortress[2]

the actual armed defenders were probably 8,000[citation needed]
few firearms
no artillery
Casualties and losses

268 killed[3] 669 wounded[4]

645 died of disease.[5]
15,000 defenders and civilians killed[6] or up to 20,000 killed[7] or 150,000 killed[8]
Turkmen soldiers

Turkmen soldiers, end of 19th century

Geoktepe fortress storm

Russian engraving depicting the storming of the fortress.

The Siege of Geok Tepe or The Battle of Geok Tepe was a siege by the Imperial Russian army against the Turkmen fort of Geok Tepe in 1880–1881.

History[]

Turkmenistan-map

Map of modern Turkmenistan. Geok Tepe is just northwest of Ashgabat. Krasnovodsk is the modern Turkmenbasy.

In 1853–1868 the Russians moved south and occupied most of what was later called Russian Central Asia. The area they did not yet have was approximately modern Turkmenistan. In 1869 they built Krasnovodsk on the east side of the Caspian sea. In 1879 they moved east and tried to take Geok Tepe. They first used artillery and then tried to take the fort by storm. The more numerous Turkomans drove them back. The Russians retreated and had difficulty holding off their pursuers. They retreated back across the desert toward Krasnovodsk. It is said[9] that this was the worst Russian defeat in Central Asia since 1717.

After the unsuccessful first Battle of Geok Tepe 1879. The Russians sent a second expedition this time with more men and equipment, including 20,000 camels for transport. In December 1880, Geok Tepe was besieged by 7,100 Russians under General Mikhail Skobelev against 25,000 defenders. Including the civilian Turkmen population of the area. Learning a lesson from the previous expedition, Skolobev decided to besiege the fort instead of a direct assault. The siege of Geok Tepe lasted twenty-three days, after which the city was taken by storm. Although they encountered heavy resistance, Russian forces were eventually able to break in by digging a tunnel underneath a portion of the wall, then detonating a mine underneath the wall. On 12 (24) January 1881, the mine was detonated. Once the fortress was breached, the Russian troops stormed in. Several hundred defenders were killed in the initial explosion, and many more were killed in the fighting that ensued. As the Russians poured in the fort, the defenders, along with the civilians inside the fortress, fled across the desert, pursued by General Skobelev's cavalry.

The massacre[]

Around 8,000 Turkmen soldiers and civilians, including women and children were killed in their flight, along with an additional 6,500 that were killed inside the fortress. The Russians killed all Turkmen males in the fortress who had not escaped, but they spared some 5,000 women and children and freed 600 Persian slaves. The taking of Geok Tepe and the following slaughter broke the Turkmen resistance and decided the fate of Transcaspia. On 6 May 1881, Transcaspia was declared an oblast of the Russian Empire. During the entire campaign of 1880–1881 Russian casualties were 290 killed and 883 wounded, sickness accounted for the death of 645 Russian soldiers.[10]

The Russian general Skobelev said the following about the massacre:

"The harder you hit them, the longer they'll stay down."[11]

Aftermath[]

Skobelev was removed from his command because of the massacre. In 1881 Ashgabat was founded 28 miles southeast of Geok Tepe. The next Russian move as east to Merv in 1884 and in 1885 south from Merv to Pandjeh on the Afghan border.

Commemorations[]

The Geok Tepe (Gokdepe Mosque) was built to commemorate the siege and the defenders, it is noted for its mint-turquoise blue coloured roof and white marble structure.

The battle is remembered as a national day of mourning each year, and the resistance is often cited as a source of great national pride.[12]

File:Medal "For taking Geok-tepe by storm", silver, averse.jpg

Russian medal for the battle

Sources[]

  1. Russian Central Asia, 1867–1917, Richard A. Pierce page 41, 1960
  2. Russian Central Asia, 1867–1917, Richard A. Pierce page 41, 1960
  3. Merv, the Queen of the World, Charles Marvin, page 402
  4. Merv, the Queen of the World, Charles Marvin, page 402
  5. Russian Central Asia, 1867–1917, Richard A. Pierce page 42, 1960
  6. Turkmenistan, MaryLee Knowlton, page 30, 2005
  7. Dictionary of Battles and Sieges, Tony Jaques, page 389, 2007
  8. Asian History Module-based Learning, Ongsotto, et al., page180, 2002
  9. Peter Hopkirk,'The Great Game",1994,page 389
  10. Russian Central Asia, 1867–1917, Richard A. Pierce page 42, 1960
  11. Turkmenistan, MaryLee Knowlton, page 30, 2005
  12. Turkmenistan, MaryLee Knowlton, page 30, 2005

Further reading[]

  • Chahryar Adle, Madhavan K. Palat, Anara Tabyshalieva History of Civilizations of Central Asia

Coordinates: 38°09′28″N 57°57′59″E / 38.15778°N 57.96639°E / 38.15778; 57.96639

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