The Decline of the Ottoman Empire - The Sick Old Man of Europe
Posted: Wednesday, March 18, 2009
by Russell Shortt
Exploring Ireland
The Eastern Question was the collective term for the problems raised in south-eastern Europe by the weakness of the Ottoman Turkish Empire and the rivalry of its successors. At the peak of the Ottoman Empire, it stretched from the Persian Gulf to the gates of Vienna, Austria but by 1870 it was commonly referred to as the sick man of Europe'. Reasons for its deterioration can be attributed to the slip of the Turkish army into total decay, the backwardness of the Turkish economy and the corrupt and inefficient nature of the Turkish administrative system. Basically, the Ottoman Empire had remained for all intensive purposes a medieval state. These difficulties were compounded by the rise of Balkan nationalism. This issue also had he effect of involving the Great Powers in the region as their rivalries in the Balkans led to a series of conflicts in the late nineteenth century and substantially contributed to the outbreak of World War One. Russia viewed themselves as protectors of the Slav peoples of South-East Europe, the Austrians wished to annex land and also dampen Balkan nationalism lest it spread to their own Empire and Britain was wary of Russian attempts to control the Dardanelles lest their route to India be menaced and therefore supported Turkey against Russian encroachments. In 1875, disturbances began in Bosnia-Herzegovina, a Balkan province of the Turkish Empire. Muslim overlords had been mistreating their Christian peasantry leading to mass revolts. Fearing a descent into full scale war, the Austrian foreign minister Andrassy sent a note to the Sultan demanding a series of reforms in the Balkans. All the powers signed the Andrassy Note' but the Turks chose to ignore it and continued their policy of suppressing disturbances which had by 1876 spread to Bulgaria. Serbia and Montenegro decided to take advantage of the situation by attacking Turkey in the hope of acquiring territory.
However, the Bulgarians proved to be anti-Russian and the country contrary to Britain's fears did not become a Russian satellite. In fact, they sided closer to Britain and France fuelling expectation that Russia would invade to right the wrong but this was prevented by the Dual Alliance which stated that the Germans would come to the aid of the Austrians who were sure to be affronted by any belligerent move by Russia against Bulgaria. The crisis also had the effect of Russia building links with France to stave off complete isolation. This had the effect of strengthening the divide between the two camps though Britain remained non-committal to either and from 1888 it began to drift from Turkey, indeed building links with Russia. No longer did Britain need to worry about Russia interfering with it's trade route to India as it had occupied Egypt in 1882 and Cyprus in 1878. Germany began to ally itself with Turkey, the alliance being cemented by the rise to power of the Young Turks in 1908. The Young Turks attempts to re-establish Turkish control over the Balkans led Austria to annex Bosnia-Herzegovina angering Russia and Serbia in the process. The Serbs felt that because Bosnia-Herzegovina was predominately a Slav province and that it should become incorporated into their state. Terrorist activities increased culminating in the assassination of Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, the final straw which led directly to World War One. The strident nationalism of the Young Turk movement and its continued repression of other nationalities in their Empire led to the creation of the Balkan League, a coalition consisting of Serbia, Greece, Bulgaria and Montenegro. In 1912 the League attacked and won immediate victories against the Turkish army, driving Turkey almost completely out of Europe, leaving only Constantinople and parts of Thrace under their control. However, the League turned against one another because of disputes over who deserved what part of the sick man of Europe'. During the First World War, Turkey and Bulgaira sided with the Alliance, under the Treaty of Lausanne (1923) Turkey ceded all claims to the non-Turk lands of the former Ottoman Empire thereby ending the problematic Eastern Question.
Russell Shortt is a travel consultant with Exploring Ireland, the leading specialists in customised, private escorted tours, escorted coach tours and independent self drive tours of Ireland. Article source Russell Shortt, http://www.exploringireland.net
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