- Sochi conflict
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Sochi conflict
partof=World War One andRussian Civil War
caption=
date=July 1918-May 1919
place=Abkhazia andBlack Sea Soviet Republic
casus=Bolshevik rebellion in Abkhazia
territory=
result=establishment of the current official Russian-Georgian border along the Psou until 1921
combatant1=
combatant2=
combatant3=flagicon|RussiaWhite movement
combatant4=flagicon|Turkey|1918Ottoman Empire |Sochi conflict was a three-party border conflict which involved the counterrevolutionary White Russian forces,
Bolshevik Red Army and theDemocratic Republic of Georgia each of which sought the control over theBlack Sea townSochi and the adjacent region. The conflict was fought as a part of theRussian civil war and lasted with varying success from July 1918 to May 1919, and ended through the British mediation effectively establishing the current official border betweenRussia and Georgia.Background
The disputed area had been inhabited by an Abkhaz-Adyghe tribe,
Zygs , since ancient times.Georgian claims came from the fact that the area was politically dominated by the medieval kingdom of Georgia at the height of its prestige and strength, and then came under the rule of a successor, the
Kingdom of Imereti and, eventually, the Principality ofAbkhazia . The area of increasing tourist interest, part of this region was detached by theTsar ’s decree of December 25 1904, from the Sukhumi district (Kutaisi guberniya) to become part of the Black Seaguberniya . TheBlack Sea district was only thinly inhabited since the Russian Empire took control of the area forcing thousands of locals to become "Muhajir s". [ Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911, Black Sea District] The region was also inhabited by a significant number of Armenians and Georgians.The Russian general
Denikin and his colleagues insisted, however, that the border between Georgia (though not yet recognized by either White or Soviet leadership) and the White-controlledKuban Republic should be that between the former Russian guberniyas of Kutais and Black Sea, i.e. slightly in the north to theBzyb River .Conflict
The conflict was preceded by a pro-
Bolshevik revolt inAbkhazia that made the local post-revolution government, Abkhazian People’s Council, to request aid from theDemocratic Republic of Georgia and to join it as an autonomous entity (June 8 1918). A Georgian force under Major GeneralGiorgi Mazniashvili was deployed in the region and joined by an Abkhaz cavalry provided by local nobility. Mazniashvili repulsed a Bolshevik offensive fromSochi direction late in June and, following to the instructions from Abkhazian and Georgian authorities [ [http://www.abkhazia.dot.ge/history/20050617545628099382.php] ] , advanced northward in order to liquidate a Bolshevik base which provided help to theCommunist revolutionaries.The Georgian military operation, encouraged also by a German military mission, resulted in the occupation of Adler (3 July),
Sochi (6 July), andTuapse (27 July) along the Black Sea coastline. Mazniashvili was soon ordered to take control of the Tuapse-Maikop railway line and coordinate his actions with the White Russian Kuban government and Denikin’s "Dobrovolcheskaya Armya" waging an all-out war against the Red armies in SouthRussia .Initially, Georgia regarded the White forces as allies against the common threats from the Bolshevist
Moscow . This cooperation was, however, soon clouded by Denikin’s calls for the reunited “Great Russia” with theCaucasus as its integral part.Early in September, the Georgians were forced out from Tuapse by the retreating
Taman Red Army pursued by Denikin’s forces. Soon the White units took control of the town on September 8 forcing the Bolsheviks to retreat further toward Armavir.On September 18, a Council for Sochi (a legislature formed by the local
Menshevik s and SRs in August) declared the unification of the city and its district to theDemocratic Republic of Georgia as a “temporary measure” against the threats from bothLenin andDenikin . The annexation by Georgia followed immediately and caused an acute protest from the leaders of the White forces.On September 25 1918, the White leaders and representatives of the DRG met in
Ekaterinodar to find a peaceful solution to the dispute. Denikin demanded that the Georgians withdraw back to the Bzyb river. An agreement was not achieved and the Whites halted the negotiations next day. The same day Denikin captured Lazarevskaya at the northern outskirts of Sochi but he was unable to take full control over the region until the Red Army was defeated inNorth Caucasus . On February 6 1919 the Georgian troops were forced back to the Bzyb river with their commander General Konyev (Koniashvili), and his staff captured by the Russians atGagra . Georgia sent reinforcements, but the British representatives intervened establishing a demarcation line along the Bzyb. The captured Georgian officers were released.On March 14 1919 a Georgian delegation presented at Paris peace conference a project of the borders of the country in which it demanded a part of the former Black Sea province up to the small river Makopse 14 km southeast to the town Tuapse. The negotiations, however, yielded no results.
On April 12 1919, a
Sukhumi -based Georgian People’s Guard and army units under General Mazniashvili launched a counteroffensive. Avoiding the British peacekeeping posts at the Bzyb river, they retook Gagra after a bloody clash and, in cooperation with the “Green” Russian guerillas, moved to the Makhadyr river. The British intervention however halted the Georgian advance. A new demarcation line was established south to Adler, on thePsou River . Along the border, a British expeditionary force took positions to prevent further outbreak of the war. On May 23-24, Georgian, Russian Volunteers’ and British representatives met inTbilisi to find a peace resolution. Actually, this was the end of the conflict. Occasional skirmishes occurred, however, until the late 1919.The establishment of the current official Russian-Georgian border along the Psou was perhaps the main outcome of the Sochi conflict. The new border was de jure recognized by the
Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (May 1920) and the Allies (January 1921).Bibliography
*R. H. Ullman, "Britain and the Russian Civil War" (Princeton, 1968), pp. 219-20
* [http://sisauri.tripod.com/politic/abkhazia.htm Georgian-Abkhaz relations in 1918-1921] , article by A. Mentetashvili
* [http://wcry.narod.ru/shambarov1/03.html (In Russian)]
* [http://xxl3.ru/belie/shambarov1/05.html (In Russian)]
* [http://www.ekavkaz.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=106 (In Russian)]ee also
*
Sadzen
*Russian Civil War
*Aftermath of World War I External links
* [http://feefhs.org/maps/RUSE/RE-CAC.HTML The Caucasus map within the Russian Empire as of 1882]
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