The 'Treaty of Gulistan' (
Russian: Гюлистанский договор;
Persian: عهدنامه گلستان) was a
peace treaty concluded between
Imperial Russia and
Persia on
October 24,
1813 in the village of
Gulistan in
Karabakh as a result of the
first Russo-Persian War. The peace negotiations were precipitated by
Lankaran's fall to Gen.
Pyotr Kotlyarevsky on
January 1, 1813.
The treaty confirmed inclusion of modern day
Azerbaijan,
Daghestan and Eastern
Georgia into the
Russian Empire.
The text was prepared by the British diplomat Sir
Gore Ouseley who served as the mediator and wielded great influence at the Persian court. It was signed by
Nikolai Fyodorovich Rtischev from the Russian side
[1] and
Haji Mirza Abol Hasan Khan from the Iranian side in eleven chapters.
Terms
By this treaty:
#"Russia by this instrument was confirmed in possession of all the khanates -- Karabagh, Gandja, Shekeen, Shirvan, Derbend, Kouba, and Baku, together with part of Talish and the fortress of Lenkoran. Persia further abandoned all pretensions to Daghestan, Georgia, Mingrelia, Imeretia, and Abkhazia."
[2]
#These lands include:
##All the cities, towns, and villages of
Georgia, including all the villages and towns on the coast of the
Black Sea, such as:
##
Megrelia,
##
Abkhazia,
##
Imeretia,
##
Guria;
##Almost all the cities, towns and villages of the khanates in
South Caucasus, including:
##
Baku khanate (now capital of
Azerbaijan Republic),
##
Shirvan Khanate,
##
Derbent,
##
Karabakh khanate,
##
Ganja khanate,
##
Shaki Khanate,
##
Quba Khanate,
##part of the
Talysh Khanate;
#Iran loses all rights to navigate the
Caspian Sea, and Russia is granted exclusive rights to station its military
fleet in the
Caspian Sea.
#Both countries agree on the establishment of
free trade, with Russians having free access to conduct business anywhere in Iran.
#Russia in return promises to support
Abbas Mirza as heir to the Persian throne after the death of
Fath Ali Shah. (which did not happen)
Assessment
Iran officially sees this and the succeeding
Treaty of Turkmenchay as one of its most humiliating treaties ever signed. The treaty is also regarded by Iranians as the main reason why
Fath Ali Shah is seen as one of Iran's most incompetent rulers in memory. The scholars in Azerbaijan point out that the Karabakh khanate, where the treaty was signed, had pursued independent foreign policy as early as 1795, when "''Ibrahim Khalil Khan, the wali of Qarabagh, fearing for his independence, warned Sultan Selim III of Agha Muhammad Khan Qajar's ambitions to subdue
Azerbaijan and later Qarabagh, Erivan and Georgia. In the same year Muhammad Khan, the hakim of Erivan, also wrote the Sultan alerting him to Agha Muhammad's "aggression" and seeking Ottoman protection''."
[3]
Russian imperial historians maintain that Russia's absorption of the
Transcaucasus territories delivered their population from constant
Iranian and
Ottoman invasions, the Christian nations of Caucasus were liberated from Muslim repression, ushering in the years of peace and relative economic stability.
Aftermath
According to Prof. Tadeusz Swietochowski:
[4]
According to Prof. Svante Cornell:
According to Cambridge History of Iran:
The two treaties of Gulistan and
Turkemenchai also divided Azerbaijani
[5] and Talysh
[6] from their brethren in Iran and the wider Iranian cultural world.
See also
★
List of treaties
★
Treaty of Turkmenchay
★
Treaty of Akhal
★
Iran-Russia relations
★
Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907
References
1. Treaty of Gulistan
2. John F. Baddeley, "The Russian Conquest of the Caucasus", Longman, Green and Co., London: 1908, p. 90
3. Muhammad Riza Nasiri, "Asnad va Mukatabat-i Tarikh-i Qajariya", Tehran, Intisharat-i Kayhan, 1366/1987, pp. 7-8.
4. Tadeusz Swietochowski,Russia and Azerbaijan. A Borderland in Transition. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995
5. "However the result of the Treaty of Turkmenchay was a tragedy for the Azerbaijani people. It demarcated a borderline through their territory along the Araxes river, a border that still today divides the Azerbaijani people." in Svante Cornell, "Small nations and great powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus", Richmond: Curzon Press, 2001, p. 37.
6. Michael P. Croissant, "The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict: causes and implications", Praeger/Greenwood,1998 - Page 67: ''The historical homeland of the Talysh was divided between Russia and Iran in 1813''.
Sources
★ H. Pir Nia, Abbas Eghbal Ashtiani, B. Agheli. ''History of Persia''. Tehran, 2002. pp. 673-686. ISBN 964-6895-16-6