The 'Treaty of Turkmenchay' (
Russian: Туркманчайский договор;
Persian: عهدنامه ترکمنچای) was a treaty negotiated in
Turkmenchay by which the
Persian Empire, more commonly known today as
Iran, recognized
Russian suzerainty over the
Erivan khanate,
Nakhchivan khanate and the remainder of the
Talysh khanate, establishing the
Aras River as the common boundary between both empires, after its defeat in
1828 at the end of the
Russo-Persian War, 1826-1828. The treaty was signed on
February 21,
1828 by
Haj Mirza Abol-hasan Khan and
Asef o-dowleh, chancellor of
Fath Ali Shah on behalf of Persia, and General
Ivan Paskievich representing
Imperial Russia. As was the case for the
Treaty of Gulistan, Persia was forced to sign the treaty by Russia, as it had no alternative after crown prince
Abbas Mirza's defeat. The Russian general had threatened
Fath Ali Shah to conquer
Tehran in five days unless the treaty was signed.
The treaty
By this treaty:
#By Article 4 of the treaty, Persia renounces claims over the
Erivan khanate (most of present-day central
Armenia), the
Nakhchivan khanate (most of the present-day
Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of
Azerbaijan), the
Talysh khanate, the
Ordubad and Mughan regions (now also part of Azerbaijan), in addition to all lands annexed by
Russia in the Gulistan Treaty.
#By Article 6 of the treaty, Iran promised to pay Russia 10 Koroor in Gold (in 1828 currency).
#By Article 8 of the treaty, Iranian ships lose full rights to navigate all of the
Caspian Sea and her coasts, henceforth given to Russia.
#Iran recognizes Capitulation rights for Russians in Iran.
#By Article 10, Russia gains the right to send consulate envoys to anywhere in Iran it wishes.
#By Article 13, Exchange of POWs.
#By Article 10, Iran is forced to sign economic treaties with Russia as Russia specifies.
#By Article 7 of the treaty, Russia promises to support
Abbas Mirza as the heir to the throne of Persia after Fath Ali Shah dies. (which did not happen).
#Iran officially apologizes for breaking its promises made in the Gulistan Treaty.
#By Article 15, Fath Ali Shah promises not to prosecute any khanate secessionist movements in the
Azerbaijan region.
Aftermath
According to Prof. Svante Cornell:
According to Cambridge History of Iran:
Iran sees this and the preceding
Treaty of Gulistan as the most humiliating treaties signed in the country's millennia-old history. The treaty is the reason many Iranians consider
Fath Ali Shah to be one of Iran's most incompetent rulers.
[1]
Massacre at the Russian Embassy
In the aftermath of the war and signing of the treaty, the anti-Russian sentiment in Persia was rampant. On February 11, 1829, an angry mob stormed the Russian embassy in
Tehran and slaughetered virtually everyone inside. Among those killed in the massacre was a newly appointed
ambassador to Persia
Alexander Griboyedov, a celebrated Russian playwright and a personal friend of
Alexander Pushkin (Griboyedov had previosly played an active role in negotiating the terms of the treaty).
References
★ H. Pir Nia,
Abbas Eghbal Ashtiani, B. Agheli. ''History of Persia''. Tehran, 2002. p.673-686. ISBN 964-6895-16-6
1. M. Zirisnky: “Reza Shah’s abrogation of capitulation, 1927-1928” in he Making of Modern Iran: State and Society Under Riza Shah 1921-1941 By Stephanie Cronin, Routledge ,Published 2003, pg 81, “The context of this regime capitulations, of course, is that by the end of the reign of Fath Ali Shah (1798-1834), Iran could no longer defend its independence against the west. .. For Iran this was a time of weakness, humiliation and soul-searching as Iranians sought to assert their dignity against overwhelming pressure from the expansionist west
See also
★
Treaty of Gulistan
★
Treaty of Akhal
★
Iran-Russia relations
★
Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907
External links
★
Text of the Treaty of Turkmenchay