翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Muricopsis pauxilla
・ Muricopsis perexigua
・ Muricopsis principensis
・ Muricopsis rosea
・ Muricopsis rutila
・ Muricopsis schrammi
・ Muricopsis seminolensis
・ Muricopsis suga
・ Muricopsis testorii
・ Muricopsis withrowi
・ Muricy Ramalho
・ Murid
・ Murid (Chakwal)
・ Murid herpesvirus 4
・ Murid herpesvirus 68
Murid War
・ Muridae
・ Muridava gas field
・ Murideva
・ Muridke
・ Muridke railway station
・ Muridke Tehsil
・ Murie
・ Murie family
・ Murie railway station
・ Murie Ranch Historic District
・ Murie Residence
・ Murie Science and Learning Center
・ Muriedas
・ Muriel


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Murid War : ウィキペディア英語版
Murid War

The Murid War (1830–1859) was the eastern phase of the Caucasian War in which Russia gained control of the independent peoples of the Caucasus Mountains. When the Russians annexed Georgia in 1801 they had to control the Georgian Military Highway in the exact center which was to only practical route south across the mountains. This divided the war into two parts. In the western or Russo-Circassian War the tribes did not unite and the war was very complex. In the east the tribes joined in the Caucasian Imamate, a military-theocratic state which held out for thirty years. This state was created by Kazi Mulla in 1829–1832 and ruled by Imam Shamil from 1834 to 1859.
==Background==

Geography: The region of fighting was a rough triangle or rectangle about 150 by 200 km. The northern boundary was the east-flowing Terek River. The eastern boundary was inland from the Caspian Sea where the foothills meet the Caspian plain. The Southern boundary was at most the Samur River, but much of the south was under some degree of Russian control. The Southwestern boundary was the crest of the Caucasus. This area was inaccessible and was only crossed by a few raids into Georgia in the far south. The western boundary was the Georgian Military Highway. At first most of the fighting was within a 50 or 75 kilometer radius of Gimry (). After 1839 the center of resistance moved northwest to the forests of Chechnya.
The basic distinction is between the forests of Chechnya in the northwest and the high and barren plateaus of Dagestan in the east. In Dagestan, just north of Gimry, the east-flowing Andi Koysu joins the north-flowing Avar Koysu to form the Sulak River which flows north and then east. All three flow in very deep canyons. To the east plateaus and canyons run down to the narrow costal plain of the Caspian Sea. To the south are more plateaus, canyons and mountains. This region is called Avaria from its major language and was partly ruled by the Avar Khanate at Khunzakh and the Kazikumukh Khanate further south. North of Gimry and the Andi Koysu is the Salatau plateau and west of it is a lower area marked by the village of Andi. North of these are the forested north-south valleys of Chechnya, a region called Ichkeria. At about the line of the Terek the forests give way to steppe. The Chechens used this for winter pasture until the Russians pushed them south. Between the Terek and the mountains was a 30–70 km belt of forested flat country which has now been cleared for agriculture. The western boundary is the Georgian Military Highway which follows the north-flowing upper Terek River. The northwest bend of the Terek was the main area where forest-cutting and Cossack villages were pushed southeast into the Chechen forests.
The war as a siege: Velyaminov, Yermolov’s chief of staff, described the Caucasus as an enormous fortress with a 600,000-man garrison which could not be taken by storm and could only be taken by siege. The Caucasus War was basically a 60-year-long siege. The many campaigns into the interior only served to wear the mountaineers down and did not result in permanent occupation until the last year or so.
Fighting in the lowlands: The Russian infantry had little difficulty with flat country that had been cleared for agriculture. These areas often had rulers who could be pressured and subjects who were used to obedience.
Fighting in the forests of Chechnya: In the northwest, Chechnya extends from the high mountains down through a series of north-south valleys to the flat country. The whole region was forested to about the Terek River. The Russians could easily send a raiding party into the forest, burn a few villages and withdraw, but anything larger was nearly impossible. A large force with its baggage train would string out for a mile or more along a forest path where it would be attacked from both sides as soon as the mountaineers gathered enough men. This required skirmish lines on both sides, the so-called “column in a box”. A large force could fight its way through or out, but at unacceptable cost. The only safe way to move through the forest was to cut down the trees for a musket shot on both sides of the road. Many of the trees were large beech trees that were hard to cut down and provided excellent sniper roosts. Forest cutting was a major activity during the whole period. Since lowland Chechnya is good farmland, Cossack military-agricultural villages were pushed southward as the trees were cut down. Forest fighting extended all along the north Caucasus and merged into the Circassian war further west. The Russians preferred to fight in winter when there was less cover.
Fighting in the mountains of Dagestan: In the east, Dagestan was higher and dryer with only patches of forest. Especially in the north it was a system of plateaus cut by deep gorges. Villages were usually built on crags, houses were of stone with loopholes and interlocked so that the whole village was a fort. Some were built stairstep-wise up the side of a hill so that a storming party needed ladders to move from one house to the next. These could be taken by storm at great cost or blasted open with artillery. Lack of firewood made permanent occupation difficult. The best time for the Russians was high summer when the snow had melted and there was grass for the horses.
Between two fires: Each village or Khanate was effectively independent. If it wanted to resist it had to consider how many soldiers the Russians could bring to the area. But if it submitted it could expect a counter-attack from Shamil. “Pacified” villages had varying degrees of autonomy which changed with time. Especially on the edges, many villages changed sides several times depending on which side was most threatening.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Murid War」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.