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The Treaty of Constantinople ((ロシア語:Константинопольский договор),) Russo-Ottoman Treaty or Treaty of the Partition of Persia (''Iran Mukasemenamesi'') was a 1724 treaty between the Ottoman Empire and the Russian Empire, dividing large portions of the territory of mutually neighbouring Safavid Iran between them. The Russians and the Ottomans were engaged in a race to occupy more Iranian territories and were about to engage in a war over the occupation of Gandjeh when France intervened. In the Russo-Persian War (1722-1723), Russia had managed to conquer swaths of Safavid Irans territories in the North Caucasus, Transcaucasia, and northern mainland Iran,〔Alexander Mikaberidze. ("Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia" ) ABC-CLIO 2011. p 726〕 while the Ottoman Turks had invaded and conquered all Iranian territories in the west, most notably Georgia and Armenia. Still, the news of a Russo-Iranian accord that would settle the 1722-1723 Russo-Iranian War precipitated a crisis between Imperial Russia and Ottoman Turkey,〔Alexander Mikaberidze. ("Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia" ) ABC-CLIO 2011. p 726〕 who openly stated that it would not permit any other power to establish itself on the Caspian Sea. As the Ottomans and Russians both neighboured each other as well as Iran for centuries, and all three were geo-political rivals of each other, the matter was taken into the highest regard. With France as intermediary, the two governments of the Ottoman Empire and Russia eventually signed a treaty in Constantinople on June 12, 1724, dividing a large portion of Iran between them. Thus, the annexed Iranian lands located on the east of the conjunction of the rivers Kurosh (Kur) and Aras were given to the Russians, comprising the provinces in northern mainland Iran (Gilan, Mazandaran and Astrabad) as well as the lands in Dagestan, while the lands on the west went to the Ottomans,〔 comprising large parts of Iranian Azerbaijan (incl. Ardabil, Hamadan, and Tabriz),〔("The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 6, The Rise of Great Britain and Russia" ) 1970. p 654〕 Kermanshah,〔("The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 6, The Rise of Great Britain and Russia" ) 1970. p 654〕 and much of the rest of Iranian-ruled Transcaucasia (encompassing modern-day Georgia and Armenia).〔Alexander Mikaberidze. ("Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia" ) ABC-CLIO 2011. p 726〕 The treaty furthermore specified that if Safavid Iran, at that time led by the regime of king Tahmasp II, would refuse to accept the treaty both Imperial Russia and the Porte would take common action against Iran and install a puppet ruler.〔Alexander Mikaberidze. ("Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia" ) ABC-CLIO 2011. p 726〕 However, the gains for both Russia and Ottoman Turkey proved to be very brief, for the 1732 Treaty of Resht and 1735 Treaty of Ganja returned all territories taken by Russia back to Iran, while the Ottoman–Persian War (1730–35) decisively returned all Ottoman annexed territories back to Iran. ==See also== * Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1723) * Treaty of Resht * Treaty of Ganja 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「Treaty of Constantinople (1724)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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