Urfa Resistance

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Urfa Resistance
Part of Armenian Resistance
Date September 29-October 20, 1915
Location Urfa
Result The resistance was thwarted following German intervention and the Ottoman Empire continued its genocidal campaign in the region.
Combatants
Ottoman Empire
Germany
Armenian volunteer units
Commanders
Mgrdich Yotneghparian
Casualties
 ?  ?
Armenian Genocide
Background
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire · Armenian Question · Hamidian Massacres · Zeitun Resistance (1895) · 1896 Ottoman Bank Takeover · Yıldız Attempt · Adana Massacre · Young Turk Revolution
The Genocide

Armenian notables deported from the Ottoman capital · Tehcir Law · Armenian casualties of deportations · Ottoman Armenian casualties  · Labour battalion

Major extermination centers:
Bitlis · Deir ez-Zor · Diyarbakır · Erzurum · Kharput · Muş · Sivas · Trabzon

Resistance:
Zeitun  · Van · Musa Dagh · Urfa · Shabin-Karahisar · Armenian militia

Foreign aid and relief:
Reactions · American Committee for Relief in the Near East

Responsible parties

Young Turks:
Talat · Enver · Djemal · Committee of Union and Progress · Teskilati Mahsusa · The Special Organization · Ottoman Army · Kurdish Irregulars · Topal Osman

Aftermath
Courts-Martial · Operation Nemesis · Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire · Denial of the Genocide
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The Armenian resistance in Urfa during the Armenian genocide took place as a reaction to Turkish actions. The resistance was quelled following German intervention.[1]

In May 27, 1915, hundreds of Armenians were captured by Ottoman authorities in Urfa. The rest sat in a meeting in order to figure a way out of the problem. People thought of many different things, but Mgrdich Yotneghparian and his partisans were some of the few who preferred to fight till death instead of ceding to the enemy. Previous events like the Adana massacre made him increasingly cautious of the new Young Turk government and the Turkish constitution.[1]

The charismatic Mugerditch, the resistance of the Armenian fighters in the heavily fortified stone houses lasted sixteen days and was finally broken only with the help of a newly arrived contringent of six thousand Turkish troops equipped with heavy artillery.[2]

  1. ^ a b (Armenian) Kurdoghlian, Mihran (1996). Badmoutioun Hayots, Volume III. Athens, Greece: Hradaragoutioun Azkayin Oussoumnagan Khorhourti, p. 93-95. 
  2. ^ The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide - Page 201 by Lewy, Guenter
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