Battles of Ctesiphon (Kûtü'l-Amara) at the Iraqi Front in World War I According to the French Press
Journal Title: Ankara Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi - Year 2018, Vol 58, Issue 1
Abstract
The Iraqi Front, which opened in the First World War in 1914 because of the motives like the search for raw material and market arising from industrialization in European countries such as England, France, Germany and Italy, the acceleration of colonialism, the rivalry between the German and the British, and the rivalry between the German and theFrench, becamea front line where very serious battles took place between the Ottoman Empire and Britain. Britain landed troops to Basra to prevent threats to the colonial India, to unite with the Russians in the north and to capture Iraqi oil. The skirmish between the British under the command of General Townshend (1861-1924) and the Ottoman soldiers under the command of Mirliva Halil Pasha (1882-1957) took place in Medayin which was one of the most important cities of ancient Mesopotamia. This place was the most important front line that opened in the south in the war . These battles, which prevented the British from approaching Baghdad and even forced them to withdraw towards the Kûtü’l-Amâre, put on the records as the Battles of the Medayin. Examining the war reports in the French press about the Iraqi front, which became a scene for intense battles between the Turks and the British, it is understood that these writings did not reflect the truth and were usually based on British sources. These reports, which tended to misleadand manipulatethe French public opinion, were found to praise the English, but despised the Ottoman army and Turks. Upon the capture of Nasriye by the British, the newspapers used expressions stating that the Turks were jammed in the Black Sea, they were expulsed from the Caucasus, they lost in the Euphrates constantly, and they fought back hopelessly in Gallipoli. Instead of recording the Kûtü'l-Amâre victory of the Turkish army as a success of the Turks, they considered it as a result of the delay of the arrival of the reinforcements in due time for the British Army under siege, and they showed this as an excuse for their defeat. In addition, the resistance of the British soldiers during the siege was exalted and reported as an honourable defeat. In this article, we have studied in detail the news of this front which were published in the French press. Official documents of the French Ministry of War related to this front were also included in the study.
Authors and Affiliations
Fatma UYGUR
The Problem of “Truth” in Philosophies of Nietzsche and Aristotle
Foucault states that “philosophies are distinguished from each other by each having grasped one or several elements of truth” (Foucault 33). In this article, focusing on Nietzsche's and Aristotle's understandings of trut...
The Andalusian Muwashshahs and Kharjas
The Qasidah was the unique form of classical Arabic poetry. However, with the expansion of the Islamic state by the conquests, some new poetry styles have emerged under the influence of neighboring cultures and social co...
Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa and Life, Death, and the Desire of Eternity in “Il Gattopardo”
In his work, "La Sicilia del Gattopardo" (The Sicily of the Leopard), Massimo Ganci emphasizes that according to Tomasi di Lampedusa the lithified aridity of Sicily is a reflection of human life (ref. Gioia, 2014). The i...
The Elements that Effect the Formation of Institutional Image of University Librarıes and the Role of These Elements on the Use of the Library
The corporate image consists of evaluations of how institutions are perceived and recognized by their users. The institutional image, which is an outwardly reflected image of the institution, is formed and shaped in rela...
The Travel of the Teachers in Istanbul to Bursa, and Mustafa Kemal Pasha's Speech as the Head Teacher
Mustafa Kemal Paşa, after the Battle of Dumlupınar, while, on the one hand, was looking for a remedy to make the victory permanent, on the other, with no delay, made preparations for building the future without crowing o...