Treaty of Moscow (1921)
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The Treaty of Moscow or Treaty of Brotherhood was a friendship treaty between Grand National Assembly of Turkey (TBMM) under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and Bolshevist Russia under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin, signed on 16 March 1921. Neither the Republic of Turkey, nor the Soviet Union was established at the time. On October 23, 1921, the treaty was augmented by the Treaty of Kars.
[edit] References
- Full text of the Treaty of Moscow in original Russian
- "Moscow, Treaty of." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 23 Mar. 2007
Concepts | Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire - Establishment of movement - Turkish revolutionaries - Turkish National Movement | ||||
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Issues | Chanak Crisis - Population Exchange - Persona non grata - Malta exiles - Outpost Societies - King-Crane Commission - Khilafat Movement | ||||
Campaigns | British (Allies): İstanbul | ||||
Revolts: Kuva-i Inzibatiye - Revolt of Ahmet Aznavur - Koçkiri Rebellion | |||||
Franco : Maras - Antep - Urfa | |||||
Greco : Smyrna (İzmir) - Aydın - 1st İnönü - 2nd İnönü - Sakarya - Dumlupinar | |||||
Armenian : Oltu – Sarıkamış – Kars – Alexandropol | |||||
Agreements | Timeline | ||||
Allies: Conference of London - Ottoman Empire: Paris Peace Conference, 1919 - Sanremo conference - (Ottoman Parliament:) Misak-ı Milli - Treaty of Sèvres |
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Turkish revolutionaries: Treaty of Alexandropol - Treaty of Moscow (1921) - Conference of London - Cilicia Peace Treaty - Treaty of Ankara (1921) - Treaty of Kars - Conference of London - Armistice of Mudanya - Conference of Lausanne - Treaty of Lausanne |