'Maps illustrating Memorandum respecting the Settlement of Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula.' [18r] (3/14)
The record is made up of 1 volume (3 folios and 4 map sheets). It was created in 1918. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .
Transcription
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
NOTES ON MAP 2.
1. Turco-Bulgarian Frontier .—This question is being dealt with in the series of
memoranda on the British case in relation to Southern and South-Eastern Europe. The
line shown on this map is that of the Turco-Bulgarian Treaty of 1915, and has the
merit of leaving the Dedeagatch Railway to Bulgaria and the tombs of the Sultans in
Adrianople to Turkey. Any other line must deprive either Turkey of Adrianople or
Bulgaria of access to the iEgean.
2. Frontiers of Armenia .—The suggested western frontier follows the natural line
of the Taurus Range, and is identical with the boundary between the blue and green
areas in the agreements (Nos. 11 and 12) up to a point north of Sivas. From there it is
carried northwards to Cape Yasun on the Black Sea, leaving Turkey in possession of
Samsun, which is the natural port for North and North-Central
Anatolia
Peninsula that forms most of modern-day Turkey.
. Trebizond
and Kerasond, having a mixed Greek, Turkish and Armenian population, should be
assigned to Armenia, since they are the outlet for a great part of the Armenian interior
towards the Black Sea. There is also an ancient trade route from Trebizond across
Armenia to North-West Persia. This route will certainly regain its importance, and
it would be equitable to make Trebizond a free port, and to secure free transit across
the Armenian hinterland for trade with Persia.
The area marked C is the Karabagh district, and there is a large Armenian popu
lation in the mountains, which preserved its liberty against Persia in the pre-Russian
period, and has held out against the Turkish invader during the last few months. _ _0n
historical grounds it should go to Armenia, but there is also a strong Azerbaijani
element in the population, and the best permanent settlement might be to bring about
a segregation of the Armenians and Azerbaijanis into separate areas by persuading the
Karabagh Armenians to emigrate to the Erivan district and the Erivan Azerbaijanis to
Karabagh. If this weip done, Area C would of course fall to Azerbaijan.
The area marked F and coloured green has a mixed Armenian, Kurdish, and Arab
population, and should probably be divided between the Armenian .and Arab States
when the 'exact local conditions have been ascertained by investigation. If it were
feasible to carry a railway from Alexandretta north-eastwards through Aintab, Urfa,
and Diarbekir, it might be desirable to keep all these places on the Armenian side of
the frontier, but such a railway might be impracticable. In any case, the track of
future railways ought to be taken into consideration in settling the frontier here.
From the Euphrates to the Mediterranean the suggested frontier practically follows
the northern line of -Arabic speech, taking in the Armenian villages of Jebel Musa,
the inhabitants of which were rescued in 1915 by the Allied fleets, and have since then
been refugees in Egypt.
3. Frontiers of Georgia .-—The area marked D and coloured green is territory
formerly belonging to Turkey which is inhabited by Lazes, that is, tribes which are
Georgian in language but Moslem in religion.
East of D the line assigns to Georgia the Akhaltzikh and Akhalkalaki districts,
which are inhabited chiefly by Armenians, descended from refugees who crossed
the Russian frontier from Turkey at various periods during the last century. On
grounds of nationality, therefore, these districts ought to belong to Armenia, but they
command the heart of Georgia strategically, and on the whole it would seem equitable
to assign them to Georgia, and give their Armenian inhabitants the option of emigra
tion into the wide territories assigned to the Armenians towards the south-west.
The area marked A is inhabited by Abkhazians, an indigenous Moslem tribe who
are not Georgians in language. The Georgians have been attempting to annex Area A
during the last few months, and it is reported that the Abkhazians have been resisting
them by force of arms. This area should not be forced to unite with Georgia against
its will, and should either be left as part of Russia or kept separate and given foreign
assistance as an independent unit.
The two areas marked B are doubtful as between Georgia and the tribes of
Daghestan. As between Georgia and Azerbaijan, there are no difficulties of
demarcation.
4. The area marked E and coloured green belongs to the Nestorian (Assyrian)
Christians, who speak a Semitic dialect, and are distinct in every way from the
surrounding Kurds. The Nestorians have been badly treated during the war by the
[920—1 a]
About this item
- Content
Volume comprising 7 folios numbered 17 to 23. Produced to accompany 'Memorandum respecting the Settlement of Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula' published by the Political Intelligence Department, Foreign Office, 21 November 1918. Includes four map sheets numbered 1, 2, 2A and 3 together with explanatory notes relating to maps 2 and 3; the explanatory notes bear the imprint '[920-1 A]'.
A second copy is at Mss Eur F112/570, ff 24-30.
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (3 folios and 4 map sheets)
- Area map covers
- Map loading...
- Orientation
- North
- Degree coordinates
- Top-left: 45° 0' 0" N, 20° 0' 0" E
Top-right: 45° 0' 0" N, 60° 0' 0" E
Bottom-left: 12° 0' 0" N, 20° 0' 0" E
Bottom-right: 12° 0' 0" N, 60° 0' 0" E - Physical characteristics
Materials: Printed in colour
Dimensions: 340 x 205mm, with fold-out maps 290 x 452mm or smaller
Binding: Thin light buff card, bound with two stitches; evidence of previous staples
Folio 23 (back cover) lacks lower right corner
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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'Maps illustrating Memorandum respecting the Settlement of Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula.' [18r] (3/14), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F112/570, ff 17-23, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100146604659.0x000024> [accessed 13 June 2026]
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- Mss Eur F112/570, ff 17-23
- Title
- 'Maps illustrating Memorandum respecting the Settlement of Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula.'
- Pages
- 17r:23v
- Author
- Foreign Office, Political Intelligence Department
- Usage terms
- Public Domain
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