Crimea in War and Transformation | Kozelsky Mara | Keménykötésű

Áruház

ENbook.hu

Márka

Oxford Univ Pr

emCrimea in War and Transformationem is the first book to examine the terrible toll of violence on Crimean civilians and landscapes from mobilization through reconstruction. pWhen war landed on Crimea's coast in September 1854, multiple armies instantly doubled the peninsula's population. Engineering brigades mowed down forests to build barracks. Ravenous men fell upon orchards like locusts and slaughtered Crimean livestock. Within a month, war had plunged the peninsula into a subsistence crisis. Soldiers and civilians starved as they waited for food to travel from the mainland by oxcart at a rate of 12 mile per hour. Every army conscripted Tatars as laborers, and fired upon civilian homes. Several cities and villages-Sevastopol, Kerch, Balaklava, Genichesk among them-burned to the ground. At the height of violence, hysterical officers accused Tatars of betrayal and deported large segments of the local population. pPeace did not bring relief to Crimea's homeless and hungry. Removal of

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