Defense of Van (1915)

Defense of Van
Part of the Caucasus Campaign of World War I and the Armenian genocide

Armenian fighters holding a defense line against Ottoman forces in the walled city of Van, May 1915.
Date19 April – 17 May 1915
Location
Result Russo-Armenian victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Armenian fedayi
Russian Empire
Assyrian volunteers
Commanders and leaders
Djevdet Bey
Halil Bey
Köprülü Kâzım Bey
Rafael de Nogales
Nikolai Yudenich
Pyotr Oganovsky
Aram Manukian
Armenak Yekarian
Vana Ishkhan
Strength
5,000 1,300–6,000
Casualties and losses
Unknown but heavy
2,000 captured, 30 guns
Unknown
55,000 Armenian civilians massacred

The defense of Van (Armenian: Վանի հերոսամարտ, romanized: Vani herosamart) and in Russian Van operation (Russian: Ванская операция, romanized: Vanskaya operatsia) was the armed resistance of the Armenian population of Van and Russian army against the Ottoman Empire's attempts to massacre the Ottoman Armenian population of the Van Vilayet in the 1915 Armenian genocide. Several contemporaneous observers and later historians have concluded that the Ottoman government deliberately instigated an armed Armenian resistance in the city and then used this insurgency as the main pretext to justify beginning the deportation and slaughter of Armenians throughout the empire. Witness reports agree that the Armenian posture at Van was defensive and an act of resistance to massacre. The self-defense action is frequently cited in Armenian genocide denial literature; it has become "the alpha and omega of the plea of 'military necessity'" to excuse the genocide and portray the persecution of Armenians as justified.