Persecution of Muslims during the Ottoman contraction
| Persecution of Muslims during the Ottoman contraction | |
|---|---|
Bulgarian soldiers pose with dead Turkish civilians, Edirne, 1913 | |
| Location | Former Ottoman territories and the Russian Empire |
| Date | 19th and early 20th centuries |
| Target | Muslim people (Turks, Kurds, Albanians, Bosnian Muslims, Circassians, Serb Muslims, Greek Muslims, Muslim Roma, Pomaks) |
Attack type | Genocide, religious persecution, expropriation, mass murder, mass rape, and ethnic cleansing |
| Deaths | Estimated up to around 5 to 5.5 million (c. 1820 to 1920) (also see below) |
| Perpetrators | Various European Christian nations and empires |
| Motive | Anti-Muslim sentiment, Christianization and ethnic hatred |
During the decline and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, Muslim inhabitants (including Turks, Kurds, Albanians, Bosnian Muslims, Circassians, Serb Muslims, Greek Muslims, Muslim Roma, Pomaks) living in territories previously under Ottoman control often found themselves persecuted after borders were re-drawn. These populations were subject to genocide, expropriation, massacres, religious persecution, mass rape, and ethnic cleansing.
The 19th century saw the rise of nationalism in the Balkans coincide with the decline of Ottoman power, which resulted in the establishment of an independent Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria and Romania. At the same time, the Russian Empire expanded into previously Ottoman-ruled or Ottoman-allied regions of the Caucasus and the Black Sea region. These conflicts such as the Circassian genocide created large numbers of Muslim refugees. Persecutions of Muslims resumed during World War I by the invading Russian troops in the east and during the Turkish War of Independence in the west, east, and south of Anatolia by Greek troops and Armenian fedayis. After the Greco-Turkish War, a population exchange between Greece and Turkey took place, and most Muslims of Greece left. During these times many Muslim refugees, called Muhacir, settled in Turkey.