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This book draws on unpublished archival material and an innovative historiographical approach to analyze events and their legacy in comparative perspective.
List of contents
1. The Pontic Greek Genocide documented by Political Archive of the Pontus National Council / 2. Testimonies of American Charitable and Missionary Organizations on the Genocide of the Pontic Greeks / 3. The evidence of the French commission in Pontus on the anti-hellenic persecutions after the end of the First World War (1919-1920) / 4. Liman von Sanders and the German plans for the Christians in Asia Minor during World War I / 5. Poles in the Ottoman Empire and Their Opinion on the Extermination of Greeks and Armenians, (1909-1918) / 6. Late Recognition of the Assyrian Genocide / 7. Big Secrets, Small Villages. The Collective Memory of the Assyrian Genocide / 8. Why does Turkish Denialism of Genocide against Christians Persist?: An Examination of the Political and Cultural Factors / 9. The "systematic extermination" of the Christian element as presented before the Commission on the Responsibility of the Authors of the War and on Enforcement of Penalties (1919-1920) / 10. The Greek Minority's Fate in the Former Ottoman Empire as a Human-Rights Crisis / 11. Shared Intent in a Collapsing Empire: Pan-Turkism as Mens Rea Evidence of Genocide against Christian Populations in the Late Ottoman Period / 12. Protection of Women and Children in the Near East: the Efforts of the League of Nations
About the author
Taner Akçam is Professor of History, Director of Armenian Genocide Research Program at Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA. He published extensively on Armenian Genocide and Turkish Nationalism. His most known books
A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility (Metropolitan Books, 2006) and
Killing Orders: Talat Pasha's Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide (Palgrave, 2018).
Theodosios Kyriakidis is Research Fellow at the Chair for Pontic Studies of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and associate lecturer at International Hellenic University and Hellenic Open University. His research interests include the history and culture of the Greeks of Pontus and Asia Minor as well as the Genocide of the Christian population of the Ottoman Empire. His latest book is
In the Name of Faith and Civilization: Roman-Catholic Missionaries in Nineteenth-Century Pontus (2019).
Kyriakos Chatzikyriakidis is Associate Professor at the Chair for Pontic Studies of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and associate lecturer at the Hellenic Open University. His research interests lie mainly in the area of economic and social history of the Greeks of Anatolia and Cyprus (19th-early 20th century) and the refugee settlement of the Greeks of Asia Minor in Greece after the Lausanne Treaty (1923).
Summary
This book draws on unpublished archival material and an innovative historiographical approach to analyze events and their legacy in comparative perspective.