A hundred years ago
this month, the First Balkan War began. On Oct. 8, 1912, Montenegro declared
war on the Ottoman Empire, and invaded Albania. Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia followed
suit as part of the Balkan League. By March 1913, their campaigns had
effectively pushed the weakened Ottomans out of the Balkans. However, by July
1913, Greece and Serbia would clash with Bulgaria in the Second Balkan War, a
bitter month long struggle that saw more territory change hands and many more
lose their lives.
In military terms
these conflicts were a prelude to the far greater slaughter that was the First
World War. Ariel bombardment, trench warfare and the machine gun all played a
similar role as they would in the later conflict. The Balkan states were pawns in a much bigger game of great
power rivalry. Serbian nationalism, backed by Russia, put the two ultimately at
odds with Austria-Hungary, triggering World War I. However, “The Balkans were
not the powder keg, as is so often believed: the metaphor is inaccurate,”
writes Balkans historian Misha Glenny, in his book, The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers,
1804-1999. “They were merely the powder trail that the great powers
themselves had laid. The powder keg was Europe.”
I have a number of resources
relevant to this conflict on the Balkan Military History website. The armies in 15mm, a bibliography,
a feature on the key early battle of Kumanovo and travel
tips are spread across the travel
section. If you want to read more I would recommend Richard Hall’s, ‘The Balkan Wars 1912-13’ as a good overview. For the Ottoman army, Edward Erickson’s, ‘Defeat in Detail’ is excellent. For wargamers, Alexander Vachkov’s, ‘The Balkan War 1912-13’ is in an Osprey style format with good colour plates and plenty of photographs.
Finally, we should never forget that the Balkan Wars erased a generation of Serbs, Greeks, Montenegrins and especially Bulgarians, who suffered a 25% casualty rate. Not to mention an estimated 100,000 Turks.
I recently picked up the Balkans war Osprey and also recommend it.
ReplyDeleteColKG