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Congress of Berlin 1878
Congress of Berlin 1878, called by the signers
of the Treaty of Paris of 1856 (see Paris, Congress of) to reconsider the terms
of the Treaty of San Stefano, which Russia had forced on the Ottoman Empire
earlier in 1878. Great Britain and Austria-Hungary were the powers most
insistent on revision; Russia submitted the treaty to revision only after Great
Britain threatened war and Bismarck had offered to mediate as “honest broker.”
He was chairman of the congress. Disraeli represented Great Britain; Count
Andrássy, Austria-Hungary; William Henry Waddington, France; Aleksandr
Gorchakov, Russia; Count Corti, Italy; and Alexander Karatheodori, the Ottomans.
The agreements reached in the Treaty of Berlin and the accompanying
British-Turkish pact deeply modified the Treaty of San Stefano. Montenegro,
Serbia, and Romania were recognized as independent states; Romania, however, was
forced to cede S Bessarabia to Russia in return for the less favored Dobruja.
Greater Bulgaria, which had been created at San Stefano, was divided into N
Bulgaria, a principality under nominal Ottoman suzerainty; Eastern Rumelia, to
be governed, with certain autonomous rights, by a Christian appointee of the
Ottoman emperor; and Macedonia (including Adrianople), under unrestricted
Ottoman sovereignty. Bosnia and Hercegovina, original cause of the Russo-Turkish
War of 1877–78, were assigned to Austria-Hungary for administration and military
occupation. In Asia, Russia acquired Ardahan, Batum, and Kars from the Ottomans.
Cyprus was to be under temporary occupation by Great Britain through a separate
agreement, and Crete was promised constitutional government. Other provisions
included an important rectification of the Greco-Ottoman boundary, the
demilitarization of the lower Danube, and the protection of the Armenians and
other religious minorities in Turkey. Russia was antagonized by Bismarck's
handling of the conference, thereby bringing to an end the first Three Emperors'
League.
Three Emperors' League,was an informal alliance among Austria-Hungary, Germany,
and Russia, announced officially in 1872 on the occasion of the meeting of
emperors Francis Joseph, William I, and Alexander II. The chief architects of
the alliance were Julius Andrássy, Otto von Bismarck, and Prince Gorchakov. The
aims of the league were to preserve the social order of the conservative powers
of Europe and to keep the peace between Austria-Hungary and Russia. The
Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78 shook the alliance (see Berlin, Congress of).
Although the agreement was secretly renewed in 1881, it was disrupted again in
1885 as a result of the Balkan flareup. However, it remained in force until
1887, when it was eclipsed by the German-Austrian alliance of 1879, which after
the adherence of Italy (1882) became the Triple Alliance. From 1887 to 1890 all
that remained of the Three Emperors' League was a Russo-German reinsurance
treaty. The German chancellor Graf von Caprivi refused to renew even this in
1890, thus opening the way for the Franco-Russian rapprochement and the creation
of the Triple Entente