Zangibasar Named for the Zangi (present-day
Hrazdan) river passing through the territory, Zangibasar, which was located in northwest of the contemporary
Ararat Province of Armenia, consisted of 30,000 Muslims in 26 villages some southwest of Armenia's capital
Yerevan—the principal town of the district was also named Zangibasar and now forms part of the town
Masis. Despite Armenia appointing a local
Azerbaijani official in the region, the latter's authority did not effectively extend from their post in Ulukhanlu (now also part of Masis) as it was undermined by the presence of Turkish and Azerbaijani envoys who were encouraging locals to sabotage infrastructure and to raid nearby
Armenian villages—which many did with the help of
Turkish soldiery.
Vedibasar The district of Vedibasar constituted the south of the Ararat Province and was predominantly Azerbaijani-populated, with its key town in Boyuk Vedi (present-day
Vedi). On 1 July 1919, raiders from Boyuk Vedi attacked the railway town of Davalu (present-day
Ararat), killing several Armenian soldiers and civilians. 3 days later, a detachment of 400 soldiers of the
Armenian army issued an ultimatum to Boyuk Vedi to surrender the raiders and the stolen belongings of the murdered, however, the rebels answered with machine-gun fire which scattered the detachment and caused a least 160 casualties. In the following 10 days, the Armenian army attempted to storm the village, though were unsuccessful due to the defenders being bolstered by Turkish officers. On 10 August 1919, General
Drastamat Kanayan launched a counteroffensive which recaptured 5 rebelling villages and reached the heights of Boyuk Vedi, however, the town would not be retaken until the following year. On 14 July 1919, the
Azerbaijani envoy to Armenia who played a "great role in the successful resistance of Muslims" dispatched the following note to the
foreign minister of Azerbaijan: Three days earlier, Takinski had apprised the Azerbaijani government of the unsuccessful Armenian counterattack at Boyuk Vedi which resulted in 200 casualties and led to the locals seizing "two artillery pieces and eight machine guns". Though the Armenians attributed their failure to the presence of Turkish soldiery, historian
Jamil Hasanli writes that it was determined that there was "not a single Turkish soldier in these villages".
Sharur–Nakhichevan Encouraged by the uprisings near Yerevan, on 18 July 1919,
Halil Sami Bey crossed the border from
Doğubayazıt into
Sharur to lead a local cavalry unit. The British command later received word that the Armenian authorities in Nakhichevan had become "powerless", as indicated by the inter-ethnic clashes that erupted over the following days. The city of
Nakhchivan shortly thereafter became the center of an Armenian pogrom, thus the republic's administration over the region was shattered. On 21 July, Takinski reported to his government that Armenian governance had been ousted from Sharur. As the uprising spread throughout the Nakhichevan uezd,
Armenians in Jugha (present-day
Gülüstan) were forced to escape across the
Aras river into
Iran. Some 6,000 Armenians from Nakhichevan living in the
Ararat Valley managed to escape to Daralayaz, the
Nor Bayazet uezd, and the
Zangezur uezd (present-day
Vayots Dzor,
Gegharkunik, and
Syunik provinces, respectively). As a result of the uprising, Halil Sami Bey was responsible for the destruction of 45 Armenian villages and the massacre of 10,000 of their inhabitants in Sharur–Nakhichevan, including the
destruction of the large Armenian-populated town of Verin Agulis (present-day
Yuxarı Əylis) and its 1,400 inhabitants. Later in the year, Azerbaijani general
Samed bey Mehmandarov complained to his government about the presence of
Iranian agents trying to entice Muslim refugees in Sharur–Nakhichevan to seek refuge in Iran.
Suppression On 18 June 1920, some months after the
Red Army invasion of Azerbaijan in April, Armenia issued an ultimatum to the rebels of Zangibasar some southwest of Yerevan to submit to Armenian rule. Having no expectation that the ultimatum would be answered, the Armenian army launched an offensive to recapture the rebelling villages on the following day. In the fight for Zangibasar, Lieutenant Aram Kajaznuni, the son of the
first prime minister of Armenia was killed, however, the Armenians were victorious on 21 June and had secured the peripheries of Yerevan, however, the locals (mainly Tatars, later known as
Azerbaijanis) fled into the neighboring Surmalu uezd to
Aralık to avoid retribution. After the battle, volunteer detachments consisting of Armenian refugees from the
Aresh and
Nukha uezds of Azerbaijan looted the abandoned homes. The voices of the militaristic factions in the
Armenian government were strengthened by the successes in Zangibasar and Olty, therefore, the army prepared to retake the districts of Vedibasar and Sharur–Nakhichevan; the advance into the former began on 11 July and by the next day, Armenian forces had recaptured the district and Boyuk Vedi, reaching the boundary of the
Erivan and
Sharur-Daralayaz uezds at the mountain pass known as the
Volchi vorota ()—this again caused the local Muslims to flee, now southward to Sharur. On 14 July, the Armenian advance continued through the
Volchi vorota into the Sharur district, capturing it 2 days later whilst the locals fled across the Aras river into Iran. Before the Armenians could advance into the Nakhchevan uezd proper, the national council () of Nakhichevan appealed for peace, however, the negotiations only served in delaying Armenia's advance, after which the town of
Şahtaxtı some northwest of Nakhichevan was captured. By this time, the
11th Army of
Soviet Russia which had previously
invaded Azerbaijan reached southern Nakhichevan to form a link with
Nationalist Turkey. Colonel Tarkhov, the commander of the "united troops of the Soviet Russia and Red Turkey in Nakhichevan" in addressing the Armenians in Şahtaxtı proclaimed Soviet rule over the rest of Nakhichevan, thereby ending the Armenian campaign. During the campaign, the
Persian ministry of foreign affairs tried to delay the Armenian advance for a few days, stating that "the inhabitants of Nakhichevan were petitioning for protection through the
sardar of
Maku and the authorities at
Tabriz" and that as the rebels were "former Persian subjects and overwhelmingly
Shia", the government "could not remain indifferent to their appeal." == Turko-Kurdish uprisings ==