Due to its key position, Perekop has endured
many sieges. During the
Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739), Russian field marshal
Burkhard Christoph von Munnich successfully stormed the fortifications on June 17, 1736 and left the Tatar fortress in ruins. This was a serious, if not mortal, blow to the independence of the Crimean Khanate. The town was virtually wiped out during the
Siege of Perekop by the
Red Army in 1920. The siege was a key episode of the
Russian Civil War. The success of the
Bolsheviks allowed them to oust
Pyotr Wrangel's
White Army from the
Crimea. Twelve years later, the
Soviets founded the new town of
Krasnoperekopsk to the south. During
World War II, Perekop was occupied by the
German Army from
September 27, 1941 to November 1, 1943. The capture of Perekop (by both the
Wehrmacht in 1941 and the Red Army in 1943) was used to cut off Crimea from
Ukraine. ==Demographics==