Armenian massacre victims laid out in the Armenian Gregorian Cemetery, Erzurum, Turkey, 1895

Item Overview
- Title
- Armenian massacre victims laid out in the Armenian Gregorian Cemetery, Erzurum, Turkey, 1895
- Photographer
- Sachtleben, William Lewis
- Date Created
- November 1, 1895-November 2, 1895
- Date
- 1895-11-01/1895-11-02
- Collection
-
Sachtleben (William Lewis) Papers. Collection 1841
Sachtleben (William) Images of Armenian Massacre
Notes
- Description
-
Photograph of the bodies of Armenian massacre victims laid out in an open area on the ground between a wall (L) and a stand of trees in the Armenian Cemetery in Erzurum, with people gathered around them along the wall and standing among the trees.
On Wednesday, October 30, 1895, Armenians were massacred in Erzurum and the surrounding Armenian villages. American journalist William Sachtleben happened to be in Erzurum at that time, investigating the disappearance of American cyclist Frank Lenz. During the massacre Sachtleben was in the American mission building, where over 200 Armenians fled for protection. Sachtleben witnessed the aftermath of the massacre; he took photographs of the victims in the Armenian Cemetery and wrote three lengthy and detailed letters about the massacre that were published, unsigned and attributed to an Occasional Correspondent, in the London Times on November 16, 27 and December 9. In the Nov. 16 letter he wrote: "Saturday, Nov. 2...I went with one of the cavasses of the English Legation, a soldier, my interpreter, and a photographer (Armenian) to the Armenian Gregorian Cemetery. The municipality had sent down a number of bodies, friends had brought more, and a horrible sight met my eyes. Along the wall on the north in a row 20ft. wide and 150ft. long, lay 321 dead bodies of the massacred Armenians..." - Caption
- "A Grim Corner of the Cemetery. Nothing could be more convincing as to the truth of the reports of massacres than the sight of corpses laid out in the cemetery waiting until one large common grave had been dug for their reception. It is impossible to state the exact number of the killed, but one correspondent heard 400, and it is probable that the total reached about 1,000."["The Massacre at Erzeroum, October 30, 1895: From Photographs Taken on the Three Following Days." The Graphic: An Illustrated Weekly Newspaper, Dec. 7, 1895. Quoted in Gia Aivazian, "The W. L. Sachtleben Papers on Erzerum in the 1890s" in Armenian Karin/Erzerum, ed. R. G. Hovannisian (2003)]
Physical Description
- Extent
- 1 photographic negative
- Medium
- b&w nitrate negative
Find This Item
- Repository
- University of California, Los Angeles. Library Special Collections
- Local Identifier
- uclamss_1841_0325
- ARK
- ark:/21198/zz002hfspk
- Manifest url
-
Access Condition
- Rights statement
- public domain
- Funding Note
- Access to this collection is generously supported by Arcadia funds.