Why Did Britain Fight Russia In The Crimean War?
Автор: The History Chap
Загружено: 2025-07-03
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Why Did Britian Fight Russia in the Crimean War?
The Tsar's Miscalculation - How the Crimean War Started.
Chris Green is The History Chap; telling stories that brings the past to life.
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In 1853, Tsar Nicholas I of Russia made a series of catastrophic miscalculations that would plunge Europe into its first major war in forty years - the Crimean War.
This is the story of how the mighty Tsar's overconfidence led to a conflict that would cost nearly 500,000 casualties and shatter his dreams of Russian dominance.
It all began with a seemingly trivial dispute in Jerusalem over who held the keys to Christianity's holiest sites. But behind this religious quarrel lay the complex geopolitical puzzle known as "The Eastern Question" - what would happen as the Ottoman Empire continued its long decline?
Tsar Nicholas I believed he had all the answers. This deeply religious autocrat saw himself as the divine successor to the Byzantine Empire and protector of Orthodox Christians worldwide. When he demanded control over the Ottoman Empire's 12 million Orthodox subjects, he was confident Europe would not intervene.
His reasoning seemed sound: Protestant Britain would never ally with Catholic France. Austria owed him loyalty after he'd sent 300,000 troops to crush the Hungarian Revolution. Parliamentary democracy was inherently weak compared to autocratic rule. The British Army was tiny - just 140,000 men scattered across a global empire.
He was wrong on every count.
The devastating Russian naval victory at Sinope in November 1853 shocked Europe. Using revolutionary explosive shells, the Russian Black Sea Fleet annihilated an Ottoman squadron, killing 2,700 Turkish sailors while losing just 37 of their own. But this tactical triumph became a strategic disaster.
The "Massacre of Sinope" outraged British and French public opinion. Anti-Russian sentiment exploded across London and Paris. Newspapers demanded action, Parliament attacked the government's "weak" response, and even Prince Albert condemned the Tsar as "a tyrant and enemy of all liberty."
Nicholas had fundamentally misunderstood the changing nature of European politics. While he thought in 18th-century terms, Britain had developed a global imperial perspective where Russian expansion anywhere threatened British interests everywhere. The route to India, Mediterranean trade, and the balance of power were all at stake.
The unthinkable happened: Britain and France formed an alliance. On 28th March 1854, both declared war on Russia.
The resulting Crimean War would rage for nearly two years across multiple fronts. British forces would fight at the Alma, Inkerman, and Balaclava, endure the siege of Sevastopol, and witness the famous Charge of the Light Brigade. Florence Nightingale would revolutionize military nursing, while war correspondent William Howard Russell pioneered modern conflict reporting.
This episode reveals how a series of miscalculations by an overconfident autocrat led to one of the 19th century's most significant conflicts - and how British strategic thinking proved superior to Russian assumptions about European power politics.
Chapters
0:00 Introduction
0:55 The Eastern Question
2:19 Tsar Nicholas I
3:10 The Sick Man of Europe
4:11 Alarm Bells Ring
6:05 British Position
7:58 The Spark
10:44 Russia up the stakes
12:27 Tsar's Miscalculation
14:18 Turks Fight Back
15:17 Battle of Sinope
17:05 British Reaction
18:59 War is Coming
21:08 Anglo-French Alliance
22:11 War Declared
23:12 The Crimean War
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My name is Chris Green and I love to share stories from British history. Not just because they are interesting but because, good or bad, they have shaped the world we live in today.
Just for the record, I do have a history degree in Medieval & Modern history from the University of Birmingham and am a member of the Royal Historical Society.
I am also a member of the Victorian Military Society, the Anglo Zulu War Society and the Military Historical Society.
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