Causes
Consequences
Perpetrators
Victims
International Reactions
100

This empire ruled the region where the Armenian Genocide took place during World War I.

Ottoman Empire


100

Approximately this many Armenians were killed during the genocide.

1-1.5 million

100

This political organization of the Young Turks controlled the Ottoman government during the genocide.

Committee of Union and Progress

100

This Christian ethnic group was the primary target of the genocide.

Armenians

100

This U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire documented and reported early accounts of the genocide.

Henry Morgenthau

200

This nationalist group took power in the Ottoman Empire and promoted a homogenous Turkish state

Committee of Union and Progress/Young Turks

200

The date when Armenian intellectuals were arrested and executed in Constantinople, and  is commemorated as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.

April 24, 1915

200

This Ottoman Minister of the Interior is widely considered the primary architect of the genocide.

Talaat Pasha

200

During the genocide, this group of Armenians was usually targeted first, often disarmed, placed in labor battalions, and then executed.

Armenian men

200

This 1915 declaration by Britain, France, and Russia condemned Ottoman actions and used the what phrase for the first time? 

Crimes Against Humanity

300

This failed 1914 agreement attempted to protect Armenians by placing their regions under European supervision.

Armenian Reform Agreement (1914)

300

This Syrian desert region became a major destination where deported Armenians were left to die.

Der Zor

300

This secret paramilitary organization composed of convicts and soldiers carried out mass killings.

Special Organization

300

These two Christian groups were also victims of violence alongside Armenians.

Greeks and Assyrians

300

This American humanitarian organization helped Armenian orphans and refugees.

Near East Relief

400

This 1914 declaration by the Ottoman Empire framed World War I as a religious struggle against Britain, France, and Russia.

Call to Jihad

400

This 1915 law legalized the deportation of Armenians under “military necessity.”

Temporary Law of Deportation


400

These two groups of civilians were encouraged to participate in raids and killings against Armenians.

Turkish and Kurdish Civilians

400

This group was frequently kidnapped, forced to convert, or assimilated into Muslim households.

Women and children

400

This 1920 treaty proposed an independent Armenian state but was never ratified.

Treaty of Sèvres

500

This Ottoman military defeat in 1914–1915 was blamed on Armenians and helped justify their deportation.

Battle of Sarikamish

500

This tactic forced Armenians to march long distances without food or water and became a key method of extermination.

Death Marches

500

This country knew about the genocide but largely failed to intervene.

Germany

500

This percentage represents roughly how much of the Ottoman Armenian population was killed.

70%

500

This treaty replaced the Treaty of Sèvres and ignored the genocide entirely.

Treaty of Lausanne

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