Our Smallest Ally: a brief account of the Assyrian Nation in the Great War is a book published in 1920 by William A. Wigram.[1]

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Our Smallest Ally: a brief account of the Assyrian Nation in the Great War
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AuthorWilliam Ainger Wigram
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-fiction
Publication date
1920
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Can Great Britain, now that she is responsible for order in the country, afford to neglect so valuable a military asset as this nation has proved itself to be?

William Ainger Wigram, Our Smallest Ally

Wigram, an Anglican priest part of the Archbishop of Canterbury's mission to the Assyrians,[2] gives a first-hand account of contributions of the Assyrian volunteers during the Great War.

The Assyrian nation

The Assyrian nation was led by their Patriarch, Shimun XIX Benyamin, the circumstances of which were partly due to the Ottoman Millet system, in which religious bodies were treated as ethnic groups and were separated and afforded local autonomy. Upon joining on the side of the Allies during World War I, the Patriarch was special commander of one of the Battalions.

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Shimun XIX Benyamin or Mar Benyamin Shimun XIX, led the Assyrian Nation to side with the Allies, assassinated in 1918

Later, a third battalion was organized, under the special command of the Assyrian Patriarch.

H. H. Austin Brigadier-General, Our Smallest Ally

The efforts of the Patriarch's Assyrians on the side of Russia during the war, prior to the overthrow of Czar Nicholas II, were recognized in 1917 on 25 October, when 200 grade four Cross of St. George medals were delivered to Mar Benyamin to distribute to his soldiers that showed valor.[3]

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Fourth order of St. George medal

In addition, the Patriarch was decorated with the Order of St. Anna (pictured below) and was promised another additional order that only the Czar himself was able to bestow. However, the ousting of the Czar in the Russian Revolutions of 1917 prevented this second decoration being awarded to Mar Benyamin.[3]

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Star of the Order of St. Anna

On 3 March 1918, Mar Benyamin along with many of his 150 bodyguards were assassinated by Simko Shikak (Ismail Agha Shikak), a Kurdish agha, in the town of Kuhnashahir in Salmas (Persia) under a truce flag, in the context of the ongoing Assyrian genocide.[4][5] Czar Nicholas II himself was assassinated by the Bolsheviks along with his family in July 1918.

See also

References

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