Introduction. Long before the official start of the Caucasian War, the Don Cossacks took part in thefighting in the Caucasus, and they had their own attitude to these events, which differed from the romantic descriptionsof the Caucasus and the war in the Caucasus, which appeared in the 19th century. Materials and methods. The authorsanalyze the annual reports of Don officers written in the 18th century about their service in the Caucasus and reveal thepersonal attitude of the authors to the battles in the Caucasus and to the region as a whole. Historical-genetic,historical-comparative, problem-chronological, and contextual methods were used. Analysis. The military operationsthat were conducted in the 18th century in the foothills of the Caucasus and in the Caucasus itself were primarilyconsidered by the Cossacks as a war against the population of the Kuban and the Western Caucasus, as protectionof their territory from enemy raids. The prevailing definitions of the situation in the service records of the Cossackswere “precaution” and “punishment.” The transfer of the Russian border to the Kuban and the intensification ofhostilities in other regions of the North Caucasus have changed the attitude of the Cossacks to the war. The war wasconsidered primarily as a royal service, including police service (“pacification”). The recorded losses among thecommand staff of the Donets during this period were minimal. Authors’ contribution. A.V. Venkov analyzed theservice of the Don officers; H.M.A. Sabanchiev connected it with historical events in the Caucasus in the 18th century.
Venkov et al. (Sat,) studied this question.