Video Summary
Video Summary

Data

Name: Pro-independence and White movements in the Russian Far East during the Russian Civil War

Type: Event

Start: 1917 AD

End: 1926 AD

Parent: Pro-independence movements in the Russian Civil War

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Icon Pro-independence and White movements in the Russian Far East during the Russian Civil War

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Were a series of revolts and secessions in the Russian Far East during the Russian Civil War.

Chronology


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  • April 1917: The State of Buryat-Mongolia was established according to the decision of the first All-Buryat congress.
  • September 1918: From June to August 1918, Komuch's influence spread from Samara into the provinces of Simbirsk, Kazan, Ufa and Saratov.
  • October 1922: When the Japanese withdrew, the Soviet army of the Far Eastern Republic retook the territory.The army of the Far Eastern Republic retook Vladivostok on 25 October 1922, effectively bringing the Russian Civil War to a close.
  • November 1919: Omsk was conquered by the Reds.
  • April 1920: The Far Eastern Republic was a nominally independent state that existed from April 1920 in the Russian Far East.
  • April 1922: Korobeinikov's "Yakut People's Army," armed with six machine guns, took the major town of Yakutsk.
  • November 1918: The Provisional All-Russian Government (PA-RG) was a short-lived government (1918-1920) centred in Omsk in Siberia during the Russian Civil War of 1917-1922.
  • April 1920: When the Japanese evacuated the Trans-Baikal and Amur oblasts in the spring of 1920, a political vacuum resulted. The Far Eastern Republic was established comprising only the area around Verkhne-Udinsk.
  • January 1926: Japan retained the northern half of Sakhalin Island until 1925, ostensibly as compensation for the massacre of about 700 civilians and soldiers at the Japanese garrison at Nikolaevsk-na-Amure in January 1920.
  • November 1918: Samara falls to the Provisional All-Russian Government.
  • March 1922: Korobeinikov's "Yakut People's Army," armed with six machine guns, took the major town of Yakutsk.
  • February 1918: The Provisional Siberian Government (later the Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia), was an ephemeral government for Siberia created by the White movement.
  • January 1920: The Zemstvo of Maritime Territory was a local government that existed in the eastern part of Russia during the Russian Civil War between 31 January and 28 October 1920.
  • May 1921: Right-wing forces rejected the idea of a fledgling democratic republic. On 26 May 1921 a White coup took place in Vladivostok, backed by Japanese occupying forces. A cordon sanitaire of Japanese troops protected the insurgents, who sought to establish a new régime known as the Provisional Government of the Priamur.
  • July 1921: Gradually the enclave of Priamur was expanded to Khabarovsk and then Spassk, 201 km north of Vladivostok.
  • September 1922: In summer 1922, the Whites were ousted from Yakutsk and withdrew to the Pacific coast.
  • November 1922: With the Civil War finally over, Soviet Russia absorbed the Far Eastern Republic.
  • December 1922: When the Soviet Union was formed on 30 December 1922, the only Russian territory still controlled by the White Movement was the region of the Pepelyayevshchina ("пепеляевщина"), that is, Ayan, Okhotsk, and Nelkan.
  • July 1924: The Tungus Republic was a short-lived unrecognized secessionist state covering mostly Okhotsk region and the eastern regions of the Yakut ASSR from July 1924 to May 1925.
  • May 1925: The Tungus Republic was a short-lived unrecognized secessionist state covering mostly Okhotsk region and the eastern regions of the Yakut ASSR from July 1924 to May 1925.
  • April 1920: The State of Buryat-Mongolia de facto ceased to exist after the formation of the Far Eastern Republic.

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