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History of Central Asia

The history of Central Asia concerns the history of the various peoples that have inhabited Central Asia. The lifestyle of such people has been determined primarily by the area's climate and geography. The aridity of the region makes agriculture difficult and distance from the sea cut it off from much trade. Thus, few major cities developed in the region. Nomadic horse peoples of the steppe dominated the area for millennia.

Contemporary political map of Central Asia

Relations between the steppe nomads and the settled people in and around Central Asia were marked by conflict. The nomadic lifestyle was well suited to warfare, and the steppe horse riders became some of the most militarily potent people in the world, due to the devastating techniques and ability of their horse archers.[1] Periodically, tribal leaders or changing conditions would cause several tribes to organize themselves into a single military force, which would then often launch campaigns of conquest, especially into more 'civilized' areas. A few of these types of tribal coalitions included the Huns' invasion of Europe, various Turkic migrations into Transoxiana, the Wu Hu attacks on China and most notably the Mongol conquest of much of Eurasia.

The dominance of the nomads ended in the 16th century as firearms allowed settled people to gain control of the region. The Russian Empire, the Qing dynasty of China, and other powers expanded into the area and seized the bulk of Central Asia by the end of the 19th century. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Soviet Union incorporated most of Central Asia; only Mongolia and Afghanistan remained nominally independent, although Mongolia existed as a Soviet satellite state and Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan in the late 20th century. The Soviet areas of Central Asia saw much industrialization and construction of infrastructure, but also the suppression of local cultures and a lasting legacy of ethnic tensions and environmental problems.

With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, five Central Asian countries gained independence — Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. In all of the new states, former Communist Party officials retained power as local strongmen, with the partial exception of Kyrgyzstan which, despite ousting three post-Soviet presidents in popular uprisings, has as yet been unable to consolidate a stable democracy.[2]

Prehistory

 
Sarmishsay (Navoi Region), Rock Art 3rd millennium BCE. State Museum of History of Uzbekistan.
 
 
Murals from Dilberjin Tepe, thought to represent early Central Asian Huns.[3][4][5][6]

Anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) reached Central Asia by 50,000 to 40,000 years ago. The Tibetan Plateau is thought to have been reached by 38,000 years ago.[7] The currently oldest modern human sample found in northern Central Asia, is a 45,000-year-old remain, which was genetically closest to ancient and modern East Asians, but his lineage died out quite early.[8][9]

 
Genetic, archeologic and linguistic evidence links the early Turkic peoples to the "Northeast Asian gene pool". Proto-Turks are suggested to have adopted a nomadic lifestyle and expanded from eastern Mongolia westwards.[10]

Paleolithic Central Asia was characterized by an distinctive but deeply European-related population (Ancient North Eurasian), with subsequent geneflow from Paleo-Siberians, contributing East Asian-related ancestry towards Paleolithic Central Asians. During the Bronze Age, ancient Central Asia received various migration events from Europe and the Middle East, associated with Indo-Europeans. Bronze Age Central Asia consisted largely of Iranian peoples, with some groups being of Paleo-Siberian and Samoyedic (Uralic) origin. Since the early Iron Age, Central Asia received noteworthy amounts of migration from East Asian-related populations, and became increasingly diverse. The Turkic peoples slowly replaced and assimilated the previous Iranian-speaking locals, turning the population of Central Asia from largely Iranian, into primarily of East Asian descent. Modern Central Asians are characterized by both West-Eurasian and East-Eurasian ancestry, with the majority being of primarily East Asian ancestry, and can be linked to expanding Turkic peoples outgoing from Mongolia and Northeast Asia.[11][12][13][14]

The term Ceramic Mesolithic is used of late Mesolithic cultures of Central Asia, during the 6th to 5th millennia BC (in Russian archaeology, these cultures are described as Neolithic even though farming is absent). It is characterized by its distinctive type of pottery, with point or knob base and flared rims, manufactured by methods not used by the Neolithic farmers. The earliest manifestation of this type of pottery may be in the region around Lake Baikal in Siberia. It appears in the Elshan or Yelshanka or Samara culture on the Volga in Russia by about 7000 BC.[15] and from there spread via the Dnieper-Donets culture to the Narva culture of the Eastern Baltic.[16]

The Botai culture (c. 3700–3100 BC) is suggested to be the earliest culture to have domesticated the horse. The four analyzed Botai samples had about 2/3 European-related and 1/3 East Asian-related ancestry. The Botai samples also showed high affinity towards the Mal'ta boy sample in Siberia.[17][18]

In the Pontic–Caspian steppe, Chalcolithic cultures develop in the second half of the 5th millennium BC, small communities in permanent settlements which began to engage in agricultural practices as well as herding. Around this time, some of these communities began the domestication of the horse. According to the Kurgan hypothesis, the north-west of the region is also considered to be the source of the root of the Indo-European languages. The horse-drawn chariot appears in the 3rd millennium BC, by 2000 BC, in the form of war chariots with spoked wheels, thus being made more maneuverable, and dominated the battlefields. The growing use of the horse, combined with the failure, roughly around 2000 BC, of the always precarious irrigation systems that had allowed for extensive agriculture in the region, gave rise and dominance of pastoral nomadism by 1000 BC, a way of life that would dominate the region for the next several millennia, giving rise to the Scythian expansion of the Iron Age.

Scattered nomadic groups maintained herds of sheep, goats, horses, and camels, and conducted annual migrations to find new pastures (a practice known as transhumance). The people lived in yurts (or gers) – tents made of hides and wood that could be disassembled and transported. Each group had several yurts, each accommodating about five people.

While the semi-arid plains were dominated by the nomads, small city-states and sedentary agrarian societies arose in the more humid areas of Central Asia. The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex of the early 2nd millennium BC was the first sedentary civilization of the region, practicing irrigation farming of wheat and barley and possibly a form of writing. Bactria-Margiana probably interacted with the contemporary Bronze Age nomads of the Andronovo culture, the originators of the spoke-wheeled chariot, who lived to their north in western Siberia, Russia, and parts of Kazakhstan, and survived as a culture until the 1st millennium BC. These cultures, particularly Bactria-Margiana, have been posited as possible representatives of the hypothetical Aryan culture ancestral to the speakers of the Indo-Iranian languages (see Indo-Iranians).

Later the strongest of Sogdian city-states of the Fergana Valley rose to prominence. After the 1st century BC, these cities became home to the traders of the Silk Road and grew wealthy from this trade. The steppe nomads were dependent on these settled people for a wide array of goods that were impossible for transient populations to produce. The nomads traded for these when they could, but because they generally did not produce goods of interest to sedentary people, the popular alternative was to carry out raids.

A wide variety of people came to populate the steppes. Nomadic groups in Central Asia included the Huns and other Turks, as well as Indo-Europeans such as the Tocharians, Persians, Scythians, Saka, Yuezhi, Wusun, and others, and a number of Mongol groups. Despite these ethnic and linguistic differences, the steppe lifestyle led to the adoption of very similar culture across the region.[12][19][20]

Ancient era

 
Tetradrachm of the Greco-Bactrian King Eucratides (171–145 BC).
 
A monumental Sogdian wall mural of Samarkand, dated c. 650 AD, known as the Ambassadors' Painting, found in the hall of the ruin of an aristocratic house in Afrasiab, commissioned by the Sogdian king of Samarkand, Varkhuman
 
 
The banquet scenes in the murals of Balalyk Tepe show the life of the Hephthalite ruling class of Tokharistan.[21][22]

In the 2nd and 1st millennia BC, a series of large and powerful states developed on the southern periphery of Central Asia (the Ancient Near East). These empires launched several attempts to conquer the steppe people but met with only mixed success. The Median Empire and Achaemenid Empire both ruled parts of Central Asia. The Xiongnu Empire (209 BC-93 (156) AD) may be seen as the first central Asian empire which set an example for later Göktürk and Mongol empires.[23] Xiongnu's ancestor Xianyu tribe founded Zhongshan state (c. 6th century BC – c. 296 BC) in Hebei province, China. The title chanyu was used by the Xiongnu rulers before Modun Chanyu so it is possible that statehood history of the Xiongnu began long before Modun's rule.

Following the success of the Han–Xiongnu War, Chinese states would also regularly strive to extend their power westwards. Despite their military might, these states found it difficult to conquer the whole region.

When faced by a stronger force, the nomads could simply retreat deep into the steppe and wait for the invaders to leave. With no cities and little wealth other than the herds they took with them, the nomads had nothing they could be forced to defend. An example of this is given by Herodotus's detailed account of the futile Persian campaigns against the Scythians. The Scythians, like most nomad empires, had permanent settlements of various sizes, representing various degrees of civilisation.[24] The vast fortified settlement of Kamenka on the Dnieper River, settled since the end of the 5th century BC, became the centre of the Scythian kingdom ruled by Ateas, who lost his life in a battle against Philip II of Macedon in 339 BC.[25]

Some empires, such as the Persian and Macedonian empires, did make deep inroads into Central Asia by founding cities and gaining control of the trading centres. Alexander the Great's conquests spread Hellenistic civilisation all the way to Alexandria Eschate (Lit. “Alexandria the Furthest”), established in 329 BC in modern Tajikistan. After Alexander's death in 323 BC, his Central Asian territory fell to the Seleucid Empire during the Wars of the Diadochi.

In 250 BC, the Central Asian portion of the empire (Bactria) seceded as the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, which had extensive contacts with India and China until its end in 125 BC. The Indo-Greek Kingdom, mostly based in the Punjab region but controlling a fair part of Afghanistan, pioneered the development of Greco-Buddhism. The Kushan Kingdom thrived across a wide swath of the region from the 2nd century BC to the 4th century AD, and continued Hellenistic and Buddhist traditions. These states prospered from their position on the Silk Road linking China and Europe.

Likewise, in eastern Central Asia, the Chinese Han dynasty expanded into the region at the height of its imperial power. From roughly 115 to 60 BC, Han forces fought the Xiongnu over control of the oasis city-states in the Tarim Basin. The Han was eventually victorious and established the Protectorate of the Western Regions in 60 BC, which dealt with the region's defence and foreign affairs.[26][27][28][29] Chinese rule in Tarim Basin was replaced successively with Kushans and Hephthalites.

Later, external powers such as the Sassanid Empire would come to dominate this trade. One of those powers, the Parthian Empire, was of Central Asian origin, but adopted Persian-Greek cultural traditions. This is an early example of a recurring theme of Central Asian history: occasionally nomads of Central Asian origin would conquer the kingdoms and empires surrounding the region, but quickly merge into the culture of the conquered peoples.

At this time Central Asia was a heterogeneous region with a mixture of cultures and religions. Buddhism remained the largest religion, but was concentrated in the east. Around Persia, Zoroastrianism became important. Nestorian Christianity entered the area, but was never more than a minority faith. More successful was Manichaeism, which became the third largest faith.

Turkic expansion began in the 6th century; the Turkic speaking Uyghurs were one of many distinct cultural groups brought together by the trade of the Silk Route at Turfan, which was then ruled by China's Tang dynasty. The Uyghurs, primarily pastoral nomads, observed a number of religions including Manichaeism, Buddhism, and Nestorian Christianity. Many of the artefacts from this period were found in the 19th century in this remote desert region.

Medieval

Sui and early Tang dynasty

 
A Tang period gilt-silver jar, shaped in the style of northern nomad's leather bag[30] decorated with a horse dancing with a cup of wine in its mouth, as the horses of Emperor Xuanzong were trained to do.[30]
 
The monumental Sogdian wall murals of Panjakent (modern Tajikistan), showing cavalry and horse riders, dated c. 740 AD

It was during the Sui and Tang dynasties that China expanded into eastern Central Asia. Chinese foreign policy to the north and west now had to deal with Turkic nomads, who were becoming the most dominant ethnic group in Central Asia.[31][32] To handle and avoid any threats posed by the Turks, the Sui government repaired fortifications and received their trade and tribute missions.[33] They sent royal princesses off to marry Turkic clan leaders, a total of four of them in 597, 599, 614, and 617. The Sui army intervened in Turks’ civil war and stirred conflict amongst ethnic groups against the Turks.[34][35]

As early as the Sui dynasty, the Turks had become a major militarised force employed by the Chinese. When the Khitans began raiding north-east China in 605, a Chinese general led 20,000 Turks against them, distributing Khitan livestock and women to the Turks as a reward.[36] On two occasions between 635 and 636, Tang royal princesses were married to Turk mercenaries or generals in Chinese service.[35]

Throughout the Tang dynasty until the end of 755, there were approximately ten Turkic generals serving under the Tang.[37][38] While most of the Tang army was made of fubing(府兵) Chinese conscripts, the majority of the troops led by Turkic generals were of non-Chinese origin, campaigning largely in the western frontier where the presence of fubing(府兵) troops was low.[39] Some "Turkic" troops were nomadisized Han Chinese, a desinicized people.[40]

Civil war in China was almost totally diminished by 626, along with the defeat in 628 of the Ordos Chinese warlord Liang Shidu; after these internal conflicts, the Tang began an offensive against the Turks.[41] In the year 630, Tang armies captured areas of the Ordos Desert, modern-day Inner Mongolia province, and southern Mongolia from the Turks.[36][42]

After this military victory, Emperor Taizong won the title of Great Khan amongst the various Turks in the region who pledged their allegiance to him and the Chinese empire (with several thousand Turks traveling into China to live at Chang'an). On June 11, 631, Emperor Taizong also sent envoys to the Eastern Turkic tribes bearing gold and silk in order to persuade the release of enslaved Chinese prisoners who were captured during the transition from Sui to Tang from the northern frontier; this embassy succeeded in freeing 80,000 Chinese men and women who were then returned to China.[43][44]

While the Turks were settled in the Ordos region (former territory of the Xiongnu), the Tang government took on the military policy of dominating the central steppe. Like the earlier Han dynasty, the Tang dynasty, along with Turkic allies like the Uyghurs, conquered and subdued Central Asia during the 640s and 650s.[33] During Emperor Taizong's reign alone, large campaigns were launched against not only the Göktürks, but also separate campaigns against the Tuyuhun, and the Xueyantuo. Taizong also launched campaigns against the oasis states of the Tarim Basin, beginning with the annexation of Gaochang in 640.[45] The nearby kingdom of Karasahr was captured by the Tang in 644 and the kingdom of Kucha was conquered in 649.

 
The Chinese Tang dynasty during its greatest extension, controlling large parts of Central Asia.

[46]

The expansion into Central Asia continued under Taizong's successor, Emperor Gaozong, who invaded the Western Turks ruled by the qaghan Ashina Helu in 657 with an army led by Su Dingfang.[46] Ashina was defeated and the khaganate was absorbed into the Tang empire.[47] The territory was administered through the Anxi Protectorate and the Four Garrisons of Anxi. Tang hegemony beyond the Pamir Mountains in Afghanistan ended with revolts by the Turks in 665, but the Tang retained a military presence in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. These holdings were later invaded by the Tibetan Empire to the south in 670.[48]

Tang rivalry with the Tibetan Empire

 
A lion motif on Sogdian polychrome silk, 8th century AD, most likely from Bukhara

The Tang Empire competed with the Tibetan Empire for control of areas in Inner and Central Asia, which was at times settled with marriage alliances such as the marrying of Princess Wencheng (d. 680) to Songtsän Gampo (d. 649).[49][50] A Tibetan tradition mentions that after Songtsän Gampo's death in 649 AD, Chinese troops captured Lhasa.[51] The Tibetan scholar Tsepon W. D. Shakabpa believes that the tradition is in error and that "those histories reporting the arrival of Chinese troops are not correct" and claims that the event is mentioned neither in the Chinese annals nor in the manuscripts of Dunhuang.[52]

There was a long string of conflicts with Tibet over territories in the Tarim Basin between 670–692 and in 763 the Tibetans even captured the capital of China, Chang'an, for fifteen days during the An Shi Rebellion.[53][54] In fact, it was during this rebellion that the Tang withdrew its western garrisons stationed in what is now Gansu and Qinghai, which the Tibetans then occupied along with the territory of Central Asia.[55] Hostilities between the Tang and Tibet continued until they signed a formal peace treaty in 821.[56] The terms of this treaty, including the fixed borders between the two countries, are recorded in a bilingual inscription on a stone pillar outside the Jokhang temple in Lhasa.[57]

Arrival of Islam

 
Pre-Islamic Buddhist paintings at Bamyan, Afghanistan.

In the 8th century, Islam began to penetrate the region, the desert nomads of Arabia could militarily match the nomads of the steppe, and the early Arab Empire gained control over parts of Central Asia. The early conquests under Qutayba ibn Muslim (705–715) were soon reversed by a combination of native uprisings and invasion by the Turgesh, but the collapse of the Turgesh khaganate after 738 opened the way for the re-imposition of Muslim authority under Nasr ibn Sayyar.

The Arab invasion also saw Chinese influence expelled from western Central Asia. At the Battle of Talas in 751 an Arab army decisively defeated a Tang dynasty force, and for the next several centuries Middle Eastern influences would dominate the region. Large-scale Islamization however did not begin until the 9th century, running parallel with the fragmentation of Abbasid political authority and the emergence of local Iranian and Turkic dynasties like the Samanids.

Steppe empires

 
A map showing the major trade routes of Central Asia in the 13th century.
 
Mongol invasions and conquests seriously depopulated large areas of Muslim Central Asia

Over time, as new technologies were introduced, the nomadic horsemen grew in power. The Scythians developed the saddle, and by the time of the Alans the use of the stirrup had begun. Horses continued to grow larger and sturdier so that chariots were no longer needed as the horses could carry men with ease. This greatly increased the mobility of the nomads; it also freed their hands, allowing them to use the bow from horseback.

Using small but powerful composite bows, the steppe people gradually became the most powerful military force in the world. From a young age, almost the entire male population was trained in riding and archery, both of which were necessary skills for survival on the steppe. By adulthood, these activities were second nature. These mounted archers were more mobile than any other force at the time, being able to travel forty miles per day with ease.[citation needed]

The steppe peoples quickly came to dominate Central Asia, forcing the scattered city states and kingdoms to pay them tribute or face annihilation. The martial ability of the steppe peoples was limited, however, by the lack of political structure within the tribes. Confederations of various groups would sometimes form under a ruler known as a khan. When large numbers of nomads acted in unison they could be devastating, as when the Huns arrived in Western Europe. However, tradition dictated that any dominion conquered in such wars should be divided among all of the khan's sons, so these empires often declined as quickly as they formed.

 
Tang Chinese painting about the Hephthalites, which ruled southern Central Asia, specifically what is today Uzbekistan.

Once the foreign powers were expelled, several indigenous empires formed in Central Asia. The Hephthalites were the most powerful of these nomad groups in the 6th and 7th century and controlled much of the region. In the 10th and 11th centuries the region was divided between several powerful states including the Samanid dynasty, that of the Seljuk Turks, and the Khwarezmid Empire.

The most spectacular power to rise out of Central Asia developed when Genghis Khan united the tribes of Mongolia. Using superior military techniques, the Mongol Empire spread to comprise all of Central Asia and China as well as large parts of Russia, and the Middle East. After Genghis Khan died in 1227, most of Central Asia continued to be dominated by the Mongol successor Chagatai Khanate. This state proved to be short lived, as in 1369 Timur, a Turco-Mongol ruler, conquered most of the region.

Even harder than keeping a steppe empire together was governing conquered lands outside the region. While the steppe peoples of Central Asia found conquest of these areas easy, they found governing almost impossible. The diffuse political structure of the steppe confederacies was maladapted to the complex states of the settled peoples. Moreover, the armies of the nomads were based upon large numbers of horses, generally three or four for each warrior. Maintaining these forces required large stretches of grazing land, not present outside the steppe. Any extended time away from the homeland would thus cause the steppe armies to gradually disintegrate. To govern settled peoples the steppe peoples were forced to rely on the local bureaucracy, a factor that would lead to the rapid assimilation of the nomads into the culture of those they had conquered. Another important limit was that the armies, for the most part, were unable to penetrate the forested regions to the north; thus, such states as Novgorod and Muscovy began to grow in power.

In the 14th century much of Central Asia, and many areas beyond it, were conquered by Timur (1336–1405) who is known in the west as Tamerlane. It was during Timur's reign that the nomadic steppe culture of Central Asia fused with the settled culture of Iran. One of its consequences was an entirely new visual language that glorified Timur and subsequent Timurid rulers. This visual language was also used to articulate their commitment to Islam.[58] Timur's large empire collapsed soon after his death, however. The region then became divided among a series of smaller Khanates, including the Khanate of Khiva, the Khanate of Bukhara, the Khanate of Kokand, and the Khanate of Kashgar.

Early modern period (16th to 19th centuries)

The lifestyle that had existed largely unchanged since 500 BCE began to disappear after 1500. Important changes to the world economy in the 14th and 15th century reflected the impact of the development of nautical technology. Ocean trade routes were pioneered by the Europeans, who had been cut off from the Silk Road by the Muslim states that controlled its western termini. The long-distance trade linking East Asia and India to Western Europe increasingly began to move over the seas and not through Central Asia. However, the emergence of Russia as a world power enabled Central Asia to continue its role as a conduit for overland trade of other sorts, now linking India with Russia on a north–south axis.[59]

 
A native Turkmen man in traditional dress with his dromedary camel in Turkmenistan, c. 1915.

An even more important development was the introduction of gunpowder-based weapons. The gunpowder revolution allowed settled peoples to defeat the steppe horsemen in open battle for the first time. Construction of these weapons required the infrastructure and economies of large societies and were thus impractical for nomadic peoples to produce. The domain of the nomads began to shrink as, beginning in the 15th century, the settled powers gradually began to conquer Central Asia.

The last steppe empire to emerge was that of the Dzungars who conquered much of East Turkestan and Mongolia. However, in a sign of the changed times they proved unable to match the Chinese and were decisively defeated by the forces of the Qing dynasty. In the 18th century the Qing emperors, themselves originally from the far eastern edge of the steppe, campaigned in the west and in Mongolia, with the Qianlong Emperor taking control of Xinjiang in 1758. The Mongol threat was overcome and much of Inner Mongolia was annexed to China.

One Turko-Mongolic dynasty that remained prominent during this period was the Mughal Empire, whose founder Babur traced descent to Timur. While the Mughals were never able to conquer Babur's original domains in Fergana Valley, which fell to the Shaybanids, they maintained influence in the Afghanistan region until the late 17th century even as they dominated India. After the Mughal Empire's decline in the 18th century, the Durrani Empire from Afghanistan would briefly overrun the North Western region of India, by the 19th century, the rise of the British Empire would limit the impact of Afghan conquerors.

The Chinese dominions stretched into the heart of Central Asia and included the Khanate of Kokand, which paid tribute to Beijing. Outer Mongolia and Xinjiang did not become provinces of the Chinese empire, but rather were directly administered by the Qing dynasty. The fact that there was no provincial governor meant that the local rulers retained most of their powers and this special status also prevented emigration from the rest of China into the region. Persia also began to expand north, especially under the rule of Nadir Shah, who extended Persian dominion well past the Oxus. After his death, however, the Persian empire rapidly crumbled.

Russian expansion into Central Asia (19th century)

 
Russian wars of conquest in Turkestan

The Russians also expanded south, first with the transformation of the Ukrainian steppe into an agricultural heartland, and subsequently onto the fringe of the Kazakh steppes, beginning with the foundation of the fortress of Orenburg. The slow Russian conquest of the heart of Central Asia began in the early 19th century, although Peter the Great had sent a failed expedition under Prince Bekovitch-Cherkassky against Khiva as early as the 1720s.

By the 1800s, the locals could do little to resist the Russian advance, although the Kazakhs of the Great Horde under Kenesary Kasimov rose in rebellion from 1837 to 1846. Until the 1870s, for the most part, Russian interference was minimal, leaving native ways of life intact and local government structures in place. With the conquest of Turkestan after 1865 and the consequent securing of the frontier, the Russians gradually expropriated large parts of the steppe and gave these lands to Russian farmers, who began to arrive in large numbers. This process was initially limited to the northern fringes of the steppe and it was only in the 1890s that significant numbers of Russians began to settle farther south, especially in Zhetysu (Semirechye).

The Great Game

Russian campaigns

 
Prisoners in a zindan, a traditional Central Asian prison, in the Bukharan Protectorate under Imperial Russia, ca. 1910

The forces of the khanates were poorly equipped and could do little to resist Russia's advances, although the Kokandian commander Alimqul led a quixotic campaign before being killed outside Chimkent. The main opposition to Russian expansion into Turkestan came from the British, who felt that Russia was growing too powerful and threatening the northwest frontiers of British India. This rivalry came to be known as The Great Game, where both powers competed to advance their own interests in the region. It did little to slow the pace of conquest north of the Oxus, but did ensure that Afghanistan remained independent as a buffer state between the two Empires.

After the fall of Tashkent to General Cherniaev in 1865, Khodjend, Djizak, and Samarkand fell to the Russians in quick succession over the next three years as the Khanate of Kokand and the Emirate of Bukhara were repeatedly defeated. In 1867 the Governor-Generalship of Russian Turkestan was established under General Konstantin Petrovich Von Kaufman, with its headquarters at Tashkent. In 1881–85 the Transcaspian region was annexed in the course of a campaign led by Generals Mikhail Annenkov and Mikhail Skobelev, and Ashkhabad (from Persia), Merv and Pendjeh (from Afghanistan) all came under Russian control.

Russian expansion was halted in 1887 when Russia and Great Britain delineated the northern border of Afghanistan. Bukhara and the Khanate of Khiva remained quasi-independent, but were essentially protectorates along the lines of the Princely States of British India. Although the conquest was prompted by almost purely military concerns, in the 1870s and 1880s Turkestan came to play a reasonably important economic role within the Russian Empire.

Because of the American Civil War, cotton shot up in price in the 1860s, becoming an increasingly important commodity in the region, although its cultivation was on a much lesser scale than during the Soviet period. The cotton trade led to improvements: the Transcaspian Railway from Krasnovodsk to Samarkand and Tashkent, and the Trans-Aral Railway from Orenburg to Tashkent were constructed. In the long term the development of a cotton monoculture would render Turkestan dependent on food imports from Western Siberia, and the Turkestan-Siberia Railway was already planned when the First World War broke out.

Russian rule still remained distant from the local populace, mostly concerning itself with the small minority of Russian inhabitants of the region. The local Muslims were not considered full Russian citizens. They did not have the full privileges of Russians, but nor did they have the same obligations, such as military service. The Tsarist regime left substantial elements of the previous regimes (such as Muslim religious courts) intact, and local self-government at the village level was quite extensive.

Qing dynasty

During the 17th and 18th centuries the Qing dynasty made several campaigns to conquer the Dzungar Mongols. In the meantime, they incorporated parts of Central Asia into the Chinese Empire. Internal turmoil largely halted Chinese expansion in the 19th century. In 1867 Yakub Beg led a rebellion that saw Kashgar declaring its independence as the Taiping and Nian Rebellions in the heartland of the empire prevented the Chinese from reasserting their control.

Instead, the Russians expanded, annexing the Chu and Ili Valleys and the city of Kuldja from the Chinese Empire. After Yakub Beg's death at Korla in 1877 his state collapsed as the area was reconquered by China. After lengthy negotiations Kuldja was returned to Beijing by Russia in 1884.

Revolution and revolt

During the First World War the Muslim exemption from conscription was removed by the Russians, sparking the Central Asian Revolt of 1916. When the Russian Revolution of 1917 occurred, a provisional Government of Jadid Reformers, also known as the Turkestan Muslim Council met in Kokand and declared Turkestan's autonomy. This new government was quickly crushed by the forces of the Tashkent Soviet, and the semi-autonomous states of Bukhara and Khiva were also invaded. The main independence forces were rapidly crushed, but guerrillas known as basmachi continued to fight the Communists until 1924. Mongolia was also swept up by the Russian Revolution and, though it never became a Soviet republic, it became a communist People's Republic in 1924.

The creation of the Republic of China in 1911 and the general turmoil in China affected the Qing dynasty's holdings in Central Asia. Republic of China's control of the region was relegated to southern Xinjiang and there was a dual threat from Islamic separatists and communists. Eventually the region became largely independent under the control of the provincial governor. Rather than invade, the Soviet Union established a network of consulates in the region and sent aid and technical advisors.

By the 1930s, the governor of Xinjiang's relationship with Moscow was far more important than that with Nanking. The Chinese Civil War further destabilised the region and saw Turkic nationalists make attempts at independence. In 1933, the First East Turkestan Republic was declared, but it was destroyed soon after with the aid of the Soviet troops.

After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Governor Sheng Shicai of Xinjiang gambled and broke his links to Moscow, moving to ally himself with the Kuomintang. This led to a civil war within the region. Sheng was eventually forced to flee and the Soviet-backed Second East Turkestan Republic was formed in northern Dzungaria, while the Republic of China retained control of southern Xinjiang. Both states were annexed by the People's Republic of China in 1949.

Soviet era (1918–1991)

After being conquered by Bolshevik forces, Soviet Central Asia experienced a flurry of administrative reorganisation. In 1918 the Bolsheviks set up the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and Bukhara and Khiva also became SSRs. In 1919 the Conciliatory Commission for Turkestan Affairs was established, to try to improve relations between the locals and the Communists. New policies were introduced, respecting local customs and religion. In 1920, the Kirghiz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, covering modern Kazakhstan, was set up. It was renamed the Kazakh Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1925. In 1924, the Soviets created the Uzbek SSR and the Turkmen SSR. In 1929 the Tajik SSR was split from the Uzbek SSR. The Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast became an SSR in 1936.

These borders had little to do with ethnic make-up, but the Soviets felt it important to divide the region. They saw both Pan-Turkism and Pan-Islamism as threats, which dividing Turkestan would limit. Under the Soviets, the local languages and cultures were systematised and codified, and their differences clearly demarcated and encouraged. New Cyrillic writing systems were introduced, to break links with Turkey and Iran. Under the Soviets the southern border was almost completely closed and all travel and trade was directed north through Russia.

During the period of forced collectivisation under Joseph Stalin at least a million persons died, mostly in the Kazakh SSR. Islam, as well as other religions, were also attacked. In the Second World War several million refugees and hundreds of factories were moved to the relative security of Central Asia; and the region permanently became an important part of the Soviet industrial complex. Several important military facilities were also located in the region, including nuclear testing facilities and the Baikonur Cosmodrome. The Virgin Lands Campaign, starting in 1954, was a massive Soviet agricultural resettlement program that brought more than 300,000 individuals, mostly from the Ukraine, to the northern Kazakh SSR and the Altai region of the Russian SFSR. This was a major change in the ethnicity of the region.

Similar processes occurred in Xinjiang and the rest of Western China where the PRC quickly established control from the Second East Turkestan Republic that controlled northern Xinjiang and the Republic of China forces that controlled southern Xinjiang after the Qing dynasty. The area was subject to a number of development schemes and, like Soviet Central Asia, one focus was on the growing of the cotton cash crop. These efforts were overseen by the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps. The XPCC also encouraged Han Chinese to return to Xinjiang after many had migrated out during the Muslim revolts against the Qing dynasty.

Political turmoil has led to major demographic shifts in the region: During the Qing dynasty there were 60% Turkic and 30% Han Chinese in the region,[60] after the Muslim revolts the percentage of Han Chinese dropped to as low as 7%,[61] and by the year 2000 some 40% of the population of Xinjiang were Han.[62] As with the Soviet Union local languages and cultures were mostly encouraged and Xinjiang was granted autonomous status. However, Islam was much persecuted, especially during the Cultural Revolution. Many people from other parts of China fled to Xinjiang due to the failed agricultural policies of the Great Leap Forward in other provinces. However, the Great Leap Forward did not affect much of Xinjiang due to its geographical isolation from other parts of China.

Soviet evacuation and WWII population deportations

The Second World War sparked the widespread migration of Soviet citizens to the rear of the USSR. Much of this movement was directed to Soviet Central Asia. These migrations included official, state-organised evacuations and deportations as well as the non-sanctioned, panicked flight from the front by both general citizenry and important officials. The evacuation of Soviet citizens and industry during World War II was an essential element of their overall success in the war, and Central Asia served as a main destination for evacuees.

The German invasion of the Soviet Union began on June 22, 1941. A decree from the Presidium of the executive committee on the same day forbade the entry or exit from the USSR's border regions, which were under a state of martial law.[63] Such mandates demonstrated the Soviets' fear of spreading panic and their commitment to asserting direct state control over wartime relocations to maintain order. Soviet wartime population policy consisted of two distinct operations: deportation and evacuation. Deportation aimed to clear regions near the front of potentially insidious anti-Soviet elements that could hamper the war effort, while evacuation policy aimed to move Soviet industry and intelligentsia to the rear, where they would be safe.[64]

Deportations along ethnic lines

Soviet officials organised their wartime deportation policy largely along ethnic lines. As a response to the German invasion, Soviet citizens of German descent in border regions were targeted for deportation to the rear where Soviet authorities had no need to worry of their conspiring with the enemy. Such dubious ethnically derived logic was not reserved for Germans. Many Finns were also forcibly relocated in the first year of the war simply for their heritage, though they were mainly sent to remote areas in the northern rear, such as Siberia, rather than Central Asia. A large portion of the German deportees, however, were sent to Kazakhstan. The remobilisation of relocated human resources into the labour force was pivotal to Soviet wartime production policy, and to that end many able-bodied deportees were conscripted into a “labour army” with military style discipline.[65]

By early 1942 as many as 20,800 ethnic Germans had been organised into battalions in this labour army, though this number would grow to as much as 222,000 by early 1944 as conscription criteria were broadened.[66] The NKVD employed about 101,000 members of the labour army at construction sites to develop infrastructure for the war effort.[67] Those who were not assigned to the labour army were used for timber harvesting, the construction of railways and other infrastructure, or sent to collective farms.[67]

As the tide turned in the war, and the Soviets began to reclaim the territories they lost to the initial German advance, they began a new wave of deportations of unfavoured ethnic groups. Karachais, Kalmyks, Chechens, Ingushetians, Kabardians, and Crimean Tatars were all deported to Central Asia for their supposed fraternisation with occupying German forces. These groups were sent mostly to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan for their infidelity. These punitive deportations were also conducted to keep “anti-Soviet elements” far from the border – where the Soviet offensive against Germany was progressing – for fear of spying or sabotage.

Evacuation of Soviet citizens to Central Asia

Many Soviet citizens ended up in Central Asia during World War II, not as a result of deportation, but evacuation. The evacuation focused on the movement of critical wartime industry and the factory workers responsible for overseeing such production. Whole factories and their employees were moved together via railway eastward to cities like Tashkent, which received a lion's share of the evacuees.[68]

The initial attempts at evacuation while the war was still in its early stages through early 1942 were a far cry from the organised affair that the Soviet central bureaucracy envisaged. Throughout the summer and fall of 1941, numerous Soviet frontier cities evacuated in a haphazard and panicked fashion before the German onslaught. A number of factors led to this lack of organisation. For one, the Soviet evacuation plans were thrown together fairly hurriedly, and a lot of the logistical planning was done on the fly as the German advance was already sweeping through the Soviet border zone. The German invasion also hampered the effectiveness of the Soviet response by shattering their communications in the war's early stages; many Soviet leaders were unable to gather reliable information about the positions of German forces until it was too late to effect an orderly evacuation.[69]

There was also a desire on the part of Soviet officials to forestall any evacuations until it was absolutely necessary, the marching orders were often to continue factory production until the eve of occupation before hurriedly dismantling and transporting factory equipment, and destroying what couldn't be moved in time.[70] As a result of the delay in evacuations, they were often carried out under German aerial bombardment, which led to additional confusion among the frightened citizenry. Historian Rebecca Manley describes these early evacuations as being charactered by “three phenomena: the 'flight' of officials, the flight of the population, and 'panic'”.[71]

The early flight of Soviet officials who were supposed to manage the evacuation was roundly condemned by Soviet leaders, but often their retreat resulted from a realisation that evacuation procedures had started too late, and that there was no way to effectively execute it. Additionally, Soviet officials who remained in a city captured by German forces feared execution by Nazis on the hunt for communists. Avoiding that, the officials knew that they would be subject to intense interrogation as to what happened by suspicious Soviets upon returning to the fold.[69]

Despite these setbacks in the implementation of evacuation policy early in the war, around 12 million Soviet citizens successfully evacuated in 1941, even if a number of these were the result of disorganised, “spontaneous self-evacuation,” and another 4.5 million evacuated the following year.[72] In addition, the factories that were successfully evacuated to the Central Asian rear would help provide the productive capacity the Soviets needed to eventually win the war, as well as preventing the Germans from acquiring additional industrial resources. By providing a safe haven from the German advance for Soviet citizens, Central Asia played a critical role in securing Allied victory. The evacuation itself was only part of the difficulty, however, as evacuees arriving in Central Asia faced many trials and tribulations.[73]

Due to the haphazard nature of evacuation, many labourers did not arrive with their factory, and had to find labour on their own, though jobs were hard to come by. Additionally, cities like Tashkent became overwhelmed at the sheer volume of people arriving at its gates and had great difficulty supplying the food and shelter necessary for evacuees. Upon arrival, many evacuees died of illness or starvation in extreme poverty in Central Asia. Uzbek officials set up aid stations at Tashkent, which were mirrored at other railway stations to help combat the poverty, but they could only do so much as little could be spared economically for the war effort.[73] Despite these troubles, the ability of Central Asia to absorb Soviet industry and population to the extent that it did and in the harried manner that it did was impressive. The Germans certainly didn't foresee the preparedness of Soviet Central Asia, and in the end they paid dearly for it.

Since 1991

From 1988 to 1992, a free press and multi-party system developed in the Central Asian republics as perestroika pressured the local Communist parties to open up. What Svat Soucek calls the "Central Asian Spring" was very short-lived, as soon after independence former Communist Party officials recast themselves as local strongmen.[74] Political stability in the region has mostly been maintained, with the major exception of the Tajik Civil War that lasted from 1992 to 1997. 2005 also saw the largely peaceful ousting of Kyrgyz president Askar Akayev in the Tulip Revolution and an outbreak of violence in Andijan, Uzbekistan.

Much of the population of Soviet Central Asia was indifferent to the collapse of the Soviet Union, even the large Russian populations in Kazakhstan (roughly 40% of the total) and Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Aid from the Kremlin had also been central to the economies of Central Asia, each of the republics receiving massive transfers of funds from Moscow.

Independence largely resulted from the efforts of the small groups of nationalistic, mostly local intellectuals, and from little interest in Moscow for retaining the expensive region. While never a part of the Soviet Union, Mongolia followed a somewhat similar path. Often acting as the unofficial sixteenth Soviet republic, it shed the communist system only in 1996, but quickly ran into economic problems. See: History of independent Mongolia.

The economic performance of the region since independence has been mixed. It contains some of the largest reserves of natural resources in the world, but there are important difficulties in transporting them. Since it lies farther from the ocean than anywhere else in the world, and its southern borders lay closed for decades, the main trade routes and pipelines run through Russia. As a result, Russia still exerts more influence over the region than in any other former Soviet republics. Nevertheless, the rising energy importance of the Caspian Sea entails a great involvement in the region by the US. The former Soviet republics of the Caucasus now have their own US Special Envoy and inter-agency working groups. Former US Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson had claimed that "the Caspian region will hopefully save us [the US] from total dependence on Middle East oil".[75]

Some analysts, such as Myers Jaffe and Robert A. Manning, estimate however that US' entry into the region (with initiatives such as the US-favored Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline) as a major actor may complicate Moscow's chances of making a decisive break with its past economic mistakes and geopolitical excesses in Central Asia. They also regard as a myth the assertion that Caspian oil and gas will be a cheaper and more secure alternative to supplies from the Persian Gulf.[76]

Despite these reservations and fears, since the late 1980s, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan have gradually moved to centre stage in the global energy markets and are now regarded as key factors of the international energy security. Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan in particular have succeeded in attracting massive foreign investment to their oil and gas sectors. According to Gawdat Bahgat, the investment flow suggests that the geological potential of the Caspian region as a major source of oil and gas is not in doubt.[77]

Russia and Kazakhstan started a closer energy co-operation in 1998, which was further consolidated in May 2002, when Presidents Vladimir Putin and Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a protocol dividing three gas fields – Kurmangazy, Tsentralnoye, and Khvalynskoye – on an equal basis. Following the ratification of bilateral treaties, Russia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan declared that the northern Caspian was open for business and investment as they had reached a consensus on the legal status of the basin. Iran and Turkmenistan refused however to recognise the validity of these bilateral agreements; Iran is rejecting any bilateral agreement to divide the Caspian. On the other hand, US' choices in the region (within the framework of the so-called "pipeline diplomacy"), such as the strong support of the Baku pipeline (the project was eventually approved and was completed in 2005), reflect a political desire to avoid both Russia and Iran.[78]

Increasingly, other powers have begun to involve themselves in Central Asia. Soon after the Central Asian states won their independence, Turkey began to look east, and a number of organizations are attempting to build links between the western and eastern Turks. Iran, which for millennia had close links with the region, has also been working to build ties and the Central Asian states now have good relations with the Islamic Republic. One important player in the new Central Asia has been Saudi Arabia, which has been funding the Islamic revival in the region. Olcott notes that soon after independence Saudi money paid for massive shipments of Qur'ans to the region and for the construction and repair of a large number of mosques. In Tajikistan alone an estimated 500 mosques per year have been erected with Saudi money.[79]

The formerly atheistic Communist Party leaders have mostly converted to Islam. Small Islamist groups have formed in several of the countries, but radical Islam has little history in the region; the Central Asian societies have remained largely secular and all five states enjoy good relations with Israel. Central Asia is still home to a large Jewish population, the largest group being the Bukharan Jews, and important trade and business links have developed between those that left for Israel after independence and those remaining.

The People's Republic of China sees the region as an essential future source of raw materials; most Central Asian countries are members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. This has affected Xinjiang and other parts of western China that have seen infrastructure programs building new links and also new military facilities. Chinese Central Asia has been far from the centre of that country's economic boom and the area has remained considerably poorer than the coast. China also sees a threat in the potential of the new states to support separatist movements among its own Turkic minorities.

One important Soviet legacy that has only gradually been appreciated is the vast ecological destruction. Most notable is the gradual drying of the Aral Sea. During the Soviet era, it was decided that the traditional crops of melons and vegetables would be replaced by water-intensive growing of cotton for Soviet textile mills. Massive irrigation efforts were launched that diverted a considerable percentage of the annual inflow to the sea, causing it to shrink steadily. Furthermore, vast tracts of Kazakhstan were used for nuclear testing, and there exists a plethora of decrepit factories and mines.

In the first part of 2008 Central Asia experienced a severe energy crisis, a shortage of both electricity and fuel, aggravated by abnormally cold temperatures, failing infrastructure, and a shortage of food in which aid from the west began to assist the region.

As of 2019, despite its common cultural and historical past Central Asia has been "one of the least integrated regions in the world".[80]

See also

Further reading

  • V.V. Barthold, Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion (London) 1968 (Third Edition)
  • Bacon, Elizabeth A. Central Asians under Russian Rule (Cornell UP, 1966)
  • Becker, Seymour, Russia’s Protectorates in Central Asia: Bukhara and Khiva, 1865 - 1924 (1968)
  • Brower, Daniel Turkestan and the Fate of the Russian Empire (London) 2003. ISBN 0-415-29744-3
  • Dani, A.H. and V.M. Masson eds. UNESCO History of Civilizations of Central Asia (Paris: UNESCO) 1992–
  • Hildinger, Erik. Warriors of the Steppe: A Military History of Central Asia, 500 BC. to 1700 AD. (Cambridge: Da Capo) 2001. ISBN 0-306-81065-4
  • Maitdinova, Guzel. The Dialogue of Civilizations in the Central Asian area of the Great Silk Route: Historical experience of integration and reference points of XXI century. Dushanbe: 2015.
  • Maitdinova, Guzel. The Kirpand State – an Empire in Middle Asia. Dushanbe: 2011.
  • O'Brien, Patrick K. (General Editor). Oxford Atlas of World History. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.
  • Olcott, Martha Brill. Central Asia's New States: Independence, Foreign policy, and Regional security. (Washington, D.C.: United States Institute of Peace Press) 1996. ISBN 1-878379-51-8
  • Sinor, Denis The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia (Cambridge) 1990 (2nd Edition). ISBN 0-521-24304-1
  • S. Frederick Starr,

Other languages

  • В.В. Бартольд История Культурной Жизни Туркестана ("Istoriya Kul'turnoy zhizni Turkestana")

(Москва) 1927

  • Н.А. Халфин; Россия и Ханства Средней Азии ("Rossiya i Hanstva Sredney Azii") (Москва) 1974
  • Encyclopædia Iranica: Central Asia from the 16th to the 18th centuries (R.D. McChesney)[permanent dead link]
  • (Yuri Bregel)
  • Center for the Study of Eurasian Nomads

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  69. ^ a b Manley (2009), pp. 66–69
  70. ^ Altschuler (1993), p. 80
  71. ^ Manley (2009), p. 48
  72. ^ Manley (2009), p. 50
  73. ^ a b Manley (2009), p. 148–195
  74. ^ Soucek (2000)
  75. ^ Manning & Jaffe (1998), p. 112
  76. ^ Manning & Jaffe (1998), p. 113
  77. ^ Bahgat (2006), p. 3
  78. ^ Bahgat (2006), p. 8
  79. ^ Martha Brill Olcott. Central Asia's New States
  80. ^ Vakulchuk, Roman and Indra Overland (2019) “China’s Belt and Road Initiative through the Lens of Central Asia”, in Fanny M. Cheung and Ying-yi Hong (eds) Regional Connection under the Belt and Road Initiative. The Prospects for Economic and Financial Cooperation. London: Routledge, p. 116.

References

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External links

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history, central, asia, history, central, asia, concerns, history, various, peoples, that, have, inhabited, central, asia, lifestyle, such, people, been, determined, primarily, area, climate, geography, aridity, region, makes, agriculture, difficult, distance,. The history of Central Asia concerns the history of the various peoples that have inhabited Central Asia The lifestyle of such people has been determined primarily by the area s climate and geography The aridity of the region makes agriculture difficult and distance from the sea cut it off from much trade Thus few major cities developed in the region Nomadic horse peoples of the steppe dominated the area for millennia Contemporary political map of Central Asia Relations between the steppe nomads and the settled people in and around Central Asia were marked by conflict The nomadic lifestyle was well suited to warfare and the steppe horse riders became some of the most militarily potent people in the world due to the devastating techniques and ability of their horse archers 1 Periodically tribal leaders or changing conditions would cause several tribes to organize themselves into a single military force which would then often launch campaigns of conquest especially into more civilized areas A few of these types of tribal coalitions included the Huns invasion of Europe various Turkic migrations into Transoxiana the Wu Hu attacks on China and most notably the Mongol conquest of much of Eurasia The dominance of the nomads ended in the 16th century as firearms allowed settled people to gain control of the region The Russian Empire the Qing dynasty of China and other powers expanded into the area and seized the bulk of Central Asia by the end of the 19th century After the Russian Revolution of 1917 the Soviet Union incorporated most of Central Asia only Mongolia and Afghanistan remained nominally independent although Mongolia existed as a Soviet satellite state and Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan in the late 20th century The Soviet areas of Central Asia saw much industrialization and construction of infrastructure but also the suppression of local cultures and a lasting legacy of ethnic tensions and environmental problems With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 five Central Asian countries gained independence Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Turkmenistan Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan In all of the new states former Communist Party officials retained power as local strongmen with the partial exception of Kyrgyzstan which despite ousting three post Soviet presidents in popular uprisings has as yet been unable to consolidate a stable democracy 2 Contents 1 Prehistory 2 Ancient era 3 Medieval 3 1 Sui and early Tang dynasty 3 2 Tang rivalry with the Tibetan Empire 3 3 Arrival of Islam 4 Steppe empires 5 Early modern period 16th to 19th centuries 6 Russian expansion into Central Asia 19th century 7 The Great Game 7 1 Russian campaigns 7 2 Qing dynasty 7 3 Revolution and revolt 8 Soviet era 1918 1991 8 1 Soviet evacuation and WWII population deportations 8 1 1 Deportations along ethnic lines 8 1 2 Evacuation of Soviet citizens to Central Asia 9 Since 1991 10 See also 11 Further reading 11 1 Other languages 12 Notes 12 1 References 13 External linksPrehistory EditFurther information Genetic history of Central Asia and Ancient North Eurasians Sarmishsay Navoi Region Rock Art 3rd millennium BCE State Museum of History of Uzbekistan Murals from Dilberjin Tepe thought to represent early Central Asian Huns 3 4 5 6 Anatomically modern humans Homo sapiens reached Central Asia by 50 000 to 40 000 years ago The Tibetan Plateau is thought to have been reached by 38 000 years ago 7 The currently oldest modern human sample found in northern Central Asia is a 45 000 year old remain which was genetically closest to ancient and modern East Asians but his lineage died out quite early 8 9 Genetic archeologic and linguistic evidence links the early Turkic peoples to the Northeast Asian gene pool Proto Turks are suggested to have adopted a nomadic lifestyle and expanded from eastern Mongolia westwards 10 Paleolithic Central Asia was characterized by an distinctive but deeply European related population Ancient North Eurasian with subsequent geneflow from Paleo Siberians contributing East Asian related ancestry towards Paleolithic Central Asians During the Bronze Age ancient Central Asia received various migration events from Europe and the Middle East associated with Indo Europeans Bronze Age Central Asia consisted largely of Iranian peoples with some groups being of Paleo Siberian and Samoyedic Uralic origin Since the early Iron Age Central Asia received noteworthy amounts of migration from East Asian related populations and became increasingly diverse The Turkic peoples slowly replaced and assimilated the previous Iranian speaking locals turning the population of Central Asia from largely Iranian into primarily of East Asian descent Modern Central Asians are characterized by both West Eurasian and East Eurasian ancestry with the majority being of primarily East Asian ancestry and can be linked to expanding Turkic peoples outgoing from Mongolia and Northeast Asia 11 12 13 14 The term Ceramic Mesolithic is used of late Mesolithic cultures of Central Asia during the 6th to 5th millennia BC in Russian archaeology these cultures are described as Neolithic even though farming is absent It is characterized by its distinctive type of pottery with point or knob base and flared rims manufactured by methods not used by the Neolithic farmers The earliest manifestation of this type of pottery may be in the region around Lake Baikal in Siberia It appears in the Elshan or Yelshanka or Samara culture on the Volga in Russia by about 7000 BC 15 and from there spread via the Dnieper Donets culture to the Narva culture of the Eastern Baltic 16 The Botai culture c 3700 3100 BC is suggested to be the earliest culture to have domesticated the horse The four analyzed Botai samples had about 2 3 European related and 1 3 East Asian related ancestry The Botai samples also showed high affinity towards the Mal ta boy sample in Siberia 17 18 In the Pontic Caspian steppe Chalcolithic cultures develop in the second half of the 5th millennium BC small communities in permanent settlements which began to engage in agricultural practices as well as herding Around this time some of these communities began the domestication of the horse According to the Kurgan hypothesis the north west of the region is also considered to be the source of the root of the Indo European languages The horse drawn chariot appears in the 3rd millennium BC by 2000 BC in the form of war chariots with spoked wheels thus being made more maneuverable and dominated the battlefields The growing use of the horse combined with the failure roughly around 2000 BC of the always precarious irrigation systems that had allowed for extensive agriculture in the region gave rise and dominance of pastoral nomadism by 1000 BC a way of life that would dominate the region for the next several millennia giving rise to the Scythian expansion of the Iron Age Scattered nomadic groups maintained herds of sheep goats horses and camels and conducted annual migrations to find new pastures a practice known as transhumance The people lived in yurts or gers tents made of hides and wood that could be disassembled and transported Each group had several yurts each accommodating about five people While the semi arid plains were dominated by the nomads small city states and sedentary agrarian societies arose in the more humid areas of Central Asia The Bactria Margiana Archaeological Complex of the early 2nd millennium BC was the first sedentary civilization of the region practicing irrigation farming of wheat and barley and possibly a form of writing Bactria Margiana probably interacted with the contemporary Bronze Age nomads of the Andronovo culture the originators of the spoke wheeled chariot who lived to their north in western Siberia Russia and parts of Kazakhstan and survived as a culture until the 1st millennium BC These cultures particularly Bactria Margiana have been posited as possible representatives of the hypothetical Aryan culture ancestral to the speakers of the Indo Iranian languages see Indo Iranians Later the strongest of Sogdian city states of the Fergana Valley rose to prominence After the 1st century BC these cities became home to the traders of the Silk Road and grew wealthy from this trade The steppe nomads were dependent on these settled people for a wide array of goods that were impossible for transient populations to produce The nomads traded for these when they could but because they generally did not produce goods of interest to sedentary people the popular alternative was to carry out raids A wide variety of people came to populate the steppes Nomadic groups in Central Asia included the Huns and other Turks as well as Indo Europeans such as the Tocharians Persians Scythians Saka Yuezhi Wusun and others and a number of Mongol groups Despite these ethnic and linguistic differences the steppe lifestyle led to the adoption of very similar culture across the region 12 19 20 Ancient era Edit Tetradrachm of the Greco Bactrian King Eucratides 171 145 BC A monumental Sogdian wall mural of Samarkand dated c 650 AD known as the Ambassadors Painting found in the hall of the ruin of an aristocratic house in Afrasiab commissioned by the Sogdian king of Samarkand Varkhuman The banquet scenes in the murals of Balalyk Tepe show the life of the Hephthalite ruling class of Tokharistan 21 22 Further information Silk Road Silk Road transmission of Buddhism and Western Regions In the 2nd and 1st millennia BC a series of large and powerful states developed on the southern periphery of Central Asia the Ancient Near East These empires launched several attempts to conquer the steppe people but met with only mixed success The Median Empire and Achaemenid Empire both ruled parts of Central Asia The Xiongnu Empire 209 BC 93 156 AD may be seen as the first central Asian empire which set an example for later Gokturk and Mongol empires 23 Xiongnu s ancestor Xianyu tribe founded Zhongshan state c 6th century BC c 296 BC in Hebei province China The title chanyu was used by the Xiongnu rulers before Modun Chanyu so it is possible that statehood history of the Xiongnu began long before Modun s rule Following the success of the Han Xiongnu War Chinese states would also regularly strive to extend their power westwards Despite their military might these states found it difficult to conquer the whole region When faced by a stronger force the nomads could simply retreat deep into the steppe and wait for the invaders to leave With no cities and little wealth other than the herds they took with them the nomads had nothing they could be forced to defend An example of this is given by Herodotus s detailed account of the futile Persian campaigns against the Scythians The Scythians like most nomad empires had permanent settlements of various sizes representing various degrees of civilisation 24 The vast fortified settlement of Kamenka on the Dnieper River settled since the end of the 5th century BC became the centre of the Scythian kingdom ruled by Ateas who lost his life in a battle against Philip II of Macedon in 339 BC 25 Some empires such as the Persian and Macedonian empires did make deep inroads into Central Asia by founding cities and gaining control of the trading centres Alexander the Great s conquests spread Hellenistic civilisation all the way to Alexandria Eschate Lit Alexandria the Furthest established in 329 BC in modern Tajikistan After Alexander s death in 323 BC his Central Asian territory fell to the Seleucid Empire during the Wars of the Diadochi In 250 BC the Central Asian portion of the empire Bactria seceded as the Greco Bactrian Kingdom which had extensive contacts with India and China until its end in 125 BC The Indo Greek Kingdom mostly based in the Punjab region but controlling a fair part of Afghanistan pioneered the development of Greco Buddhism The Kushan Kingdom thrived across a wide swath of the region from the 2nd century BC to the 4th century AD and continued Hellenistic and Buddhist traditions These states prospered from their position on the Silk Road linking China and Europe Likewise in eastern Central Asia the Chinese Han dynasty expanded into the region at the height of its imperial power From roughly 115 to 60 BC Han forces fought the Xiongnu over control of the oasis city states in the Tarim Basin The Han was eventually victorious and established the Protectorate of the Western Regions in 60 BC which dealt with the region s defence and foreign affairs 26 27 28 29 Chinese rule in Tarim Basin was replaced successively with Kushans and Hephthalites Later external powers such as the Sassanid Empire would come to dominate this trade One of those powers the Parthian Empire was of Central Asian origin but adopted Persian Greek cultural traditions This is an early example of a recurring theme of Central Asian history occasionally nomads of Central Asian origin would conquer the kingdoms and empires surrounding the region but quickly merge into the culture of the conquered peoples At this time Central Asia was a heterogeneous region with a mixture of cultures and religions Buddhism remained the largest religion but was concentrated in the east Around Persia Zoroastrianism became important Nestorian Christianity entered the area but was never more than a minority faith More successful was Manichaeism which became the third largest faith Turkic expansion began in the 6th century the Turkic speaking Uyghurs were one of many distinct cultural groups brought together by the trade of the Silk Route at Turfan which was then ruled by China s Tang dynasty The Uyghurs primarily pastoral nomads observed a number of religions including Manichaeism Buddhism and Nestorian Christianity Many of the artefacts from this period were found in the 19th century in this remote desert region Medieval EditSui and early Tang dynasty Edit Main articles Protectorate General to Pacify the West Protectorate General to Pacify the North and Inner Asia during the Tang dynasty A Tang period gilt silver jar shaped in the style of northern nomad s leather bag 30 decorated with a horse dancing with a cup of wine in its mouth as the horses of Emperor Xuanzong were trained to do 30 The monumental Sogdian wall murals of Panjakent modern Tajikistan showing cavalry and horse riders dated c 740 AD It was during the Sui and Tang dynasties that China expanded into eastern Central Asia Chinese foreign policy to the north and west now had to deal with Turkic nomads who were becoming the most dominant ethnic group in Central Asia 31 32 To handle and avoid any threats posed by the Turks the Sui government repaired fortifications and received their trade and tribute missions 33 They sent royal princesses off to marry Turkic clan leaders a total of four of them in 597 599 614 and 617 The Sui army intervened in Turks civil war and stirred conflict amongst ethnic groups against the Turks 34 35 As early as the Sui dynasty the Turks had become a major militarised force employed by the Chinese When the Khitans began raiding north east China in 605 a Chinese general led 20 000 Turks against them distributing Khitan livestock and women to the Turks as a reward 36 On two occasions between 635 and 636 Tang royal princesses were married to Turk mercenaries or generals in Chinese service 35 Throughout the Tang dynasty until the end of 755 there were approximately ten Turkic generals serving under the Tang 37 38 While most of the Tang army was made of fubing 府兵 Chinese conscripts the majority of the troops led by Turkic generals were of non Chinese origin campaigning largely in the western frontier where the presence of fubing 府兵 troops was low 39 Some Turkic troops were nomadisized Han Chinese a desinicized people 40 Civil war in China was almost totally diminished by 626 along with the defeat in 628 of the Ordos Chinese warlord Liang Shidu after these internal conflicts the Tang began an offensive against the Turks 41 In the year 630 Tang armies captured areas of the Ordos Desert modern day Inner Mongolia province and southern Mongolia from the Turks 36 42 After this military victory Emperor Taizong won the title of Great Khan amongst the various Turks in the region who pledged their allegiance to him and the Chinese empire with several thousand Turks traveling into China to live at Chang an On June 11 631 Emperor Taizong also sent envoys to the Eastern Turkic tribes bearing gold and silk in order to persuade the release of enslaved Chinese prisoners who were captured during the transition from Sui to Tang from the northern frontier this embassy succeeded in freeing 80 000 Chinese men and women who were then returned to China 43 44 While the Turks were settled in the Ordos region former territory of the Xiongnu the Tang government took on the military policy of dominating the central steppe Like the earlier Han dynasty the Tang dynasty along with Turkic allies like the Uyghurs conquered and subdued Central Asia during the 640s and 650s 33 During Emperor Taizong s reign alone large campaigns were launched against not only the Gokturks but also separate campaigns against the Tuyuhun and the Xueyantuo Taizong also launched campaigns against the oasis states of the Tarim Basin beginning with the annexation of Gaochang in 640 45 The nearby kingdom of Karasahr was captured by the Tang in 644 and the kingdom of Kucha was conquered in 649 The Chinese Tang dynasty during its greatest extension controlling large parts of Central Asia 46 The expansion into Central Asia continued under Taizong s successor Emperor Gaozong who invaded the Western Turks ruled by the qaghan Ashina Helu in 657 with an army led by Su Dingfang 46 Ashina was defeated and the khaganate was absorbed into the Tang empire 47 The territory was administered through the Anxi Protectorate and the Four Garrisons of Anxi Tang hegemony beyond the Pamir Mountains in Afghanistan ended with revolts by the Turks in 665 but the Tang retained a military presence in Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan These holdings were later invaded by the Tibetan Empire to the south in 670 48 Tang rivalry with the Tibetan Empire Edit A lion motif on Sogdian polychrome silk 8th century AD most likely from Bukhara The Tang Empire competed with the Tibetan Empire for control of areas in Inner and Central Asia which was at times settled with marriage alliances such as the marrying of Princess Wencheng d 680 to Songtsan Gampo d 649 49 50 A Tibetan tradition mentions that after Songtsan Gampo s death in 649 AD Chinese troops captured Lhasa 51 The Tibetan scholar Tsepon W D Shakabpa believes that the tradition is in error and that those histories reporting the arrival of Chinese troops are not correct and claims that the event is mentioned neither in the Chinese annals nor in the manuscripts of Dunhuang 52 There was a long string of conflicts with Tibet over territories in the Tarim Basin between 670 692 and in 763 the Tibetans even captured the capital of China Chang an for fifteen days during the An Shi Rebellion 53 54 In fact it was during this rebellion that the Tang withdrew its western garrisons stationed in what is now Gansu and Qinghai which the Tibetans then occupied along with the territory of Central Asia 55 Hostilities between the Tang and Tibet continued until they signed a formal peace treaty in 821 56 The terms of this treaty including the fixed borders between the two countries are recorded in a bilingual inscription on a stone pillar outside the Jokhang temple in Lhasa 57 Arrival of Islam Edit Main article Muslim conquest of Transoxiana Pre Islamic Buddhist paintings at Bamyan Afghanistan In the 8th century Islam began to penetrate the region the desert nomads of Arabia could militarily match the nomads of the steppe and the early Arab Empire gained control over parts of Central Asia The early conquests under Qutayba ibn Muslim 705 715 were soon reversed by a combination of native uprisings and invasion by the Turgesh but the collapse of the Turgesh khaganate after 738 opened the way for the re imposition of Muslim authority under Nasr ibn Sayyar The Arab invasion also saw Chinese influence expelled from western Central Asia At the Battle of Talas in 751 an Arab army decisively defeated a Tang dynasty force and for the next several centuries Middle Eastern influences would dominate the region Large scale Islamization however did not begin until the 9th century running parallel with the fragmentation of Abbasid political authority and the emergence of local Iranian and Turkic dynasties like the Samanids Steppe empires Edit A map showing the major trade routes of Central Asia in the 13th century Mongol invasions and conquests seriously depopulated large areas of Muslim Central Asia Over time as new technologies were introduced the nomadic horsemen grew in power The Scythians developed the saddle and by the time of the Alans the use of the stirrup had begun Horses continued to grow larger and sturdier so that chariots were no longer needed as the horses could carry men with ease This greatly increased the mobility of the nomads it also freed their hands allowing them to use the bow from horseback Using small but powerful composite bows the steppe people gradually became the most powerful military force in the world From a young age almost the entire male population was trained in riding and archery both of which were necessary skills for survival on the steppe By adulthood these activities were second nature These mounted archers were more mobile than any other force at the time being able to travel forty miles per day with ease citation needed The steppe peoples quickly came to dominate Central Asia forcing the scattered city states and kingdoms to pay them tribute or face annihilation The martial ability of the steppe peoples was limited however by the lack of political structure within the tribes Confederations of various groups would sometimes form under a ruler known as a khan When large numbers of nomads acted in unison they could be devastating as when the Huns arrived in Western Europe However tradition dictated that any dominion conquered in such wars should be divided among all of the khan s sons so these empires often declined as quickly as they formed Tang Chinese painting about the Hephthalites which ruled southern Central Asia specifically what is today Uzbekistan Once the foreign powers were expelled several indigenous empires formed in Central Asia The Hephthalites were the most powerful of these nomad groups in the 6th and 7th century and controlled much of the region In the 10th and 11th centuries the region was divided between several powerful states including the Samanid dynasty that of the Seljuk Turks and the Khwarezmid Empire The most spectacular power to rise out of Central Asia developed when Genghis Khan united the tribes of Mongolia Using superior military techniques the Mongol Empire spread to comprise all of Central Asia and China as well as large parts of Russia and the Middle East After Genghis Khan died in 1227 most of Central Asia continued to be dominated by the Mongol successor Chagatai Khanate This state proved to be short lived as in 1369 Timur a Turco Mongol ruler conquered most of the region Even harder than keeping a steppe empire together was governing conquered lands outside the region While the steppe peoples of Central Asia found conquest of these areas easy they found governing almost impossible The diffuse political structure of the steppe confederacies was maladapted to the complex states of the settled peoples Moreover the armies of the nomads were based upon large numbers of horses generally three or four for each warrior Maintaining these forces required large stretches of grazing land not present outside the steppe Any extended time away from the homeland would thus cause the steppe armies to gradually disintegrate To govern settled peoples the steppe peoples were forced to rely on the local bureaucracy a factor that would lead to the rapid assimilation of the nomads into the culture of those they had conquered Another important limit was that the armies for the most part were unable to penetrate the forested regions to the north thus such states as Novgorod and Muscovy began to grow in power In the 14th century much of Central Asia and many areas beyond it were conquered by Timur 1336 1405 who is known in the west as Tamerlane It was during Timur s reign that the nomadic steppe culture of Central Asia fused with the settled culture of Iran One of its consequences was an entirely new visual language that glorified Timur and subsequent Timurid rulers This visual language was also used to articulate their commitment to Islam 58 Timur s large empire collapsed soon after his death however The region then became divided among a series of smaller Khanates including the Khanate of Khiva the Khanate of Bukhara the Khanate of Kokand and the Khanate of Kashgar Early modern period 16th to 19th centuries EditThe lifestyle that had existed largely unchanged since 500 BCE began to disappear after 1500 Important changes to the world economy in the 14th and 15th century reflected the impact of the development of nautical technology Ocean trade routes were pioneered by the Europeans who had been cut off from the Silk Road by the Muslim states that controlled its western termini The long distance trade linking East Asia and India to Western Europe increasingly began to move over the seas and not through Central Asia However the emergence of Russia as a world power enabled Central Asia to continue its role as a conduit for overland trade of other sorts now linking India with Russia on a north south axis 59 A native Turkmen man in traditional dress with his dromedary camel in Turkmenistan c 1915 An even more important development was the introduction of gunpowder based weapons The gunpowder revolution allowed settled peoples to defeat the steppe horsemen in open battle for the first time Construction of these weapons required the infrastructure and economies of large societies and were thus impractical for nomadic peoples to produce The domain of the nomads began to shrink as beginning in the 15th century the settled powers gradually began to conquer Central Asia The last steppe empire to emerge was that of the Dzungars who conquered much of East Turkestan and Mongolia However in a sign of the changed times they proved unable to match the Chinese and were decisively defeated by the forces of the Qing dynasty In the 18th century the Qing emperors themselves originally from the far eastern edge of the steppe campaigned in the west and in Mongolia with the Qianlong Emperor taking control of Xinjiang in 1758 The Mongol threat was overcome and much of Inner Mongolia was annexed to China One Turko Mongolic dynasty that remained prominent during this period was the Mughal Empire whose founder Babur traced descent to Timur While the Mughals were never able to conquer Babur s original domains in Fergana Valley which fell to the Shaybanids they maintained influence in the Afghanistan region until the late 17th century even as they dominated India After the Mughal Empire s decline in the 18th century the Durrani Empire from Afghanistan would briefly overrun the North Western region of India by the 19th century the rise of the British Empire would limit the impact of Afghan conquerors The Chinese dominions stretched into the heart of Central Asia and included the Khanate of Kokand which paid tribute to Beijing Outer Mongolia and Xinjiang did not become provinces of the Chinese empire but rather were directly administered by the Qing dynasty The fact that there was no provincial governor meant that the local rulers retained most of their powers and this special status also prevented emigration from the rest of China into the region Persia also began to expand north especially under the rule of Nadir Shah who extended Persian dominion well past the Oxus After his death however the Persian empire rapidly crumbled Russian expansion into Central Asia 19th century EditMain article Russian conquest of Central Asia Russian wars of conquest in Turkestan The Russians also expanded south first with the transformation of the Ukrainian steppe into an agricultural heartland and subsequently onto the fringe of the Kazakh steppes beginning with the foundation of the fortress of Orenburg The slow Russian conquest of the heart of Central Asia began in the early 19th century although Peter the Great had sent a failed expedition under Prince Bekovitch Cherkassky against Khiva as early as the 1720s By the 1800s the locals could do little to resist the Russian advance although the Kazakhs of the Great Horde under Kenesary Kasimov rose in rebellion from 1837 to 1846 Until the 1870s for the most part Russian interference was minimal leaving native ways of life intact and local government structures in place With the conquest of Turkestan after 1865 and the consequent securing of the frontier the Russians gradually expropriated large parts of the steppe and gave these lands to Russian farmers who began to arrive in large numbers This process was initially limited to the northern fringes of the steppe and it was only in the 1890s that significant numbers of Russians began to settle farther south especially in Zhetysu Semirechye The Great Game EditMain article Great Game Russian campaigns Edit Prisoners in a zindan a traditional Central Asian prison in the Bukharan Protectorate under Imperial Russia ca 1910 The forces of the khanates were poorly equipped and could do little to resist Russia s advances although the Kokandian commander Alimqul led a quixotic campaign before being killed outside Chimkent The main opposition to Russian expansion into Turkestan came from the British who felt that Russia was growing too powerful and threatening the northwest frontiers of British India This rivalry came to be known as The Great Game where both powers competed to advance their own interests in the region It did little to slow the pace of conquest north of the Oxus but did ensure that Afghanistan remained independent as a buffer state between the two Empires After the fall of Tashkent to General Cherniaev in 1865 Khodjend Djizak and Samarkand fell to the Russians in quick succession over the next three years as the Khanate of Kokand and the Emirate of Bukhara were repeatedly defeated In 1867 the Governor Generalship of Russian Turkestan was established under General Konstantin Petrovich Von Kaufman with its headquarters at Tashkent In 1881 85 the Transcaspian region was annexed in the course of a campaign led by Generals Mikhail Annenkov and Mikhail Skobelev and Ashkhabad from Persia Merv and Pendjeh from Afghanistan all came under Russian control Russian expansion was halted in 1887 when Russia and Great Britain delineated the northern border of Afghanistan Bukhara and the Khanate of Khiva remained quasi independent but were essentially protectorates along the lines of the Princely States of British India Although the conquest was prompted by almost purely military concerns in the 1870s and 1880s Turkestan came to play a reasonably important economic role within the Russian Empire Because of the American Civil War cotton shot up in price in the 1860s becoming an increasingly important commodity in the region although its cultivation was on a much lesser scale than during the Soviet period The cotton trade led to improvements the Transcaspian Railway from Krasnovodsk to Samarkand and Tashkent and the Trans Aral Railway from Orenburg to Tashkent were constructed In the long term the development of a cotton monoculture would render Turkestan dependent on food imports from Western Siberia and the Turkestan Siberia Railway was already planned when the First World War broke out Russian rule still remained distant from the local populace mostly concerning itself with the small minority of Russian inhabitants of the region The local Muslims were not considered full Russian citizens They did not have the full privileges of Russians but nor did they have the same obligations such as military service The Tsarist regime left substantial elements of the previous regimes such as Muslim religious courts intact and local self government at the village level was quite extensive Qing dynasty Edit During the 17th and 18th centuries the Qing dynasty made several campaigns to conquer the Dzungar Mongols In the meantime they incorporated parts of Central Asia into the Chinese Empire Internal turmoil largely halted Chinese expansion in the 19th century In 1867 Yakub Beg led a rebellion that saw Kashgar declaring its independence as the Taiping and Nian Rebellions in the heartland of the empire prevented the Chinese from reasserting their control Instead the Russians expanded annexing the Chu and Ili Valleys and the city of Kuldja from the Chinese Empire After Yakub Beg s death at Korla in 1877 his state collapsed as the area was reconquered by China After lengthy negotiations Kuldja was returned to Beijing by Russia in 1884 Revolution and revolt Edit During the First World War the Muslim exemption from conscription was removed by the Russians sparking the Central Asian Revolt of 1916 When the Russian Revolution of 1917 occurred a provisional Government of Jadid Reformers also known as the Turkestan Muslim Council met in Kokand and declared Turkestan s autonomy This new government was quickly crushed by the forces of the Tashkent Soviet and the semi autonomous states of Bukhara and Khiva were also invaded The main independence forces were rapidly crushed but guerrillas known as basmachi continued to fight the Communists until 1924 Mongolia was also swept up by the Russian Revolution and though it never became a Soviet republic it became a communist People s Republic in 1924 The creation of the Republic of China in 1911 and the general turmoil in China affected the Qing dynasty s holdings in Central Asia Republic of China s control of the region was relegated to southern Xinjiang and there was a dual threat from Islamic separatists and communists Eventually the region became largely independent under the control of the provincial governor Rather than invade the Soviet Union established a network of consulates in the region and sent aid and technical advisors By the 1930s the governor of Xinjiang s relationship with Moscow was far more important than that with Nanking The Chinese Civil War further destabilised the region and saw Turkic nationalists make attempts at independence In 1933 the First East Turkestan Republic was declared but it was destroyed soon after with the aid of the Soviet troops After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 Governor Sheng Shicai of Xinjiang gambled and broke his links to Moscow moving to ally himself with the Kuomintang This led to a civil war within the region Sheng was eventually forced to flee and the Soviet backed Second East Turkestan Republic was formed in northern Dzungaria while the Republic of China retained control of southern Xinjiang Both states were annexed by the People s Republic of China in 1949 Soviet era 1918 1991 EditSee also Soviet Central Asia After being conquered by Bolshevik forces Soviet Central Asia experienced a flurry of administrative reorganisation In 1918 the Bolsheviks set up the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and Bukhara and Khiva also became SSRs In 1919 the Conciliatory Commission for Turkestan Affairs was established to try to improve relations between the locals and the Communists New policies were introduced respecting local customs and religion In 1920 the Kirghiz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic covering modern Kazakhstan was set up It was renamed the Kazakh Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1925 In 1924 the Soviets created the Uzbek SSR and the Turkmen SSR In 1929 the Tajik SSR was split from the Uzbek SSR The Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast became an SSR in 1936 These borders had little to do with ethnic make up but the Soviets felt it important to divide the region They saw both Pan Turkism and Pan Islamism as threats which dividing Turkestan would limit Under the Soviets the local languages and cultures were systematised and codified and their differences clearly demarcated and encouraged New Cyrillic writing systems were introduced to break links with Turkey and Iran Under the Soviets the southern border was almost completely closed and all travel and trade was directed north through Russia During the period of forced collectivisation under Joseph Stalin at least a million persons died mostly in the Kazakh SSR Islam as well as other religions were also attacked In the Second World War several million refugees and hundreds of factories were moved to the relative security of Central Asia and the region permanently became an important part of the Soviet industrial complex Several important military facilities were also located in the region including nuclear testing facilities and the Baikonur Cosmodrome The Virgin Lands Campaign starting in 1954 was a massive Soviet agricultural resettlement program that brought more than 300 000 individuals mostly from the Ukraine to the northern Kazakh SSR and the Altai region of the Russian SFSR This was a major change in the ethnicity of the region Similar processes occurred in Xinjiang and the rest of Western China where the PRC quickly established control from the Second East Turkestan Republic that controlled northern Xinjiang and the Republic of China forces that controlled southern Xinjiang after the Qing dynasty The area was subject to a number of development schemes and like Soviet Central Asia one focus was on the growing of the cotton cash crop These efforts were overseen by the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps The XPCC also encouraged Han Chinese to return to Xinjiang after many had migrated out during the Muslim revolts against the Qing dynasty Political turmoil has led to major demographic shifts in the region During the Qing dynasty there were 60 Turkic and 30 Han Chinese in the region 60 after the Muslim revolts the percentage of Han Chinese dropped to as low as 7 61 and by the year 2000 some 40 of the population of Xinjiang were Han 62 As with the Soviet Union local languages and cultures were mostly encouraged and Xinjiang was granted autonomous status However Islam was much persecuted especially during the Cultural Revolution Many people from other parts of China fled to Xinjiang due to the failed agricultural policies of the Great Leap Forward in other provinces However the Great Leap Forward did not affect much of Xinjiang due to its geographical isolation from other parts of China Soviet evacuation and WWII population deportations Edit The Second World War sparked the widespread migration of Soviet citizens to the rear of the USSR Much of this movement was directed to Soviet Central Asia These migrations included official state organised evacuations and deportations as well as the non sanctioned panicked flight from the front by both general citizenry and important officials The evacuation of Soviet citizens and industry during World War II was an essential element of their overall success in the war and Central Asia served as a main destination for evacuees The German invasion of the Soviet Union began on June 22 1941 A decree from the Presidium of the executive committee on the same day forbade the entry or exit from the USSR s border regions which were under a state of martial law 63 Such mandates demonstrated the Soviets fear of spreading panic and their commitment to asserting direct state control over wartime relocations to maintain order Soviet wartime population policy consisted of two distinct operations deportation and evacuation Deportation aimed to clear regions near the front of potentially insidious anti Soviet elements that could hamper the war effort while evacuation policy aimed to move Soviet industry and intelligentsia to the rear where they would be safe 64 Deportations along ethnic lines Edit Soviet officials organised their wartime deportation policy largely along ethnic lines As a response to the German invasion Soviet citizens of German descent in border regions were targeted for deportation to the rear where Soviet authorities had no need to worry of their conspiring with the enemy Such dubious ethnically derived logic was not reserved for Germans Many Finns were also forcibly relocated in the first year of the war simply for their heritage though they were mainly sent to remote areas in the northern rear such as Siberia rather than Central Asia A large portion of the German deportees however were sent to Kazakhstan The remobilisation of relocated human resources into the labour force was pivotal to Soviet wartime production policy and to that end many able bodied deportees were conscripted into a labour army with military style discipline 65 By early 1942 as many as 20 800 ethnic Germans had been organised into battalions in this labour army though this number would grow to as much as 222 000 by early 1944 as conscription criteria were broadened 66 The NKVD employed about 101 000 members of the labour army at construction sites to develop infrastructure for the war effort 67 Those who were not assigned to the labour army were used for timber harvesting the construction of railways and other infrastructure or sent to collective farms 67 As the tide turned in the war and the Soviets began to reclaim the territories they lost to the initial German advance they began a new wave of deportations of unfavoured ethnic groups Karachais Kalmyks Chechens Ingushetians Kabardians and Crimean Tatars were all deported to Central Asia for their supposed fraternisation with occupying German forces These groups were sent mostly to Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan for their infidelity These punitive deportations were also conducted to keep anti Soviet elements far from the border where the Soviet offensive against Germany was progressing for fear of spying or sabotage Evacuation of Soviet citizens to Central Asia Edit Many Soviet citizens ended up in Central Asia during World War II not as a result of deportation but evacuation The evacuation focused on the movement of critical wartime industry and the factory workers responsible for overseeing such production Whole factories and their employees were moved together via railway eastward to cities like Tashkent which received a lion s share of the evacuees 68 The initial attempts at evacuation while the war was still in its early stages through early 1942 were a far cry from the organised affair that the Soviet central bureaucracy envisaged Throughout the summer and fall of 1941 numerous Soviet frontier cities evacuated in a haphazard and panicked fashion before the German onslaught A number of factors led to this lack of organisation For one the Soviet evacuation plans were thrown together fairly hurriedly and a lot of the logistical planning was done on the fly as the German advance was already sweeping through the Soviet border zone The German invasion also hampered the effectiveness of the Soviet response by shattering their communications in the war s early stages many Soviet leaders were unable to gather reliable information about the positions of German forces until it was too late to effect an orderly evacuation 69 There was also a desire on the part of Soviet officials to forestall any evacuations until it was absolutely necessary the marching orders were often to continue factory production until the eve of occupation before hurriedly dismantling and transporting factory equipment and destroying what couldn t be moved in time 70 As a result of the delay in evacuations they were often carried out under German aerial bombardment which led to additional confusion among the frightened citizenry Historian Rebecca Manley describes these early evacuations as being charactered by three phenomena the flight of officials the flight of the population and panic 71 The early flight of Soviet officials who were supposed to manage the evacuation was roundly condemned by Soviet leaders but often their retreat resulted from a realisation that evacuation procedures had started too late and that there was no way to effectively execute it Additionally Soviet officials who remained in a city captured by German forces feared execution by Nazis on the hunt for communists Avoiding that the officials knew that they would be subject to intense interrogation as to what happened by suspicious Soviets upon returning to the fold 69 Despite these setbacks in the implementation of evacuation policy early in the war around 12 million Soviet citizens successfully evacuated in 1941 even if a number of these were the result of disorganised spontaneous self evacuation and another 4 5 million evacuated the following year 72 In addition the factories that were successfully evacuated to the Central Asian rear would help provide the productive capacity the Soviets needed to eventually win the war as well as preventing the Germans from acquiring additional industrial resources By providing a safe haven from the German advance for Soviet citizens Central Asia played a critical role in securing Allied victory The evacuation itself was only part of the difficulty however as evacuees arriving in Central Asia faced many trials and tribulations 73 Due to the haphazard nature of evacuation many labourers did not arrive with their factory and had to find labour on their own though jobs were hard to come by Additionally cities like Tashkent became overwhelmed at the sheer volume of people arriving at its gates and had great difficulty supplying the food and shelter necessary for evacuees Upon arrival many evacuees died of illness or starvation in extreme poverty in Central Asia Uzbek officials set up aid stations at Tashkent which were mirrored at other railway stations to help combat the poverty but they could only do so much as little could be spared economically for the war effort 73 Despite these troubles the ability of Central Asia to absorb Soviet industry and population to the extent that it did and in the harried manner that it did was impressive The Germans certainly didn t foresee the preparedness of Soviet Central Asia and in the end they paid dearly for it Since 1991 EditFrom 1988 to 1992 a free press and multi party system developed in the Central Asian republics as perestroika pressured the local Communist parties to open up What Svat Soucek calls the Central Asian Spring was very short lived as soon after independence former Communist Party officials recast themselves as local strongmen 74 Political stability in the region has mostly been maintained with the major exception of the Tajik Civil War that lasted from 1992 to 1997 2005 also saw the largely peaceful ousting of Kyrgyz president Askar Akayev in the Tulip Revolution and an outbreak of violence in Andijan Uzbekistan Much of the population of Soviet Central Asia was indifferent to the collapse of the Soviet Union even the large Russian populations in Kazakhstan roughly 40 of the total and Tashkent Uzbekistan Aid from the Kremlin had also been central to the economies of Central Asia each of the republics receiving massive transfers of funds from Moscow Independence largely resulted from the efforts of the small groups of nationalistic mostly local intellectuals and from little interest in Moscow for retaining the expensive region While never a part of the Soviet Union Mongolia followed a somewhat similar path Often acting as the unofficial sixteenth Soviet republic it shed the communist system only in 1996 but quickly ran into economic problems See History of independent Mongolia The economic performance of the region since independence has been mixed It contains some of the largest reserves of natural resources in the world but there are important difficulties in transporting them Since it lies farther from the ocean than anywhere else in the world and its southern borders lay closed for decades the main trade routes and pipelines run through Russia As a result Russia still exerts more influence over the region than in any other former Soviet republics Nevertheless the rising energy importance of the Caspian Sea entails a great involvement in the region by the US The former Soviet republics of the Caucasus now have their own US Special Envoy and inter agency working groups Former US Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson had claimed that the Caspian region will hopefully save us the US from total dependence on Middle East oil 75 Some analysts such as Myers Jaffe and Robert A Manning estimate however that US entry into the region with initiatives such as the US favored Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline as a major actor may complicate Moscow s chances of making a decisive break with its past economic mistakes and geopolitical excesses in Central Asia They also regard as a myth the assertion that Caspian oil and gas will be a cheaper and more secure alternative to supplies from the Persian Gulf 76 Despite these reservations and fears since the late 1980s Azerbaijan Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan have gradually moved to centre stage in the global energy markets and are now regarded as key factors of the international energy security Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan in particular have succeeded in attracting massive foreign investment to their oil and gas sectors According to Gawdat Bahgat the investment flow suggests that the geological potential of the Caspian region as a major source of oil and gas is not in doubt 77 Russia and Kazakhstan started a closer energy co operation in 1998 which was further consolidated in May 2002 when Presidents Vladimir Putin and Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a protocol dividing three gas fields Kurmangazy Tsentralnoye and Khvalynskoye on an equal basis Following the ratification of bilateral treaties Russia Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan declared that the northern Caspian was open for business and investment as they had reached a consensus on the legal status of the basin Iran and Turkmenistan refused however to recognise the validity of these bilateral agreements Iran is rejecting any bilateral agreement to divide the Caspian On the other hand US choices in the region within the framework of the so called pipeline diplomacy such as the strong support of the Baku pipeline the project was eventually approved and was completed in 2005 reflect a political desire to avoid both Russia and Iran 78 Increasingly other powers have begun to involve themselves in Central Asia Soon after the Central Asian states won their independence Turkey began to look east and a number of organizations are attempting to build links between the western and eastern Turks Iran which for millennia had close links with the region has also been working to build ties and the Central Asian states now have good relations with the Islamic Republic One important player in the new Central Asia has been Saudi Arabia which has been funding the Islamic revival in the region Olcott notes that soon after independence Saudi money paid for massive shipments of Qur ans to the region and for the construction and repair of a large number of mosques In Tajikistan alone an estimated 500 mosques per year have been erected with Saudi money 79 The formerly atheistic Communist Party leaders have mostly converted to Islam Small Islamist groups have formed in several of the countries but radical Islam has little history in the region the Central Asian societies have remained largely secular and all five states enjoy good relations with Israel Central Asia is still home to a large Jewish population the largest group being the Bukharan Jews and important trade and business links have developed between those that left for Israel after independence and those remaining The People s Republic of China sees the region as an essential future source of raw materials most Central Asian countries are members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation This has affected Xinjiang and other parts of western China that have seen infrastructure programs building new links and also new military facilities Chinese Central Asia has been far from the centre of that country s economic boom and the area has remained considerably poorer than the coast China also sees a threat in the potential of the new states to support separatist movements among its own Turkic minorities One important Soviet legacy that has only gradually been appreciated is the vast ecological destruction Most notable is the gradual drying of the Aral Sea During the Soviet era it was decided that the traditional crops of melons and vegetables would be replaced by water intensive growing of cotton for Soviet textile mills Massive irrigation efforts were launched that diverted a considerable percentage of the annual inflow to the sea causing it to shrink steadily Furthermore vast tracts of Kazakhstan were used for nuclear testing and there exists a plethora of decrepit factories and mines In the first part of 2008 Central Asia experienced a severe energy crisis a shortage of both electricity and fuel aggravated by abnormally cold temperatures failing infrastructure and a shortage of food in which aid from the west began to assist the region As of 2019 despite its common cultural and historical past Central Asia has been one of the least integrated regions in the world 80 See also EditEurasian nomads Eurasian Steppe History of Afghanistan History of Kazakhstan History of Kyrgyzstan History of Mongolia History of Tajikistan History of the central steppe History of Turkmenistan History of Uzbekistan History of XinjiangFurther reading EditMain article Bibliography of the history of Central Asia V V Barthold Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion London 1968 Third Edition Bacon Elizabeth A Central Asians under Russian Rule Cornell UP 1966 Becker Seymour Russia s Protectorates in Central Asia Bukhara and Khiva 1865 1924 1968 Brower Daniel Turkestan and the Fate of the Russian Empire London 2003 ISBN 0 415 29744 3 Dani A H and V M Masson eds UNESCO History of Civilizations of Central Asia Paris UNESCO 1992 Hildinger Erik Warriors of the Steppe A Military History of Central Asia 500 BC to 1700 AD Cambridge Da Capo 2001 ISBN 0 306 81065 4 Maitdinova Guzel The Dialogue of Civilizations in the Central Asian area of the Great Silk Route Historical experience of integration and reference points of XXI century Dushanbe 2015 Maitdinova Guzel The Kirpand State an Empire in Middle Asia Dushanbe 2011 O Brien Patrick K General Editor Oxford Atlas of World History New York Oxford University Press 2005 Olcott Martha Brill Central Asia s New States Independence Foreign policy and Regional security Washington D C United States Institute of Peace Press 1996 ISBN 1 878379 51 8 Sinor Denis The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge 1990 2nd Edition ISBN 0 521 24304 1 S Frederick Starr Rediscovering Central AsiaOther languages Edit V V Bartold Istoriya Kulturnoj Zhizni Turkestana Istoriya Kul turnoy zhizni Turkestana Moskva 1927 N A Halfin Rossiya i Hanstva Srednej Azii Rossiya i Hanstva Sredney Azii Moskva 1974 Encyclopaedia Iranica Central Asia in pre Islamic Times R Fryer Encyclopaedia Iranica Central Asia from the Islamic Period to the Mongol Conquest C Bosworth Encyclopaedia Iranica Central Asia in the Mongol and Timurid Periods B Spuler Encyclopaedia Iranica Central Asia from the 16th to the 18th centuries R D McChesney permanent dead link Encyclopaedia Iranica Central Asia in the 18th 19th centuries Yuri Bregel Center for the Study of Eurasian NomadsNotes Edit O Connell Robert L Soul of the Sword page 51 The Free Press New York 2002 US and West need to stand solid behind Kyrgyzstan Central Asia s only democracy Kurbanov 2010 pp 135 136 sfn error no target CITEREFKurbanov2010 help Bernard P DelbarjinELBARJiN Encyclopaedia Iranica Ilyasov 2001 pp 187 197 sfn error no target CITEREFIlyasov2001 help Dani Litvinsky amp Zamir Safi 1996 p 183 sfn error no target CITEREFDaniLitvinskyZamir Safi1996 help Aldenderfer M 2011 Peopling the Tibetan plateau insights from archaeology High Alt Med Biol 12 2 141 147 doi 10 1089 ham 2010 1094 PMID 21718162 Qi X Cui C Peng Y Zhang X Yang Z Zhong H Zhang H Xiang K Cao X Wang Y et al 2013 Genetic evidence of paleolithic colonization and neolithic expansion of modern humans on the tibetan plateau Mol Biol Evol 30 8 1761 1778 doi 10 1093 molbev mst093 PMID 23682168 Jane Qiu The Surprisingly Early Settlement of the Tibetan Plateau Scientific American 1 March 2017 Fu Qiaomei Li Heng Moorjani Priya Jay Flora Slepchenko Sergey M Bondarev Aleksei A Johnson Philip L F Petri Ayinuer A Prufer Kay de Filippo Cesare Meyer Matthias 2014 10 23 The genome sequence of a 45 000 year old modern human from western Siberia Nature 514 7523 445 449 Bibcode 2014Natur 514 445F doi 10 1038 nature13810 ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 4753769 PMID 25341783 Lu Dongsheng Lou Haiyi Yuan Kai Wang Xiaoji Wang Yuchen Zhang Chao Lu Yan Yang Xiong Deng Lian Zhou Ying Feng Qidi 2016 09 01 Ancestral Origins and Genetic History of Tibetan Highlanders American Journal of Human Genetics 99 3 580 594 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2016 07 002 ISSN 0002 9297 PMC 5011065 PMID 27569548 Uchiyama Junzo Gillam J Christopher Savelyev Alexander Ning Chao 2020 Populations dynamics in Northern Eurasian forests a long term perspective from Northeast Asia Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 11 ISSN 2513 843X S2CID 219470000 Jeong Choongwon Balanovsky Oleg Lukianova Elena Kahbatkyzy Nurzhibek Flegontov Pavel Zaporozhchenko Valery Immel Alexander Wang Chuan Chao Ixan Olzhas Khussainova Elmira Bekmanov Bakhytzhan June 2019 The genetic history of admixture across inner Eurasia Nature Ecology amp Evolution 3 6 966 976 doi 10 1038 s41559 019 0878 2 ISSN 2397 334X PMC 6542712 PMID 31036896 a b Unterlander Martina Palstra Friso Lazaridis Iosif Pilipenko Aleksandr Hofmanova Zuzana Gross Melanie Sell Christian Blocher Jens Kirsanow Karola Rohland Nadin Rieger Benjamin 2017 03 03 Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe Nature Communications 8 14615 Bibcode 2017NatCo 814615U doi 10 1038 ncomms14615 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 5337992 PMID 28256537 Krzewinska Maja Kilinc Gulsah Merve Juras Anna Koptekin Dilek Chylenski Maciej Nikitin Alexey G Shcherbakov Nikolai Shuteleva Iia Leonova Tatiana Kraeva Liudmila Sungatov Flarit A 2018 10 03 Ancient genomes suggest the eastern Pontic Caspian steppe as the source of western Iron Age nomads Science Advances 4 10 eaat4457 Bibcode 2018SciA 4 4457K doi 10 1126 sciadv aat4457 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 6223350 PMID 30417088 Damgaard Peter de Barros Marchi Nina Rasmussen Simon Peyrot Michael Renaud Gabriel Korneliussen Thorfinn Moreno Mayar J Victor Pedersen Mikkel Winther Goldberg Amy Usmanova Emma Baimukhanov Nurbol May 2018 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes Nature 557 7705 369 374 Bibcode 2018Natur 557 369D doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0094 2 hdl 1887 3202709 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 29743675 S2CID 13670282 pp 4 5 These results suggest that Turkic cultural customs were imposed by an East Asian minority elite onto central steppe nomad populations The wide distribution of the Turkic languages from Northwest China Mongolia and Siberia in the east to Turkey and Bulgaria in the west implies large scale migrations out of the homeland in Mongolia Anthony D W 2007 Pontic Caspian Mesolithic and Early Neolithic societies at the time of the Black Sea Flood a small audience and small effects In Yanko Hombach V Gilbert A A Panin N Dolukhanov P M eds The Black Sea Flood Question changes in coastline climate and human settlement pp 245 370 ISBN 978 9402404654 Anthony David W 2010 The horse the wheel and language how Bronze Age riders from the Eurasian steppes shaped the modern world Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691148182 Gronenborn Detlef 2007 Beyond the models Neolithisation in Central Europe Proceedings of the British Academy 144 73 98 Damgaard Peter de Barros Martiniano Rui Kamm Jack Moreno Mayar J Victor Kroonen Guus Peyrot Michael Barjamovic Gojko Rasmussen Simon Zacho Claus Baimukhanov Nurbol Zaibert Victor 2018 06 29 The first horse herders and the impact of early Bronze Age steppe expansions into Asia Science 360 6396 eaar7711 doi 10 1126 science aar7711 PMC 6748862 PMID 29743352 Jeong Choongwon Balanovsky Oleg Lukianova Elena Kahbatkyzy Nurzhibek Flegontov Pavel Zaporozhchenko Valery Immel Alexander Wang Chuan Chao Ixan Olzhas Khussainova Elmira Bekmanov Bakhytzhan June 2019 The genetic history of admixture across inner Eurasia Nature Ecology amp Evolution 3 6 966 976 doi 10 1038 s41559 019 0878 2 ISSN 2397 334X PMC 6542712 PMID 31036896 Gnecchi Ruscone Guido Alberto Khussainova Elmira Kahbatkyzy Nurzhibek Musralina Lyazzat Spyrou Maria A Bianco Raffaela A Radzeviciute Rita Martins Nuno Filipe Gomes Freund Caecilia Iksan Olzhas Garshin Alexander March 2021 Ancient genomic time transect from the Central Asian Steppe unravels the history of the Scythians Science Advances 7 13 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 4414G doi 10 1126 sciadv abe4414 PMC 7997506 PMID 33771866 Damgaard Peter de Barros Marchi Nina Rasmussen Simon Peyrot Michael Renaud Gabriel Korneliussen Thorfinn Moreno Mayar J Victor Pedersen Mikkel Winther Goldberg Amy Usmanova Emma Baimukhanov Nurbol May 2018 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes Nature 557 7705 369 374 Bibcode 2018Natur 557 369D doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0094 2 hdl 1887 3202709 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 29743675 S2CID 13670282 Kurbanov 2010 p 67 sfn error no target CITEREFKurbanov2010 help Azarpay Guitty Belenickij Aleksandr M Marsak Boris Il ic Dresden Mark J 1981 Sogdian Painting The Pictorial Epic in Oriental Art University of California Press pp 92 93 ISBN 978 0 520 03765 6 Christoph Baumer The History of Central Asia The Age of the Silk Roads Volume 2 PART I EARLY EMPIRES AND KINGDOMS IN EAST CENTRAL ASIA 1 The Xiongnu the First Steppe Nomad Empire Herodotus IV 83 144 Central Asia history of Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 Di Cosmo 2002 pp 250 251 Yu 1986 pp 390 391 409 411 Chang 2007 p 174 Loewe 1986 p 198 a b Ebrey 1999 p 127 Ebrey Walthall amp Palais 2006 p 113 Xue 1992 pp 149 152 257 264 a b Ebrey Walthall amp Palais 2006 p 92 Benn 2002 pp 2 3harvp error no target CITEREFBenn2002 help a b Cui 2005 pp 655 659 a b Ebrey 1999 p 111 Xue 1992 p 788 Twitchett 2000 p 125 Liu 2000 pp 85 95 Gernet 1996 p 248 Xue 1992 pp 226 227 Xue 1992 pp 380 386 Benn 2002 p 2harvp error no target CITEREFBenn2002 help Xue 1992 pp 222 225 Twitchett Denis Wechsler Howard J 1979 Kao tsung reign 649 83 and the Empress Wu The Inheritor and the Usurper In Denis Twitchett John Fairbank eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 3 Sui and T ang China Part I Cambridge University Press p 228 ISBN 978 0 521 21446 9 a b Skaff Jonathan Karem 2009 Nicola Di Cosmo ed Military Culture in Imperial China Harvard University Press pp 183 185 ISBN 978 0 674 03109 8 Skaff Jonathan Karam 2012 Sui Tang China and Its Turko Mongol Neighbors Culture Power and Connections 580 800 Oxford University Press p 190 ISBN 978 0 19 973413 9 Millward James A 2007 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press pp 33 42 ISBN 978 0 231 13924 3 Whitfield 2004 p 193 Sen 2003 pp 24 30 31 Charles Bell 1992 Tibet Past and Present illustrated reprint ed Motilal Banarsidass p 28 ISBN 978 81 208 1048 8 retrieved 2010 07 17 W D Shakabpa Derek F Maher 2010 One hundred thousand moons Volume 1 illustrated ed Brill p 123 ISBN 978 90 04 17788 8 retrieved 2011 07 06 Beckwith 1987 p 146 Stein 1972 p 65 Twitchett 2000 p 109 Benn 2002 p 11harvp error no target CITEREFBenn2002 help Richardson 1985 pp 106 143harvp error no target CITEREFRichardson1985 help 1 Archived 2008 09 13 at the Wayback Machine A Journey of a Thousand Years Levi Scott 1999 India Russia and the Eighteenth Century Transformation of the Central Asian Caravan Trade Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 42 4 519 48 doi 10 1163 1568520991201696 Toops Stanley May 2004 Demographics and Development in Xinjiang after 1949 PDF East West Center Washington Working Papers East West Center no 1 p 1 Hann 2008 Community matters in Xinjiang ISBN 978 90 04 16675 2 p52 Includes only citizens of the PRC Does not include members of the People s Liberation Army in active service Source 2000年人口普查中国民族人口资料 民族出版社 2003 9 ISBN 7 105 05425 5 Altschuler 1993 p 78 Manley 2009 p 41 Polian 2004 p 137 Polian 2004 pp 137 138 a b Polian 2004 p 138 Manley 2009 pp 24 47 a b Manley 2009 pp 66 69 Altschuler 1993 p 80 Manley 2009 p 48 Manley 2009 p 50 a b Manley 2009 p 148 195 Soucek 2000 Manning amp Jaffe 1998 p 112 Manning amp Jaffe 1998 p 113 Bahgat 2006 p 3 Bahgat 2006 p 8 Martha Brill Olcott Central Asia s New States Vakulchuk Roman and Indra Overland 2019 China s Belt and Road Initiative through the Lens of Central Asia in Fanny M Cheung and Ying yi Hong eds Regional Connection under the Belt and Road Initiative The Prospects for Economic and Financial Cooperation London Routledge p 116 References Edit Altschuler Mordechai 1993 Escape and Evacuation of Soviet Jews at the Time of the Nazi Invasion in Lucjan Dobroszycki Jeffrey S Gurock eds The Holocaust in the Soviet Union New York NY M E Sharpe Bahgat Gawdat March 2006 Central Asia and Energy Security Asian Affairs Routledge Taylor and Francis Group 37 1 1 16 doi 10 1080 03068370500456819 S2CID 162353264 Beckwith Christopher I 1987 The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02469 1 Chang Chun shu 2007 The Rise of the Chinese Empire Volume II Frontier Immigration amp Empire in Han China 130 B C A D 157 Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press 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of Military Legal System et al Beijing Encyclopedia of China Publishing House ISBN 978 7 5000 6303 2 Manley Rebecca 2009 To the Tashkent Station Ithaca NY Cornell University Press Manning R Jaffe A 1998 The myth of the Caspian Great Game the real geopolitics of energy Survival Global Politics and Strategy International Institute for Strategic Studies 40 4 112 129 doi 10 1080 713660015 Polian Pavel 2004 Forced migrations during and after the Second World War 1939 1953 Against Their Will the History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR Budapest Central European University Press Sen Tansen 2003 Buddhism Diplomacy and Trade The Realignment of Sino Indian Relations 600 1400 Manoa Asian Interactions and Comparisons a joint publication of the University of Hawaii Press and the Association for Asian Studies ISBN 978 0 8248 2593 5 Soucek Svat 2000 A History of Inner Asia Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65169 1 Stein R A 1972 1962 Tibetan Civilization 1st English ed Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0806 7 Twitchett Denis 2000 Tibet in Tang s Grand Strategy in van de Ven Hans ed Warfare in Chinese History Leiden Koninklijke Brill pp 106 179 ISBN 978 90 04 11774 7 Whitfield Susan 2004 The Silk Road Trade Travel War and Faith Chicago Serindia ISBN 978 1 932476 12 5 Xue Zongzheng 薛宗正 1992 Turkic peoples 突厥史 Beijing 中国社会科学出版社 ISBN 978 7 5004 0432 3 Yu Ying shih 1986 Han Foreign Relations in Denis Twitchett Michael Loewe eds The Cambridge History of China Volume I the Ch in and Han Empires 221 B C A D 220 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 377 462 ISBN 978 0 521 24327 8External links EditNew Directions Post Independence from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Central Asia amp oldid 1125218706, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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