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Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus

42°49′N 47°07′E / 42.817°N 47.117°E / 42.817; 47.117

Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus
1918–1922
Coat of arms
CapitalTerek-kale (now Vladikavkaz)
Religion
Sunni Islam (majority and state-backed faith)
Russian Orthodox Church (minority)
Demonym(s)North Caucasian
GovernmentConfederated parliamentary republic under a provisional government
• 11 May 1918 – December 1918
Tapa Tchermoeff
• December 1918 – 12 May 1919
Pshemakho Kotsev
Historical era
• Independence declared
6 March 1918
30 November 1922
Area
• Total
430,874 km2 (166,361 sq mi)
Population
• 1919 census
11,221,860[1]
CurrencyTumen

The Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus (MRNC), also referred to as the United Republics of the North Caucasus, Mountain Republic, or the Republic of the Mountaineers, was a state in Eurasia and encompassing the entirety of the North Caucasus that emerged during the Russian Civil War and existed from 1918 to 1922. It formed as a consolidation of various Caucasian ethnic groups, including the Circassians, Chechens, Karachays, Ossetians, Balkars, Ingush, and Dagestanis.

The MRNC encompassed the former territories of Terek Oblast and Dagestan Oblast within the Russian Empire. These territories now constitute the present-day republics of Chechnya, Ingushetia, North Ossetia–Alania, Kabardino-Balkaria, Dagestan, and a portion of Stavropol Krai in the Russian Federation. Spanning approximately 430,874 square kilometers (166,361 sq mi), the MRNC had a population of approximately 11.2 million. Throughout its existence, the capital of the MRNC relocated from Vladikavkaz to Nazran and ultimately settled in Temir-Khan-Shura.

The MRNC broke away from the Russian Empire during the February Revolution of 1917, just before the outbreak of the Russian Civil War. Soviet Russian forces captured the state in 1921, and transformed it into the Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.[2]

State formation edit

The Union consisted seven "states" distributed on a national basis and united under a confederative principle within the territories: Dagestan, Ingushetia, Chechnya, North Ossetia–Alania, Circassia (including West Circassia, although the union had control only over East Circassia), Karachay-Balkaria, the Nogai steppes, and also asserted claims in Abkhazia.[3][4][5]

The Cabinet of Ministers of the Mountain Republic comprised representatives from nearly all regions of the North Caucasus.[citation needed]

History edit

The Union of the Peoples of the Northern Caucasus was established in March 1917 and an Executive Committee was elected to oversee its operations. Abdulmajid Tapa Tchermoev was appointed as Chairman of the Executive Committee. In August 1917, the Executive Committee decided to readopt the 1847 constitution of Imam Shamil.[citation needed]

The independent republic was declared on 11 May 1918 at the time of the collapse of the Russian Tsarist empire during the Russian Revolution of 1917. The new republic established a government led by Prime Minister Tchermoev, Rashid Khan Kaplanov, and Haidar Bammate.[6] The capital was initially Vladikavkaz but was later relocated to Temir-Khan-Shura after being occupied by the Red Army.[6][7] The Republic received support from Said Shamil, the grandson of Imam Shamil, and gained international recognition from various countries. The United Kingdom formed an alliance with Russian general Anton Denikin and made efforts to reinstate Tsarist rule in the region.[7]

During the Brest-Litovsk negotiations, an effort was made to dispatch delegates to represent the Republic under Ottoman supervision. However, the Ottomans later declined this association due to an unfavorable response from the Bolsheviks. On 30 May 1918, the Bolshevik government issued a diplomatic note declaring their non-recognition of the MRNC.[7] In March 1919, a delegation led by Tapa Tchermoeff and Ibrahim Bey Gaydarov went to Paris to participate in the Treaty of Versailles and sought international recognition of the Republic's independence.[8]

The Dagestan cavalry regiments, units within the Caucasian Native Cavalry Division, pledged their allegiance to the Mountainous Republic and Ottoman pashas of Circassian descent arrived with their forces to provide assistance. An army was formed and participated in confrontations against General Anton Denikin's Volunteer Army. With backing from the North Caucasus Army, led by Yusuf Izzet Pasha, the Caucasus region was liberated from Soviet Russia.[8]

Following the conclusion of World War I and the withdrawal of Turkish troops, the Mountain government underwent reorganization. In late 1918, Pshemaho Kotsev was confirmed as leader of the coalition cabinet in the Mountain Congress held in Temir-Khan-Shura. Hostilities ended in January 1920 with Denikin's army defeat by the 11th Red Army. In January 1921, the Red Army occupied the Mountain Republic and established the Soviet Mountain Republic within the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR).

Legacy edit

The "Congress of the Peoples of the North Caucasus", a political organization operating in the 21st century, has invoked the Mountainous Republic to advocate for the cooperation of different Northern Caucasus separatist groups in their struggle against Russia.[9]

Prominent government figures, 1917–1919 edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ L'Europe orientale (Paris. 1919), N2
  2. ^ World, Abkhaz (28 March 2009). "Abkhazia, Georgia and the Caucasus Confederation, by Stanislav Lakoba". Abkhaz World | History, Culture & Politics of Abkhazia. Retrieved 2020-03-08.
  3. ^ «После Февральской революции 1917 г. процесс политического самоопределения привел к образованию Карачаево-Балкарского штата в составе горской республики.» (ИЭА Российской академии наук. Серия энциклопедий «Народы и культуры», «Карачаевцы. Балкарцы.» — М.: Наука, ИЭА РАН, 2014. — С. 7. — 815 с. ISBN 978-5-02-038043-1.)
  4. ^ Петр Михайлович Шаститко (2002). Обречённые догмы: большевизм и национальный вопрос. М.: Восточная литература. p. 44. ISBN 9785020183056.
  5. ^ Камалудин Гаджиев (2013). Кавказский узел в геополитических приоритетах России. Litres. ISBN 9785457145672.
  6. ^ a b М. Вачагаев: Союз горцев Северного Кавказа и Горская республика, 2018
  7. ^ a b c Gülseven, Aslı (2021-03-30). "Büyük Güçler Yarişi Bağlaminda Başariya Ulaşmamiş Bi̇r Bağimsizlik Hareketi̇: Kuzey Kafkasya Bağimsizlik Mücadelesi̇ (1917–1920)". Nevşehir Hacı Bektaş Veli Üniversitesi SBE Dergisi. 11 (1): 245–259. doi:10.30783/nevsosbilen.873522. ISSN 2149-3871. S2CID 233912811.
  8. ^ a b Berzeg, Sefer E. (Mart 2003). Kuzey Kafkasya Cumhuriyeti 1917–1922, Kafkasya Dağlıları Birliği’nin Kuruluşu (I. Cilt). İstanbul : Birleşik Kafkasya Derneği.
  9. ^ Doukaev 2023.
  10. ^ Журнал «Ахульго, Журнал №6, Он служил своему народу.
  11. ^ "Гайдаров Ибрагим-бек Исаббекович". www.hrono.ru. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
  12. ^ "Газават.ру :: Личности2".
  13. ^ "Ценный документ".
  14. ^ a b "Подвигами предков соткана наша история". Ёлдаш (in Russian). November 2019. Retrieved 2021-03-19.
  15. ^ Михаил Булгаков. Фотолетопись жизни и творчества / Юрий Кривоносов. — М. : Вече, 2017. — 480 с.
  16. ^ Первые государственные образования на Северном Кавказе, (май 1917 – март 1920 гг.), Какагасанов Г. И., Матиев Т. Х., Болдырев Ю.Ф., Назарова О. В., Вестник Ингушского научно-исследовательского института гуманитарных наук им. Ч.Э. Ахриева, 2019

Bibliography edit

  • "Caucasian Republic Mission to the Peace Conference Appeal for Help", The Morning Post, London, Friday 4 April 1919.
  • J. "Obedinennyi Kavkaz" ("Vereinigtes Kaukasien"), 1–3 (30–32), München, 1954. (in Russian)
  • Baddeley, J. F., 1908, The Russian Conquest of the Caucasus, Longmans, Green, and Co., London
  • Madeleine Henrey, Madeleine Grown Up, J. M. Dent & Sons, London, 1954.
  • Kathleen R. Jackson, Marat Fidarov, Essays on the History of the North Caucasus, HHN Media, New York, 2009.
  • Marshall, Alex (2010), The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule, New York City: Routledge
  • Saparov, Arsène (2015), From Conflict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the making of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh, New York City: Routledge
  • Storozhenko (ed.), Ingushetia and Chechen Republic Map, Northern Caucasian Aerogeodesic Company of Roskartografia, Russia, 1995.
  • Levan Z. Urushadze, "About the history of the question of unity of the Caucasian Peoples". J. "Amirani", XIII, Montreal‐Tbilisi, 2005, pp. 72–87.
  • «Союз горцев Северного Кавказа и Горская республика. История несостоявшегося государства. 1917–1920», М.М. Вачагаев, 2018
  • Doukaev, Aslan (December 2023). "Resurgent Dreams of Independence in the North Caucasus". Eurasia Daily Monitor. Jamestown Foundation. 20 (188).

mountainous, republic, northern, caucasus, 1171918, 1922flag, coat, armscapitalterek, kale, vladikavkaz, religionsunni, islam, majority, state, backed, faith, russian, orthodox, church, minority, demonym, north, caucasiangovernmentconfederated, parliamentary, . 42 49 N 47 07 E 42 817 N 47 117 E 42 817 47 117Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus1918 1922Flag Coat of armsCapitalTerek kale now Vladikavkaz ReligionSunni Islam majority and state backed faith Russian Orthodox Church minority Demonym s North CaucasianGovernmentConfederated parliamentary republic under a provisional government 11 May 1918 December 1918Tapa Tchermoeff December 1918 12 May 1919Pshemakho KotsevHistorical eraWorld War IInterwar period Independence declared6 March 1918 Replaced by Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic30 November 1922Area Total430 874 km2 166 361 sq mi Population 1919 census11 221 860 1 CurrencyTumenPreceded by Succeeded byRussian Republic Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist RepublicThe Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus MRNC also referred to as the United Republics of the North Caucasus Mountain Republic or the Republic of the Mountaineers was a state in Eurasia and encompassing the entirety of the North Caucasus that emerged during the Russian Civil War and existed from 1918 to 1922 It formed as a consolidation of various Caucasian ethnic groups including the Circassians Chechens Karachays Ossetians Balkars Ingush and Dagestanis The MRNC encompassed the former territories of Terek Oblast and Dagestan Oblast within the Russian Empire These territories now constitute the present day republics of Chechnya Ingushetia North Ossetia Alania Kabardino Balkaria Dagestan and a portion of Stavropol Krai in the Russian Federation Spanning approximately 430 874 square kilometers 166 361 sq mi the MRNC had a population of approximately 11 2 million Throughout its existence the capital of the MRNC relocated from Vladikavkaz to Nazran and ultimately settled in Temir Khan Shura The MRNC broke away from the Russian Empire during the February Revolution of 1917 just before the outbreak of the Russian Civil War Soviet Russian forces captured the state in 1921 and transformed it into the Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 2 Contents 1 State formation 2 History 2 1 Legacy 3 Prominent government figures 1917 1919 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyState formation editThe Union consisted seven states distributed on a national basis and united under a confederative principle within the territories Dagestan Ingushetia Chechnya North Ossetia Alania Circassia including West Circassia although the union had control only over East Circassia Karachay Balkaria the Nogai steppes and also asserted claims in Abkhazia 3 4 5 The Cabinet of Ministers of the Mountain Republic comprised representatives from nearly all regions of the North Caucasus citation needed History editSee also Flag of the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus The Union of the Peoples of the Northern Caucasus was established in March 1917 and an Executive Committee was elected to oversee its operations Abdulmajid Tapa Tchermoev was appointed as Chairman of the Executive Committee In August 1917 the Executive Committee decided to readopt the 1847 constitution of Imam Shamil citation needed The independent republic was declared on 11 May 1918 at the time of the collapse of the Russian Tsarist empire during the Russian Revolution of 1917 The new republic established a government led by Prime Minister Tchermoev Rashid Khan Kaplanov and Haidar Bammate 6 The capital was initially Vladikavkaz but was later relocated to Temir Khan Shura after being occupied by the Red Army 6 7 The Republic received support from Said Shamil the grandson of Imam Shamil and gained international recognition from various countries The United Kingdom formed an alliance with Russian general Anton Denikin and made efforts to reinstate Tsarist rule in the region 7 During the Brest Litovsk negotiations an effort was made to dispatch delegates to represent the Republic under Ottoman supervision However the Ottomans later declined this association due to an unfavorable response from the Bolsheviks On 30 May 1918 the Bolshevik government issued a diplomatic note declaring their non recognition of the MRNC 7 In March 1919 a delegation led by Tapa Tchermoeff and Ibrahim Bey Gaydarov went to Paris to participate in the Treaty of Versailles and sought international recognition of the Republic s independence 8 The Dagestan cavalry regiments units within the Caucasian Native Cavalry Division pledged their allegiance to the Mountainous Republic and Ottoman pashas of Circassian descent arrived with their forces to provide assistance An army was formed and participated in confrontations against General Anton Denikin s Volunteer Army With backing from the North Caucasus Army led by Yusuf Izzet Pasha the Caucasus region was liberated from Soviet Russia 8 Following the conclusion of World War I and the withdrawal of Turkish troops the Mountain government underwent reorganization In late 1918 Pshemaho Kotsev was confirmed as leader of the coalition cabinet in the Mountain Congress held in Temir Khan Shura Hostilities ended in January 1920 with Denikin s army defeat by the 11th Red Army In January 1921 the Red Army occupied the Mountain Republic and established the Soviet Mountain Republic within the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic RSFSR Legacy edit The Congress of the Peoples of the North Caucasus a political organization operating in the 21st century has invoked the Mountainous Republic to advocate for the cooperation of different Northern Caucasus separatist groups in their struggle against Russia 9 Prominent government figures 1917 1919 edit nbsp Leaders of the MRNC with Prime Minister Tapa Tchermoeff seated in the center of the front row nbsp Abdulmajid Tapa Tchermoeff oil industrialist first chairman of the Central Committee and first prime minister Chechen Died in Switzerland in 1937 nbsp Rashid Khan Kaplanov second Chairman of the Central Committee Minister of the Interior Kumyk Assassinated by the Bolshevik government in 1937 nbsp Pshemakho Kotsev second prime minister Kabardian Circassian Died in Istanbul in 1962 nbsp Haidar Bammate Foreign Minister Kumyk Died in Paris in 1965 nbsp Vassan Girey Jabagiyev Minister of Finance Ingush Died in Istanbul in 1961 nbsp Nukh bek Tarkovskiy Military Minister Kumyk Died in Switzerland in 1951 nbsp Zibair Temirkhanov Chairman of the Madjlis Parliament Kumyk Twice repressed by the Bolsheviks died in Dagestan in 1952 nbsp Daniyal Apashev Member of Parliament and chairman in 1919 Kumyk Killed by Bolsheviks in 1920 10 nbsp Ibrahim Bey Gaydarov Minister of Posts and Telegraph 11 Lezgian Died in Ankara in 1949 nbsp Adil Gerey Daidbekov Minister of Transportation Kumyk Died in Baku in 1946 12 13 nbsp Alikhan Kantemir the official representative in neighboring countries Azerbaijan Georgia Muslim Ossetian Died in Munich in 1963 nbsp Tadjuddin Penzulayev Minister of Justice Kumyk Killed by the Bolsheviks in 1937 14 Co author of Mikhail Bulgakov s piece Children of Mulla 15 nbsp Muhiddin Penzulayev Minister of Communications Kumyk Died in 1942 14 Brother of Tadjuddin Penzulayev nbsp Tugan Alkhasov member of the government Kumyk The circumstances of his death remain unknown 16 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus nbsp History portal Caucasian Imamate 1828 1859 North Caucasian Soviet Republic 1918 Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1921 1924 Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus 1989 2000 PrometheismReferences edit L Europe orientale Paris 1919 N2 World Abkhaz 28 March 2009 Abkhazia Georgia and the Caucasus Confederation by Stanislav Lakoba Abkhaz World History Culture amp Politics of Abkhazia Retrieved 2020 03 08 Posle Fevralskoj revolyucii 1917 g process politicheskogo samoopredeleniya privel k obrazovaniyu Karachaevo Balkarskogo shtata v sostave gorskoj respubliki IEA Rossijskoj akademii nauk Seriya enciklopedij Narody i kultury Karachaevcy Balkarcy M Nauka IEA RAN 2014 S 7 815 s ISBN 978 5 02 038043 1 Petr Mihajlovich Shastitko 2002 Obrechyonnye dogmy bolshevizm i nacionalnyj vopros M Vostochnaya literatura p 44 ISBN 9785020183056 Kamaludin Gadzhiev 2013 Kavkazskij uzel v geopoliticheskih prioritetah Rossii Litres ISBN 9785457145672 a b M Vachagaev Soyuz gorcev Severnogo Kavkaza i Gorskaya respublika 2018 a b c Gulseven Asli 2021 03 30 Buyuk Gucler Yarisi Baglaminda Basariya Ulasmamis Bi r Bagimsizlik Hareketi Kuzey Kafkasya Bagimsizlik Mucadelesi 1917 1920 Nevsehir Haci Bektas Veli Universitesi SBE Dergisi 11 1 245 259 doi 10 30783 nevsosbilen 873522 ISSN 2149 3871 S2CID 233912811 a b Berzeg Sefer E Mart 2003 Kuzey Kafkasya Cumhuriyeti 1917 1922 Kafkasya Daglilari Birligi nin Kurulusu I Cilt Istanbul Birlesik Kafkasya Dernegi Doukaev 2023 Zhurnal Ahulgo Zhurnal 6 On sluzhil svoemu narodu Gajdarov Ibragim bek Isabbekovich www hrono ru Retrieved 2021 02 03 Gazavat ru Lichnosti2 Cennyj dokument a b Podvigami predkov sotkana nasha istoriya Yoldash in Russian November 2019 Retrieved 2021 03 19 Mihail Bulgakov Fotoletopis zhizni i tvorchestva Yurij Krivonosov M Veche 2017 480 s Pervye gosudarstvennye obrazovaniya na Severnom Kavkaze maj 1917 mart 1920 gg Kakagasanov G I Matiev T H Boldyrev Yu F Nazarova O V Vestnik Ingushskogo nauchno issledovatelskogo instituta gumanitarnyh nauk im Ch E Ahrieva 2019Bibliography edit Caucasian Republic Mission to the Peace Conference Appeal for Help The Morning Post London Friday 4 April 1919 J Obedinennyi Kavkaz Vereinigtes Kaukasien 1 3 30 32 Munchen 1954 in Russian Baddeley J F 1908 The Russian Conquest of the Caucasus Longmans Green and Co London Madeleine Henrey Madeleine Grown Up J M Dent amp Sons London 1954 Kathleen R Jackson Marat Fidarov Essays on the History of the North Caucasus HHN Media New York 2009 Marshall Alex 2010 The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule New York City Routledge Saparov Arsene 2015 From Conflict to Autonomy in the Caucasus The Soviet Union and the making of Abkhazia South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh New York City Routledge Storozhenko ed Ingushetia and Chechen Republic Map Northern Caucasian Aerogeodesic Company of Roskartografia Russia 1995 Levan Z Urushadze About the history of the question of unity of the Caucasian Peoples J Amirani XIII Montreal Tbilisi 2005 pp 72 87 Soyuz gorcev Severnogo Kavkaza i Gorskaya respublika Istoriya nesostoyavshegosya gosudarstva 1917 1920 M M Vachagaev 2018 Doukaev Aslan December 2023 Resurgent Dreams of Independence in the North Caucasus Eurasia Daily Monitor Jamestown Foundation 20 188 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus amp oldid 1207731772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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