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Siberian regionalism

Siberian regionalism (Russian: Сибирское областничество, romanizedSibirskoye oblastnichestvo, lit.'Siberian oblast movement') is a political movement that advocates for the formation of an autonomous Siberian state.[citation needed] The idea originated in the mid-19th century and reached a high tide with the White movement military activities of Aleksandr Kolchak (1874–1920) and Viktor Pepelyayev (1885–1920) during the Russian Civil War of 1917–1922.[citation needed]

Siberian regionalism
Сибирское областничество
ChairpersonPyotr Derber
Governing bodyProvisional Government of Autonomous Siberia
FounderAfanasy Shchapov, Grigory Potanin, Nikolay Yadrintsev
LegalisedA vote by the Siberian Regional Duma
Merged intoProvisional All-Russian Government
HeadquartersTomsk
IdeologySiberia as an autonomous region (or independent state)
Party flag

Foundations

Regionalism and autonomy

Siberian regionalism, according to Susan Smith-Peter, is the first political regionalist movement in a European country.[1] Following the activities of Afanasy Shchapov (1830–1876) in Siberia, a movement advocating a far-ranging autonomy for the region took shape under the name of "regionalism" (oblastnichestvo). In the 19th century Siberian students in Saint Petersburg: Grigory Potanin (1835–1920), Nikolay Yadrintsev (1842–1894) and people with other backgrounds founded the movement.[2]

Independence

Some radical members in 1863 presumably[original research?] prepared a revolt in Siberia together with exiled Poles and Ukrainians, trying to achieve independence and to begin the development of a Siberian state, similar to the United States.[citation needed] Tsarist authorities arrested and imprisoned forty-four members of the group in May 1865, after watch-officers of the Siberian Cadet Corps searched cadet Arseny Samsonov, aged 16, for illicit items and found a proclamation entitled "To Patriots of Siberia", attributed to a collective authorship of Grigory Potanin, Nikolay Yadrintsev, Serafim Serafimovich Shashkov [ru] (1841–1882), et al.[3]

The Russian revolutionary Mikhail Bakunin (1814–1876) supported the idea of an autonomous Siberia in the hope it would become a democratic state, prosperous within a union with United States and leading to the collapse of Imperial Russia.[4] Local thinkers and settlers saw Siberia as means of escape from the oppression of the Russian Empire, and as the seed of a possible free and democratic country that would spread freedom across Asia.[citation needed]

In the end of the 19th and at beginning of the 20th century, Siberian regionalists led by Potanin and Yadrintsev formed a legal opposition to Russian colonialism in Siberia; they wrote many books and articles, and organized research into Siberian cultures, economics, ethnicities, races, etc. Yadrintsev's greatest book, Siberia as a colony (Сибирь как колония),[5] envisaged the future of Siberia as domination of the white race and a European way of development, similar to the U.S., claiming that the Siberians already had many differences from their Russian and East-Slavic ancestors — especially cultural differences such as love of freedom and private initiative.[2]

Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia

After the February Revolution, the development of oblastnichestvo gained momentum, as on May 21, 1917, when the Oblastniks convened their first general meeting in Irkutsk, where they heard and discussed the report delivered by I.I. Serebrennikov "On the autonomy of Siberia". In August, the Oblastniks convened the Conference of Public Organizations based on the decision of Tomsk Provincial People's Assembly as of May 18, 1917.[6] On August 5, 1917, the Conference approved "The Regulations for the Autonomy of Siberia" and heard the report by P.A. Kazantsev "On the Siberian National Banner", which it also unanimously approved:

The National Siberian Banner shall be a combination of two colours: white and green. White colour means Siberian snow, whilst green colour – Siberian taiga. The banner shall be rectangular, split into two parts diagonally from the left top to right bottom. thus, the upper triangle shall be of green colour, and the lower one – of white colour.[7][8][9]

On January 28, 1918, the Siberian Regional Duma was convened in Tomsk in secret, fearing suppression by the Bolsheviks, who occupied the city. The members elected the members of the Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia from four political factions:

  1. The Socialist-Revolutionary Party delegated:
    • P.Ya. Derber to be the Chairman of the Government,
    • Colonel A.A. Krakovetsky to take the Ministry of Defence,
    • A.Ye. Novosyolov – Minister of Internal Affairs,
    • N.Ye. Zhernakov – State Controller,
    • Ye.V. Zakharov, S.A. Kudryavtsev and M.B. Shatilov to be ministers with no charge.
  2. The Oblastniks delegated:
    • P.V. Vologodsky to become the Minister of Foreign Affairs,
    • V.M. Krutovsky – Minister of Public Health,
    • G.B. Patushinsky – Minister of Justice,
    • I.I. Serebrennikov – Minister of Supply and Food,
    • I.A. Mikhailov – Minister of Finance,
    • L.A. Ustrugov – Minister of Railways.
  3. The ethnic minorities delegated:
    • V.T. Tiber-Petrov to take the position of the Minister of Native Affairs,
    • D.G. Sulima – Minister of Exterritorial Peoples,
    • E.D. Rinchino – Minister of Public Education,
    • G.S. Neometullov to be a minister with no charge.
  4. Mensheviks delegated:
    • M.A. Kolobov to become the Minister of Trade and Industry
    • I.S. Yudin to become the Minister of Labour.

Only a handful of them agreed to take part in the Government. Fairly soon, most of the ministers had to flee to the Far East and stayed there until July, when they went to Vladivostok after it was liberated from the Bolsheviks by the Czechs.[6]

Meanwhile, on May 27, 1918, Colonel A.N. Grishin-Almazov, who undertook his best efforts to unite the officer resistance against the Bolsheviks, ordered a full scale uprising, which proved to be a total success, as the Whites managed to defeat the Reds and cleared many Siberian cities of their presence. On June 13, 1918, colonel A.N. Grishin-Almazov issued an order to form the West Siberian Army (later to become Siberian Army). In a matter of months, he managed to accumulate over 10,000 volunteers across Siberia and Urals, which allowed some of the Siberian ministers headed by P.V. Vologodsky to come back.

Provisional Siberian Government

On June 23, 1918, Vologodsky formed a new Provisional Siberian Government instead of the previously elected Government of Autonomous Siberia, which had virtually no influence and authority whatsoever. He took the chair and ministry of foreign affairs assisted by many of his former member ministers I.I. Serebrennikov, who again became the Minister of Supply, while I.A. Mikhailov was chosen to be the Minister of Finance and M.B. Shatilov – the Minister of Native Affairs. Colonel A.N. Grishin-Almazov was appointed Minister of Defence.

Under the control of the regionalists, there was a short-term state formation, so-called "Siberian Republic".[2][6] On July 11, 1918, the Provisional Siberian Government published the Declaration, declaring its authority over territory of Siberia, and restoration of the Russian state as the ultimate goal of the Siberian government. Decision on the status of Siberia was left to the future All-Russian and Siberian constituent assemblies.

On November 3, 1918, the Provisional Siberian Government sacrificed own independence for the sake of consolidation of all possible forces to fight against the Bolsheviks. Thereby it merged with the Ufa Directory, forming Provisional All-Russian Government.[6]

Modern movements

In 2014, an artist, Artyom Loskutov, wrote in his blog about an idea to create a Siberian Republic within the Russian Federation[10] and attempted to organize a mock demonstration called Monstration for Siberian Federalisation to take place on August 17 in Novosibirsk. Russian authorities banned the march and attempted to censor media coverage about the event, citing a recently passed law against "calls to mass unrest, extremist activities or participation in illegal public events."[11] The purpose of the protest was to "ridicule the Kremlin's claimed hypocrisy in the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation and to raise the issue of Siberia's delayed development".[12] He claimed that Western Siberia provides most of Russia's oil and gas, but the region gets very little benefit since the taxes go to Moscow.[12][13]

See also

References

  1. ^ Smith-Peter 2018, p. 17.
  2. ^ a b c Watrous 1993, pp. 113–132.
  3. ^ Slezikini, Y. Arctic Mirrors: Russia and the Small Peoples of the North, Chapter 4, pages 95–130, Cornell University Press
  4. ^ Mark Bassin "Imperial Visions: Nationalist Imagination and Geographical Expansion in the Russian Far East, 1840–1865
  5. ^ Yadrintsev, Nikolai Mikhailovich (1892). Siberia as a colony: in regard to geographic, ethnographic and historical repests Сибирь как колония: в географическом, этнографическом и историческом отношении [Sibir' kak koloniya: v geografichesom, etnograficheskom i istoricheskom otnoshenii] (in Russian) (2, corrected and expanded ed.). Saint Petersburg: И.М. Сибиряков. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Sushko 2009, pp. 174–179.
  7. ^ The A.S. Pushkin Tomsk Regional Universal Scientific Library: Siberian Oblastnichestvo. Chronicle
  8. ^ The flags of the national entities in Russia in 1917–1920
  9. ^ V.V. Zhuravlev (2000) The National Symbols of the "White" Russia
  10. ^ Maynes, Charles (5 August 2014). "As Snowden looks on, Russia cracks down on Internet freedom". PRI. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  11. ^ Goble, Paul (2020). "Siberian Regionalism Is a Growing Threat to Moscow".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ a b Luhn, Alec (5 August 2014). "Russia bans Siberia independence march". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  13. ^ "Meanwhile, at the Other End of the Empire ... Putin Scrambles to Squash Siberian Autonomy Movement".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Bibliography

  • Anisimova, Alla; Echevskaia, Olga (2016). "Reading Post-Soviet (Trans)formations of Siberian Identity through Biographical Narrative," REGION: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia 5, no. 2. pp. 127–148.
  • Anisimova, Alla; Echevskaya, Olga (2018). "Siberian regional identity: self-perception, solidarity, or political claim?". In Edith W. Clowes; Gisela Erbslöh; Ani Kokobobo (eds.). Russia's Regional Identities: The Power of the Provinces. Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-20102-6.
  • Balzer, M. M. (1999). The Tenacity of Ethnicity: A Siberian Saga in Global Perspective. Princeton University Press
  • Curtis, K. (1985). The Soviet State: The Domestic Roots of Soviet Foreign Policy. Royal Institute of International Affairs.
  • von Hagen, Mark (2007). "Federalisms and Pan-movements: Re-imagining Empire," in Russian Empire: Space, People, Power, ed. Jane Burbank, Mark von Hagen and Anatoli Remnev. Indiana University Press, 494–510.
  • Hanson, Gary (1974) "Siberian Regionalism in the 1860s," Topic 27: 62–75.
  • Kovalaschina, Elena (2007). "The Historical and Cultural Ideals of the Siberian Oblastnichestvo," Sibirica 6, no. 2: 87–119.
  • von Mohrenschildt, Dimitri (1981). Toward a United States of Russia: Plans and Projects of Federal Reconstruction of Russia in the Nineteenth Century. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
  • Smith-Peter, Susan (2018). "The Six Waves of Russian Regionalism in European Context, 1830–2000". In Edith W. Clowes; Gisela Erbslöh; Ani Kokobobo (eds.). Russia's Regional Identities: The Power of the Provinces. Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 14–43. ISBN 978-1-138-20102-6.
  • Sushko, Valentina A. (June 2009). "Сибирский национализм и борьба за власть в крае (март 1917 — ноябрь 1918 г.)" [Siberian nationalism and the struggle for power in the region (March 1917 – November 1918)] (PDF). Вестник Томского государственного университета [ Tomsk State University Bulletin] (in Russian). 323: 174–179. ISSN 1561-7793.
  • Tishkov, Valery (1997). Ethnicity, Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union: The Mind Aflame. Sage Publications Ltd.
  • Watrous, Stephen (1993). "The Regionalist Conception of Siberia, 1860 to 1920". In Galya Diment; Yuri Slezkine (eds.). Between Heaven and Hell: The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 113–132. ISBN 978-0-312-06072-5.

External links

  • The A.S. Pushkin Tomsk Regional Universal Scientific Library: Siberian Oblastnichestvo. Chronicle
  • The flags of the national entities in Russia in 1917–1920
  • V.V. Zhuravlev (2000) The National Symbols of the "White" Russia
  • Siberian regionalism: a growing threat to Moscow at Jamestown.org

siberian, regionalism, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, section, possibly, contains, synthesis, material, which, does, verifiably, mention. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article or section possibly contains synthesis of material which does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Parts of this article those related to documentation need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Siberian regionalism Russian Sibirskoe oblastnichestvo romanized Sibirskoye oblastnichestvo lit Siberian oblast movement is a political movement that advocates for the formation of an autonomous Siberian state citation needed The idea originated in the mid 19th century and reached a high tide with the White movement military activities of Aleksandr Kolchak 1874 1920 and Viktor Pepelyayev 1885 1920 during the Russian Civil War of 1917 1922 citation needed Siberian regionalism Sibirskoe oblastnichestvoChairpersonPyotr DerberGoverning bodyProvisional Government of Autonomous SiberiaFounderAfanasy Shchapov Grigory Potanin Nikolay YadrintsevLegalisedA vote by the Siberian Regional DumaMerged intoProvisional All Russian GovernmentHeadquartersTomskIdeologySiberia as an autonomous region or independent state Party flag Contents 1 Foundations 1 1 Regionalism and autonomy 1 2 Independence 2 Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia 3 Provisional Siberian Government 4 Modern movements 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksFoundations EditRegionalism and autonomy Edit Siberian regionalism according to Susan Smith Peter is the first political regionalist movement in a European country 1 Following the activities of Afanasy Shchapov 1830 1876 in Siberia a movement advocating a far ranging autonomy for the region took shape under the name of regionalism oblastnichestvo In the 19th century Siberian students in Saint Petersburg Grigory Potanin 1835 1920 Nikolay Yadrintsev 1842 1894 and people with other backgrounds founded the movement 2 Independence Edit Some radical members in 1863 presumably original research prepared a revolt in Siberia together with exiled Poles and Ukrainians trying to achieve independence and to begin the development of a Siberian state similar to the United States citation needed Tsarist authorities arrested and imprisoned forty four members of the group in May 1865 after watch officers of the Siberian Cadet Corps searched cadet Arseny Samsonov aged 16 for illicit items and found a proclamation entitled To Patriots of Siberia attributed to a collective authorship of Grigory Potanin Nikolay Yadrintsev Serafim Serafimovich Shashkov ru 1841 1882 et al 3 The Russian revolutionary Mikhail Bakunin 1814 1876 supported the idea of an autonomous Siberia in the hope it would become a democratic state prosperous within a union with United States and leading to the collapse of Imperial Russia 4 Local thinkers and settlers saw Siberia as means of escape from the oppression of the Russian Empire and as the seed of a possible free and democratic country that would spread freedom across Asia citation needed In the end of the 19th and at beginning of the 20th century Siberian regionalists led by Potanin and Yadrintsev formed a legal opposition to Russian colonialism in Siberia they wrote many books and articles and organized research into Siberian cultures economics ethnicities races etc Yadrintsev s greatest book Siberia as a colony Sibir kak koloniya 5 envisaged the future of Siberia as domination of the white race and a European way of development similar to the U S claiming that the Siberians already had many differences from their Russian and East Slavic ancestors especially cultural differences such as love of freedom and private initiative 2 Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia EditMain article Siberian Republic 1918 After the February Revolution the development of oblastnichestvo gained momentum as on May 21 1917 when the Oblastniks convened their first general meeting in Irkutsk where they heard and discussed the report delivered by I I Serebrennikov On the autonomy of Siberia In August the Oblastniks convened the Conference of Public Organizations based on the decision of Tomsk Provincial People s Assembly as of May 18 1917 6 On August 5 1917 the Conference approved The Regulations for the Autonomy of Siberia and heard the report by P A Kazantsev On the Siberian National Banner which it also unanimously approved The National Siberian Banner shall be a combination of two colours white and green White colour means Siberian snow whilst green colour Siberian taiga The banner shall be rectangular split into two parts diagonally from the left top to right bottom thus the upper triangle shall be of green colour and the lower one of white colour 7 8 9 On January 28 1918 the Siberian Regional Duma was convened in Tomsk in secret fearing suppression by the Bolsheviks who occupied the city The members elected the members of the Provisional Government of Autonomous Siberia from four political factions The Socialist Revolutionary Party delegated P Ya Derber to be the Chairman of the Government Colonel A A Krakovetsky to take the Ministry of Defence A Ye Novosyolov Minister of Internal Affairs N Ye Zhernakov State Controller Ye V Zakharov S A Kudryavtsev and M B Shatilov to be ministers with no charge The Oblastniks delegated P V Vologodsky to become the Minister of Foreign Affairs V M Krutovsky Minister of Public Health G B Patushinsky Minister of Justice I I Serebrennikov Minister of Supply and Food I A Mikhailov Minister of Finance L A Ustrugov Minister of Railways The ethnic minorities delegated V T Tiber Petrov to take the position of the Minister of Native Affairs D G Sulima Minister of Exterritorial Peoples E D Rinchino Minister of Public Education G S Neometullov to be a minister with no charge Mensheviks delegated M A Kolobov to become the Minister of Trade and Industry I S Yudin to become the Minister of Labour Only a handful of them agreed to take part in the Government Fairly soon most of the ministers had to flee to the Far East and stayed there until July when they went to Vladivostok after it was liberated from the Bolsheviks by the Czechs 6 Meanwhile on May 27 1918 Colonel A N Grishin Almazov who undertook his best efforts to unite the officer resistance against the Bolsheviks ordered a full scale uprising which proved to be a total success as the Whites managed to defeat the Reds and cleared many Siberian cities of their presence On June 13 1918 colonel A N Grishin Almazov issued an order to form the West Siberian Army later to become Siberian Army In a matter of months he managed to accumulate over 10 000 volunteers across Siberia and Urals which allowed some of the Siberian ministers headed by P V Vologodsky to come back Provisional Siberian Government EditOn June 23 1918 Vologodsky formed a new Provisional Siberian Government instead of the previously elected Government of Autonomous Siberia which had virtually no influence and authority whatsoever He took the chair and ministry of foreign affairs assisted by many of his former member ministers I I Serebrennikov who again became the Minister of Supply while I A Mikhailov was chosen to be the Minister of Finance and M B Shatilov the Minister of Native Affairs Colonel A N Grishin Almazov was appointed Minister of Defence Under the control of the regionalists there was a short term state formation so called Siberian Republic 2 6 On July 11 1918 the Provisional Siberian Government published the Declaration declaring its authority over territory of Siberia and restoration of the Russian state as the ultimate goal of the Siberian government Decision on the status of Siberia was left to the future All Russian and Siberian constituent assemblies On November 3 1918 the Provisional Siberian Government sacrificed own independence for the sake of consolidation of all possible forces to fight against the Bolsheviks Thereby it merged with the Ufa Directory forming Provisional All Russian Government 6 Modern movements EditIn 2014 an artist Artyom Loskutov wrote in his blog about an idea to create a Siberian Republic within the Russian Federation 10 and attempted to organize a mock demonstration called Monstration for Siberian Federalisation to take place on August 17 in Novosibirsk Russian authorities banned the march and attempted to censor media coverage about the event citing a recently passed law against calls to mass unrest extremist activities or participation in illegal public events 11 The purpose of the protest was to ridicule the Kremlin s claimed hypocrisy in the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation and to raise the issue of Siberia s delayed development 12 He claimed that Western Siberia provides most of Russia s oil and gas but the region gets very little benefit since the taxes go to Moscow 12 13 See also Edit Siberia portalAutonomous administrative divisions of Russia List of active separatist movements in Asia Secession in RussiaReferences Edit Smith Peter 2018 p 17 a b c Watrous 1993 pp 113 132 Slezikini Y Arctic Mirrors Russia and the Small Peoples of the North Chapter 4 pages 95 130 Cornell University Press Mark Bassin Imperial Visions Nationalist Imagination and Geographical Expansion in the Russian Far East 1840 1865 Yadrintsev Nikolai Mikhailovich 1892 Siberia as a colony in regard to geographic ethnographic and historical repests Sibir kak koloniya v geograficheskom etnograficheskom i istoricheskom otnoshenii Sibir kak koloniya v geografichesom etnograficheskom i istoricheskom otnoshenii in Russian 2 corrected and expanded ed Saint Petersburg I M Sibiryakov Retrieved 7 March 2021 a b c d Sushko 2009 pp 174 179 The A S Pushkin Tomsk Regional Universal Scientific Library Siberian Oblastnichestvo Chronicle The flags of the national entities in Russia in 1917 1920 V V Zhuravlev 2000 The National Symbols of the White Russia Maynes Charles 5 August 2014 As Snowden looks on Russia cracks down on Internet freedom PRI Retrieved 5 August 2014 Goble Paul 2020 Siberian Regionalism Is a Growing Threat to Moscow a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Luhn Alec 5 August 2014 Russia bans Siberia independence march The Guardian Retrieved 5 August 2014 Meanwhile at the Other End of the Empire Putin Scrambles to Squash Siberian Autonomy Movement a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Bibliography EditAnisimova Alla Echevskaia Olga 2016 Reading Post Soviet Trans formations of Siberian Identity through Biographical Narrative REGION Regional Studies of Russia Eastern Europe and Central Asia 5 no 2 pp 127 148 Anisimova Alla Echevskaya Olga 2018 Siberian regional identity self perception solidarity or political claim In Edith W Clowes Gisela Erbsloh Ani Kokobobo eds Russia s Regional Identities The Power of the Provinces Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series London New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 20102 6 Balzer M M 1999 The Tenacity of Ethnicity A Siberian Saga in Global Perspective Princeton University Press Curtis K 1985 The Soviet State The Domestic Roots of Soviet Foreign Policy Royal Institute of International Affairs von Hagen Mark 2007 Federalisms and Pan movements Re imagining Empire in Russian Empire Space People Power ed Jane Burbank Mark von Hagen and Anatoli Remnev Indiana University Press 494 510 Hanson Gary 1974 Siberian Regionalism in the 1860s Topic 27 62 75 Kovalaschina Elena 2007 The Historical and Cultural Ideals of the Siberian Oblastnichestvo Sibirica 6 no 2 87 119 von Mohrenschildt Dimitri 1981 Toward a United States of Russia Plans and Projects of Federal Reconstruction of Russia in the Nineteenth Century Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Smith Peter Susan 2018 The Six Waves of Russian Regionalism in European Context 1830 2000 In Edith W Clowes Gisela Erbsloh Ani Kokobobo eds Russia s Regional Identities The Power of the Provinces Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series London New York Routledge pp 14 43 ISBN 978 1 138 20102 6 Sushko Valentina A June 2009 Sibirskij nacionalizm i borba za vlast v krae mart 1917 noyabr 1918 g Siberian nationalism and the struggle for power in the region March 1917 November 1918 PDF Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta Tomsk State University Bulletin in Russian 323 174 179 ISSN 1561 7793 Tishkov Valery 1997 Ethnicity Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union The Mind Aflame Sage Publications Ltd Watrous Stephen 1993 The Regionalist Conception of Siberia 1860 to 1920 In Galya Diment Yuri Slezkine eds Between Heaven and Hell The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture New York St Martin s Press pp 113 132 ISBN 978 0 312 06072 5 External links EditThe A S Pushkin Tomsk Regional Universal Scientific Library Siberian Oblastnichestvo Chronicle The flags of the national entities in Russia in 1917 1920 V V Zhuravlev 2000 The National Symbols of the White Russia Siberian regionalism a growing threat to Moscow at Jamestown org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siberian regionalism amp oldid 1135042388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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