Jump to content

Second Chui Volost

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 5.101.22.2 (talk) at 02:41, 30 November 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

  • Comment: Parts of this are written in the present tense, for example: "the Zaisans of the Second Chui Volost have always had great authority among the zaisans of the Altai duchins and loyal subjects of Russia Altaians". I also don't understand why one of the sub-sections is called "Dualism" and why most of that section is about paying tribute. voorts (talk/contributions) 03:12, 25 November 2023 (UTC)
  • Comment: Concerns on context still not resolved. Speaking as a person with zero knowledge on the history of Russia this article is still fairly confusing to me. S5A-0043Talk 14:10, 8 November 2023 (UTC)
  • Comment: At the lead, I am expecting Template:Tq is only for quoting in talk and project pages. Do not use it in actual articles. and not Template:Tq is only for quoting in talk and project pages. Do not use it in actual articles.. Vanderwaalforces (talk) 09:51, 7 November 2023 (UTC)


The Second Chui Volost
1717–1865 (Volost was part of the Russian Empire from 1865 to 1913)
CapitalKuray[1][2] (Kosh-Agach since 1907[3][4][5])
Recognised national languagesTelengit language
GovernmentMonarchy
History 
• Established
1717
• Disestablished
1865 (Volost was part of the Russian Empire from 1865 to 1913)

The Second Chui Volost (Kebeks Otok,[6] Altan Nuur Urianghai[7][8]) was the otok, formed after the collapse of the Telengit Land. The otok was inhabited by Telengits, who were also called Dvoedans because they paid taxes to the Russian Empire and the Qing Empire.[9] With such dependence, neither Russia nor China participated in the internal policy of the otok, thereby preserving its partial sovereignty.[10] This otok was ruled by Zaisans from the Ak-Kebek dynasty.[11]

History

Influence of the Qing Empire

During the Third Oirat-Manchurian War on the territory of Altai also began to attack the Qing warriors. Unable to defend themselves, most of the Altaians accepted Russian citizenship,[12] meanwhile, the Zaisan of the Second Chui Volost Yarynak and the Zaisan of the First Chui Volost Telebek began to pay taxes to China. For this, the emperor officially recognized the authority of the Teles in the first otok(in the First Chui Volost), and the Ak-Kebeks in the second,[11] assigning each of the two zaisans the title of "Ukherida", which was equal to a third-level official.[13]

Obligations to Russia and China

In the fifties of the XVIII century, the Second Chui Volost fell into a situation in which the residents of otok had to pay taxes to two states.[14] This situation made it possible to maneuver between the two empires and maintain limited sovereignty.[10]

In favor of the Qing Empire, the Chui Telengites paid annual taxes. In 1757, eight Qing ambassadors arrived in the Second Chui volost for the first time, who collected yasak at the rate of one sable per person. Later yasak for an adult male was equal to 2 skins of sable and 60 skins of squirrels.[15] Children and the elderly were exempt from paying alman.[16]

Telengits for the Russian Empire were obliged to pay yasak, as well as to protect the property of travelers who studied their region, in rare cases to provide Russian officials with horses. The Dvoedans had no other duties towards Russia.[17] Also, the Russian Empire did not interfere in the management of the Second Chui Volost, which was recorded in the "Charter on the Management of Foreigners" of 1822. Because of this, the Zaisans of The Second Chui Volost had great authority among the Zaisans of the Altai dyuchins and loyal subjects of Russia Altaians.[18][19]

Joining the Russian Empire

A turning point in the history of the Second Chui Volost was a visit to Kosh-Agach Tomsk Governor Herman Gustavovich Lerche, which took place in the summer of 1864. The governor agitated local residents about joining Russia.[20] And already January 25 [O.S. 1865] of the year The Second Chuiskaya Volost headed by zaisan Chichkan Tesegeshev[21] is part of the Russian Empire.[22]

Demographics

In 1826, Alexander von Bunge visited the Second Chui Parish, and he noted that the local population is two thousand people.[23] Vasily Radlov, who visited the dvoedants in the sixties of the nineteenth century, said that there were from two to three thousand people.[24] The Altai spiritual mission counted two thousand Telengits in the Volost.[25] No one kept statistical records of the population in the Second Chui Volost until the end of the XIX century. By the end of the XIX century, the population was 1,645 people.[26][27]

References

  1. ^ Швецов С.П. Горный Алтай и его население… Page 231.
  2. ^ Потапов, Леонид Павлович - Очерки по истории алтайцев. Page 185.
  3. ^ The references provide information about the archival document and a link to the literary publication in which this document can be found.
  4. ^ ГАТО. Ф.3. Оп.44. Д.3216. Л.391. Подлинник. Рукопись.
  5. ^ В составе Томской губернии: История Республики Алтай в документах Государственного архива Томской области. XIX-начало ХХ веков/ редкол.: А. В. Большакова идр.; сост.:В. И. Марков и др.; худ.: В. В. Сальников. — Горно-Алтайск: Горно-Алт.
  6. ^ Самаев Г. П. «ГОРНЫЙ АЛТАЙ В XVII — СЕРЕДИНЕ XIX В.: ПРОБЛЕМЫ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЙ ИСТОРИИ И ПРИСОЕДИНЕНИЯ К РОССИИ» ISBN 5-7405-0568-2. Page 169.
  7. ^ Липовцев С. В. Уложение китайской Палаты внешних сношений. Т. 1-2. СПб., 1828. Page. 191.
  8. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 176.]
  9. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 182-185.]
  10. ^ a b Самаев Г. П. «ГОРНЫЙ АЛТАЙ В XVII — СЕРЕДИНЕ XIX В.: ПРОБЛЕМЫ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЙ ИСТОРИИ И ПРИСОЕДИНЕНИЯ К РОССИИ». Page 198.
  11. ^ a b Швецов С.П. Горный Алтай и его население… Page 103.
  12. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 169.]
  13. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 181.]
  14. ^ Этнография Алтая и сопредельных территорий... Page 42.
  15. ^ Потапов, Леонид Павлович - Очерки по истории алтайцев. Page 182.
  16. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 182.]
  17. ^ Радлов В. В.Из Сибири… ISBN 5-02-017025-9 Page 127.
  18. ^ Радлов В. В. Из Сибири... Page 127—128.
  19. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 187.]
  20. ^ Чевалков, Михаил Васильевич Памятное завещание : Автобиография миссионера Алтайской духовной миссии. Page 65. Archived from the original on 2022-10-08. Retrieved 2022-11-07.
  21. ^ Приветственная речь Ивана Белекова
  22. ^ Самаев Г. П. «ГОРНЫЙ АЛТАЙ В XVII — СЕРЕДИНЕ XIX В.: ПРОБЛЕМЫ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОЙ ИСТОРИИ И ПРИСОЕДИНЕНИЯ К РОССИИ». Page 171.
  23. ^ Ледебур К. Ф., Бунге А. А., Мейер К. А. Путешествие по Алтайским горам… Page 196.
  24. ^ Радлов В. В. Из Сибири… Page 95.
  25. ^ Алтай и его жители // Миссионер. № 19. 8 мая 1877. Page 50.
  26. ^ Швецов С.П. Горный Алтай и его население… Page 229.
  27. ^ Двоеданничество в Сибири. XVII — 60-е гг. XIX вв. / О. В. Боронин; Алт. гос. ун-т. Каф. востоковедения, Алт. центр востоковед. исслед. — Барнаул : Азбука, 2002. — 217, [2 с.; 20 см; ISBN 5-93957-028-3 Page 179.]