
Last modified: 2021-08-26 by valentin poposki
Keywords: hulunbuir | russia | burga | barga | turkestan | 
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I visited the chinese pages and I was surprised hat the republic of Turkestan 
in Russia was classified as Chinese. The republic of 
Turkestan was the successor state of the imperial province of Turkestan, 
mainly the modern Turkmenistan and 
Kazakhstan and part of Kazakhstan and is unrelated with 
China.
Also about Hulunbuir (called also Burga or Barga), there's some informations in 
the page that should be wrongs. I believe that 
Hulumbuir don't remained in Chinese hands after 1920. Hulunbuir was a 
secessionist state from China, with support of Russia 
(like Tuva); in 1913 recognized chinese sovereignity under autonomous status, 
but remained de facto independent under Russian influence; but in 1917 russian 
power collapsed and in 1919 China reconquered the region 
(autonomy was revoked some months later); the flags in the banknote (dated 1919) 
can be the Burga local flag or the China republic flag (but notice that it has 
not a upper light stripe); in 1920 was in hands of Von Sternberg, his white 
troops and his buriats allieds until it was defeated in 1921 and the communist 
take the power. In the web I found about Burga the following explanation:
Barga- also Hulunbuir. Barga is a region in northwestern Manchuria slightly 
larger than Illinois. It was a major goal of Russian expansionism during the 
early twentieth century, due to its abundant natural resources. While the area 
was under Chinese jurisdiction, many Russians emigrated to the area, and by the 
Chinese Revolution of 1911 outnumbered the Chinese, although not the native 
Mongols. As Chinese central authority collapsed, the Bargut Mongols (with a 
great deal of Russian "assistance") declared their independence, announcing 
their intention to join Mongolia. When Manchu troops were dispatched to Barga, 
they found that the Mongols had large stockpiles of Russian materiel, and 
Russian troops had entered the territory to train and assist the Bargut 
fighters. The Chinese were steadily pushed out of the province, and in March of 
1912 Barga formally seceded. At this point, the Russians generously offered to 
step in as mediators. The weak Chinese Republic agreed to Russian conditions, 
and Barga was made an autonomous province, while the Russians gained a great 
deal of influence. At several times, Chinese troops entered Barga to test the 
Mongol defenses, and Russian troops intervened rapidly. Barga's autonomy was 
revoked in 1920, as Russian power in the east collapsed.
Source:
http://history.stackexchange.com/questions/872/why-did-mongolia-split-in-two-when-they-declared-independence
Many commoners and nobles in Inner Mongolia as well as Hulunbuir and some Huh 
Nuur Mongols agreed to cooperate with Bogd Khanate Mongolia. Khalkh conquests 
freeing Inner Mongolia from Republic of China was mostly successful until Russia 
and China called Bogd Khanate leaders for trilateral summit in Khyagta disabling 
Bogd Khanate Mongolia to expand their territory. Another thing happened was that 
Bogd Khanate Mongols freed Hobd territory from Manchu rulers incorporating 
non-Khalkh territory into their land. 
Then I suspect that Hulunbuir was conquered by China togheter all independent 
Mongolia in 1919. In 1920 was liberated by Von Sterneberg and in 1921 was 
enclosed in the Mongolia Peoples Republic, and remained in this until 1929 
(after a failed independence movement in 1928) when was proclaimed newly 
independent republic. Later I don't know if the republic joined the Manchurian 
government of Zhang Xueliang (the son and successor of the warlord Zhang Zuolin 
+ 1928) or remained independent until 1931 when the Japanese soldiers occupied 
Manchuria.
In Wikipedia, in the biography of Merse (a mongol leader), is stated: 
Early in his political life, Merse established close ties with the independent 
state of  Mongolia and 
the Soviet Union. In 1922, he attended a pan-Mongol conference organised by
Buryat at Verkhneudinsk 
(today Ulan-Ude), capital of 
the Republic of 
Buryatia).
In October 1925, he became the secretary-general of the newly-founded Inner 
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party at Kalgan
Zhangjiakou.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merse_%28politician%29#cite_note-Li97-1 
Even the name of the party itself represented Merse's careful balancing act 
between the 
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party in independent
Mongolia, and the various 
political parties in China, at a time of 
Kuomintang-
Communist Party 
of China cooperation: the Mongolian name echoed the MPRP's Mongolian name, 
while the Chinese name echoed "Kuomintang".
The KMT-CPC split of 1927 reflected itself into the IMPRP's own internal 
situation. The party split into two factions under the pro-China Serengdongrub 
and the pro-Ulaanbaatar/Moscow Merse (though
Ulanhu would later try to 
frame this purely as a split between KMT and CPC supporters). Merse and other 
left-wing elements within the party took steps towards more radical action: 
organising an armed uprising. 
Comintern agent Ivan P. Stepanov promised them arms and funding. Thus, in 
1928, Merse and his Daur compatriot
Fumintai (ИЃУїЬЉ or АНУёЬЉ) led a group of
Barga Mongols in an 
uprising in his hometown Hailar, attempting to establish local autonomy. Sources 
refer to this by a variety of names, including the "Hulunbuir Uprising" and 
"Barga Rebellion". However, the Comintern repudiated Stepanov's statement, and 
the Mongolian and Soviet governments denied all association with the uprisings, 
and arrested Merse's associates who had gone to Ulaanbaatar during and after the 
uprising. No outside support would be forthcoming. The Chinese authorities 
arrested China 
Eastern Railway assistant director
Mikhail Lashevich 
in connection with the uprising in August 1928 Merse was thus forced to end his 
uprising and make peace with
Zhang Xueliang in 
September 1929. The Barga, for their part, fled to independent Mongolia, where 
they would become the target of political repressions in the next decade. 
According Enciclopedia Hispano-Americana (know as Enciclopedia Espasa, edited in 
Barcelona betwen 1910-1920), Appendix 7, pag. 632, published 1932, in the 
exposition of the recent history of Outer Mongolia, states (my translation to 
English): "12 december 1929 was proclaimed in the district of Burga a new 
independent republic that has by capital Hailar". Seems clear that independence 
was from Outer Mongolia.
Jaume Ollé, 04 April 2013
Turkestan have no relations with
China. May be authors mean "Eastern 
Turkestan"? People`s Republic of Eastern Turkestan was proclaimed in 1943 
and in 1949 became part of China.
Victor Lomantsov, 04 April 2013
Eastern Turkestan has is own page (correctly 
classified as Chinese). The wrong classified page is referred to
Russian Turkestan and its pictured flags are from 
the short lived Soviet republic.
Jaume Ollé, 04 April 2013