(Redirected from Bukharan People\'s Republic)
The 'Bukharan People's Soviet Republic' (
Russian: Бухарская Народная Советская Республика) was the name of
Uzbekistan from
1920 to
1925. It was a short-lived
Soviet state which governed the former
Emirate of Bukhara during the period immediately following the
Russian Revolution from
1920-
1925. It eventually became part of the
Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic (Uzbek SSR).
History
Main articles: History of Uzbekistan
In
1868, the
Russian Empire forced the Emirate of Bukhara to accept
protectorate status. Over the next 40 years, the Russians slowly eroded at Bukhara’s territory, although never actually annexing the city of
Bukhara itself. However, the
emir could not shut out all outside influences, and gradually some of the disaffected youth of Bukhara gravitated to
Pan-Turkism, inspired by the
Young Turks in the
Ottoman Empire, ideas taken from the
Islamic
Jadid reform movement, and the new
Bolshevik-inspired
communism. These various ideologies coalesced in the
Young Bukharan Movement, led by
Faizullah Khojaev. The young Bukharans faced extreme obstacles as the emirate was dominated by conservative
Sunni Islamic clergy. The ensuing conflict would pit the secular Young Bukharans and their Bolshevik supporters against the conservative, pro-emir rebels named the
Basmachi. This conflict would last more than a decade.
In March
1918 activists of the Young Bukharan Movement informed the Bolsheviks that the Bukharans were ready for the revolution and that the people were awaiting liberation. The Red Army marched to the gates of Bukhara and demanded that the emir surrender the city to the Young Bukharans. As Russian sources report, the emir responded by murdering the Bolshevik delegation, along with several hundred Russian inhabitants of Bukhara and the surrounding territories. The majority of Bukharans did not support an invasion and the ill-equipped and ill-disciplined Bolshevik army fled back to the Soviet stronghold at
Tashkent.
However, the emir had won only a temporary respite. As the civil war in Russia wound down, Moscow sent reinforcements to Central Asia. On
2 September 1920, an army of well-disciplined and well equipped
Red Army troops under the command of Bolshevik general
Mikhail Frunze attacked the city. After four days of fighting, the emir’s citadel (Arc) was destroyed, the red flag was raised from the top of
Kalyan Minaret, and the Emir
Alim Khan was forced to flee to his base at
Dushanbe in
Eastern Bukharan, and finally to
Kabul,
Afghanistan.
The Bukharan People's Republic was proclaimed on
8 October 1920 under
Faizullah Khojaev. The overthrow of the Emir was the impetus for the
Basmachi Revolt, a conservative anti-communist rebellion. In 1922, most of the territory of the republic was controlled by Basmachi, surrounding the city of Bukhara.
During the first few years of the Russian Revolution,
Lenin relied on a policy of encouraging local revolutions under the aegis of the local
bourgeoisie, and in the early years of Bolshevik rule the Communists sought the assistance of the
Jadids, reformists, in pushing through radical social and educational reforms. Only two weeks after the proclamation of the People's Republic,
Communist Party membership in Bukhara soared to 14,000 as many local inhabitants were eager to prove their loyalty to the new regime. As the
Soviet Union stabilized, it could afford to purge itself of opportunists and potential
nationalists. A series of
purges stripped membership down to 1000 by
1922.
From
19 September 1924 to
17 February 1925, the republic was known as 'Bukharan Soviet Socialist Republic' (Bukharan SSR; Russian: Бухарская Социалистическая Советская Республика). When new national boundaries were drawn up in 1924, the 'Bukharan SSR' voted itself out of existence, and became part of the new Uzbek SSR. Today the territory of the defunct Bukhara SSR is lies mostly in
Uzbekistan with parts in
Tajikistan and
Turkmenistan.
Khojaev survived the purges and became the first President of the Uzbek SSR, but he was later purged in the 1930s together with virtually the entire
intelligentsia of
Central Asia.
Chairmen of the Provisional (from 6 October 1920, Central) Revolutionary Committee
★
Mirza Abdulqodir Mansurovich Mukhitdinov (
2 September 1920 -
1921)
★
Polat Usmon Khodzhayev (
1921 -
23 September 1921)
Chairmen of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee
★
Polat Usmon Khodzhayev (
23 September 1921 -
April 1922)
★
Muin Jon Aminov (
April 1922 -
18 August 1922)
★
Porsa Khodzhayev (
18 August 1922 -
17 February 1925)
See also
★
Bukhara
★
Basmachi Revolt
★
Enver Pasha
★
Emirate of Bukhara
★
Khorezm SSR