
Outer Manchuria is in light red on this map. Some also consider the island of
Sakhalin to be part of Outer Manchuria.
'Outer Manchuria' (
Chinese: 外滿洲), known in China as 'Outer Northeast [China]' (
Chinese: 外東北), and 'Priamurye' (
Cyrillic: Приаму́рье) in Russia, is the territory ceded by
China to
Russia in the
Treaty of Aigun in 1858 and the
Treaty of Peking in 1860. The area comprises the present-day Russian areas of
Primorsky Krai, southern
Khabarovsk Krai, the
Jewish Autonomous Oblast and
Amur Oblast. Another interpretation also adds the island of
Sakhalin.
In contrast to Outer Manchuria, the part of Manchuria that is still part of China is referred to as "Inner Manchuria".
According to the
Treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689, the Sino-Russian border was the
Stanovoy Mountains and the
Argun River, giving Outer Manchuria to China. The Treaties of Aigun and Peking, however, realigned the border on the
Amur and
Ussuri rivers, in Russia's favour. As a result, China lost Outer Manchuria, as well as access to the
Sea of Japan.
Place names
Today there still exist certain reminders of the ancient
Manchu domination in
toponyms: for example the
Sikhote-Alin, the great coastal range, the
Khanka Lake,
Amur and
Ussuri Rivers,
Yam Alin,
Miao-Shan Alin,
Il-Kuri Alin, Great and Little
Khingan and others small ranges and the
Shantar coastal
archipelago.
History
Different ancient nations lived in this area. The original inhabitants apparently were the
Mohe and other
Tungus tribes. Others were the ancient kingdoms of
Goguryeo and
Balhae, who extended their territories from the Korean peninsula to inner and outer Manchuria.
According to the
Treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689, the Sino-Russian border was the
Stanovoy Mountains and the
Argun River, giving Outer Manchuria to China. However, Outer Manchuria was ceded by the
Qing Dynasty to
Russia in the
Treaty of Aigun of
1858 and the
Treaty of Peking of
1860; a small region to the north of the Amur known as the
Sixty-Four Villages East of the Heilongjiang River, was kept by China according to the Treaty of Aigun, but invaded and annexed by Russia in
1900. From 1860 to 1920 Outer Manchuria was part of the
Russian Empire. From 1918 to 1925 Outer Manchuria was occupied by the
Japanese and briefly united with
Inner Manchuria under
Japanese domination. This temporary control included
East Transbaikalia (the
Ulan Ude-
Chita sector). Some sources indicated that Japanese units patrolled to the East
Urals and Central Asia. North
Sakhalin was finally returned during 1925.
During the 1930s and
World War II, the
Japanese Imperial Army,
Kwantung Army and other members of the
Strike North Group (Japanese supporters of conquest of lands in Siberia) outlined the
"Ohtsu" or "B" Operation, a plan to invade the
Soviet Far East. The plan implied the occupation of
Khabarovsk and the
Primorsky Krai, the
Okhotsk Sea coast,
Kamchatka Peninsula,
Ulan Ude (East Baikal area), and
Outer Mongolia. The concept was of occupation, or a defensive buffer against the USSR.
The
Battle of Lake Khasan ("
Changkufeng incident"), the
Battle of Halhin Gol ("
Nomonhan incident"), and some smaller Japanese land, sea and air incursions were part of an ambitious large-scale strategy. Ultimately, when the Japanese Army evaluated its outcomes against the
Red Army and its
Mongol allies, these plans were dropped. The
Japanese Navy's strategy to strike south prevailed, leading ultimately to the attack on
Pearl Harbor.
As Soviet Manchuria, Outer Manchuria formed part of the Far Eastern provinces of the
USSR and was used as the launch-pad for the Soviet assault on
Japanese occupied Inner
Manchuria in 1945. During the
Chinese Civil War Chinese communist forces began the war with large amounts of Inner Manchuria already in their hands; in 1949 the victorious communists established the
People's Republic of China.
In 1959 tension arose between
Chinese Inner Manchuria and
Russian Outer Manchuria over the interpretation of the treaties of
Aigun and
Peking. This was as much an attempt to undo
European
colonialism as an ideological split between
Mao Tse-tung and
Nikita Khrushchev. In
1969, tensions led to considerable loss of human lives in an open military conflict for control of the
Damansky Island.
In
2004, Russia agreed to transfer
Yinlong Island as well as one half of
Heixiazi Island () to China, ending a long-standing border dispute between Russia and China. Both islands are found at the confluence of the
Amur and
Ussuri Rivers, and were until then administered by Russia and claimed by China. The event was meant to foster feelings of reconciliation and cooperation between the two countries by their leaders, but it has also sparked different degrees of discontents on both sides. Russians, especially
Cossack farmers of
Khabarovsk who would lose their plowlands on the islands, were unhappy about the apparent loss of territory. The transfer has been ratified by both the Chinese
National People's Congress and the Russian
State Duma, but has yet to be carried out to date.
Disputes
Outer Manchuria is regarded by most Chinese as territory that was unfairly taken away.
[1] However, outstanding boundary issues between
China and
Russia have been settled and relations are cordial. Article 6 of the
2001 Sino-Russian Treaty of Friendship provides that the contracting parties, the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation, have no territorial claims. One concern of Russia are large numbers of Chinese immigrants pouring into relatively empty Outer Manchuria from crowded Inner Manchuria.
As the
Republic of China now based in
Taiwan has never recognized the
People's Republic of China or its border treaties with other countries, some Chinese maps published in Taiwan still consider the entire Heixiazi Island and the
Sixty-Four Villages East of the Heilongjiang River to be Chinese territories, although these maps do show Outer Manchuria, sometimes called "lost territories in the Northeast (China)" (東北失地), to be Russian territory.
In addition to unofficial irredentism by Chinese people, the Manchukuo Temporary Government, a
micronation seeking to revive the 1932-1945
puppet state of
Manchukuo as a modern nation, also claims Outer Manchuria as "the territories with argument with Russia".
[2]
See also
★
Outer Mongolia
★
Annam
★
1991 Sino-Russian Border Agreement
External links
1. Anything for Power: The Real Story of China’s Jiang Zemin (Chapter 14) (Chinese version) from The Epoch Times with irredentism
2. The information of Manchukuo Temporary Government