(Redirected from Provisional Priamur Government)The 'Provisional Priamurye Government' (also rendered as 'Provisional Priamur Government') existed in the Siberian region of
Priamurye,
Russia, between
May 27,
1921 and
October 25,
1922. It was the last
White Army enclave during the
Russian Civil War.
The government had its origin in a White Army coup in
Vladivostok and its environs whose aim was to break away from the
Far Eastern Republic, surviving behind a ''cordon sanitaire'' of
Japanese troops involved in the
Siberian Intervention. The coup was started on May 23 by the ''
Kappelevtsy'', the remnants of
Vladimir Kappel's army.
The government was headed by the Merkulov brothers -
Spiridon Dionisovich Merkulov (former functionary of the
Ministry of Agriculture), head of the Priamurye government, and Nikolai Merkulov,
merchant. Both were deputies of the
Russian Provisional Government. Somewhat later the
Cossack ataman Grigory Semyonov attempted to take power, but he was not backed by the Japanese, and eventually withdrew. ''Kappelevtsy'' and ''Semyonovtsy'' despised each other.
Gradually the enclave was expanded to
Khabarovsk and further to
Spassk, 125 miles north of Vladivostok.
[1] The Merkulovs were deposed in June 1922 and replaced by one of
Kolchak's generals,
Mikhail Diterikhs.

Attendees of the 1922 Zemskiy Sobor in Priamursky Kray
In July 1922 a
Zemsky Sobor (Приамурский Земский Собор) was convened in the territory. This sobor, calling to all Russian people to repent for the overthrow of the tsar, reinstituted a monarchy by naming
Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolayevich Romanov as tsar.
Patriarch Tikhon (who was not present; neither was the Grand Duke) was named as the honorary chairman of the sobor. The territory was renamed 'Priamursky Zemsky Krai.' Diterikhs styled himself ''
voyevoda'' and the army was called ''Zemskaya Rat' '' (''rat' '' is an archaic Slavic term for military force).
When the Japanese withdrew, the Soviet army of the Far Eastern Republic retook the territory. The Civil War was officially declared over, although the
Ayano-Maysky District was
still controlled by
Anatoly Pepelyayev at that time.
References
1. HAROLD VAN VECHTEN FAY: WITNESS TO JAPAN'S APRIL 1920 OFFENSIVE IN THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST; reports of Capt. Fay are used in the chapter "Ataman's exile and White Russia's last spasms 9october 1920-November 1922)" of the book Jamie Bisher, '' (2005) ISBN 0714656909
★ Yuri Korolkov, ''
Sovershenno Sekretno, Pri Opasnosti Szhech'' Minsk ''Belarus Publishers'', 1986 (memoirs of doctor Aleksandr Mikulin)
External links
★
Postal stamps of the PPG