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What was the Alash Orda?
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All Flashcards in Topic 12.10
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12.10.112 cards
What was the Alash Orda?
A Kazakh nationalist party founded in 1917, led by Alikhan Bukeikhanov, that declared an autonomous Kazakh government (the Alash Autonomy) at Orenburg in December 1917.
What did Alash Orda originally want (before Oct 1917)?
Kazakh self-rule and land rights within a democratic, federal Russia — not full independence.
Who led Alash Orda?
Alikhan Bukeikhanov, a Russian-educated Kazakh intellectual and former member of the Russian Duma.
Why did Alash Orda ally with the Whites in the Civil War?
They feared Bolshevik class war more than they trusted the Whites, even though White generals mostly wanted a restored unified Russian Empire, not Kazakh autonomy.
How did the Civil War end in Kazakhstan?
The Red Army retook Orenburg from Cossack forces in 1919; seeing the Whites collapse, Alash leaders surrendered in 1919-20 in exchange for amnesty and a promised autonomous republic.
What is national delimitation?
Soviet policy (from 1924) of redrawing Central Asian borders along supposed ethnic lines, creating republics like the Uzbek and Turkmen SSRs.
What status did Kazakhstan hold from 1920-1936?
An ASSR (Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) inside Soviet Russia — a lower status than a full union republic.
When did the Kazakh SSR form, and what changed?
1936, under Stalin's new constitution — Kazakhstan was upgraded to a full union republic, though Moscow still held real power.
What was sedentarisation?
Soviet policy forcing nomadic Kazakh herders to settle permanently in fixed villages and surrender livestock to collective farms, led locally by Filipp Goloshchekin.
What was the Kazakh famine of 1930-33 (Asharshylyq)?
A catastrophic famine caused by collectivisation and sedentarisation that killed roughly 1.5 million people — about 38-42% of the Kazakh population.
What was Goloshchekin's 'Little October'?
His framing of forced collectivisation in Kazakhstan as a second, harsher revolution — used to justify extreme repression against nomadic Kazakhs.
Give three tools of Russification in Kazakhstan by 1940.
Script changes (Arabic to Latin 1929, to Cyrillic 1940), continued Russian/Ukrainian in-migration, and purges of Kazakh national leaders during the Great Terror (1937-38).
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Why did the USSR evacuate factories to Kazakhstan in 1941-42?
To save Soviet industry from the advancing German army — over 1.5 million people and hundreds of factories were relocated there.
What role did Kazakhstan play in the Soviet war effort by 1943?
It became a major industrial base, producing large shares of Soviet lead and copper for weapons, plus grain, meat and cotton for the army.
'Punished peoples'
Entire ethnic groups (e.g. Volga Germans, Chechens, Crimean Tatars) deported by Stalin to Central Asia on collective suspicion of disloyalty, without individual evidence.
When were the Volga Germans deported, and why?
1941, almost immediately after the German invasion, accused of being a potential Nazi 'fifth column' due to their ethnicity alone.
When were the Chechens, Ingush and Crimean Tatars deported?
1944 — hundreds of thousands deported within days, accused of collective wartime collaboration with Germany.
Process: what happened to deportees on arrival in Central Asia?
They arrived with little or nothing, often to unprepared remote areas; many died the first winter, but many survived with help from local Kazakh and Uzbek communities.
Virgin Lands campaign
Khrushchev's plan from 1954 to plough millions of hectares of untouched steppe (mainly in northern Kazakhstan) to boost Soviet grain production.
Comparison: Virgin Lands campaign's successes vs failures
Successes: strong early harvests (1956), new towns/infrastructure. Failures: soil erosion from poor farming methods, inconsistent yields, and the 1962-63 drought forcing grain imports.
What defined the Brezhnev era (1964-82) in Central Asia?
Political stability under long-serving local leaders (e.g. Kunaev in Kazakhstan), but also part of the wider Soviet 'era of stagnation' — slowing growth and rising corruption.
What caused the Aral Sea to shrink?
Soviet diversion of the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers from the 1960s to irrigate cotton fields, cutting off the sea's water supply and devastating local fishing towns.
Semipalatinsk
Nuclear test site in northeastern Kazakhstan where the USSR conducted over 450 nuclear tests (1949-89), causing long-term radiation-linked illness in nearby populations.
Essay skill: how should a Paper 3 essay treat Soviet-era 'gains' like Virgin Lands or wartime industrialisation?
Weigh them against the human/environmental costs (deportations, soil damage, Aral Sea, Semipalatinsk) rather than treating them as straightforwardly positive — most were side effects of Moscow's own priorities, not designed to benefit Central Asians.
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What were glasnost and perestroika?
Gorbachev's reforms from the mid-1980s: glasnost (openness/free debate) and perestroika (restructuring the economy).
Who led Kazakhstan's Communist Party before December 1986, and who replaced him?
Dinmukhamed Kunaev, an ethnic Kazakh, was replaced by Gennady Kolbin, an ethnic Russian outsider, on 16 December 1986.
What were the Jeltoqsan protests?
Protests in Almaty starting 17 December 1986 by mostly young Kazakhs against Kolbin's appointment; suppressed by Soviet troops and police, with disputed casualties.
Why is Kazakhstan's 1986–91 independence path called 'reluctant and sudden'?
Kazakhstan had no mass independence movement and its leaders wanted a reformed union preserved; it became independent only after the USSR collapsed around it in December 1991.
What were the Belovezha Accords?
An 8 December 1991 agreement by Russia, Ukraine and Belarus declaring the USSR dissolved, signed without consulting Kazakhstan.
When did Kazakhstan declare independence, and in what order relative to other republics?
16 December 1991 — the last Soviet republic to declare independence.
What was the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)?
A loose alliance of most former Soviet republics, formed at the Almaty Protocol on 21 December 1991, hosted by Nazarbayev.
How long did Nazarbayev serve as Kazakhstan's president?
From 1991 (party leader from 1989) until his resignation in 2019 — almost three decades.
Why did Kazakhstan move its capital to Astana in 1997–98?
To anchor the Russian-majority north to the state, escape Almaty's earthquake-prone, cramped site, and project a modern national image.
How did oil wealth shape nation-building in Kazakhstan?
Revenue from fields like Tengiz funded infrastructure and the new capital, and created the National Fund (2000) sovereign wealth fund, but also entrenched elite power and dependence on one resource.
What was the Assembly of the People of Kazakhstan?
A body created in 1995 to represent the country's many ethnic groups, giving minorities symbolic voice while keeping real power centralised.
Compare Nazarbayev's achievements and his authoritarianism.
Achievements: ethnic peace, oil-funded development, international standing. Authoritarian methods: controlled elections, restricted opposition/media, the 2011 Zhanaozen shootings of striking oil workers.
Topic 12.10 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The emergence of Central Asian republics (1917–2020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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