Kuban People's Republic

Kuban People's Republic
Кубанская Народная Республика
Kubanskaya Narodnaya Respublika
Кубанська Народна Республiка
Kubans'ka Narodna Respublika
1918–1920
Flag Coat of arms
Map of Europe in 1919 showing the Kuban People's
Republic (green) within Russia.
Capital Yekaterinodar
Languages Russian
Ukrainian
Government Republic
Chairman
   19171918, 1919 Luka Bych
  19181919 Nikolai Ryabovol
  19191920 F. Sushkov
Ataman
  19171919 Alexander Filimonov
  1920 Nikolai Bukretov
Legislature Kuban Legislative Rada
History
  Rada formed March 1917
   Republic proclaimed January 28, 1918
  Independencea 16 February 1918
   Evicted and dissolved March 17, 1920
Population
   1918[1] est. 3,500,000 
Currency Ruble
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Russian Empire
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
a. Proclaimed by the Kuban Rada.

The Kuban People's Republic (Russian: Кубанская Народная Республика Kubanskaya Narodnaya Respublika; Ukrainian: Кубанська Народна Республiка Kubans'ka Narodna Respublika) was an anti-Bolshevik state that comprised the territory of the Kuban in the modern-day Russian Federation during the Russian Civil War.

The republic was proclaimed by the Kuban Rada on January 28, 1918 and declared its independence on February 16. During its brief period of independence, it sought union with the Ukrainian People's Republic until the latter was occupied by Soviet forces. The Kuban People's Republic would include all territory of the former Kuban Oblast of the Russian Empire. It was crushed 7 November 1919 and existed for a period of 1 year 9 months.

History

Background

Main article: Kuban Cossacks

During the Russian Empire, the region of the Kuban was a Cossack territory. Like many similar provinces, its demographics constituted several differences from ordinary Russian governorates (guberniyas). The western regions belonged to the descendants of the Black Sea Cossack Host from Ukraine in 1792. The southern and eastern regions were made from the Caucasus Line Cossack Host, descendants of the Don Cossacks.

Historically, the Kuban Cossacks were formed to guard the Russian borders from the Mountain peoples which caused the Caucasus War that lasted for six decades up until 1860. In addition, during many wars, Cossacks sent large army contingents to fight alongside the Imperial Russian Army; moreover it was the Kuban Cossacks that made the Tsar's personal bodyguard. In return for such loyalty, they lived free from taxes in a semi-independent way with various privileges. The military nature of their lifestyle was also mirrored in the administration of the region, where stanitsa settlements were in place of traditional Russian villages, and had much more autonomy such as the election of a local Ataman, or commander.

However, during the reforms of Tsar Alexander II, the pacified Kuban Oblast was heavily invested in and extensive peasant migrants from Russian, Armenian and Ukrainian provinces migrated to cultivate the land. The question of land ownership caused extensive friction between the peasants and the Cossacks, and often resulted in the latter's action to ensure its ownership.

February Revolution

After the February Revolution in Petrograd, the inefficient Russian Provisional Government decided to prolong its involvement in the increasingly unpopular First World War. As a result, the Russian Army began to collapse. The Kuban Cossack units deserted the front lines and returned home to protect their homelands from a threatened Turkish invasion from the South.

During the Russian Empire, the Kuban was directly administered by an appointed Ataman (Nakaznoy Ataman) directly by the Tsar, usually a skilled non-Cossack general. With the sovereign's abdication, the Kuban governing council, the Kuban Rada (parliament) in March 1917 proclaimed itself as the sole administration body with intentions to create a military government that would retain control of the Kuban, and on June 17 of that year proclaimed the Kuban People's Republic within the new Democratic Russian Republic.

Independent Kuban National Republic

Luka Bych, the First Chairman of the Kuban People's Republic.

From 30 April to 3 May 1917, a Cossack meeting took place in Yekaterinodar. It formed a Cossack government  the Kuban Military Council  electing Mykola Riabovil as its head.

With the October Revolution the people of the Kuban found themselves divided among several groups. The large non-Cossack peasants were infiltrated and influenced by the Bolsheviks and proclaimed a Kuban Soviet Republic, which dispersed the Council. On February 16, 1918, however, the Kuban Rada (Council) proclaimed the independence of the Kuban People's Republic from Bolshevik Russia. A few days after the closing of the sessions, the members of the Council voted for a resolution to join the Kuban under a federal structure with Ukraine under the conservative Skoropadsky government.[2]

In March 1918, after Lavr Kornilov's successful offensive, the Kuban Rada was re-established and placed itself under his authority. The Cossacks, formerly loyal to the Russian Empire, supported the White movement. Yet after the early successes of Kornilov's Volunteer Army, which rid the Kuban of the Bolsheviks, the front lines moved north into the Don territory.

This affected the importance of the Rada, and in June 1918 friction began to grow between the head of the leadership and the Cossacks. In particular, the main focal point was between the Chernomortsy and the Lineitsy. The former, disappointed with ineffective attempts of different authorities, pursued a policy of attaining full independence for the Kuban. However, the Lineitsy continued to believe in a re-created Russian state.

Russian Civil War

As the populace was already discontent with past struggles over land, the idea of a future Cossack state was unsuitable to many. Anton Ivanovich Denikin grew increasingly dissatisfied with an increasingly isolated Rada. The final sparks came when the Rada first turned towards Ukraine to enter a federal union with Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky, and after its downfall, entered into a similar union with the Democratic Republic of Georgia, whilst its foreign envoys in France proclaimed independence from Russia. Some Cossacks left the government, and others defected to the Red Army.

The Kuban National Republic included the Kuban Oblast, Stavropol oblast, Terek, Dagestan and Chornomoske guberniya). 4 December 1918 at the special session of the Council where the 2nd Constitution was proclaimed, the Kuban National Republic was renamed Kubanskiy krai.

In December 1918, the Rada sent a delegation headed by First Chairman Luka Bych to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. By April the delegation put forward its requests for international help for the Kuban as an independent state to be defended from Bolshevism and announced its break from Denikin and refusal to further cooperate in the White Movement. None of this satisfied the Triple Entente. The Kuban People's Republic was, however, de jure recognized by the Ukrainian People's Republic, Azerbaijan Democratic Republic[3] the German Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the Democratic Republic of Georgia, and the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus.

Denikin, learning of this "back-stabbing" on November 6, 1919, ordered the Rada building to be surrounded, and with the help of Ataman Alexander Filimonov arrested ten of the Rada's members, including its premier P. Kurgansky, who was publicly hanged for treason. Most Cossacks joined Denikin and fought in the ranks of the Armed Forces of the Russian South, mainly in the Kuban army. In December 1919, after Denikin's defeat, it had become clear that the Bolsheviks would overrun the Kuban, and some of the separatist-minded groups managed to restore the Rada authorities and to break away from the Volunteer Army, either to fight the Bolsheviks in alliance with other independence-striving governments such as the Ukrainian People's Republic and the Democratic Republic of Georgia or to liberate Ukraine from Pilsudsky's invasion in alliance with the Reds.[4] However, by early 1920 the Red Army took most of the Kuban, and both the Rada and the white armies were evicted. But the last ataman, his government and many of his cossacks served in the army of Wrangel and then retreated from Crimea to Turkey. This proves that by promising new alliances the separatists only tried to prevent as many Cossacks as they could from switching their allegiance from the Whites to the Reds.

Legacy

Both Soviet and later contemporary Russian historians viewed the decision of the Kuban People's Republic to break with the White Movement as a deceitful "back-stabbing" at a critical moment during the Russian Civil War. The act is perceived as one of the important contributions to the ultimate Bolshevik victory.

Some Ukrainian historians argue that the Kuban People's Republic was an attempt by the Kuban Cossacks to unite with Ukraine, citing the shifting alliances of the Rada. The last premier of the Republic, Vasil Ivanis, argued that had Pavlo Skoropadsky acted more decisively, and sent a UNR division led by General Natiev to the Kuban, Ukraine would have become the main nexus of the Anti-Bolshevik movement. Ivanis states that with the aid of the Central Powers they could have easily reclaimed all of Russia, given that Aleksandr Kolchak would have acted in the same time frame in the East.

See also

References and sources

References
  1. Minahan, James (2000). One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-30984-1.
  2. Примарний день незалежності // Українська Кубань
  3. As stated by Khoyski, Official Azerbaijan Archives, folio.895, list.1, w. 288, pp.28-49
  4. Kubijovyč, Volodymyr (1963). Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopedia. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 790–793.
Sources

Further reading

Coordinates: 45°02′N 38°58′E / 45.033°N 38.967°E / 45.033; 38.967

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