Kyakhta Explained

En Name:Kyakhta
Ru Name:Кяхта
Loc Name1:Хяагта
Loc Lang1:Buryat
Coordinates:50.35°N 106.45°W
Map Label Position:right
Image Coa:Coat of Arms of Kyakhta (Buryatia) (1861).png
Federal Subject:Republic of Buryatia
Adm District Jur:Kyakhtinsky District
Adm Selsoviet Jur:Kyakhta
Adm Selsoviet Type:Town
Adm Ctr Of1:Kyakhtinsky District
Adm Ctr Of2:Town of Kyakhta
Inhabloc Cat:Town
Mun District Jur:Kyakhtinsky Municipal District
Urban Settlement Jur:Kyakhta Urban Settlement
Mun Admctr Of1:Kyakhtinsky Municipal District
Mun Admctr Of2:Kyakhta Urban Settlement
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Valery Tsyrempilov
Pop 2010Census:20024
Established Date:1728
Current Cat Date:1805
Postal Codes:671840, 671842, 671843
Dialing Codes:30142

Kyakhta (Russian: Кя́хта, pronounced as /ru/; Buriat: Хяагта|Khiaagta, pronounced as /ˈçæːχtə/; Mongolian: Хиагт|Hiagt, in Mongolian pronounced as /ˈçæχtʰ/) is a town and the administrative center of Kyakhtinsky District in the Republic of Buryatia, Russia, located on the Kyakhta River near the Mongolia–Russia border. The town stands directly opposite the Mongolian border town of Altanbulag. Population: From 1727 it was the border crossing for the Kyakhta trade between Russia and China.[1]

Etymology

The Buryat name means place covered with couch grass,[2] and is derived from Mongolian word Mongolian: хиаг, meaning couch grass.[3]

Geography

The region where Kyakhta stands is advantageous for Russo-Chinese trade. The Siberian River Routes connect the fur-bearing lands of Siberia to Lake Baikal. From there, the Selenga River valley is the natural route through the Selenga Highlands southeast of Lake Baikal out onto the plains of Mongolia.

History

Kyakhta was founded in 1727 soon after the Treaty of Kyakhta was negotiated just north at Selenginsk. It was the starting point of the boundary markers that defined what is now the northern border of Mongolia. Kyakhta's founder, the Serb Sava Vladislavich, established it as a trading point between Russia and the Qing Empire.[4] "He gave instructions to build the Troitskosavsky Fortress at the place of Barsukov winter camp. A church was erected inside the wooden fortress. The church gave the name both to the Troitskaya (Trinity) Fortress and to the future town of Troitskosavsk. This is what the town was called until 1734 when it was merged with the trading settlement of Kyakhta and renamed Troitskosavsk-Kyakhta. In 1934, the name was shortened to Kyakhta."[5] Other sources[6] have Troitskosavsk as a fort a short distance north, Troitskosavsk being the administrative and military center while Kyakhta was the trading post on the border. The Manchus built Maimaicheng just south of Kyakhta on their side of the border. Before 1762, state caravans traveled from Kyakhta to Peking. After that date, trade was mostly by barter at Kyakhta-Maimaicheng, with merchants crossing the border to make their business.

Kyakhta and Maimaicheng were visited by the famous English adventurer and engineer Samuel Bentham in 1782. He related that he was entertained by the commander of the Chinese city "with the greatest politeness which a stranger can meet with in any country whatever". At that time, the Russians sold furs, textiles, clothing, hides, leather,[1] hardware, and cattle, while the Chinese sold silk, cotton stuffs, teas,[1] fruits, porcelain, rice, candles, rhubarb, ginger, and musk. Much of the tea is said to have come from, a major center of tea production and trade near today's Chibi City, Hubei.

Kyakhta was crowded, unclean, ill-planned, and never came to reflect the wealth that flowed through it,[7] although several Neoclassical buildings were erected in the 19th century, including a tea bourse (1842) and the Orthodox cathedral (1807–1817), both of which still stand. In 1996 the Voskreskenskaya church was being used as a stable.[8] It was from Kyakhta that Nikolay Przhevalsky, Grigory Potanin, Pyotr Kozlov, and Vladimir Obruchev set off on their expeditions into the interior of Mongolia and Xinjiang.

Town status was granted to Kyakhta in 1805.[9]

After the entire Russian-Chinese frontier was opened to trade in 1860 and the Trans-Siberian and the Chinese Eastern Railways bypassed it, Kyakhta fell into decline. In the mid-20th century, a branch railway was built from Ulan-Ude (on the Trans-Siberian) to Mongolia's Ulan Bator, and, eventually, to China, paralleling the old Kyakhta trade route. However, this railway crosses the Russian-Mongolian border not in Kyakhta itself, but in nearby Naushki.[10]

Kyakhta Pidgin

As the first market town on the border between the Russian and Chinese Empires, Kyakhta gave its name to the so-called Kyakhta Russian–Chinese Pidgin, a contact language that was used by Russian and Chinese traders to communicate.[11]

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Kyakhta serves as the administrative center of Kyakhtinsky District.[12] As an administrative division, it is, together with one rural locality (the settlement of Sudzha), incorporated within Kyakhtinsky District as the Town of Kyakhta. As a municipal division, the Town of Kyakhta is incorporated within Kyakhtinsky Municipal District as Kyakhta Urban Settlement.[13]

Economy

Kyakhta's economy today relies mainly on its status as an important center for trade between Russia, China, and Mongolia, located on the highway from the republic's capital of Ulan-Ude to the Mongolian capital of Ulan Bator. It also has textile, lumber, and food-processing plants.

Culture

Kyakhta is home to the Damdin Sükhbaatar memorial museum.

Climate

Kyakhta has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dwb) with dry, severely cold winters and warm, moist summers.

Town name in other languages

Kiyaktu

恰克图 / 恰克圖 (Qiàkètú) or 恰克土 (Qiàkètǔ)

In Mongolian, Kyakhta was formerly known as Mongolian: Ар Хиагт (Ar Khiagt, lit. "North Kyakhta"); Altanbulag (then, Maimaicheng) across the border was Mongolian: Өвөр Хиагт (Övör Khiagt, lit. "South Kyakhta"). When the town was known as Troitskosavsk, its name in Mongolian was Mongolian: Дээд Шивээ (Deed Šhivee).

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Kiakhta . 15 . 782.
  2. Pospelov, p. 234
  3. Ирина Ф. Попова. "Торговля России и Китая через Кяхту и Маймайчен", in Mongolica-XI (SPb., 2013), p. 28, fn. 1.
  4. Book: Mark Mancall. Harvard University Press. 1971. Russia and China: their diplomatic relations to 1728, (Volume 61 of Harvard East Asian series, Center for East Asian Studies, Harvard University).. 263. 9780674781153 .
  5. Web site: Photo of Bolshaya Street in Troitskosavsk - Nikolay Charushin. Подробное описание экспоната, аудиогид, интересные факты. Официальный сайт Artefact . 2024-03-27 . ar.culture.ru . en.
  6. Clifford M Foust, 'Muscovite and Mandarin', 1969, index
  7. W. Bruce Lincoln. The Conquest of a Continent: Siberia and the Russians. Cornell University Press, 2007. Page 145.
  8. Martha Avery,The Tea Road, 2003, page 135 and photograph
  9. https://www.rbth.com/articles/2011/10/14/kyakhta_the_russian_source_for_all_the_tea_in_china_13582.html rbth.com
  10. Rolf Potts, Stranded in Siberia: At an obscure border town, our correspondent discovers the biggest obstacle in negotiating the next 4,000 miles: The train has left without him. (Salon Magazine, 1999-11-10)
  11. Book: International Council for Philosophy and Humanistic Studies. Walter de Gruyter. 1996. 3-11-013417-9. Atlas of languages of intercultural communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas, Volume 2, Part 1. (Volume 13 of Trends in Linguistics, Documentation Series).. 911–912.
  12. Resolution #43
  13. Law #985-III