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Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic

Republic of the Soviet Union (1922–1936)


Republic of the Soviet Union (1922–1936)

FieldValue
conventional_long_nameTranscaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic
native_name{{plainlist
image_flagFlag of the Transcaucasian SFSR (variant).svg
flag_typeFlag
(1925–1936)
image_coatEmblem of the Transcaucasian SFSR (1930-1936).svg
symbol_typeEmblem
(1930–1936)
national_anthemИнтернационал
"The Internationale"
image_mapTranscaucasian SFSR in Soviet Union.svg
image_map_captionLocation of the Transcaucasian SFSR (red) within the Soviet Union
status**1922:**
Condominium state
**1922–1936**:
Union Republic of the Soviet Union
capitalTiflis (Tbilisi)
common_languagesArmenian
Azerbaijani
Georgian
Russian
ethnic_groups30.7% Georgians
28.2% Azerbaijanis
22.7% Armenians
5.7% Russians
5.2% Iranian peoples
1.1% Jews
1.0% Lezgic peoples
1.0% Greeks
1.0% Abkhazians
3.4% Others
ethnic_groups_year[1926](1926-soviet-census)
demonymTranscaucasian
government_typeFederal Soviet socialist republic
legislatureAll-Caucasian Congress of Soviets
area_km2186,043
percent_water1.49%
date_start12 March
year_start1922
event1Admitted to the Soviet Union
date_event130 December 1922
date_end5 December
area_water_km22,785
year_end1936
currencyTranscaucasian rouble, Soviet rouble
p1Socialist Soviet Republic of AbkhaziaSSR Abkhazia
p2Armenian Soviet Socialist RepublicArmenian SSR
p3Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist RepublicAzerbaijan SSR
p4Georgian Soviet Socialist RepublicGeorgian SSR
s1Armenian Soviet Socialist RepublicArmenian SSR
s2Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist RepublicAzerbaijan SSR
s3Georgian Soviet Socialist RepublicGeorgian SSR
flag_p1Flag of the SSR Abkhazia.svg
flag_p2Flag of SSRA.svg
flag_p3Flag of Azerbaijan SSR (1921-1922).svg
flag_p4Flag of Georgian SSR (1921-1922).svg
flag_s1Flag of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic (1936–1940).svg
flag_s2Flag_of_Azerbaijan_SSR_(1937-1940).svg
flag_s3Flag of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic (1922–1937).svg
today

Andrkovkasi Khorhrdayin Soc'ialistakan Dashnayin (Federativ) Hanrapetut'yun

زاقافقازیا اجتماعی فدراتیو شورا جمهوریتی

  • {{noitalic|ამიერკავკასიის საბჭოთა ფედერაციული სოციალისტური რესპუბლიკა}} Amierk'avk'asiis Sabch'ota Pederatsiuli Sotsialist'uri Resp'ublik'a

Zakavkazskaya Sotsalisticheskaya Federativnaya Sovetskaya Respublika (1925–1936) (1930–1936) "The Internationale" Condominium state 1922–1936: Union Republic of the Soviet Union Azerbaijani Georgian Russian 28.2% Azerbaijanis 22.7% Armenians 5.7% Russians 5.2% Iranian peoples 1.1% Jews 1.0% Lezgic peoples 1.0% Greeks 1.0% Abkhazians 3.4% Others

  • Armenia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Georgia
    • Abkhazia
    • South Ossetia

The Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic (Transcaucasian SFSR or TSFSR), also known as the Transcaucasian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, or simply Transcaucasia, was a republic of the Soviet Union that existed from 1922 to 1936.

The TSFSR comprised Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, traditionally known as the "Transcaucasian Republics" as they were separated from Russia by the Caucasus Mountains. It was created in March 1922 to unify the region following a Soviet invasion two years prior, and was one of the four republics to sign the Treaty on the Creation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics establishing the Soviet Union in December 1922. The TSFSR was dissolved upon the adoption of the 1936 Soviet Constitution and its constituent republics were elevated individually to republics of the Soviet Union.

History

The roots of a Transcaucasian condominium state trace back to the dissolution of the Russian Empire in 1918, following the October Revolution, when the provinces of the Caucasus seceded and formed their own state called the Transcaucasian Federation. Competing ethno-national interests and confrontation with the Ottoman Empire in World War I led to the dissolution of the Transcaucasian Federation only two months later, in April 1918. The three successor states—the First Republic of Armenia, the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan, and the Democratic Republic of Georgia—lasted until 1920, when they were invaded by the Red Army and sovietized during the Armenian–Azerbaijani war. The Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian Soviet Socialist Republics took the place of their respective nations.

The Soviets subsequently saw need for economic, military, and political unification of the region to fight against the imperialists in the ongoing Russian Civil War and to defend against counterrevolutionary remnants from the 1920 invasion, in addition to helping restore the region's economy and eliminate interethnic tensions. Following a proposal by Vladimir Lenin, the three Soviet Republics were united into the Federative Union of Socialist Soviet Republics of Transcaucasia on 12 March 1922. On 13 December that year, the First All-Caucasian Congress of Soviets transformed this federation of states into a unified federal state and renamed it the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, though keeping formally the autonomy of its constituent republics. The congress also adopted the constitution, appointed the Central Executive Committee (the highest legislative body between congressional sessions), and the Council of People's Commissars (the government). Mamia Orakhelashvili, a Georgian Bolshevik leader, became the first chairman of the Transcaucasian SFSR's Council of People's Commissars.Tbilisi was the capital of the republic.

The republic became a founding member of the Soviet Union on 30 December along with the Russian SFSR, the Ukrainian SSR, and the Byelorussian SSR. In December 1936, the Transcaucasian SFSR was dissolved and divided again among the Georgian, Armenian and Azerbaijani SSRs.

Autonomous republics within the TSFSR

Map of the Transcaucasian region during the Soviet era

After the Red Army invasion of Georgia, Abkhazia (an autonomous province within the Democratic Republic of Georgia) was declared a Soviet Republic. In March 1922, the Abkhaz Revolutionary committee renamed the region the SSR of Abkhazia. Despite the declaration of this new Soviet Republic, its relations with Georgia and Russia had yet to be formally settled. On December 16, 1921, Abkhazia signed a treaty of alliance with the Georgian SSR codifying its status as a treaty republic (Russian: договорная республика). This agreement allowed the formation of an Abkhazia military while also establishing a political and financial union between the two Soviet republics. Thus, through Georgia, Abkhazia joined the TSFSR and was initially on an equal footing with the other republics of the federation. On February 19, 1931, Abkhazia's republican status was downgraded to that of an Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic within the Georgian SSR.

The Adjar ASSR was established on July 16, 1921, within the Georgian SSR as a consequence of the Treaty of Kars. The treaty marking the end of the Caucasus Campaign in World War I provided for the division of the former Batum Oblast of the Kutais Governorate of the Russian Empire between Georgia and Turkey. According to the agreement the northern half with significant Georgian Muslim population would become part of the Soviet Georgia but granted autonomy.

Another autonomous republic was established in July 1920 in Nakhchivan, an area bordering Armenia, Turkey and Iran, which was claimed by Armenians and Azerbaijanis. After the occupation of the region by the Red Army, the Nakhchivan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was declared with "close ties" to the Azerbaijani SSR. The Treaty of Moscow and the Treaty of Kars established the Nakhchivan region as an autonomous republic under the protection of the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan.

Heads of state

NameDatesParty
Nariman NarimanovMarch–December 1922Communist Party of Azerbaijan
Polikarp MdivaniMarch–December 1922Communist Party of Georgia
Aleksandr MyasnikyanMarch–December 1922Communist Party of Armenia
NameDatesParty
Nariman Narimanov1922–1925Communist Party of Azerbaijan
Gazanfar Musabekov1925–1938Communist Party of Azerbaijan
NamePeriodFor
Mikhail Tskhakaya (1st time)1922–1927Georgia
Samad aga Aliyev1922–1929Azerbaijan
Sarkis Hambartsumyan1922–1925Armenia
Sarkis Kasyan1927–1931Armenia
Filipp Makharadze (1st time)1927–1928Georgia
Mikhail Tskhakaya (2nd time)1928–1931Georgia
Gazanfar Musabekov1929–1931Azerbaijan
Filipp Makharadze (2nd time)1931–1935Georgia
Armenak Ananyan1931–1935Armenia
Sultan Majid Afandiyev1931–1936Azerbaijan
Sergo Martikyan1935–1936Armenia
Avel EnukidzeMarch–May 1935Georgia
Filipp Makharadze (3rd time)1935–1936Georgia

Stamps and postal history

Before 1923, Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan each issued their own postage stamps. The Transcaucasian Federation began issuing its own stamps on September 15, 1923, and superseded the separate republics' issues on October 1.

The first issues consisted of some of the stamps of Russia and Armenia overprinted with a star containing the five-letter acronym of the Federation inside the points. Massive inflation having set in, this was followed by an issue of the Federation's own designs, four values of a view of oil fields, and four with a montage of Soviet symbols over mountains and oil derricks, values ranging from 40,000 to 500,000 Transcaucasian rubles. The 40,000 rubles and 75,000 rubles were then surcharged to 700,000 rubles. On October 24, the stamps were re-issued with values from 1 to 18 gold kopecks. Starting in 1924, the Federation used stamps of the Soviet Union. Transcaucasia 1923 CPA 2 stamp (Lesser Coat of Arms of Russian Empire. Star with 'ZSFSR' handstamped).jpg|A 1923 stamp overprinted on the stamp of the Russian Empire Transcaucasia 1923 CPA 6 stamp (Lesser Coat of Arms of Russian Empire. Star with 'ZSFSR' handstamped).jpg|A 1923 stamp overprinted on the stamp of the Democratic Republic of Armenia File:Transcaucasia 1923 CPA 8 stamp (Oil derricks, mounts Ararat and Elbrus, rising sun, Soviet symbols - hammer and sickle, red star).jpg|1923 40,000-rouble stamp File:Transcaucasia 1923 CPA 19 stamp (oil derricks, mounts Ararat and Elbrus, rising sun, Soviet symbols - hammer and sickle, red star, star and crescent).jpg|1923 two-kopeck stamp

Most of the stamps of the Federation are not especially rare today, with 1998 prices in the US$1–2 range, although the overprints on Armenian stamps range up to US$200. As might be expected from a short period of usage, used stamps are less common than unused and covers are not often seen.

Notes

Bibliography

References

  1. "закавказская федерация".
  2. Solomon Ilich Bruk. "Transcaucasia".
  3. (2015-09-25 }}. ''Большая советская энциклопедия'', 3-е изд., гл. ред. А. М. Прохоров. Москва: Советская энциклопедия, 1972. Т. 9 ({{cite book). "[[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]". Soviet Encyclopedia.
  4. {{harvnb. Suny. 1994
  5. {{harvnb. Suny. 1994
  6. {{harvnb. Saparov. 2015
  7. {{harvnb. Hewitt. 1993
  8. {{harvnb. Blauvelt. 2007
  9. [https://www.deutscharmenischegesellschaft.de/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Vertrag-von-Kars-23.-Oktober-1921.pdf Text of the Treaty of Kars]
  10. (May 2022). "Transcaucasia | Stamps and postal history | StampWorldHistory". StampWorldHistory.
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