After the end of the Opium Wars in China, East Asia became the conflict zone of strategic interests and competing imperialism of the great European nations, as well as the United States and Japan. Russian researcher Anatoly V. Remnev wrote in the early 2000s: “One of the most important features of the functioning of regional power in Asian Russia of the XIX – early XX centuries was the lack of a clear boundary between foreign and domestic policies and the incompleteness of the process of formalisation of the state borders” (Remnev, 2004, p. 20). Sergey Glebov notes, “The very term “Far East” is of relatively late progeny. Although the term was used in reference to China and Japan beginning in the 1880s, it emerges as a reference to the Russian provinces only at the turn of the twentieth century, most likely as a calque from the French l’Orient Extrême around the time of the Boxer Rebellion” (Glebov, 2019, p. 267). Since the second half of the nineteenth century, colonisation of the Russian East Asia became a priority for the Russian Empire. In addressing that priority, the government had to face a number of well-known difficulties: harsh weather conditions, sparse density of population, and underdeveloped transport infrastructure. The goal of this chapter is to characterise for English-speaking readers the voluminous collections of official documents, eyewitness evidence preserved in Russian archives on competing imperialism in connection with Russian policy, and colonisation activity in the Far East in the early twentieth century.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCompeting Imperialisms in Northeast Asia
Subtitle of host publicationNew Perspectives, 1894–1953
EditorsAglaia De Angeli, Peter Robinson, Peter O'Connor, Emma Reisz, Tsuchiya Reiko
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherTaylor & Francis
Chapter8
Pages137-154
Number of pages17
ISBN (Electronic)9781003126430
ISBN (Print)9780367648237
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Publication series

NameRoutledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia
PublisherRoutledge, Taylor & Francis Group
Number183

    Scopus subject areas

  • Arts and Humanities(all)

ID: 116715050