bandits arrested by Russian officials along the
Chinese Eastern Railway, early 1900s. The dominance of the honghuzi in Priamurye led to the Russian government's creation of a large police force and prison system. The
Meiji Restoration and the end of the Japanese policy of
sakoku,
French,
American and
Japanese expeditions to Korea and increasing Qing assertiveness (as in a 1883 border war with Russia and the 1884
Sino-French War) led to increasing attention on the Pacific in diplomatic circles. The increasing authority of
Wu Dacheng, commanding general of the Chinese province of
Jilin, also caused alarm for Russia, especially with his open interest in reclaiming Outer Manchuria, which the Qing government shared. The threat posed by Wu had been one of the reasons for the Governorate-General's establishment, and the
Ministry of War was involved in the territory from its inception.
Honghuzi banditry, as well as the frequent flow of goods and people between Outer Manchuria, Inner Manchuria and Korea led to the funding of a large police force in Priamurye. A prison was opened in the capital,
Khabarovsk on 30 March 1886. It was followed by a
Russian Orthodox church on 19 September 1899, which was created with the intention of assisting in the "spiritual education" of detainees. The
Amur and
Ussuri Cossack hosts played a significant role in policing, and were directly subordinated to the Governor-General. As Russia continued to press into China around the turn of the century, Priamurye was tasked with defence of Russian
concessions. The
Chinese Eastern Railway north of Mukden (now
Shenyang) fell under the jurisdiction of Priamurye, as did other territories. This brought the administration into conflict with that of
Russian Dalian, which was given overlapping orders. The conflict was gradually resolved in favour of Dalian, with military presence and colonists moving from Outer Manchuria to Inner Manchuria, as well as the rapid growth of
Harbin compared to
Vladivostok and Khabarovsk. Priamurye, as well as Russia's concessions in China, were briefly governed as part of the from 1903 until 1905, when Russia's defeat in the
Russo-Japanese War led to the loss of Dalian to Japan, the dissolution of the viceroyalty and the return of remaining concessions to Priamurye's control. Priamurye's authorities strove to control the Chinese population, to little avail, and at times regarded them as representative of a hostile state. Russian forces stationed in the territory during the
Boxer Rebellion engaged in
massacres of Chinese civilians, killing thousands of local residents. The 1904–1905 Russo-Japanese War significantly involved Priamurye, and Matsuzato argues that efforts to expand military installations Priamurye. Honghuzi were frequently utilised by Japanese military commanders in order to terrorise Russian populations. The Russian colonial and military administration forcefully removed Chinese and Korean populations from the town of Vladivostok, and following Russia's defeat by Japan and the beginning of the
Russian Revolution of 1905, violently cracked down on unrest among soldiers, citing the
October Manifesto as a justification. The
February Revolution of 1917 led to the establishment of multiple
soviets soon after news of the revolution reached Priamurye on . The Vladivostok Soviet, a ten-member body including one
Bolshevik, two
Mensheviks and two
Socialist Revolutionaries, was established with a stated mission of managing the local military garrison, protecting cargo in the port of Vladivostok. The large number of soldiers among its members made it a potent political force in the city, though military and police activities continued as they had before the soviet's establishment. In Khabarovsk, however, the local soviet took a much more radical approach; Governor-General
Nikolay Gondatti and general
Arkady Nishchenkov were arrested within two days and several other administrators were also held by the soviet administration. The Khabarovsk Soviet, led by Menshevik D. I. Titkin (later
internationalist Menshevik Nikolai Valukin), seized control of the administration and declared it to be under the control of Khabarovsk's local soviet. Historian John J. Stephan describes Priamurye as ceasing to exist on 16 March 1917, though he notes that the colonial administration continued to function. In contrast to metropolitan Russia, where the soviets acted as a form of opposition to the post-revolutionary
Russian Provisional Government and the
Russian Republic, the soviets in Priamurye largely supported it, and the administration continued to function after was appointed to the newly-minted title of commissioner over the region. The
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party's branches, particularly Bolsheviks, spread rapidly throughout the summer and autumn of 1917 as the local Bolsheviks (led by
Chicago-based Russian émigrés such as and
Alexander Krasnoshchyokov) chose to favour local conditions in their programme over rigid adherence to the theses of
Vladimir Lenin and the
Petrograd Soviet. Following the
October Revolution these Bolsheviks established
Red Guard units comprising Austro-Hungarian and German prisoners of war, Koreans, soldiers,
Amur Flotilla sailors and factory workers. They overthrew Rusanov and his entourage and declared the Far East to be subordinated to the Petrograd Soviet on 24 December 1917. The entire region descended into chaos within three months of the putsch as the
Russian Civil War reached the Far East. == Economy ==