The territory of Tuva has been controlled by the
Xiongnu (209 BC93 AD) and the
Xianbei state (93–234),
Rouran Khaganate (330–555),
Tang dynasty (647–682),
Yenisei Kyrgyz Khaganate (7th–13th century),
Mongol Empire (1206–1271),
Yuan dynasty (1271–1368),
Northern Yuan dynasty (1368–1691),
Khotgoid Khanate and
Zunghar Khanate (1634–1758). Medieval Mongol tribes, including
Oirats and
Tumeds, inhabited areas which are now part of the Tuvan Republic. During the
Xinhai Revolution in China,
Tsarist Russia formed a
separatist movement among the
Tuvans while there were also pro-independence and pro-Mongol groups.
Tsar Nicholas II agreed to the third petition by Tuva's leadership in 1912, establishing a
protectorate over the then-independent state. Some Russians, such as merchants, travellers, and explorers, had already settled in Tuva at that time. Tuva became nominally independent as the
Uryankhay Republic before being turned into a Russian protectorate as
Uryankhay Krai under Tsar Nicholas II, on 17 April 1914. A Tuvan capital was established, called
Belotsarsk (Белоца́рск; literally, "(Town) of the
White Tsar"). Meanwhile, in 1911, with the collapse of the Qing, Mongolia
seceded from China, entering Russia's sphere of influence. Following the
Russian Revolution of 1917 that ended the imperial autocracy, most of Tuva was occupied from 5 July 1918 to 15 July 1919 by
Alexander Kolchak's
White Russian troops. Pyotr Ivanovich Turchaninov was named governor of the territory. In the autumn of 1918, the southwestern part was occupied by Chinese troops and the southern part by Mongol troops led by
Khatanbaatar Magsarjav. From July 1919 to February 1920, the communist
Red Army controlled Tuva but from 19 February 1920 to June 1921 it was
occupied by China (governor was Yan Shichao [traditional, Wade–Giles transliteration: Yan Shi-ch'ao]), until their expulsion by the Bolsheviks in 1921. On 14 August 1921, the
Bolsheviks established the
Tuvan People's Republic, popularly called
Tannu-Tuva. In 1926, the capital (Belotsarsk; Khem-Beldyr since 1918) was renamed
Kyzyl, meaning "red". The Tuvan People's Republic was de jure an
independent state between the World Wars. The state's ruler,
Chairman Donduk Kuular, sought to strengthen ties with
Mongolia and establish
Tibetan Buddhism as the
state religion. This unsettled the Soviet Union, which orchestrated
a coup carried out in 1929 by five young Tuvan graduates of Moscow's
Communist University of the Toilers of the East. In 1930, the pro-Soviet regime discarded the state's
Mongol script in favor of a Latin alphabet designed for Tuva by Russian linguists. In 1943, Cyrillic script replaced Latin. Under the leadership of Party Secretary Salchak Toka, ethnic Russians were granted full citizenship rights and Buddhist and Mongol influences on the Tuvan state and society were systematically curtailed. Tuva was annexed by the
Soviet Union in 1944, with the approval of Tuva's
Little Khural (parliament), but without a
referendum on the issue. It became the
Tuvan Autonomous Oblast, within the
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, after the Soviet victory in
World War II.
Salchak Toka, leader of the
Tuvan People's Revolutionary Party, was given the title of First Secretary of the
Tuvan Communist Party and became the
de facto ruler of Tuva until his death in 1973. The territory became the
Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic on 10 October 1961. Tuva has remained remote and difficult to access. Tuva was a signatory to the 31 March 1992 treaty that created the Russian Federation. On 22 October 1993, a new constitution was drawn up for the republic, creating a 32-member parliament (
Supreme Khural) and a
Grand Khural, which deals with local legislation. The constitution was approved by 53.9% (62.2% according to another source) of Tuvans in a referendum on 12 December 1993. At the same time, the official name was changed from
Tuva (Тува) to
Tyva (Тыва). ==Geography==