Nerchinsk is part way up the Shilka
The
Treaty of Nerchinsk (1689) (Russian:
Нерчинский договор, Chinese: 尼布楚條約, Pinyin: Níbùchǔ tiáoyuē) was
the first treaty between Russia and China. The Russians gave up the
area north of the Amur River and east of the mouth of the Argun
River but kept the area between the Argun River and Lake Baikal.
For background see
Russo-Chinese
Relations.
The
agreement was signed in Nerchinsk
on August 27, 1689. The signatories were
Songgotu on behalf of the
Kangxi Emperor and
Fedor Golovin on behalf of the Russian tsars
Peter I and
Ivan
V.
The authoritative version was in Latin, with translations into
Russian and Manchu, but these versions differed considerably. There
was no official Chinese text for another two centuries, but the
border markers were inscribed in Chinese along with Manchu, Russian
and Latin.
Later, in 1727, the
Treaty of
Kiakhta fixed what is now the border of Mongolia west of the
Argun and opened up the caravan trade. In 1858 (
Treaty of Aigun) Russia annexed the land
north of the Amur and in 1860 (
Treaty
of Beijing) took the coast down to Vladivostok. The current
border runs along the Argun, Amur and Ussuri Rivers.
Details
From about 1640, Russians entered the Amur basin from the north,
into land claimed by the Manchus who at this time were just
beginning their conquest of China. By 1685 most of the Russians had
been driven out of the area. For this, see
Russian-Manchu border
conflicts.
After
their first victory at Albazin
in 1685, the
Manchus sent two letters to the Tsar (in Latin) suggesting peace
and demanding that Russian freebooters leave the Amur. The
Russian government, knowing that the Amur could not be defended and
being more concerned with events in the west, sent
Fyodor Golovin east as plenipotentiary.
Golovin left Moscow in January 1686 with 500
streltsy and reached
Selenginsk near Lake Baikal in October 1687, from
whence he sent couriers ahead. It was agreed the meeting would be
in Selenginsk in 1688. At this point the
Oirats (western Mongols) under
Galdan attacked the
eastern Mongols in the area between Selenginsk and
Peking and negotiations had to be delayed.
To avoid the fighting
Golovin moved east to Nerchinsk
where it was agreed that talks would take
place. The Manchus with 3,000 to 15,000 soldiers under
Songgotu left Peking June 1689 and arrived
in July, (March remarks that there were no Mandarins with them
since the journey had to be made on horseback and few Chinese
gentlemen had mastered this undignified skill). Talks went on from
August 22 to September 6. The language used was Latin, the
translators being, for the Russians, a Pole named Andrei Bielobocki
and for the Chinese the Jesuits
Jean-Francois Gerbillon and
Thomas Pereira. To avoid problems of
precedence, tents were erected side by side so that neither side
would be seen as visiting the other.
The Chinese wanted to remove the Russians from the Amur but were
worried about possible Russian support for the western Mongols.
They also wanted a delineated frontier to keep nomads and outlaws
from fleeing across the border. They were interested in the Amur
since it was the northern border of the Manchu heartland. They
could ignore the area west of the Argun since it was then
controlled by the Oirats. The Russians knew that the Amur was
indefensible and were more interested in establishing profitable
trade. Golovin accepted the loss of the Amur in exchange for
possession of Trans-Baikalia.
The border: The agreed
boundary was the Argun River
north to its confluence with the Shilka River, up the Shilka to the 'Gorbitsa
River', up the Gorbitsa to its headwaters, then along the east-west
watershed through the Stanovoy Mountains
and down the Uda River to the Sea of Okhotsk
at its southwest corner.
The border west of the Argun was not defined (at the time, this
area was controlled by the Oirats). The Gorbitsa is hard to find on
modern maps. Google Earth shows a Gorbitsa River as a tributary of
an unnamed river that flows south to join the Shilka about 35 km
east of Nerchinsk. If this is the Gorbitsa, Russia would have had a
long narrow beak between the Shilka and Argun. Neither side had
very exact knowledge of the course of the Uda River.
Paragraphs:The treaty had six paragraphs: 1 and 2:
definition of the border, 3. Albazin to be abandoned and destroyed.
4. Refugees who arrived before the treaty to stay, those arriving
after the treaty to be sent back. 5. Trade to be allowed with
proper documents. 6. Boundary stones to be erected, and general
exhortations to avoid conflict.
(note that this summary given by G. Patrick March differs from the
Manchu text given the Wikisource. March may have been summarizing
the Latin or Russian text.)
See also
Notes
- *On the difference between version of the treaty, see V. S.
Frank, "The Territorial Terms of the Sino-Russian Treaty of
Nerchinsk, 1689", The Pacific Historical Review 16, No. 3
(August 1947), 265-170. For the original texts of the treaties, see
Michael Weiers ed., Die Verträge zwischen Russland und China,
1689-1881 (Bonn: Wehling, 1979).
- Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, 281.
- March in references, Chapter 5,
References
- G. Patrick March, 'Eastern Destiny: Russia in Asia and the
North Pacific,1996
- Vincent Chen. Sino Russian Relations in the Seventeenth
Century. (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966).
- V. S. Frank. "The Territorial Terms of the Sino-Russian Treaty
of Nerchinsk, 1689". The Pacific Historical Review (August
1947): 265-170.
- Mark Mancall. Russia and China. (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1971).
- Perdue, Peter C. China
Marches West: The Qing Conquest of Central Eurasia. Cambridge,
MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2005.
- Sebes, Joseph, and Thomas Pereira. The Jesuits and the
Sino-Russian Treaty of Nerchinsk (1689): The Diary of Thomas
Pereira. Bibliotheca Instituti Historici S.I.; V. 18. Rome:
Institutum Historicum S.I., 1962.
External links