Thread with excerpts from "The Revolt of 1916 in Russian Central Asia" by Edward Sokol
Russian Central Asia
The book was published in 1954. Settled peoples of the Ferghana Valley (Eastern Uzbekistan, Northern Tajikstan, & Southern Kyrgyzstan) are referred to as “Sarts”.
Turkic nomads were a third of the region’s population, with the rest mostly Sarts & Tajiks living in oases. There were Armenians, Persians, Jews, & Russian minorities.
Discovery of the sea route to India led to decline of Silk Road. Central Asia, impoverished by the shift in trade routes, intellectually stagnated & regressed.
Kazahs & Kirgiz nomads were both mostly shamanistic until the Russians converted them to Islam in 1700s & 1800s.
Turkmen were most warlike & fiercely resisted the Russians. Sarts were easily conquered.
Russia’s Asiatic trade as a whole was a mere 7% of her exports in the first few decades of 1800s. This trade grew almost 1000% (in absolute terms, not a percentage) in the 1850s with the suppression of banditry in Kazahstan.
USA Civil War drove cotton prices up to the point Russia imported the inferiorvarities from Central Asia. Introduction of American cotton in 1880s & rise in price drove another cotton boom to point where it took 60% of Ferghana’s labor.
A colony bereft of industry due to Russia, instability in cotton prices, usury, & high taxes immiserated the small scale farmers. Rich natives, not reliant on loans prospered.
Early Russian settlers tended to be skilled workers. The Russian peasants had much larger plots of land, & grew sustenance rather than cotton.
Russian government pushed for heavy Slavic settlement in Asia to relieve agrarian unrest & immiseration in Europe. They seized the best lands of many nomads to clear the way for settlers.
Russian trade goods, including alcohol, drove many nomads into debt. With their reduction to peonage, loss of their best lands, & repossession of their livestock; herds decreased to 75% & nomads to 90% of their respective populations the decade before.
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Thread with excerpts from "The Other Quiet Revolution: National Identities in English Canada, 1945-71" by Jose Igartua
Author argues national identity among English-speaking Canadians died entirely in mid-20th century, and was replaced by a broader civic identity. Nonetheless there is still an English-Canadian nation that can be seen sociologically through shared culture.
90% of Canadians read at least one newspaper in 1969, compared to only 68% watching television news. Spread of opinion polling ended up restricting range of public discussion.
Thread with excerpts from "Lies of the Tutsi in Eastern Congo/Zaire. A Case Study: South Kivu (Pre-Colonial to 2018)" by John Kapapi
At the time of the 1884 Berlin Conference, what is now the eastern Congo was ruled by eight kingdoms. Rwanda had yet to be united. Per the author, Rwandan (Tutsi & Hutu) migration west of Lake Kivu was minimal at the time.
Belgians created two chiefdoms in North Kivu. One was given to Tutsi from Hunde in 1922, & other was bought from the Hunde in 1939. Conflict with Hunde led to Tutsi preferring to flee to South Kivu during the dynastic struggles following overthrow of King Rwabugiri in 1895.
In line with archaeology, western & central Iberia were populated by hunter-gatherers distinctive from those on Mediterranean coast by their higher Magdalenian ancestry. Those hunter-gatherers had a resurgence over the EEFs as elsewhere during neolithic.
Steppe ancestry in IEs was diluted by the time that they reached SW Iberia at end of third millennium, in line with other studies. However, there are signs of an Eastern Mediterranean migration to Iberia in Bronze Age or earlier:
There was substantial migration to urban areas in Portugal during the Roman period from Eastern Mediterranean and North Africa. If these samples are representative, about half of the urban population was foreign-derived. Date of the site isn't provided, but was after 100 BC.
Caesar's destructiveness around the Rhine can be seen in the palynological record around Cologne. The area was densely cultivated starting about 250 BC and reforested after 50 BC, implying depopulation for a century.
pre-modern mass migrations often had appalling death tolls. Pressure of the German Suebi on the Celt Helvetii must have been tremendous:
Tiberius withdrew Roman troops from east of the Rhine, but left a 10 km no man's land that wasn't resettled by Germans until the late first or early second centuries.