Preview

Oriental Studies

Advanced search

Problems of Soviet Nation-State Building: A Critical Historical Analysis of Armenia

https://doi.org/10.22162/2619-0990-2023-66-2-340-352

Abstract

Introduction. Throughout the shaping of the Soviets, the Armenian nation passed its historical way of development as a union member and grew to be administratively represented by two Soviet Armenian ethnic entities — the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic (ranked a union republic) and Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (a territory within the Azerbaijan SSR). The First Republic was established in late May 1918 to be replaced by the Second Republic, or Soviet Armenia, in early December 1920. In 1920–1922, the latter was officially referred to as ‘independent Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia’, and then as a territory within the Transcaucasian Soviet Federation (1922–1936) and the Soviet Union (1936–1991). After Transcaucasian Federation was abolished in 1936, Soviet Armenia was incorporated into the USSR as a self-sufficient union republic under the name Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic. Goals. The study seeks to show the process of nation-state building in the USSR through the example of Armenia. Materials and methods. The article analyzes archival materials represented by official documents and acts dealing with Soviet nation-state building, as well as collections of laws and party decrees. The main research methods employed are the historical/comparative and historical/genetic ones. Results. Soviet Armenia within the USSR, as well as other Soviet republics and autonomies, was no independent state in the conventional sense, but at the same time it was endowed with many attributes and symbols of statehood. Finally, it was Soviet Armenia that — for first time in the history of Armenian statehood — obtained its own Constitution. Conclusions. Soviet Armenia was a nation in the unified Soviet state, and in the conditions of seven decades of unlimited power of the Communist Party preserved and developed the Armenian Soviet statehood to a maximum possible then and there. Most Armenian historians believe the present-day independent Third Republic would never have emerged (since 1991) but for the period of Soviet Armenia.

About the Authors

Ashot A. Melkonyan
Institute of History, National Academy of Sciences of Armenia (24/4, Marshall Baghramyan Ave., 0019 Yerevan, Republic of Armenia)
Armenia

Dr. Sc. (History), Professor, Academician, Director



Karen H. Khachatryan
Institute of History, National Academy of Sciences of Armenia (24/4, Marshall Baghramyan Ave., 0019 Yerevan, Republic of Armenia)
Armenia

Dr. Sc. (History), Professor, Deputy Director



Igor V. Kryuchkov
North-Caucasus Federal University (1, Pushkin St., 355029 Stavropol, Russian Federation)
Russian Federation

Dr. Sc. (History), Professor, Head of Department



References

1. National Archives of Armenia.

2. Berdzenishvili D. Akhalkalaki of Javakheti. Art’anuji (youth journal of popular history). 1998. No. 7. Pp. 51–74. (In Geo.)

3. Bulletin of the Congress of People’s Deputies of the Soviet Union and the Supreme Soviet. 1990. No. 15. 316 p. (In Russ.)

4. Collected Current Treaties, Agreements and Conventions between the RSFSR and Foreign Governments. Is. 3. Moscow: People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, 1922. No. 79. 252 p. (In Russ.)

5. Constitution (fundamental law) of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic (14 April 1978). Yerevan: Hayastan, 1984. 58 p. (In Russ.)

6. Constitution (fundamental law) of the Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Nakhichevan, 1937. 28 p. (In Russ.)

7. Constitution (fundamental law) of the Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Revised and Expanded). Baku: Azernesher, 1941. 28 p. (In Russ.)

8. Constitution (Statute) of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast. Communist. 1924, July 6. No. 145 (924). Pp. 29–36. (In Russ.)

9. Constitution of the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic (13 December 1922). In: Kuznetsov D. V. (comp.) Soviet Constitutions: A Chrestomathy. In 4 pts. Pt. 1. Blagoveshchensk: Blagoveshchensk [State] Pedagogical Institute, 2015. 156 p. (In Russ.)

10. Galoyan G., Kazakhetsyan V. (eds.) Republic of Armenia in 1918–1920: Political History. Collected documents and materials. Yerevan: Gitutyun, 2000. 456 p. (In Russ.)

11. Guliev D. P. (ed.) Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (Azerbaijan SSR), 1918–1925: History of Its Formation Revisited. Documents and materials. Baku: Azerbaijan State Publ. House, 1989. 334 p. (In Russ.)

12. Khachatryan K. H., Sukiasyan A. K., Badalyan G. M. Annexations of Armenian Territories by Turkey and Soviet Azerbaijan in the 1920s–1930s. Yerevan: National Academy of Sciences of Armenia (Institute of History), 2022. 222 p. (In Russ.)

13. Kharmandaryan S. V. (comp.) Establishing the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Collected documents. Yu. Korablev et al. (eds.). Moscow: Nauka, 1972. 529 p. (In Russ.)

14. Klyuchnikov Yu., Sabanin A. Contemporary International Politics: Agreements, Memorandums, Declarations. Pt. 3. Moscow: People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, 1928. 430 p. (In Russ.)

15. Kuznetsov D. V. (comp.) Soviet Constitutions: A Chrestomathy. In 4 vols. Vol. 1. Blagoveshchensk: Blagoveshchensk Teachers’ Training Institute, 2015. 156 p. (In Russ.)

16. Lenin V. I. Complete Works. 5th ed. Vol. 43. Moscow: Politizdat, 1970. 562 p. (In Russ.)

17. Lenin V. I. Complete Works. 5th ed. Vol. 45. Moscow: Politizdat, 1970. 730 p. (In Russ.)

18. Melkonyan A. Javakhk in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries. Yerevan: Zangak, 2003. 544 p. (In Arm.)

19. Myasnikyan A. F. Selected Writings. Yerevan: Armenian State Publ. House, 1957. 815 p. (In Arm.)

20. Mikaelyan V. A. (ed.) Nagorno-Karabakh in 1918–1923. Collected documents and materials. Yerevan: Academy of Sciences of Armenia, 1992. 756 p. (In Russ.)

21. Nezhinsky L. N. Sources of the Bolsheviks’ unitarist foreign policy (1921–1923). Otechestvennaya istoriya. 1994. No. 1. Pp. 89–105. (In Russ.)

22. Potseluev V. A. Developing State Emblems of the Soviet Union: Glimpses of History. Moscow: Politizdat, 1987. 166 p. (In Russ.)

23. Schmidt O. Yu. (ed.) Great Soviet Encyclopedia. In v 66 vols. (1926–1947). Vol. 1. Moscow: Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya, 1926. 832 p. (In Russ.)

24. Schmidt O. Yu. (ed.) Great Soviet Encyclopedia. In v 66 vols. (1926–1947). Vol. 3. Moscow: Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya, 1926. 800 p. (In Russ.)

25. Stalin J. V. Writings. Vol. 5. Yerevan: Armenian State Publ. House, 1948, 491 p. (In Arm.)

26. Svoboda V. A voluntary union of free republics? (The creation of the USSR revisited). Etnograficheskoe obozrenie. 1992. No. 2. Pp. 3–13. (In Russ.)

27. Tenth Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks): March 1921. Verbatim report. Moscow: Politizdat, 1963. 937 p. (In Russ.)

28. The Six Years of Nationalities Policy [Conducted] by the Soviet Government and People’s Commissariat of Nationalities, 1917–1923: Instead of a [Progress] Report. Moscow: People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs (Press and Information Dept.), 1924. 228 p. (In Russ.)

29. Tumanyan M.G. Republic of Armenia, 1918–1920: A Diplomatic History. Yerevan: National Archives of Armenia, 2012. 471 p. (In Russ.)

30. Vladimirtsev I. N. (comp.) The Soviet Comradeship of Nations: Unity Movement and the Shaping of the USSR. Collected documents (1917–1922). Moscow: Politizdat, 1972. 335 p. (In Russ.)

31. Zhvaniya G. K. et al. Communist Party of Georgia: Resolutions and Decisions of Congresses, Conferences and Plenums of the Central Committee. Vol. 1: 1920–1931. Tbilisi: Communist Party of Georgia, 1976. 541 p. (In Russ.)


Review

For citations:


Melkonyan A.A., Khachatryan K.H., Kryuchkov I.V. Problems of Soviet Nation-State Building: A Critical Historical Analysis of Armenia. Oriental Studies. 2023;16(2):340-352. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22162/2619-0990-2023-66-2-340-352

Views: 551


ISSN 2619-0990 (Print)
ISSN 2619-1008 (Online)