|
Humans have inhabited what is now known as Kazakhstan since the
earliest Stone Age, generally
pursuing the nomadic movement pastoralism for which the region's
climate and terrain are best
suited. In fact, historians believe the vast steppes of modern day
Kazakhstan were where humans
first domesticated the horse. From the 4th century through the
beginning of the 7th century, southern
parts of the territory of what is now Kazakhstan were a part of and
ruled by the Persian Empire, and
after the invasion of Persia by Arabs, ruled by a few nomadic
kingdoms. Following the Mongolian
invasion in the early 13th century, administrative districts were
established under the Mongol Empire,
which eventually became the territories of the Kazakh Khanate (Ak
Horde). The major medieval cities
of Aulie-Ata and Turkestan were founded along the northern route of
the Great Silk Road during this
period. |
|
Traditional nomadic life on the vast steppe and semi-desert lands was
characterized by a constant
search for new pasture to support the livestock-based economy. The
Kazakhs emerged from a
mixture of tribes living in the region in about the 15th century and
by the middle of the16th century
had developed a common language, culture, and economy. In the early
1600s, the Kazakh Khanate
separated into the Great, Middle and Little (or Small) Hordes (jüz)—confederations
based on
extended family networks. Political disunion, competition among the
hordes, and a lack of an internal
market weakened the Kazakh Khanate. The beginning of the 18th century
marked the zenith of the
Kazakh Khanate. The area was a bone of contention between the Kazak
emirs and the Persian Kings
for many centuries. |
|
In the 19th century, the Russian Empire began to
expand, and spread into Central Asia. The "Great
Game" period is generally regarded as running from approximately 1813
to the Anglo-Russian
Convention of 1907. Following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, a
second less intensive phase
followed. The tsars effectively ruled over most of the territory
belonging to what is now the Republic of Kazakhstan. The Russian Empire introduced a system of administration and built
military garrisons and barracks in
its effort to establish a presence in Central Asia in the so-called
"Great Game" between it and the
United Kingdom. Russia enforced the Russian language in all schools
and governmental
organizations. Russian efforts to impose its system aroused the
resentment of the Kazakh people. By the 1860s, most Kazakhs resisted Russia's annexation largely
because of the disruption it
wrought upon the traditional nomadic lifestyle and livestock-based
economy. The Kazakh national
movement, which began in the late 1800s, sought to preserve the Kazakh
language and identity. |
From the 1890s onwards, ever-larger numbers of Slavic settlers began
colonizing the territory of
present-day Kazakhstan, in particular the province of Semirechie. The
number of settlers rose still
further once the Trans-Aral Railway from Orenburg to Tashkent was
completed in 1906, and the
movement was overseen and encouraged by a specially created Migration
Department in St. Petersburg. The competition for
land and water which ensued
between the Kazakhs and the incomers caused great resentment against
colonial rule during the final
years of tsarist Russia, with the most serious uprising, the Central
Asian Revolt, occurring in 1916.
Although there was a brief period of autonomy during the tumultuous
period following the collapse of
the Russian Empire, the Kazakhs eventually succumbed to Soviet rule.
In 1920, the area of present-day Kazakhstan became an autonomous republic within Russia and, in
1936, a Soviet republic. Soviet repression of the traditional elites, along with forced
collectivization in late 1920s-1930s,
brought about mass hunger and led to unrest. Soviet rule, however,
took hold, and a communist
apparatus steadily worked to fully integrate Kazakhstan into the
Soviet system. Kazakhstan
experienced population inflows of thousands exiled from other parts of
the Soviet Union during the
1930s and later became home for hundreds of thousands evacuated from
the Second World War
battlefields. The Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) contributed
five national divisions to the
Soviet Union's World War II effort. |
The period of World War II marked an increase in industrialization and
increased mineral extraction in
support of the war effort. At the time of Soviet leader Joseph
Stalin's death, however, Kazakhstan still
had an overwhelmingly agricultural-based economy. In 1953, Soviet
leader Nikita Khrushchev
initiated the ambitious "Virgin Lands" program to turn the traditional
pasturelands of Kazakhstan into a
major grain-producing region for the Soviet Union. The Virgin Lands
policy, along with later
modernizations under Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, sped up the
development of the agricultural
sector, which to this day remains the source of livelihood for a large
percentage of Kazakhstan's
population. |
Growing tensions within Soviet society led to a demand for political
and economic reforms, which
came to a head in the 1980s. In December 1986, mass demonstrations by
young ethnic Kazakhs
took place in Almaty to protest the methods of the communist system.
Soviet troops suppressed the
unrest, and dozens of demonstrators were jailed or killed. In the
waning days of Soviet rule,
discontent continued to grow and find expression under Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev's policy of
glasnost. Caught up in the groundswell of Soviet republics seeking
greater autonomy, Kazakhstan
declared its sovereignty as a republic within the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics in October 1990.
Following the August 1991 abortive coup attempt in Moscow and the
subsequent dissolution of the
Soviet Union, Kazakhstan declared independence on December 16, 1991.
|
|
The years following independence have been marked by significant
reforms to the Soviet command-economy and political monopoly on power. Under Nursultan Nazarbayev,
who initially came to power
in 1989 as the head of the Kazakh Communist Party and was eventually
elected President in 1991,
Kazakhstan has made significant progress toward developing a market
economy and a fledgling
democracy. The country has enjoyed significant economic growth since
2000, partly due to its large
oil, gas, and mineral reserves. |
|
|
|
.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|