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The Yakut ASSR was formed as part of the RSFSR on April 27, 1922, during the Yakut revolt.It comprised the territory of the Yakutsk Oblast, excluding the Nizhnyaya Tunguska district, which became part of the Kirensky district of the Irkutsk Governorate; the Republic also included the Khatango-Anabar district of the Yeniseysk Governorate, the Olekminsko-Suntarskaya volost of the Kirensky ...
Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: 1920–1990 Kazan: Tatar, Russian 68,000 Tatarstan: Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: 1961–1992 Kyzyl: Tuvan, Russian 170,500 Tuva: Udmurt Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: 1934–1990 Izhevsk: Udmurt, Russian 42,100 Udmurtia: Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: 1922–1991 Yakutsk
In 1922, the new Soviet government named the area the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In the late 1920s through the late 1930s, Yakut people were systematically persecuted, when Joseph Stalin launched his collectivization campaign. [ 54 ]
The State Emblem of the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was the State Emblem of the RSFSR, which is an image of a hammer and sickle on a red background, in the rays of a solonetz and framed with ears of wheat, with the inscription "RSFSR"in Russian and "Proletarians of all countries, unite!"
The state flag of the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic is the national flag of the RSFSR, consisting of a red cloth, in the left corner of which at the top of the shaft, are placed the golden letters "RSFSR" in Russian and Yakut languages, with an additional inscription under the letters "RSFSR" of smaller letters — "SASSR", in ...
In the Soviet era and prior to the 1991 declaration of the Sakha Republic within the Russian Federation was the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Prior to 1937, the Yakut ASSR used a flag with a blue canton containing the depiction of the Aurora and the name of the ASSR.
The early Soviet period saw a flourishing of Sakha literature as men such as Platon Oyunsky wrote down in writing the traditionally oral and improvised olonkho, in addition to composing their own works. Many early Sakha leaders, including Oyunsky, died in the Great Purge. Map of the Autonomous Yakut SSR, 1928
Prior to 1992, the Sakha Republic existed as the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Prior to 1937, Yakut ASSR used a coat of arms with the basis of korenizatsiya, on which it contained the depiction of the Lena River, Aurora, and the name of the ASSR.