1900 Amur anti-Chinese pogroms

1900 Amur anti-Chinese pogroms
Gengzi Russian disaster
Part of the Russian invasion of Manchuria

In the Blagoveshchensk massacre, a Qing civilian was tied for execution.
Date17–21 July [O.S. 4–8 July] 1900
Location
Result More than 3,000 Qing subjects killed; loss of residency for Chinese living in the Sixty-Four Villages East of the River
Territorial
changes
Qing China loses control over the Sixty-Four Villages East of the River
Belligerents
 Russian Empire  Qing dynasty
Boxers
Commanders and leaders
Aleksey Kuropatkin
Nikolay Grodekov
Shoushan[a]
Yang Fengxiang
Chong Kunshan
Wang Liangchen
Strength
36,000 Russian soldiers and Cossacks 22,000 civilians
Casualties and losses
none[citation needed] 198 officials died[1]
7,000 Chinese citizens died

The 1900 Amur anti-Chinese pogroms (Chinese: 庚子俄難) were a series of ethnic killings (pogroms) and reprisals undertaken by the Russian Empire against subjects of the Qing dynasty of various ethnicities, including Manchu, Daur, and Han peoples. They took place in Blagoveshchensk and in the Sixty-Four Villages East of the River in the Amur region, during the same time as the Boxer Rebellion in China. The events ultimately resulted in thousands of deaths, the loss of residency for Chinese subjects living in the Sixty-Four Villages East of the River, and increased Russian control over the region. The Russian justification for the pogroms were attacks made on Russian infrastructure outside Blagoveshchensk by Chinese Boxers, which was then responded by Russian force. The pogroms themselves occurred in 17–21 July [O.S. 4–8 July] 1900.


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  1. ^ Sun, Rongtu; Xu, Xilian (1974). 瑷珲县志 [Annals of Aihui County] (in Chinese). Taipei: Cheng Wen Publishing Co., Ltd. pp. 209–210.

1900 Amur anti-Chinese pogroms

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