Provisional Military Dictatorship of Mughan

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Provisional Military Dictatorship of Mughan
(1918–1918)
Mughan Territorial Administration
(1918–1919)
1918–1919
Flag of Russia.svg
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg
Lankaran District in Azerbaijan.svg
Location of Lankaran District
Capital Goytepe
Common languages Russian
Azerbaijani
Talysh
Government Military dictatorship
Leader 
 1918
T. P. Sukhorukov
Historical era Russian Civil War
 Established
1 August 1918
 Reorganized as Mughan Territorial Administration
December 1918
 Disestablished
25 April 1919
Succeeded by
Mughan Soviet Republic Red flag.svg
Today part of Azerbaijan

The Provisional Military Dictatorship of Mughan was a short-lived British-controlled anti-communist state founded in the Lankaran region (present-day Azerbaijan) on 4 August 1918, amid the Mughan clashes.

The Mughan government did not support the independence of Azerbaijan and it was led by White Russian colonel T. P. Sukhorukov, who acted under the protection of the British occupation of Baku. Mughan declared to be an autonomous part of "single and indivisible Russia". In December 1918, it was reorganized as the Mughan Territorial Administration. On 25 April 1919, a violent protest organized by Talysh workers of pro-Bolshevik orientation exploded in Lankaran and deposed the Mughan Territorial Administration. On 15 May the Extraordinary Congress of the "Councils of Workers' and Peasants' Deputies" of Lankaran district proclaimed the Mughan Soviet Republic. [1]

References

  1. Smele, Jonathan D. (2015). Historical Dictionary of the Russian Civil Wars, 1916-1926. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 771. ISBN   9781442252813.