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  1. Japanese intervention in Siberia. Part of the Russian Civil War. Japanese soldiers in Siberia. Date. 12 January 1918 [1] — 24 June 1922. (4 years, 5 months, 1 week and 5 days) Location. Former Russian Empire. Result.

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  3. Nevertheless, the Yakuts' attempts to defend their lands and way of life led the Moscow tsar to increase the number of soldiers to "subdue" the unruly population of Siberia. The year 1632 is considered to be a conventional date of "voluntary entry of Yakutia into the Russian state".

  4. After 2 September 1921. 950. The Yakut revolt ( Russian: Якутский мятеж, romanized : Yakutsky myatezh) or the Yakut expedition (Russian: Якутский поход, romanized: Yakutsky pokhod) was the last episode and final set of military engagements of the Russian Civil War.

  5. It was declared an autonomous republic under the name of Yakutia, but was still economically and politically controlled by the Soviet Union. It received its official name (Republic of Sakha) when the Declaration of Sovereignty of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) was signed on September 27,1990.

  6. May 14, 2012 · In February 1918, Yakutia formally declared its independence. But rather than gaining a country, the Yakuts found themselves embroiled in the Russian Civil War.

  7. Russians named the Yakut “yakolskiye liudi (yakolskiye people)”. Gradually phonetic changes formed the modern name of the nation. The first meeting between the Lena Yakut people and groups of Russians occurred in the mid seventeenth century.

  8. Yakutsk, city and capital of Sakha republic (Yakutia), in far northeastern Russia, on the Lena River. A fort was founded on the Lena’s low right bank in 1632 and transferred 43 miles (70 km) upstream to the present site of Yakutsk in 1642.

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