Southern Asia 1925: Soviet Reorganization of Central Asia
12 May 1925
12 May 1925
Rising Nationalism
1880–1914 Pax Britannica
1914–1917 The Great War in the Middle East
1917–1918 The Fall of the Ottoman Empire
1918–1923 Anglo-French Overreach
1923–1934 Rising Nationalism
1934–1940 Arrival of the New Order
1940–1941 World War II: The Middle Eastern Theater
1941–1945 World War II: The South-East Asian Theater
1945–pres Independence
Soviet Reorganization of Central Asia
24 Jul 1923 Treaty of Lausanne
13 Oct 1924 Saudi Conquest of Hejaz
12 May 1925 Soviet Reorganization of Central Asia
24 Aug 1925 Great Syrian Revolt
20 May 1927 Treaty of Jeddah
29 Mar 1929 Ikhwan Revolt
27 Apr 1930 Salt March
26 Mar 1931 Sino-Tibetan War
22 Sep 1932 Formation of Saudi Arabia
12 Dec 1933 First East Turkestan Republic
The Soviet victory in Central Asia had brought the former Russian protectorates of Khiva and Bukhara under Soviet control, but also provoked revolts among the Central Asian peoples. By 1924 these revolts had been crushed, allowing the Soviets to assert their authority over the region and abolish the semi-independent Soviet Republics which had succeeded Khiva and Bukhara. In their place, the Soviets began reorganizing Central Asia along ethnic lines, starting with new Uzbek and Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republics.