Misplaced Pages

Soviet Civil Administration

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Soviet Civil Authority) 1945–1948 government in northern Korea

Soviet Civil Administration in KoreaСоветская гражданская администрация (Russian)
소비에트 민정청 (Korean)
1945–1948
Flag of SCA Top: Flag of the Soviet Union
Bottom: Flag of North Korea (1946–1948) Emblem from July 1948 of SCA Emblem from July 1948
Anthem: 소비에트 연방 찬가
"State Anthem of the Soviet Union"
(1946–1947)
Location of the Soviet Civil Administration in the Korean PeninsulaLocation of the Soviet Civil Administration in the Korean Peninsula
StatusMilitary occupation
CapitalPyongyang
Official languagesRussian, Korean
GovernmentMarxist–Leninist Provisional government
Head Administrator (de facto) 
• 1945–1948 Terentii Shtykov
Head of the Civil Administration 
• 1945–1947 Andrei Romanenko [ru]
• 1947–1948 Nikolai Lebedev
Chairman of the People's Committee 
• 1946–1948 Kim Il Sung
History 
• Seishin Operation 13–17 August 1945
• Soviet troops stationed in Pyongyang 24 August 1945
• Provisional People's Committee of North Korea established 8 February 1946
• People's Committee of North Korea established 22 February 1947
• Democratic People's Republic of Korea proclaimed 9 September 1948
CurrencyWon of the Red Army Command
Preceded by Succeeded by
Chōsen
People's Republic of Korea
Provisional People's Committee of North Korea
Today part ofNorth Korea
South Korea
Soviet Civil Administration
Chosŏn'gŭl소비에트 민정청
Hancha소비에트 民政廳
Revised RomanizationSobieteu Minjeongcheong
McCune–ReischauerSobiet'ŭ Minjŏngch'ŏng

The Soviet Civil Administration (SCA; Korean: 소비에트 민정청; Russian: Советская зона оккупации Кореи, romanizedSovetskaya zona okkupatsii Korei, lit.'Soviet occupation zone in Korea') was the government of the northern half of Korea from 24 August 1945 to 9 September 1948 though governed concurrently after the setup of the Provisional People's Committee for North Korea in 1946. Even though formally referred as civilian administration, it was originally a military organization that included civilians of different professions.

It was the administrative structure that the Soviet Union used to govern what would become the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) following the division of Korea. General Terentii Shtykov was the main proponent of setting up a centralized structure to coordinate Korean People's Committees. The setup was officially recommended by General Ivan Chistyakov and headed by General Andrei Romanenko in 1945 and by General Nikolai Lebedev in 1946.

Postwar period

Main articles: World War II and Division of Korea

In the postwar period between 1946 and 1949 the Soviet Sakhalin administration, in anticipation of Japanese evacuation of Karafuto and the Kuril Islands, had allegedly established a relationship with the SCA in order to secure a cheap Korean workforce to be used on Sakhalin fisheries that were about to evacuate from the islands along with Japanese civilians. By 1950 the Korean workforce grew up to 10 thousand people on Sakhalin island alone.

During the Soviet occupation, Soviet soldiers committed rape against both Japanese and Korean women alike. Soviet soldiers also looted the property of both Japanese and Koreans living in northern Korea. The Soviets claimed Japanese enterprises in northern Korea and took valuable materials and industrial equipment.

Administration

See also: Provisional People's Committee of North Korea, People's Committee of North Korea, and Constitution of North Korea § 1948 Constitution
Part of a series on the
History of North Korea
Emblem of North Korea
Division of Korea 1945–48
People's Republic of
 Korea
1945–1946
Soviet Civil
 Administration
1945–1948
Provisional People's
 Committee of North
 Korea
1946–1948
Kim Il Sung 1948–1994
Korean War 1950–53
Korean DMZ Conflict 1966–1969
Juche 1972
1993–1994 nuclear
 crisis
1993–1994
Death and state
 funeral of
 Kim Il Sung
1994
Kim Jong Il 1994–2011
North Korean famine 1994–1998
Songun 1998
Sunshine Policy 1998–2010
Six-party talks 2003
ROKS Cheonan sinking 2010
Death and state
 funeral of
 Kim Jong Il
2011
Kim Jong Un 2011–present
State Affairs
 Commission
2016
2017–2018 North
 Korean crisis
2017–2018
Korean peace process 2018–2019
COVID-19 pandemic 2019–2023
flag North Korea portal

Under the Soviet Civil Administration from 1945 to 1948, North Korea was governed by a group of influential Soviet generals who played key roles in shaping the country's political landscape. Colonel General Ivan Mikhailovich Chistyakov, commanding officer of the 25th Army, played a critical role in deciding the location of the 25th Army headquarters, choosing Pyongyang as the capital of North Korea, a decision that continues to have a lasting impact to this day. Alongside him, Major General Nikolai Georgiyevich Lebedev, the political officer of the 25th Army, trained Kim Il Sung and coined the official name of North Korea, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, emphasizing the purported rule by the people.

However, the true architect of North Korea's early communist regime during this period was Colonel General Terentiy Fomich Shtykov, the political officer of the 1st Far Eastern Front. De facto leader of North Korea from 1945 to 1948, Shtykov shaped the nation's politics, economy, and education system. He edited the initial draft of North Korea's constitution, formed the first cabinet of ministers, and actively supported Kim Il Sung's invasion plans, which led to the outbreak of the Korean War. Despite being recalled to Moscow and demoted after the military disaster, Shtykov's impact on North Korea's governance was immense. His role in starting the Korean War and overseeing the Soviet influence in North Korean affairs remains a significant aspect of understanding the country's history during this critical period.

During the Soviet Civil Administration, Kim Il Sung, along with other North Korean politicians like Kim Tu Bong and Pak Hon Yong, followed the orders of Shtykov and the Soviet generals. The "Provisional People's Committee for North Korea," though officially presenting itself as the ruling government, had no autonomy and merely executed the decisions made by the Soviet Civil Administration. The generals, including Shtykov, played a decisive role in shaping North Korea's early communist regime, with their actions and decisions significantly influencing the nation's political landscape for years to come.

See also

Notes

  1. Shtykov was the de facto leader of the Soviet Civil Administration in North Korea, overseeing the creation of the North Korean communist regime.
  2. Chairman of the Provisional People's Committee from 1946 to 1947.

References

  1. ^ "How North Korea became Kim Il Sung's Korea". NK News. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  2. ^ "North Korean History through the Lens of Soviet Power". Daily NK. 11 August 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  3. ^ "Андрей Ланьков: Северокорейские рабочие в СССР и России. Бесправные рабы или рабочая аристократия?". polit.ru. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  4. Armstrong, Charles K. (2013-04-15). The North Korean Revolution, 1945–1950 (Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University) (Kindle Location pp. 154–155, 1367). Cornell University Press. Kindle Edition.
  5. ^ Edele, Mark (2015), Maiolo, Joseph; Bosworth, Richard (eds.), "Soviet liberations and occupations, 1939–1949", The Cambridge History of the Second World War: Volume 2: Politics and Ideology, The Cambridge History of the Second World War, vol. 2, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 487–508, ISBN 978-1-107-03407-5, retrieved 9 May 2021
  6. Cumings, Bruce. "The North Wind: The Origins of the Korean War" (PDF).
  7. "Terenti Shtykov: the other ruler of nascent N. Korea". The Korea Times. 25 January 2012. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
Index of Korea-related articles
History of Korea
General
Chronology
Geography of Korea
General
Geography of North Korea
Geography of South Korea
Politics
North Korea
South Korea
Economy
Economy of North Korea
Economy of South Korea
Demographics
Culture of Korea
General
Korean art
Culture of North Korea
Culture of South Korea


Stub icon

This Korean history-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: