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Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic

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A historic black-and-white photo showing the streets and buses of Baku city from the 1960s.

The Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic was one of the constituent republics of the Soviet Union from 1922 until 1991. It began on April 28, 1920, after the Red Army invasion of Azerbaijan. For the first two years, it was an independent country. Then it joined the Transcaucasian SFSR with the Armenian SSR and the Georgian SSR.

In December 1922, the Transcaucasian SFSR became part of the Soviet Union. The constitution of the Azerbaijan SSR was approved in March 1937. In February 1991, the Azerbaijan SSR changed its name to the Republic of Azerbaijan. It stayed part of the USSR until it declared independence in October 1991. The old constitution was replaced by a new one in 1995.

Etymology

The name "Azerbaijan" means "Land of Atropates," a king from long ago. This name was chosen in 1918.

When the area became part of the Soviet Union, it was called the Azerbaijan Socialist Soviet Republic. Later, it was known as the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. After gaining independence in 1991, it became the Republic of Azerbaijan.

History

Main article: History of Azerbaijan

Establishment

Main article: Armenian–Azerbaijani War

The Azerbaijan SSR began on 28 April 1920 after the government of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic agreed to work with leaders and soldiers from Russia.

On 13 October 1921, the Soviet republics of Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia signed a treaty with Turkey called the Treaty of Kars. Because of this treaty, the area of Nakhcivan became an autonomous ASSR inside Azerbaijan.

Transcaucasian SFSR

Main article: Transcaucasian SFSR

On 12 March 1922 the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia formed a group called the Transcaucasian Soviet Federal Socialist Republic (TSFSR). This was the first attempt to join Soviet republics together. The leaders of the three republics were Nariman Narimanov (Azerbaijan), Polikarp Mdivani (Georgia), and Aleksandr Fyodorovich Miasnikyan (Armenia). The leader of the Transcaucasian Communist Party was Sergo Ordzhonikidze.

In December 1922 TSFSR decided to join with Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, creating the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. But in December 1936, the Transcaucasian Union ended when the leaders could not agree on some things. Then Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia each became a republic of the Soviet Union by itself.

Baku in the early 1950s

Economy and development

In spring 1921, the government changed how it organized people to use Soviets. To help Azerbaijan’s oil industry grow, the government gave it what it needed right away. New oil fields like Ilyich bay, Qaraçuxur, Lökbatan and Qala were found. By 1929, a big movement to farm together had started and Azerbaijan became the second Soviet tea maker after the Georgian SSR. On 31 March 1931, the oil industry of the Azerbaijan SSR got the Order of Lenin because it made more than 60% of all Soviet oil at that time. The republic got a second Order on 15 March 1935 for its 15th birthday. By the end of the second five-year plan (1933–1937) Azerbaijan became the 3rd republic in the Soviet Union by how much it spent to build things.[citation needed]

World War II

From 17 September 1939 to 21 June 1941, Nazi Germany bought oil from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic because of an agreement and good trade.

This changed when Germany attacked the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. In the first year of the war, Azerbaijan made a lot of oil—a record for its oil industry. By the end of 1941, thousands of Azerbaijanis had joined volunteer groups. Everyone worked harder, especially in the oil fields. A week after the war started, oil workers decided to work 12-hour shifts with no days off until the war ended.

In September 1942, Hitler’s generals gave him a big cake showing the Caspian Sea and Baku. Baku became the main goal of Hitler’s 1942 attack. This attack did not work. The German army got to the mountains of the Caucasus, but lost badly at the Battle of Stalingrad and had to leave, giving up all hopes for controlling the area. In 1942, Azerbaijan also became the second-largest tea maker for the Soviet Army. Because of a rule in February 1942, more than 500 workers and employees in Azerbaijan’s oil industry got awards and medals. Of the about 600,000 Azerbaijanis who joined the Soviet Army during the war, many did not come back.

Post-war period

Main article: Azerbaijan People's Government

An important event for people on both sides of the border was when the Soviet Union took over Iranian Azerbaijan in the summer of 1941. The Soviet soldiers being south of the Aras River made people in Azerbaijan feel more connected. During the occupation, the Azerbaijani language was helped to grow again with support from writers, reporters, and teachers from Soviet Azerbaijan. In November 1945, with Soviet help, an autonomous “Azerbaijan People's Government” was started at Tabriz under Jafar Pishevari, the leader of the Azerbaijani Democratic Party. Schools and culture grew in Iranian Azerbaijan, and people thought maybe the two Azerbaijani republics could join under Soviet control. But it turned out that the issue of Iranian Azerbaijan became one of the first problems of the Cold War, and under pressure from Western countries, the Soviet army left. The Iranian government took back control over Iranian Azerbaijan by the end of 1946 and the leaders of the Democratic Party went to Soviet Azerbaijan.

Apart from the Oil Rocks, Azerbaijan’s first offshore oil field opened in the early 1950s. Changes in rules and better times after the 1950s led to better schools and living conditions for most people in Azerbaijan. This also was when the country started growing fast and making more things. During this time, a new push against religion and a return to a rule of making all people of the USSR into one new Soviet nation happened.

Pre-secession

In the 1960s, problems in the Soviet system started to show up. Azerbaijan’s important oil industry lost importance in the Soviet economy, partly because oil was found in other places and partly because the oil that could be reached from land ran out. Because of this, Azerbaijan had the slowest growth in making things and earning money among the Soviet republics, only Tajikistan was slower. Tensions between Armenians and Azerbaijanis grew, but the fighting was stopped. To try to fix these problems, the government in Moscow chose Heydar Aliyev to lead the Communist Party of Azerbaijan in 1969. Aliyev made things a little better and started other industries like cotton besides oil. He also made the leaders of the republic mostly ethnic Azerbaijanis. In 1982 Aliyev became a member of the Communist Party's Politburo in Moscow. In 1987, when Mikhail Gorbachev started his changes called perestroika, Aliyev had to leave because he did not agree with Gorbachev’s ideas.[citation needed]

Secession

The late 1980s, during Gorbachev’s time, were busy with unrest in the Caucasus, starting with the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. The unrest got worse when the Red army tried to stop the calls for leaving.

Azerbaijan joined a vote to keep the union together but with different rules. The vote passed with most of the votes that were counted. The Supreme Soviet of the exclave of the Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic also decided not to join the vote.

The “Treaty of the Union of Sovereign States” did not get approved because the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt made Soviet Socialist Republics say they wanted to leave between August and December. Azerbaijan said it would leave on 18 October 1991. The Soviet Union finally ended on 26 December 1991. Shortly before that, the Azerbaijan SSR joined the Commonwealth of Independent States.

By the end of 1991 fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh had become a big war, which ended in a stop in 1994 that lasted until later years.

Government

On April 28, 1920, a new group took control of the country and formed a government called the Council of People's Commissars of Azerbaijan SSR.

Later, new rules were made, and a new group was chosen to make important decisions. In 1937, this group changed to a new one called the Supreme Soviet.

Heads of state

The administrative divisions of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic

Chairmen of the Central Executive Committee

Chairperson of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet

Main article: Chairperson of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic

President of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic

Military

A parade on Lenin Square in Baku in honor of the 50th anniversary of the founding of Soviet Azerbaijan, October 1970

Before it became independent, Azerbaijan had many soldiers from the Soviet Union there. These soldiers were part of the army, air force, and navy. The main army group was called the 4th Army and was based in Baku. It had important units in places like Ganja, Lenkaran, Baku, and Nakhchivan. There was also a special school in Baku to train soldiers.

Images

Historical flag of the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic from 1922, featuring orange and yellow colors with inscribed text.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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