Treaty of Aigun
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The Treaty of Aigun was the Russian-Chinese treaty that established the modern borders of the Russian Far East. Its provisions were confirmed by the Beijing Treaty of 1860.
The Russian representative Nikolay Muravyov and the Qing representative Yishan signed the treaty on May 28, 1858 in the Manchurian town of Aigun. It was one of many treaties between the Qing Empire and foreign powers that forced 19th-century China to concede territorial and sovereign rights. These territories, generally, had non-Chinese populations (Manchus, Tibetans, Turkic peoples, or Polynesians), but not Han Chinese.
The purpose of the treaty was to establish a border along the Amur River. Under the terms of this treaty:
- Russia gained the left bank of the Amur River that had been assigned to China as a result of treaty of Nerchinsk of 1689. (China would continue to administer the Sixty-Four Villages East of the Heilongjiang River.) The Amur, Sungari, and Ussuri rivers were to be open exclusively to both Chinese and Russian ships. Manchu residents north of the Amur River would be allowed to remain. The territory bounded on the west by the Ussuri, on the north by the Amur, and on the east and south by the Sea of Japan was to be jointly administered by Russia and China -- a "condominium" arrangement similar to that which the British and Americans had agreed upon for the Oregon Territory in the Convention of 1818.
- The inhabitants along the Amur, Sungari, and Ussuri rivers were to be allowed to trade with each other.
- The Russians would retain Russian and Manchu copies of the text, and the Chinese would retain Manchu and Mongolian copies of the text.
- All restrictions on trade to be lifted along the border.
Significantly, the Treaty of Aigun was never approved by the Xianfeng Emperor, and was largely superseded by the Treaty of Beijing in November 1860.