-
Kyakhta (Russian: Кя́хта, [ˈkʲæxtə]; Buryat: Хяагта, romanized: Khiaagta, [ˈçæːχtə]; Mongolian: Хиагт, romanized: Hiagt, [ˈçæχtʰ]) is a town and the administrative...
- The
Treaty of
Kyakhta (or Kiakhta),
along with the
Treaty of
Nerchinsk (1689),
regulated the
relations between Imperial Russia and the Qing
Empire of...
- The
Kyakhta Trade (Russian: Кяхтинская торговля,
Kyahtinskaya torgovlya, Chinese: 恰克图商路)
refers to the
trade between Russia and
China through the town...
-
Kyakhta Russian–Chinese
Pidgin was a
contact language (specifically a pidgin) used by
Russian and
Chinese traders to
communicate during the 18th-early...
-
regulation of Qing-Russian
trade by the
Treaty of
Kyakhta in 1727, a
caravan route between Beijing and
Kyakhta opened up,
along which the city was eventually...
- to Beijing,
indicated a
violation of the
Kyakhta Agreement by China. This step in
conflict with the
Kyakhta agreement was
considered by the
Chinese as...
- sovereignty. The
matter was
settled in 1915 by the
tripartite Treaty of
Kyakhta (1915),
which provided for
Mongolian autonomy within the
Chinese state...
- The
Treaty of
Kyakhta (Mongolian: Хиагтын гэрээ; Russian: Кяхтинский договор; Chinese: 中俄蒙協約) was a tri-party
treaty signed on 25 May 1915
among Russia...
-
during the
eighteenth century. For
background see
Kyakhta trade. It was
never successful because the
Kyakhta route was
easier than the long trek east from...
- and
Saint Petersburg. In 1762, he
unilaterally abrogated the
Treaty of
Kyakhta,
which governed the
caravan trade between the two empires.
Another source...