Steppe Governorate-General
The Steppe Governorate-General, also known as the Steppe Krai was a Governorate-General of the Russian Empire located in the colonized territory the Kazakh Steppe and Western Siberia, covering the modern Kazakhstan, as well as parts of Kyrgyzstan and Russia. It consisted of four or five oblasts: Akmolinsk, Semipalatinsk, Turgay, and Ural oblasts, and from 1882 to 1899 Semirechye Oblast, having the total area of and the total population of 3,454,000 in 1897. Omsk was the capital.
History
Russia asserted full control over the Kazakh Steppe in the early 19th century, amidst the Russian conquest of Central Asia. As part of its, the Russian government handed over pastures to over 800,000 ethnically-Russian settler-colonists; this, along with the blocking of traditional transhumance routes and lands used to sustain Kazakh practices of nomadic pastoralism, resulted in the disruption of Kazakh customary land law and sedentism among Kazakh nomadic communities. In other cases, Kazakhs became labourers in the service of the Russian settler population. Sedentism, as well as the unequal distribution of land favouring Russian settlers, was the dominant issue in local politics during the early 20th century.A Russophone Kazakh intelligentsia began emerging in the mid-19th century, later growing into an anti-colonial movement that was strengthened by the Russian Revolution of 1905. Beginning with the 1903 arrest of, Russian colonial authorities frequently arrested or otherwise targeted Kazakh activists, especially during the administration of over Semipalatinsk Oblast. This repression resulted in the further growth of nationalist and anti-colonialist activism as the movement grew increasingly politicised, later becoming the Alash movement.