Page 61 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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                 Establishing Borders

                 The Treaty of Nipchu (Nerchinsk) of  August 1689  point the [Russian]  Ambassadors are [at present]
                 sought to establish and maintain peace on the border  without explicit instructions from the Czar. Hereafter,
                 between China and Russia.                       when the  Ambassadors on both sides shall have
                                                                 returned [to their respective countries], the Czar and
                 Article I. The river Gorbitza, which joins the Schilka
                                                                 the Emperor of China will decide the question on
                 from its left side near the river Tchernaya, is to form
                                                                 terms of amity, either by sending Plenipotentiaries or
                 the boundary between the two Empires.The bound-
                                                                 by written correspondence.
                 ary from the source of that river to the sea will run
                 along the top of the mountain chain [in which the  Article II. Similarly, the river Argun, which flows
                 river rises].The jurisdiction of the two Empires will be  into the Amur, will form the frontier along its whole
                 divided in such a way that [the valleys of] all the rivers  length.All territory on the left bank is to be under the
                 or streams flowing from the southern slope of these  rule of the Emperor of China; all on the right bank
                 mountains to join the  Amur shall belong to the  will be included in the Empire of the Czar. All habi-
                 Empire of China, while [the valleys of] all the rivers  tations on the south side will be transferred to the
                 flowing down from the other [or northern] side of  other.
                 these mountains shall be similarly under the rule of
                                                                 Article III. The fortified town of Albazin, built by
                 His Majesty the Czar of the Russian Empire. As to
                                                                 His Majesty the Czar, is to be completely demolished,
                 [the valleys of] the other rivers which lie between the
                                                                 and the people residing there, with all military and
                 Russian river Oud and the aforesaid mountains—
                                                                 other stores and equipment, are to be moved into
                 running near the Amur and extending to the sea—
                                                                 Russian territory. Those moved can take all their
                 which are now under Chinese rule, the question of
                                                                 property with them, and they are not allowed to suf-
                 the jurisdiction over them is to remain open. On this
                                                                 fer loss [by detention of any of it].


            determined whether peace or war existed along China’s  eties recognized some form of boundaries and created
            northern frontier” and has traced key institutions such as  fortifications, but these were not necessarily linear or ter-
            frontier markets, tribute, bestowals (acts of gift giving),  ritorial borders in the modern sense.
            and exchanges of brides between Chinese and nomadic   The rise of Islam provides an interesting example of
            rulers (Jagchid and Symons 1989, 1).                boundary conceptualization. Islamic political theory does
              The resources necessary for boundary maintenance  not seem to have recognized the notion of political
            were enormous, and infrastructures were expensive to  boundaries.According to Ralph Brauer, boundaries were
            maintain. Policies such as diplomacy or trade proved to  noncanonical in Islamic law. Islamic jurists conceptual-
            be cheaper and, in some cases, more effective. Even walls  ized the world as divided into two irreconcilable realms:
            could not stop cross-cultural interaction because popu-  the Dar al Islam (land of Islam) and the Dar al Harb
            lations that appeared to be distinct when viewed from the  (land of war). In theory Islam was expected to be ever
            perspective of the center were in fact often blurred when  expanding until the Islamic community was coterminous
            viewed at the margins.                              (having the same or coincident boundaries) with the
                                                                whole world. Sanction for jihad (holy war) against non-
            Borders as a Global                                 Islamic states makes the boundaries of Islam permanently
            Framework                                           in a state of flux. Although Islamic statecraft recognizes
            Boundaries and border infrastructures have not neces-  temporary peace agreements with non-Muslims and brief,
            sarily been pervasive in global history. In fact we do not  strategic concessions, in Islamic statecraft there was
            know even how common boundaries were in certain     apparently no such thing as a permanent boundary.This
            parts of the world before the modern period. Many soci-  unique approach might be explained by the fact that
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