Siberia and France has a long history of contentious relations, most notably in the immediate wake of the Russian Exodus. In 1834, the Ural Uprising was generally regarded as being backed by the Siberians, and the 1862 Franco-Siberian War was fought over control of a mountain pass between Europe and Siberia through the Urals, resulting in a French victory. Deep into the 20th century, Siberia remained a thorn in the side of the French, who refused to recognize the Siberian state and instead regarded the territory as a protectorate of the more docile and friendly Alaskans, especially at the turn of the century. France finally recognized the Novosibirsk government in 1952 as an "exile state," and in 1986 Siberia finally relinquished its claim over eastern Europe, over a century and a half sin
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rdfs:label
| - Siberia (Napoleon's World)
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rdfs:comment
| - Siberia and France has a long history of contentious relations, most notably in the immediate wake of the Russian Exodus. In 1834, the Ural Uprising was generally regarded as being backed by the Siberians, and the 1862 Franco-Siberian War was fought over control of a mountain pass between Europe and Siberia through the Urals, resulting in a French victory. Deep into the 20th century, Siberia remained a thorn in the side of the French, who refused to recognize the Siberian state and instead regarded the territory as a protectorate of the more docile and friendly Alaskans, especially at the turn of the century. France finally recognized the Novosibirsk government in 1952 as an "exile state," and in 1986 Siberia finally relinquished its claim over eastern Europe, over a century and a half sin
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dbkwik:alt-history...iPageUsesTemplate
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dbkwik:althistory/...iPageUsesTemplate
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| - Республика Сибирь
- Respublika Sibir'
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Flag
| - Flag of the Siberian Empire.png
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abstract
| - Siberia and France has a long history of contentious relations, most notably in the immediate wake of the Russian Exodus. In 1834, the Ural Uprising was generally regarded as being backed by the Siberians, and the 1862 Franco-Siberian War was fought over control of a mountain pass between Europe and Siberia through the Urals, resulting in a French victory. Deep into the 20th century, Siberia remained a thorn in the side of the French, who refused to recognize the Siberian state and instead regarded the territory as a protectorate of the more docile and friendly Alaskans, especially at the turn of the century. France finally recognized the Novosibirsk government in 1952 as an "exile state," and in 1986 Siberia finally relinquished its claim over eastern Europe, over a century and a half since the French conquest of Russia. In 1993, State Minister Alexander Neveshkin became the first French State Minister to visit Novosibirsk, and in 1998 Siberian President Gennady Lustunayenkov visited Paris on an official state visit to meet with Emperor Albert II. In 2008, Maurice Napoleon I became the first Emperor to visit Siberia in French history, in order to finalize a deal to import natural gas from western Siberia to the Eastern Department.
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