Buryatia is a releasable of Russia, located in North Asia
and was added in the 03/29/23 update. It is in a very weak starting position with its only saving grace being its geography. Its neighbors all have bigger populations than it and the country is often conquered.
Background
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Buryatia, officially the Republic of Buryatia, is a republic of Russia located in the Russian Far East. Formerly part of the Siberian Federal District, it has been administered as part of the Far Eastern Federal District since 2018. Its capital is the city of Ulan-Ude. It has an area of 351,300 square kilometers (135,600 sq mi) with a population of 978,588 (2021 Census). It is home to the indigenous Buryats, who are the republic's titular nation. Mongolian people have lived around the area of Lake Baikal since the fifth century, with Mongolic-related Slab Grave cultural monuments found in Baikal territory. Over time, the Mongolic peoples of the regions developed into distinct groups, one of which became the Buryats. Further divisions of the Buryats came from those living on the western shore of Lake Baikal, with better land for agriculture, and those in the east, who practiced nomadism more regularly and continued residing in moveable felt yurts. As a result of the superior farmland, the western side of Lake Baikal was settled by European peasants during the time of the Russian Empire - western Buryats were more exposed to and influenced by the culture, religions, and economy of their European neighbors, whereas the eastern Buryats maintained closer ties to other Mongolic peoples, Buddhism, and Asian civilizations. The territory of Buryatia has been governed by the Xiongnu Empire (209 BC-93 CE) and Mongolian Xianbei state (93-234), Rouran Khaganate (330-555), Tang Dynasty (647–784), Mongol Empire (1206-1368), and Northern Yuan (1368-1635). Medieval Mongol tribes such as the Merkit, Bayads, Barga Mongols and Tümeds inhabited in Buryatia. Cossacks and other tsarists officials began moving eastward into the western Buryat lands in 1625, where they estimated 30,000 Buryats were living in southeastern Siberia, collecting tribute from other, small Siberian tribes. The Buryats resisted the incorporation into the Russian Empire's tribute system (yasak) that demanded a yearly supply of furs; it was not until the 1680s that the last of the eastern Buryat lands were forced to participate in the yasak system. In 1666, the fort of Udinskoye was founded. This area later became known as Verkhneudinsk – in 1934, it was renamed Ulan-Ude, the present-day capital of Buryatia. From 1727 it was the border crossing for the Kyakhta trade between Russia and China. Kyakhta's founder, the Serb Sava Vladislavich, established it as a trading point between Russia and the Qing Empire. The 1820 reforms of Mikhail Speransky established indirect rule over Buryatia by codifying the local clan leaders as official members of the "steppe duma" in order to incorporate them into the existing imperial government. Buddhism was recognized as an official religion of the Russian Empire by Empress Elizabeth in 1741, with the first Pandito Khambo Lama, the spiritual leader of Buryat Buddhists, elected in 1764. The first person to serve in this role was Damba Dorzha Zaiaev (1711 - 1776). At the time of the Bolshevik Revolution, Dashi-Dorzho Itigilov served as the 12th Pandito Khambo Lama of Eastern Siberia from 1911 to 1917. Itigilov stepped down in 1917 at the time of the revolution and later encouraged his students to flee to Mongolia, though he refused to flee himself. National movements, including that of Buryatia, began to foment after the February Revolution in 1917. From March 1917, the leading Buryat intelligentsia organized a number of conferences in cities such as Petrograd, Chita, Irkutsk, and Verkhneudinsk (present-day Ulan-Ude) and invited representatives from Buryat administrative districts of the Irkutsk and Transbaikalia regions. The culmination of these conferences was the first All-Buryat Congress in April 23-25, 1917 in Chita, where activists advocated for a self-governing Buryat Autonomous Region, based on the models of Poland and Finland, with an elected body, the Buryat National Duma, that all Buryats, men and women, over the age of 18 and without criminal convictions, would participate in. This Duma would elect a permanent executive body, the Buryat National committee, which would take on responsibilities such as organizing the elections, assembling the Buryat Duma, and publishing works in the Buryat language. Among other topics discussed at the Congress were the establishment of an Education Council to create Buryat schools, trained educators, and curricula that included the history of the Buryats and Mongols and Buryat studies. After the November Revolution in 1917, the Buryats bid for independence was complicated by the arrival of a Japanese expeditionary force into Buryatia in 1918. The Buryat national leaders saw the Japanese as potential and critical allies in assisting the independence movement, but the cooperation ultimately failed due to the conflicting agendas. The Red Army advanced in Buryatia in 1920 and continued to Outer Mongolia in 1921. Attracted to the promises of self-determination and territorial autonomy by the Bolsheviks, and having lost the cooperation of the Japanese, the Buryat leaders embraced the idea of building a Buryat nation with the new Soviet state. In 1923, the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Buryat: Буряадай Автономито Совет Социалис Республика; Russian: Бурятская Автономная Советская Социалистическая Республика) was created as a result of the merger of State of Buryat and Buryat Oblast and promised territorial autonomy. In 1937, Aga Buryatia and Ust-Orda Buryatia were detached from the Buryat-Mongolian ASSR and merged with Chita and Irkutsk Oblasts, respectively. In 1958, the name "Mongol" was removed from the name of the republic as it was fitting and simply became the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of Buryatia within the vast multi-ethnic, diverse Soviet Union. The Ivolginsky Datsan was opened in 1945 as the only Buddhist spiritual centre of the USSR, home to the Central Spiritual Board of Buddhists of the USSR, the state-controlled sangha. The Buryat intelligentsia were active throughout Buryatia and beyond, into Tibet and Mongolia. At the turn of the 20th century, Buryats leaders, such as Batu-dalai Ochirov and Mikhail Bogdanov, began actively writing political articles about the threat to Buryatia and Buryat existence from Russia. Despite their noted influence from 1900 to 1930, most of them were purged, killed outright or sent to concentration camps, in the 1930s. The leader of the Buryat ASSR from 1962 to 1984 was Andrei Urupkheevich Modogoev. In the 1970s, Soviet authorities began two major industrial projects in Buryatia: the Gusinoozerskii power station to the south of Ulan-Ude and the construction of the Baikal–Amur Mainline railway in northern Buraytia. The construction of both projects, particularly the railway, required recruiting campaigns to bring workers from other parts of the country to Buryatia. Towns developed along the railroad, and the urban population in northern Buryatia doubled between 1979 and 1989. In addition to the Russians who moved to Buryatia for work, Buryats from other parts of southern Siberia also migrated to the Buryat ASSR, particularly Ulan-Ude and other cities for jobs and educational opportunities. Prior to World War II, less than 10% of Buryats lived in urban areas, compared to almost half at the time of the fall of the Soviet Union. By 1989, one-third of the Buryat population of the Buryat ASSR was living in Ulan-Ude. The Buryat ASSR declared its sovereignty in 1990 and adopted the name Republic of Buryatia in 1992. However, it remained an autonomous republic within the Russian Federation. On 11 July 1995 Buryatia signed a power-sharing agreement with the federal government, granting it autonomy. This agreement was abolished on 15 February 2002. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, autonomous republics such as Buryatia did not have the right to secede. However they retained considerable autonomy, with a separate legislature and president. However this autonomy has been curtailed following the 2004 law passed by Vladimir Putin that decreed regional governors and presidents were to be appointed, rather than directly elected. The Free Buryatia Foundation was founded in March 2022 in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, by opponents of the war in Buryatia and members of the global Buryats diaspora. |
Base Statistics
Economy
Buryatia starts off with a income of $91,875. Most of the income comes from tax while only $13,565 comes from resources. Once released it is a minor power at the 179th ranking.
Resources
Buryatia is a country which contains a solid amount of resources. It makes 0.83 Copper every 5 days.
Resources of Buryatia | |
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+0.92 |
Military
Buryatia can be said to be in a weak position manpower-wise at the start of the game. It starts with a home guard of 0 as is a releasable of Russia. It has a base manpower capacity of 60,000 and makes 275 manpower every 5 days.
Base Manpower Capacity of Buryatia per Conscription Law | |
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The following columns below present the manpower capacity from lowest (Disarmed) to highest (Required). RP stands for "Recruitable Population". | |
Disarmed [1% RP] |
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Volunteer [2% RP] |
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Limited [5% RP] |
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Extensive [10% RP] |
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Required [25% RP] |
Geography

All of Buryatia is Mountainous. The Munku Sardyk mountain range goes through its country.
During most of the year Buryatia has no biomes, but during winter (December-January) its country is Severe Winter and on the months before and after winter, (November/February) it is covered in Mild Winter.
Cities
Buryatia has a total of 6 cities with none of them being square cities. Its highest populated city is Ulan Ude with a population of 360,000~ people, its second largest population is Severobaykalsk with a population of 25,000~ and third most populated city is Gusinoozyorsk with 24,000~ people.
Borders
Buryatia borders two countries which are Russia and
Mongolia. It has a smaller population than both of its bordering countries. However, if all the nations around it are released, it will also border
Siberia and
Far Eastern Republic.
Threats
Most common threats to your nation are:
Russia trying to reintegrate you. (COMMON)
Siberia needs you in order to form the
United States of North Asia. (UNCOMMON)
- Other Russian releasables expanding. (UNCOMMON)
Mongolia trying to expand or form the
Mongol Empire. (UNCOMMON)
China looking to expand. (UNCOMMON-RARE)
Strategy
Start as Russia and justify a liberation war on Latvia. Build electronic, fertiliser, steel and motor factories in Ulan Ude. Declare war on Latvia and concede all your releaseables. Then Justify on Mongolia if China is not a player, if it is, justify on Siberia. Create as much infantry as you can, and train them for arctic and send them to Siberia’s capital. Then auto capture. Continue to take releaseables until you are powerful. Then create some Civilian Factories and sell them to a strong country (AI). Now you can decide what to do.
If China declares war
Send all your infantry back to your back to your capital and entrench quickly. The troops will die because of your mountainous terrain and your entrenchment. China will probably keep spamming infantry, and eventually your troops will die, but you can build artillery and station them near your capital. Create 70k infantry and secretly send them to Beijing. After you have captured Beijing, scorch it, and China will turn into a mess.
Trivia
- Lake Baikal, the world's largest freshwater lake, is also in Buryatia.
- Buryatia is a mountainous republic that covers 351,300 square kilometers and occupies the north and east side of Lake Baikal and embraces a 880-kilometer-long "panhandle" that stretches to the Mongolian border. Buryatia is a republic set up for the Buryats, the largest indigenous group in Siberia.
Removed | |
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Europe | ![]() |
Asia | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |