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Argun (Amur)

River in Russia and China


Summary

River in Russia and China

FieldValue
nameArgun
name_native
name_etymologyDerived from Proto-Mongolic *ergene 'wide'
imageArgun River near Inner Mogolia.jpg
image_captionTaken from Shiwei, Inner Mongolia, China.
Russia is on the opposite side.
mapAmur watershed.png
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom5
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1China, Russia
subdivision_type2Russian Krai
subdivision_name2Zabaykalsky Krai
subdivision_type3Chinese Region
subdivision_name3Hulunbuir
length1620 km
discharge1_avg340 m3/s
source1Hailar
source1_locationGreater Khingan mountains
source1_coordinates
source2Kherlen
source2_locationabout 195 km from Ulaanbaatar
source2_coordinates
source2_elevation1961 m
mouthAmur
mouth_coordinates
progression
basin_size164000 km2

Russia is on the opposite side. | mapframe-zoom = 5

The Argun or Ergune (额尔古纳河) is a 1620 km long river that forms part of the eastern China–Russia border, together with the Amur. Its upper reaches are known as the Hailar River (海拉尔河) in China. The Argun marks the border (established by the Treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689) between Russia and China for about 944 km, until it meets the Amur.

Name

The name derives from Buryat Urgengol 'wide river' (urgen 'wide' + gol 'river'). Mongolian word "ergün" (in Traditional Mongolian alphabet) or "örgön" (in modern Mongolian) means "wide".

Geography

The river flows from the western slope of the Greater Xing'an Range in China's Inner Mongolia, and forms the Chinese side of the two rivers that flow together to produce the Amur (Heilong). Its confluence with the Shilka at Ust-Strelka on the Russian side forms the Amur. The Argun is 1620 km long including its upper course Hailar, and has a drainage basin of 164000 km2. Its main tributaries are the Urov, Uryumkan and Gazimur from the left, and the Gen He from the right.

Kherlen–Argun–Amur

In years with high precipitation, the normally exitless Hulun Lake may overflow at its northern shore, and the water will meet the Argun after about 30 km. The Kherlen–Argun–Amur system has a total length of 5052 km.

History

In The Secret History of the Mongols is a legend related to the Ergüne hun Mongol ancestry. In this legend, the Mongols prevailed over other tribes and carried such slaughter among them, that in living remained no more than two men and two women. These two families, in fear of the enemy, fled to the inhospitable terrain, which included only mountains and forests and to which there was no road. Among those mountains was the abundant grass and healthy climate of the steppe. Then, legend tells that in Ergune-Khun, Mongols multiplied and become masters of iron smelting and blacksmithing. According to legend, it is the art of melting iron that has helped them escape from the mountain gorges on scope of the current Mongolian steppes, to the Kherlen (Kelulun) and Onon rivers.

Prior to the emergence of the Mongols, the Amur River basin was home to certain tribes of Jurchen people, who founded the Jin dynasty (1115–1234) in northern China. The Manchu people who founded the Qing dynasty (1644–1912) additionally claimed descent from the Jurchens. Following the Russian conquest of Siberia in the 17th century, Russia-China relations were formalized in the 1689 Treaty of Nerchinsk, which established the Argun River as the China–Russia border. However, prior to the Amur Annexation of Outer Manchuria, China's border extended further to include the so-called Sixty-Four Villages East of the River in present-day Amur Oblast, southern Khabarovsk, and all of Primorsky Krai. Although the subsequent Amur Annexation fixed the eastern Sino-Russian border at the Amur, it would only be at the 1991 Sino-Soviet Border Agreement when all Sino-Soviet border conflicts would be resolved.

References

References

  1. Pospelov, E.M.. (1998). "Geograficheskie nazvaniya mira". Russkie slovari.
  2. [http://bse.sci-lib.com/article068923.html Аргунь], [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]
  3. Perkins, Dorothy. (2013). "Amur River (Heilongjiang)". Routledge.
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