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East Turkestan Republic
Loyalty Medal
(Full Size)
東突厥斯坦共和國
忠誠獎章
(官方版)
Item number: M357
Year: AD 1946
Material: Silver
Size: 35.0 x 30.0 mm
Weight: 40.25 g (with box)
Provenance: Stack’s Bowers 2024
This is a “Loyalty Medal” awarded in AD 1946 by the East Turkestan Republic to its armed forces, the “National Army.” The East Turkestan Republic was a de facto independent regime that controlled three administrative regions in northern Xinjiang—Yili, Tacheng, and Altay—between AD 1944 and AD 1949.
The medal is circular in shape and made of silver. At its top, a ring attaches to a green ribbon with a white stripe, allowing the recipient to wear it on the chest as an ornament. The obverse features the national emblem of East Turkestan, which includes a crescent moon and a five-pointed star—symbols representing both Islamic faith and pan-Turkic nationalism—surrounded by radiating lines symbolising light. Beneath the imagery is the inscription “صراقت” (Loyalty) in Old Uyghur script, which was used locally in Xinjiang before the establishment of the People’s Republic of China. The reverse side of the medal is engraved with the serial number “405” and the year of issuance, “1946.”
On November 7, AD 1944, in the strategic political and economic hub of Yining, located in northern Xinjiang near the Soviet border, local Kazakh and Uyghur forces launched an attack on the stationed Republic of China troops. This effort, led by local religious leader Alihan Töre and secretly supported by the Soviet Union, succeeded in capturing the city on November 12. Following this victory, Töre declared the establishment of the East Turkestan Republic. This marked the second attempt in the 20th century by the Turkic peoples of Xinjiang to break free from Chinese rule, following the short-lived East Turkestan Islamic Republic in southern Xinjiang in AD 1933.
On April 8, AD 1945, the government of the East Turkestan Republic, aiming to consolidate its rule and maintain discipline, reorganised and expanded the various guerrilla forces that had emerged since the uprising. This effort led to the formation of the “National Army,” a formal military force modelled after the Soviet Red Army. By the summer of that year, the National Army had successfully taken control of three administrative regions in northern Xinjiang and even threatened the Republic of China’s provincial capital, Ürümqi, demonstrating the potential to seize all of Xinjiang.
However, motivated by its desire to negotiate with the Republic of China to secure post-World War II interests in China, the Soviet Union intervened. Soviet agents abducted Alihan Töre, the leader of the East Turkestan Republic, and placed him under house arrest in the USSR. They replaced him with Ahmetjan Qasimi, a Soviet-aligned figure, to lead the regime and engage in negotiations. Qasimi agreed to renounce the republic’s formal name externally, although the region retained de facto independence until the fall of AD 1949, when the People’s Republic of China was established.
In the summer of AD 1949, as the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) gained the upper hand in the Chinese Civil War, Ahmetjan Qasimi and the leadership of the East Turkestan Republic secretly travelled via the Soviet Union to Beijing to discuss Xinjiang’s future with Mao Zedong. However, their delegation perished in a mysterious plane crash within Soviet territory, leaving the regime leaderless.
By October AD 1949, the People’s Liberation Army successfully entered Xinjiang. The administrative structure and National Army of the East Turkestan Republic were integrated into the framework of the newly established People’s Republic of China, marking the end of the republic.