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How did the sixty-four villages in Jiangdong and Vladivostok break off?
Jiangdong liushitun

Jiangdong 64 Tun refers to the left bank of Heilongjiang, starting from the mouth of Jingqili on the other side of Heihe Town, Aihui County, and ending south at the other side of Hormujintun Tun in Sunwu County (about 140 from north to south and about 50-70 from east to west). For a long time, it has been a place where China people live in compact communities. There are sixty-four villages where China residents live in history, so people used to call them sixty-four villages in Jiangdong. It covers an area of 3600 square kilometers. In the Love Faint Treaty signed between the Qing Dynasty and Russia, the north bank of Heilongjiang was allocated to Russia. However, due to the large number of Qing Dynasty residents living in Jiangdong 64 Village, China, it was specially placed under the management of China during the demarcation.

1858, when Russia attacked China by the British and French allied forces, it forced the Qing government of China at that time to sign the unequal Sino-Russian Love-Faint Treaty, which stipulated that Heilongjiang was the same boundary between China and Russia, and occupied a large area of China land in Jiangzuo. However, Article 1 of the Treaty provides the following for the 64 villages located on the left bank of Heilongjiang, where China people have lived for generations: "The Manchu people and others who originally lived are still allowed to live in their villages forever, still under the management of Manchu ministers and officials, and the Russians and others are reconciled and shall not be violated." According to the provisions of this treaty, the people of China have the right to live in Sixty-four Tun, and the China government has jurisdiction over the people there. However, when Eight-Nation Alliance invaded China in 1900 (the 26th year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty), Russia took the opportunity to drive the residents of 64 villages in Jiangdong past Jiangxi and occupied this land. 1902 After the Sino-Russian peace talks, although the Qing government repeatedly negotiated for recovery, the Russian government resorted to various rogue means to refuse the Russian people who originally lived in this area to return home for generations. At present, 64 villages in Jiangdong are under the jurisdiction of a part of Amur State in Russia.

Haishenwai

VVO

Also known as Vladivostok

Sea cucumber was produced here more than 100 years ago. "Wei" means depression, so China calls it Vladivostok. It is located on the east bank of Suifenhekou Bay, the capital of Bohai Sea. According to China's historical records, Yongming City was called Yongming City in Yuan Dynasty, which was under the jurisdiction of General Hunchun of Jilin Province and was originally the inherent territory of China. 1860, Russia forced the Qing government to sign the Sino-Russian Beijing Treaty, which led to the cession of more than 400,000 square kilometers of land east of the Wusuli River, including Vladivostok, to Russia. 1862, the Russian government renamed Vladivostok "Vladivostok", which translated into Chinese means to control the East.