Uralic genocide
Uralic genocide | |
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Location | Second Republic of Illyricum |
Date | 1831-1840 |
Target | Uralics |
Attack type | Genocide, death march, mass executions |
Deaths | 4–5 million |
Perpetrators | Purification and Unification Commission |
The Uralic genocide (Illyrian Iberic: Urale genoçidio, Uralic Iberic: Uralio genocido) was the systematic destruction and killing of the Uralic people and culture in the Second Republic of Illyricum, following the Illyrian–Uralic War and during the Infinitesimo from 1831 to 1840. Administrated by the Purification and Unification Commission, which was chaired by Julio Lupo from 1831 to 1835 and Aurelio Fufetio from 1835 to 1840, the genocide resulted in the deaths of more than 3 million Uralics throughout Illyricum. The genocide was implemented through death marches, mass executions, and mass rapes, which were meant to destroy nationalistic movements and counter possible revolutions.
In 1794, Lonio Tulio began rallying nobility and the populace throughout Uralia and the Andaluzian mountains, calling for the formation of an independent Uralic state from the collapsing Illyrian control. In 1798, Uralic forces created the First Republic of Uralis, which would last until the Uralic Civil War from 1812 to 1814, caused by the Famine of 1811. The following Second Republic of Uralis was largely at odds with the First and later after 1819 the Second Republic of Illyricum. Under the Second Illyrian Republic, led by President Romulonysyos Anyastynaxos, multiple massacres and attacks took place against Uralics throughout the 1820s. In 1827, Anyastynaxos ordered the invasion of Uralis, which would last until the Battle of Mount Tarnassus in 1831, after which Anyastynaxos annexed Uralis.