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Khertek Anchimaa-Toka

Khertek Anchimaa-Toka
Хертек Анчимаа-Тока
Khertek Anchimaa-Toka.png.jpg
Chairperson of the Presidium of the Little Khural of Tannu Tuva
In office
6 April 1940 – 11 October 1944
Prime Minister Bair Ondar
Saryg-Dongak Chymba
Preceded by Oyun Polat
Succeeded by Position abolished
Personal details
Born (1912-01-01)1 January 1912
Bay-Tayginsky, Tannu Uriankhai (now Russia)
Died 4 November 2008(2008-11-04) (aged 96)
Political party People's Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s) Salchak Toka
Alma mater Communist University of the Toilers of the East

Khertek Amyrbitovna Anchimaa-Toka (Russian: Хертек Амырбитовна Анчимаа-Тока; 1 January 1912 – 4 November 2008) was a Tuvan/Soviet politician who in 1940–44 was the Chairwoman of Little Khural of the Tuvan People's Republic, and the first non-hereditary female head of state in the modern world.

Khertek Anchimaa was born in what is now Bay-Tayginsky District of Tuva, near the present day settlement of Kyzyl-Dag. Months earlier the collapse of the Qing Dynasty had led to the end of the nominal Chinese rule and the establishment of the independent Tannu Uriankhai under Mongolian and Tuvan nobility. Anchimaa was born the third child in a family of peasant hunters. In the spring of 1918 a smallpox epidemic in the region claimed her father and one of her sisters, leaving her mother to care for Anchimaa and her four other siblings alone. To help make ends meet, the six-year-old Anchimaa was fostered out to a more prosperous branch of the family.

A Russian protectorate was established over Tuva in 1914, however the region became a battleground in the Russian Civil War after 1917, where effective control over the territory and capital Belotsarsk changed between the Red Army and counter-revolutionary forces several times. However conservative forces in Tuva were defeated in 1920 and the People's Republic of Tanna Tuva was proclaimed on 17 August 1921. The new Soviet-backed government greatly increased education opportunities, and subsequently in a period where very few Tuvans, particularly women, were literate Anchimaa managed to learn to write and read in Mongolian language. At the age of 18, when the first national Tuvan alphabet was introduced, she was one of the first to learn it, and was subsequently recruited by the state to teach the language to others as a member of the Revolutionary Youth Union (Revsomol), the youth wing of the Tuvan People's Revolutionary Party (TNRP) and the functional equivalent to the CPSU's Komsomol.


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