Soviet Civil Administration

Soviet Civil Administration in Korea
Советская гражданская администрация (Russian)
소비에트 민정청 (Korean)
Top: Location of the Soviet Civil Administration in the Korean Peninsula
Middle: Emblem
Left: Flag of the Soviet Union
Right: Flag of North Korea (1946–1948)
Overview
Established1945
Dissolved1948
PolityNorth Korea
LeaderHead of the Civil Administration
Andrei Romanenko (1945–1947)
Nikolai Lebedev (1947–1948)
Head Administrator (de facto)
Terentii Shtykov (1945–1948)
Chairman of the People's Committee
Kim Il Sung (1946–1948)
MinistriesProvisional People's Committee of North Korea (established 8 February 1946)
People's Committee of North Korea (established 22 February 1947)
HeadquartersPyongyang

The Soviet Civil Administration (SCA) was the official ruling authority of the northern half of Korea from 24 August 1945 to 9 September 1948, governing concurrently with the Provisional People's Committee for North Korea from 1946.

Even though formally referred as civilian administration, it was originally a military organization that included civilians of different professions. The SCA was the administrative structure that the Soviet Union used to govern what would become the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) following the division of Korea. General Terentii Shtykov was the main proponent of setting up a centralized structure to coordinate Korean People's Committees.

After the banning of the People's Republic of Korea by the American occupational authorities in the south in late 1945, the Soviet authorities co-opted the PRK committees on 8 February 1946. This setup was officially recommended by General Ivan Chistyakov and headed by General Andrei Romanenko in 1945 and by General Nikolai Lebedev in 1946, to install Kim Il Sung as the leader of a pro-Soviet regime from Moscow, when he followed his rise to power that transitioned him from the Red Army officer to the absolute dictator of North Korea, who would rule until his death in 1994, he was posthumously declared the "Eternal President" on 5 September 1998.