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IV. STUDY THE ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

ABOUT THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST

When did the pioneers first appear in the Far East?

They appeared in Yakutia in the 1620s. History has preserved the name of Nikifor Penda. Having gathered a detachment of 40 people, Penda began his march about 1620 from Turukhansk. At this point the right tributary, the Lower Tunguska, falls into the River Yenisei. The detachment came to the upper reaches of this river on rafts under sail from where it reached the River Lena by land. There they again made rafts and sailed northward along the Lena. In the place now occupied by the city of Yakutsk Penda and his fellow explorers saw the Yakut for the first time. The detachment returned in a slightly different way

– first to the upper reaches of the Lena, then walked to the Angara, another right tributary of the Yenisei, and reached Turukhansk by water. Several other pioneers came to Yakutia after Penda.In 1632, Pyotr Beketov, the commander of a streltsy detachment, 100-strong, built the Lena ostrog*, the present-day Yakutsk, which bacame a base for the further advancement of the Russians eastward. Seven years later, in 1639, they reached the “end of the world” – a Cossack detachment, headed by Ivan Moskvitin, reached the shore of the Pacific near the present-day port of Okhotsk. By the late 17th century, the Russians had information, although incomplete, about the whole of the Far East, including Kamchatka and the Kurile Islands.

* The ostrog is the Russian name for a fortification which was usually erected on a steep river bank. Housing constructions would be surrounded by wooden walls with turrets where cannons would be placed. Sometimes the ostrog was enclosed by a dirt bank and encircled within a deep moat.

Answer the questions:

1.When did Nikifor Penda and his people begin their march?

2.What kind of transportation did they use?

3.Where did Penda’s detachment meet the Yakuts for the first time?

4.What was Pyotr Beketov?

5.When and how was Yakutsk founded? What significance did it have?

6.When did the Cossack detachment headed by Ivan Moskvitin reach the Pacific?

7.When did the Russians have the information about the whole of the Far East?

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Make up sentences about the first explorers of the Russian Far East, using the key-words in the columns:

1620s

Ivan Moskvitin

Lena Ostrog

1632

The Russians

Okhotsk

1639

Nikifor Penda

the whole of the Far East

the late 17th century

Pyotr Beketov

the Yakut

What geographical discoveries were made as the pioneers went on their travels?

In 1640, the Cossacks from Moskvitin’s detachment were first Europeans to come to Sakhalin. In 1648, Cossack Semyon Dezhnev was the first to sail through the strait which separates Asia from America. In the same year, Fedot Popov, who took part in Dezhnev’s march, was the first Russian to come to

Kamchatka. In 1651-1653, Yerofei Khabarov, a former peasant and later a seafarer, drew a detailed map of the upper and middle reaches of the river Amur, almost up to the present city of Khabarovsk. For a long time this map was the main source of drawing maps by Russian and foreign geographers. In 1697, Siberian Cossack Vladimir Atlasov gave the first information about Kamchatka and the Kurile Islands (Fedot Popov died from scurvy in Kamchatka before he could tell the government about his discovery). So the Russian pioneers also made their contribution to the great geographical discoveries of the 15th-17th centuries which is shown by geographical names. For example, the northeasternmost point in Asia (Cape Dezhnev), a range in the Chukchi Peninsula and a bay in the Bering Sea were named after Dezhnev. A tributary of the River Kamchatka was named Fedotovshchina (after Fedot Popov). One of the largest cities in the Far East was named after Khabarov – the city of Khabarovsk. One of the Kurile Islands was named after Atlasov.

Explain the dates:

1640, 1648, 1651-1653, 1697.

Who was Bering after whom a sea, a strait and an island were named?

Vitus Bering (1681-1741), a Dane by nationality, served as an officer in the Russian navy. He was a prominent seafarer. He headed two Russian expeditions to Kamchatka (in 1725-1730 and in 1733-1734). Like Dezhnev, he sailed between the Chukchi Peninsula and Alaska (Bering Strait), but only from the south, reached North America and discovered a number of the Aleutian Islands. Returning to Kamchatka, Bering died in the winter of 1741 on an island which now bears his name and is one of the Commander Islands which are also named

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after Bering, who had the rank of Captain Commander. Stepan Krasheninnikov, who compiled in 1737-1741 a detailed ‘Description of the Land of Kamchatka’, and the outstanding naturalist Georg Steller took part in Bering’s second expedition to Kamchatka.

The question about Bering was probably not a casual one. Indeed, why was the strait through which Semyon Dezhnev had passed 80 years before Bering named after him? Because Dezhnev’s report about his voyage was for many years kept in the archive of the Lena ostrog and was discoverd only in the 1730s when the brave seafarer was no longer alive (he died in Moscow in 1673) and was forgotten even in Yakutia.

Speak about the geographical names connected with the names of the explorers of the Russian Far East.

From the history of the Far East

The history of this eastern area is a part of the Russian history and a part of the history of the aboriginal people who live here. The way of living of eastern ancient people has been greatly influenced by the peculiarities of climate and geographical position of the Far East. For many years scientists have been making excavations in this area trying to clear up the past of the indigenous people of the Far East and to penetrate into the very source of their unique culture.

Numerous relics and archeological finds testify to the fact that this particular territory had been populated since ancient times and that a man appeared here 200-150 thousand years ago and had gone the way from a stone age to a metal age. Scrappers, cutters, sharing knives found in this area prove the origin of the settlements in the Far East in paleolithic era, in other words, in the old stone age.

The most important discovery – a bow and an arrow - was made in the transitional period from paleolithic to mesolithic which was a step forward in the development of the primitive society. Methods of stone treatment flourished in the neolithic era.

Man learnt to polish, to saw and to drill stones. Instruments of labour became more perfect and consequently more productive. These old instruments give us an idea about the way of life of ancient fishermen and hunters. Those who lived in the south were engaged in agriculture and cattle breeding.

In the neolithic period a man invented a ceramic and ancient vessels were decorated with rich and delicate (тонкий) ornaments of spiral design. SikachiAlyan petroglyphs is a living museum of the primitive arts of the ancient Amur tribes.

Acquaintance with metal (bronze and iron) led to the real revolution in all spheres of economy and man’s life. Agriculture, cattle-breeding, home crafts developed rapidly, social relations were changing. Matriarchy gave way to

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patriarchy. There appeared class inequality, the first large tribal unions and the first states.

The basis of the local population of the Russian Far East are the Mokhe people who lived in taiga and mountains, who bred cattle and were engaged in hunting. The Mokhe people were real warriors, their ancient towns were often surrounded by ramparts and ditches. The source of the manpower for the Mokhe’s well - developed economy were slaves and prisoners-of-war. The ammunition found in the archeological excavations – swords, knives, spears, armoured plates – was well made and richly decorated. Gradually the Mokhe tribes formed an early state feudal system and participated in the formation of the Bokhai and Chzurchzen enthnic groups, after they lost the war in the 7th century against the Chinese Emperess U-KHOU and founded a settlement Chzen which later got the name of Bokhai.

The state of Bokhai grew rapidly and occupied a part of the present Maritime and Khabarovsk Territories. Various crafts and agriculture flourished, the Bokhai people had a written language and they did not allow their young men who could not read, write and shoot to get married. The Bokhai people also knew how to manufacture porcelain and iron nails. The favourite sports of Bokhai people were archery and horse-a-back polo.

Chzurchzen enthnic group was finally formed by the 11th century. Their economy was diverse, they were engaged in agriculture, horse-breeding, hunting and fishing. Chzen people were highly qualified craftsmen, farmers and soldiers. The lodgings of Chzen people remind us of those of the Ulchi and Nanai people at the end of the 19th – beginning of the 20th centuries. There existed the same heating system with a special khan-stove.

Luxurious temples with tiled roofs and faced with the images of rooster and Phoenix were erected in the state of Chzurchzen.

Coins and decorations were moulded from bronze. In 1154 banknotes appeared and three years later coined money came into life. But in the 13th century Chengis Khan struck a crushing blow to the powerful Golden Empire of the Chzen people. Their towns were burnt to ashes, but the defeat of the Empire did not mean the extinction of the ethnic group. The period from the 13th to the 17th century is described as the period of economic depression.

Answer the questions:

1.When did a man appear in the Far East?

2.When was the most important discovery made in the history of the aboriginal people?

3.What instruments of labour did the aboriginal people use?

4.What kinds of economy were the indigenous people engaged in?

5.What was the basis of the local population of the Far East?

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