Lesson topic: "Peoples of Siberia in the 17th century." Siberia in the 17th century

About the beginning of the conquest and development of Siberia by the Russians - see the article " Yermak"

Completion of the struggle against the Tatars for Western Siberia

Founded in 1587 by governor Danila Chulkov, Tobolsk became for the first time the main stronghold of the Russians in Siberia. It was located not far from the former Tatar capital, the city of Siberia. The Tatar prince Seydyak, who was sitting in it, proceeded to Tobolsk. But with shots from squeakers and cannons, the Russians repulsed the Tatars, and then made a sortie and finally defeated them; Seydyak was taken prisoner. In this battle, Matvey Meshcheryak, the last of the four atamans-comrades of Yermak, fell. According to other news, Seydyak was killed in a different way. He allegedly, with one Kirghiz-Kaisak prince and the former chief adviser (karach) of Khan Kuchum, planned to capture Tobolsk by cunning: he came with 500 people and settled down in a meadow near the city, under the pretext of hunting. Guessing about his plan, Chulkov pretended to be his friend and invited him to negotiate peace. Seydyak with the prince, a karachoi and a hundred Tatars. During the feast, the Russian governor announced that the Tatar princes had an evil plan in mind, and ordered them to be seized and sent to Moscow (1588). After that, the city of Siberia was abandoned by the Tatars and deserted.

Having finished with Seydyak, the tsarist governors set about the former Siberian Khan Kuchum, who, having been defeated by Yermak, went to the Baraba steppe and from there continued to disturb the Russians with attacks. He received help from neighboring Nogai, marrying some of his sons and daughters to the children of Nogai princes. Now a part of the murzas of the orphaned Taybugin ulus has joined him. In the summer of 1591, voivode Masalsky went to the Ishim steppe, near Lake Chili-Kula defeated the Kuchumov Tatars and captured his son Abdul-Khair. But Kuchum himself escaped and continued his raids. In 1594, Prince Andrei Yeletsky with a strong detachment moved up the Irtysh and founded the town of the same name near the confluence of the Tara River. He found himself almost in the center of the fertile steppe, along which Kuchum roamed, collecting yasak from the Tatar volosts along the Irtysh, who had already sworn allegiance to the Russians. The city of Tara was of great help in the fight against Kuchum. From here, the Russians repeatedly undertook searches against him in the steppe; ruined his uluses, entered into relations with his murzas, who were lured into our citizenship. The governors sent to him more than once with exhortations so that he would submit to the Russian sovereign. From Tsar Fyodor Ivanovich himself, a letter of exhortation was sent to him. She pointed to his hopeless situation, to the fact that Siberia had been conquered, that Kuchum himself had become a homeless Cossack, but if he came to Moscow with a confession, then cities and volosts would be given him as a reward, even his former city of Siberia. The captive Abdul-Khair also wrote to his father and persuaded him to submit to the Russians, citing as an example himself and his brother Magmetkul, to whom the sovereign granted volosts to feed. Nothing, however, could incline the stubborn old man to obedience. In his answers, he beats the Russian Tsar with his forehead so that he would give him back the Irtysh. He is ready to reconcile, but only with the “truth”. He also adds a naive threat: “I am in alliance with the legs, and if we stand on both sides, then it will be bad for Moscow possession.”

We decided to put an end to Kuchum at all costs. In August 1598, the Russian governor Voeikov set out from Tara to the Baraba steppe with 400 Cossacks and serving Tatars. We learned that Kuchum with 500 of his hordes went to the upper Ob, where he had sown grain. Voeikov walked day and night, and on August 20, at dawn, he suddenly attacked the Kuchum camp. The Tatars, after a fierce battle, succumbed to the superiority of the "fiery battle" and suffered a complete defeat; the hardened Russians killed almost all the prisoners: only some of the Murzas and the Kuchum family were spared; eight of his wives, five sons, several daughters and daughters-in-law with children were captured. Kuchum himself escaped this time too: with several faithful people, he sailed away in a boat down the Ob. Voeikov sent a Tatar seite to him with new exhortations to submit. Seit found him somewhere in a Siberian forest on the banks of the Ob; he had three sons and about thirty Tatars. “If I did not go to the Russian sovereign in best time, - answered Kuchum, - will I go now, when I am blind and deaf, and a beggar. There is something inspiring respect in the behavior of this former Khan of Siberia. Its end was pitiful. Wandering in the steppes of the upper Irtysh, a descendant of Genghis Khan stole cattle from neighboring Kalmyks; fleeing their revenge, he fled to his former allies legs and was killed there. His family was sent to Moscow, where they arrived already in the reign of Boris Godunov; it had a solemn entry into the Russian capital, for show to the people, was favored by the new sovereign and sent to different cities. In the capital, Voeikov's victory was celebrated with prayer and bell ringing.

Development of Western Siberia by Russians

The Russians continued to secure the Ob region by building new towns. Under Fedor and Boris Godunov, the following fortified settlements appeared: Pelym, Berezov, in the very lower reaches of the Ob - Obdorsk, in its middle course - Surgut, Narym, Ketsky Ostrog and Tomsk; Verkhoturye, the main point on the road from European Russia to Siberia, was built on the upper Tura, and Turinsk was built on the middle course of the same river; on the river Taza, which flows into the eastern branch of the Gulf of Ob, is the Mangazeya prison. All these towns were equipped with wooden and earthen fortifications, cannons and squeakers. The garrisons were usually made up of several dozen servicemen. Following the military people, the Russian government transferred townspeople and plowed peasants to Siberia. The servants were also given land, in which they arranged some kind of economy. In every Siberian town, wooden temples, although small, were necessarily erected.

Western Siberia in the 17th century

Along with the conquest, Moscow cleverly and prudently led the work of the development of Siberia, its Russian colonization. Sending settlers, the Russian government ordered the regional authorities to supply them with a certain amount of livestock, livestock and bread, so that the settlers had everything they needed to immediately start a farm. The artisans necessary for the development of Siberia, especially carpenters, were also sent; coachmen were sent, etc. As a result of various benefits and incentives, as well as rumors about the riches of Siberia, many eager people, especially hunter industrialists, were drawn there. Along with the development, the work of converting the natives to Christianity and their gradual Russification began. Not being able to separate a large military force for Siberia, the Russian government took care to attract the natives themselves to it; many Tatars and Voguls were converted to the Cossack estate, provided with land allotments, salaries and weapons. Whenever necessary, foreigners were obliged to put up auxiliary detachments on horseback and on foot, which were placed under the command of Russian boyar children. The Moscow government ordered to caress and enlist in our service the former sovereign families of Siberia; it sometimes transferred local princelings and murzas to Russia, where they were baptized and joined the ranks of nobles or boyar children. And those princelings and murzas who did not want to submit, the government ordered to be caught and punished, and their towns to be burned. When collecting yasak in Siberia, the Russian government ordered relief be given to the poor and old natives, and in some places, instead of fur yasak, they taxed them with a certain amount of bread in order to accustom them to agriculture, since their own, Siberian, bread was produced too little.

Of course, not all the good orders of the central government were conscientiously carried out by the local Siberian authorities, and the natives endured many insults and harassment. Nevertheless, the cause of the Russian development of Siberia was set up cleverly and successfully, and the greatest merit in this matter belongs to Boris Godunov. Messages in Siberia went in the summer along the rivers, for which many state-owned plows were built. And long-distance communications in winter were supported either by pedestrians on skis or by sledges. To connect Siberia with European Russia by land, a road was laid from Solikamsk across the ridge to Verkhoturye.

Siberia began to reward the Russians who mastered it with their natural wealth, especially a huge amount of furs. Already in the first years of the reign of Fyodor Ivanovich, a yasak was imposed on the occupied region in the amount of 5,000 forty sables, 10,000 black foxes and half a million squirrels.

Colonization of Siberia in the reign of Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov

Russian colonization of Siberia continued and made significant progress during the reign of Mikhail Fedorovich, especially after the end of the Time of Troubles. Under this sovereign, the development of Siberia was expressed not so much by the construction of new cities (as under Fyodor Ioannovich and Godunov), but by the establishment of Russian villages and villages in the areas between the Kamenny Belt and the Ob River, what are the counties of Verkhotursky, Turin, Tyumen, Pelymsky, Berezovsky, Tobolsky, Tara and Tomsky. Having fortified the newly conquered region with cities with service people, the Russian government now took care of populating it with peasant farmers in order to Russify this region and supply it with its own bread. In 1632, from the Verkhotursky district closest to European Russia, it was ordered to send to Tomsk a hundred or fifty peasants with their wives, children, and with the entire "arable plant" (agricultural implements). So that their former Verkhoturye arable land would not be left in vain, it was ordered in Perm, Cherdyn and Kamskaya Salt to call hunters from free people who would agree to go to Verkhoturye and land there on the already plowed lands; and they were given loans and assistance. The governors were supposed to send such newly recruited peasants with their families and movable property on carts to Verkhoturye. If there were few hunters for resettlement in Siberia, the government sent settlers "by decree" from their own palace villages, giving them help with livestock, poultry, a plow, a cart.

Siberia at this time also receives an increase in the Russian population from the exiles: it was under Mikhail Fedorovich that it became predominantly a place of exile for criminals. The government tried to rid the indigenous regions of restless people and use them to populate Siberia. It planted exiled peasants and townspeople in Siberia on arable land, and recruited service people for service.

Russian colonization in Siberia was carried out mainly through government measures. Very few free Russian settlers came there; which is natural given the sparsely populated neighboring regions of the Pokamsky and Volga regions, which themselves still needed colonization from the central Russian regions. The living conditions in Siberia were then so difficult that the settlers tried at every opportunity to move back to their native lands.

The clergy were especially reluctant to go to Siberia. Russian settlers and exiles among half-savage infidels indulged in all sorts of vices and neglected the rules of the Christian faith. For the sake of church improvement, Patriarch Filaret Nikitich established a special archiepiscopal see in Tobolsk, and appointed Cyprian, archimandrite of the Novgorod Khutyn Monastery, as the first archbishop of Siberia (1621). Cyprian brought priests with him to Siberia, and set about organizing his diocese. He found there several already founded monasteries, but without observing the rules of monastic life. For example, in Turinsk there was the Intercession Monastery, where monks and nuns lived together. Cyprian founded several more Russian monasteries, which, at his request, were provided with lands. The archbishop found the morals of his flock extremely loose, and in order to establish Christian morality here, he met great opposition from the governors and service people. He sent a detailed report to the tsar and the patriarch about the disturbances he had found. Filaret sent a reproachful letter to Siberia describing these disorders and ordered that it be read publicly in churches.

It depicts the corruption of Siberian customs. Many Russian people there do not wear crosses on themselves, they do not observe fasting days. Literacy especially attacks family depravity: Orthodox people they marry Tatars and pagans or marry close relatives, even sisters and daughters; servants, going to distant places, pledge wives to comrades with the right to use, and if the husband does not redeem the wife at the appointed time, then the lender sells her to other people. Some Siberian service people, coming to Moscow, entice wives and girls with them, and in Siberia they sell them to Lithuanians, Germans and Tatars. Russian governors not only do not stop people from lawlessness, but they themselves set an example of theft; for the sake of self-interest, they inflict violence on merchants and natives.

In the same year, 1622, the tsar sent a letter to the Siberian governors with a ban on them to intervene in spiritual affairs and an order to ensure that service people in these matters obey the court of the archbishop. He also punishes them so that the servants sent to foreigners to collect yasak do not do violence to them, so that the governors themselves do not commit violence and lies. But such orders did little to restrain arbitrariness, and morals improved very slowly in Siberia. And the most spiritual authorities did not always correspond to the high appointment. Cyprian remained in Siberia only until 1624, when he was transferred to Moscow by the Metropolitan of Sarsky or Krutitsky to the place of the retired Jonah, with whom Patriarch Filaret was dissatisfied with his objections to the re-baptism of the Latins at the spiritual council of 1620. than care for the flock.

In Moscow, Siberia, being mastered by the Russians, was in charge of the Kazan and Meshchersky palaces for a long time; but in the reign of Mikhail Fedorovich, an independent "Siberian order" (1637) also appears. In Siberia, the highest regional administration was first concentrated in the hands of the Tobolsk governors; since 1629 the Tomsk governors have become independent from them. The dependence of the governors of small towns on these two main cities was predominantly military.

Beginning of Russian penetration into Eastern Siberia

Yasak from sables and other valuable furs was the main motivation for the expansion of Russian rule in Eastern Siberia beyond the Yenisei. Usually, a party of Cossacks of several dozen people comes out of one or another Russian city, and on fragile “kochs” floats along Siberian rivers in the middle of wild deserts. When the waterway is interrupted, she leaves the boats under the cover of a few people and continues on foot through the barely passable wilds or mountains. Rare, sparsely populated tribes of Siberian aliens are called upon to enter into the citizenship of the Russian tsar and pay him yasak; they either comply with this demand, or refuse tribute and gather in a crowd armed with bows and arrows. But fire from squeakers and self-propelled guns, friendly work with swords and sabers force them to pay yasak. Sometimes, overwhelmed by numbers, a handful of Russians build a cover for themselves and sit out in it until reinforcements arrive. Often industrialists paved the way for military parties in Siberia, looking for sables and other valuable furs, which the natives willingly exchanged for copper or iron cauldrons, knives, beads. It happened that two parties of Cossacks met among foreigners and started feuds that reached the point of a fight over who should take yasak in a given place.

In Western Siberia, the Russian conquest met with stubborn resistance from the Kuchumov Khanate, and then had to fight the hordes of Kalmyks, Kirghiz and Nogays. During the Time of Troubles, the conquered foreigners sometimes made attempts there to rebel against Russian rule, but were pacified. The number of natives greatly decreased, which was facilitated by the newly introduced diseases, especially smallpox.

Yenisei Territory, Baikal and Transbaikalia in the 17th century

The conquest and development of Eastern Siberia, accomplished for the most part in the reign of Mikhail Fedorovich, took place with much less obstacles; there, the Russians did not meet an organized enemy and the foundations of state life, but only semi-wild tribes of the Tungus, Buryats, Yakuts with petty princes or foremen at the head. The conquest of these tribes was consolidated by the foundation in Siberia of ever new cities and forts, located most often along the rivers at the junction of water communications. The most important of them: Yeniseisk (1619) in the land of the Tungus and Krasnoyarsk (1622) in the Tatar region; in the land of the Buryats, who showed relatively strong resistance, the Bratsk prison was set up (1631) at the confluence of the river. Okie in the Angara. On the Ilim, the right tributary of the Angara, Ilimsk arose (1630); in 1638, the Yakut prison was built on the middle reaches of the Lena. In 1636-38, the Yenisei Cossacks, led by foreman Elisha Buza, descended along the Lena to the Arctic Sea and reached the mouth of the Yana River; behind it they found the Yukaghir tribe and overlaid them with yasak. Almost at the same time, a party of Tomsk Cossacks, led by Dmitry Kopylov, entered the Aldan from the Lena, then the Maya, a tributary of the Aldan, from where it reached the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, overlaying the Tungus and Lamuts with yasak.

In 1642, the Russian city of Mangazeya suffered a severe fire. After that, its inhabitants gradually moved to the Turukhansk winter hut on the lower Yenisei, which was distinguished by a more convenient position. Old Mangazeya is deserted; instead of it, a new Mangazeya or Turukhansk arose.

Russian exploration of Siberia under Alexei Mikhailovich

The Russian conquest of Eastern Siberia already under Mikhail Fedorovich was brought to the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. Under Alexei Mikhailovich, it was finally approved and distributed to Pacific Ocean.

In 1646, the Yakut governor Vasily Pushkin sent a foreman Semyon Shelkovnik with a detachment of 40 people to the Okhta River, to the Sea of ​​​​Okhotsk for "mining new lands." Shelkovnik set up (1649?) a prison of Okhotsk on this river near the sea and began to collect tribute in furs from the neighboring natives; moreover, he took the sons of their foremen or "princes" as hostages (amanats). But, contrary to the royal decree to bring the Siberian natives into citizenship "with kindness and greetings", service people often annoyed them with violence. The natives reluctantly submitted to the Russian yoke. The princes sometimes revolted, beat up small parties of Russian people and approached the Russian prisons. In 1650, the Yakut governor Dmitry Frantsbekov, having received news of the siege of the Okhotsk prison by indignant natives, sent Semyon Yenishev with 30 people to help Shelkovnik. With difficulty, he reached Okhotsk and then withstood several battles with the Tungus, armed with arrows and spears, dressed in iron and bone kuyak. Firearms helped the Russians defeat much more numerous enemies (according to Yenishev's reports, there were up to 1000 or more). Ostrozhek was freed from the siege. Enishev did not find Shelkovnik alive; only 20 of his comrades remained. Later, having received new reinforcements, he went to the surrounding lands, imposed tribute on the tribes and took amanats from them.

The leaders of the Russian parties in Siberia at the same time had to pacify the frequent disobedience of their own service people, who in the far east were distinguished by self-will. Yenishev sent complaints to the governor about the disobedience of his subordinates. Four years later, we find him already in another prison, on the Ulya River, where he went with the rest of the people after the Okhotsk prison was burned by the natives. From Yakutsk, the governor Lodyzhensky sent Andrei Bulygin with a significant detachment in that direction. Bulygin took the Pentecostal Onokhovsky with three dozen service people from Ulya, built the New Okhotsk Ostrog (1665) on the site of the old one, defeated the rebellious Tungus clans and again brought them into citizenship of the Russian sovereign.

Mikhail Stadukhin

Moscow possessions spread further to the north. Cossack foreman Mikhail Stadukhin founded a prison on the Siberian river Kolyma, overlaid with yasak the deer Tunguses and Yukagirs who lived on it, and was the first to bring news of the Chukotka land and the Chukchi, who in winter move on deer to the northern islands, beat walruses there and bring their heads with teeth. Governor Vasily Pushkin in 1647 gave Stadukhin a detachment of servicemen to go across the Kolyma River. Stadukhin, in nine or ten years, made a number of trips on sledges and along the rivers on koches (round ships); imposed tribute on the Tungus, Chukchi and Koryaks. The river Anadyr he went to the Pacific Ocean. All this was done by the Russians with insignificant forces of a few dozen people, in a hard struggle with the harsh nature of Siberia and with constant battles with wild natives.

Eastern Siberia in the 17th century

Simultaneously with Stadukhin, in the same northeastern corner of Siberia, other Russian servicemen and industrial entrepreneurs - "experimenters" also labored. Sometimes parties of service people left for mining without the permission of the authorities. So in 1648 or 1649, a dozen or two servicemen left the Yakut prison from the oppression of the governor Golovin and his successor Pushkin, who, according to them, did not give out the sovereign's salary, and punished those who were dissatisfied with a whip, prison, torture and batogs. These 20 people went to the Yana, Indigirka and Kolyma rivers and collected yasak there, fought the natives and took their fortified winter quarters by storm. Sometimes different parties clashed and started feuds and fights. Stadukhin tried to recruit some squads of these experimentalists into his detachment, and even inflicted insults and violence on them; but they preferred to act on their own.

Semyon Dezhnev

Among these people who did not obey Stadukhin was Semyon Dezhnev and his comrades. In 1648, from the mouth of the Kolyma, sailing up the Anyuy, he made his way to the upper reaches of the Anadyr River, where the Anadyr prison was founded (1649). The following year, he set off from the mouth of the Kolyma on several boats by sea; of them, only one kocha remained, on which he rounded the Chukchi nose. Bureya and this kocha were thrown ashore; after which the party reached the mouth of the Anadyr on foot and went up the river. Of the 25 comrades of Dezhnev, 12 returned. Dezhnev warned Bering for 80 years in the opening of the strait separating Asia from America. Often the Siberian natives refused to pay yasak to the Russians and beat the collectors. Then it was necessary to send military detachments to them again. So Gr. Pushkin, sent by the Yakut governor Boryatinsky, in 1671 pacified the indignant Yukagirs and Lamuts on the river. Indigirka.

Russian advance into Dauria

Along with the yasak collection, Russian industrialists were so zealously engaged in hunting sables and foxes that in 1649 some Tungus foremen attacked the Moscow government for the rapid extermination of the fur-bearing animal. Not content with hunting, the industrialists spent the whole winter catching sables and foxes with traps; why these animals in Siberia began to be heavily bred.

The uprising of the Buryats, who lived along the Angara and the upper Lena, near Baikal, was especially strong. It happened at the beginning of the reign of Alexei Mikhailovich.

The Buryats and neighboring Tunguses paid yasak to the Yakut governors; but ataman Vasily Kolesnikov, sent by the Yenisei governor, began to collect tribute from them again. Then the united crowds of Buryats and Tungus, armed with bows, spears and sabers, in kuyaks and shishaks, horsemen began to attack the Russians and come to the Verkholensky prison. This uprising was pacified not without difficulty. Aleksey Bedarev and Vasily Bugor, sent to help this prison from Yakutsk, with a detachment of 130 people, on the way withstood three “launches” (attacks) of 500 Buryats. At the same time, the serviceman Afanasyev grabbed a Buryat rider-hero, the brother of Prince Mogunchak, and killed him. Having received reinforcements in the prison, the Russians again went to the Buryats, smashed their uluses and again withstood the battle, which they ended in complete victory.

Of the Russian fortifications built in that part of Siberia, the Irkutsk prison (1661) on the Angara then especially advanced. And in Transbaikalia, Nerchinsk (1653-1654) and Selenginsk (1666) on the river became our main strongholds. Selenge.

Moving to the east of Siberia, the Russians entered Dauria. Here, instead of the northeastern tundra and mountains, they found more fertile lands with a less severe climate, instead of rare wandering shamanistic savages - more frequent uluses of nomadic or semi-settled "Mugal" tribes, semi-dependent on China, influenced by its culture and religion, rich in cattle and bread, familiar with ores. The Daurian and Manchurian princes had silver gilded idols (burkhans), fortified towns. Their princes and khans obeyed the Manchurian Bogdykhan and had fortresses surrounded by an earthen rampart and sometimes equipped with cannons. Russians in this part of Siberia could no longer operate in parties of a dozen or two; hundreds and even thousands of detachments were needed, armed with squeakers and cannons.

Vasily Poyarkov

The first Russian campaign in Dauria was undertaken at the end of the reign of Michael.

The Yakut governor Golovin, having news of the peoples who were sitting on the Shilka and Zeya rivers and abounding in bread and all kinds of ore, in the summer of 1643 sent a party of 130 people, under the command of Vasily Poyarkov, to the Zeya River. Poyarkov swam down the Lena, then up its tributary, the Aldan, then along the river Uchura, which flows into it. Swimming was very difficult due to the frequent rapids, large and small (the latter were called "shivers"). When he reached the portage, frosts came; had to arrange a winter hut. In the spring, Poyarkov went down to Zeya and soon entered the uluses of arable Daurs. Their princes lived in towns. Poyarkov began to grab amanats from them. From them he learned the names of the princes who lived along the Shilka and the Amur, and the number of their people. The strongest prince on Shilka was Lavkay. The Daurian princes paid yasak to some khan who lived far to the south, in the land of Bogdoi (apparently, in southern Manchuria), who had a log city with an earthen rampart; and his battle was not only archery, but also rifle and cannon. The Daurian princes bought silver, copper, tin, damask and kumachi from the Khan for sable, which he received from China. Poyarkov descended into the middle reaches of the Amur and swam down the land of the Duchers, who beat a lot of his people; then, by the lower course, it reached the sea in the land of the Gilyaks, who did not pay tribute to anyone. The Russians first reached the mouth of the Amur, where they wintered. From here, Poyarkov sailed through the Sea of ​​Okhotsk to the mouth of the Ulya River, where he wintered again; and in the spring he reached Aldan by portage and Lenoy returned to Yakutsk in 1646, after a three-year absence. It was a reconnaissance campaign that introduced the Russians to the Amur and Dauria (Pegoy Horde). It cannot be called successful: most of the people died in battles with the natives and from deprivation. They suffered severe hunger during the winter near Zeya: there some were forced to eat the dead bodies of the natives. Upon their return to Yakutsk, they filed a complaint with the governor Pushkin about the cruelty and greed of Poyarkov: they accused him of beating them, not giving them grain supplies and driving them out of the prison into the field. Poyarkov was summoned to court in Moscow, along with the former governor Golovin, who had indulged him.

Rumors about the riches of Dauria aroused a desire to bring this part of Siberia under the rule of the Russian Tsar and collect there an abundant tribute not only in “soft junk”, but also in silver, gold, semi-precious stones. According to some reports, Poyarkov, before he was called to Moscow, was sent on a new campaign in that direction, and after him Enalei Bakhteyarov was sent. Looking for a closer route, they walked from the Lena along the Vitim, whose peaks approach the left tributaries of the Shilka. But they did not find the way and returned without success.

Erofey Khabarov

In 1649, the Yakut governor Frantsbekov was petitioned by the "old experimenter" Yerofei Khabarov, a merchant from Ustyug. He called for own funds“clean up” up to one and a half hundred or more eager people in order to bring Dauria under the royal hand and take yasak from them. This experienced man announced that the "direct" road to Shilka and Amur goes along the Olekma, a tributary of the Lena, and the Tugir, which flows into it, from which the portage leads to Shilka. Having received permission and assistance with weapons, having built boards, Khabarov with a detachment of 70 people in the summer of the same 1649 sailed from Lena to Olekma and Tugir. Winter has come. Khabarov moved further on the sled; through the Shilka and Amur valleys they came to the possessions of Prince Lavkai. But his city and the surrounding uluses were empty. The Russians marveled at this Siberian city, fortified with five towers and deep ditches; stone sheds were found in the city, which could accommodate up to sixty people. If fear had not attacked the inhabitants, then it would have been impossible to take their fortress with such a small detachment. Khabarov went down the Amur and found several more similar fortified cities, which were also abandoned by the inhabitants. It turned out that the Russian man Ivashka Kvashnin and his comrades managed to visit the Tungus Lavkaya; he said that the Russians were marching in the number of 500 people, and even larger forces followed them, that they wanted to beat all the Daurs, rob their property, and take their wives and children in full. The frightened Tungus gave Ivashka gifts of sables. Hearing of the impending invasion, Lavkai and other Daurian foremen abandoned their towns; with all the people and herds, they fled to the neighboring steppes under the auspices of the Manchu ruler Shamshakan. Of their abandoned winter quarters, Khabarov especially liked the town of Prince Albaza with a strong position on the middle reaches of the Amur. He occupied Albazin. Leaving 50 people for the garrison, Khabarov went back, built a prison on the Tugir portage, and in the summer of 1650 returned to Yakutsk. In order to secure Dauria for the great sovereign, Frantsbekov sent the same Khabarov in the next 1651 with a detachment much larger and with several guns.

Yakutia and the Amur Region in the 17th century

The Daurs were already approaching Albazin, but he held out until Khabarov arrived. This time, the Daurian princes put up quite a strong resistance to the Russians; a series of battles followed, ending in the defeat of the Daur; the guns were especially frightening to them. The natives again left their towns and fled down the Amur. Local princes submitted and pledged to pay yasak. Khabarov further fortified Albazin, which became a Russian stronghold on the Amur. He founded several more prisons along Shilka and Amur. Voivode Frantsbekov sent him several more human parties. News of the riches of the Daurian land attracted many Cossacks and industrialists. Gathering a significant force, Khabarov in the summer of 1652 moved from Albazin down the Amur, and smashed the coastal uluses. He swam to the confluence of the Shingal (Sungari) into the Amur, in the land of the duchers. Here he wintered in one city.

Local Siberian princes, tributaries of the Bogdykhan, sent requests to China for help against the Russians. About that time in China, the native Ming dynasty was overthrown by rebellious warlords, with whom the Manchu hordes joined. The Manchu dynasty Qing (1644) settled in Beijing in the person of Bogdy Khan Huang-di, but not all Chinese regions recognized him as sovereign; he had to conquer them and gradually consolidate his dynasty. In this era, Khabarov's campaigns and the Russian invasion of Dauria took place; their success was facilitated by the then vague state of the empire and the diversion of its military forces from Siberia to the southern and coastal provinces. News from the Amur forced the Bogdykhan governor in Manchuria (Uchurva) to detach a significant army, horse and foot, with firearms, in the amount of thirty squeakers, six cannons and twelve clay pinards, which had a pood of gunpowder inside and were thrown under the walls for an explosion. Firearms appeared in China, thanks to European merchants and missionaries; for the sake of missionary purposes, the Jesuits tried to be useful to the Chinese government and poured cannons for it.

On March 24, 1653, Russian Cossacks in the city of Achan, at dawn, were awakened by firing from cannons - that was the Bogdoy army, which, with crowds of duchers, went on the attack. “Yaz Yarofeiko ...,” says Khabarov, “and the Cossacks, having prayed to the Savior and the Most Pure Lady of our Mother of God, said goodbye among themselves and said: we will die, brothers, for the faith baptized and we will give joy to the sovereign Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, but we will not give ourselves up into the hands of the Bogdoy people” . They fought from dawn to sunset. The Manchu-Chinese cut down three links from the city wall, but the Cossacks rolled a copper cannon here and began to hit the attackers point-blank, directed the fire of other cannons and squeakers at it, and killed a lot of people. The enemies retreated in disarray. The Russians took advantage of this: 50 people remained in the city, and 156, in iron kuyak, with sabers, made a sortie and entered into hand-to-hand combat. The Russians overcame, the Bogdoy army fled from the city. The trophies were a convoy of 830 horses with grain reserves, 17 quick-firing squeakers, which had three or four barrels, and two guns. The enemies lay down about 700 people; while the Russian Cossacks lost only ten killed and about 80 wounded, but the latter later recovered. This battle reminded the former heroic deeds in Siberia of Yermak and his comrades.

But the circumstances here were different.

The conquest of Dauria involved us in a clash with the then mighty Manchurian Empire. Suffered defeat aroused a thirst for revenge; there were rumors about new crowds that were going to hit the Cossacks again in Siberia and crush them in numbers. The princes refused to pay yasak to the Russians. Khabarov did not go further down the Amur to the land of the Gilyaks, but at the end of April he sat on boards and swam up. On the way, he met reinforcements from Yakutsk; he now had about 350 men. In addition to the danger from China, they also had to deal with the disobedience of their own squads, recruited from walking people. 136 people, outraged by Stenka Polyakov and Kostka Ivanov, separated from Khabarovsk and sailed down the Amur for the sake of "zipuns", i.e. began to rob the natives, which further drove them away from the Russians. On instructions from Yakutsk, Khabarov was supposed to send several people as envoys with a royal letter to the Bogdykhan. But the Siberian natives refused to take them to China, referring to the treachery of the Russians, who promised them peace, and now they are robbing and killing. Khabarov asked to send a large army, because with such small forces, Amur could not be held. He pointed to the abundance of the Chinese land and the fact that it has a fiery battle.

Russians on the Amur

The following year, in 1654, the nobleman Zinoviev arrived on the Amur with reinforcements, a royal salary and a gold award. Taking the yasak, he returned to Moscow, taking Khabarov with him. He received from the king the title of son of a boyar and was appointed clerk of the Ust-Kutsk prison on the Lena. On the Amur, after him, Onufry Stepanov commanded. In Moscow, they intended to send a 3,000th army to this part of Siberia. But the war with the Poles for Little Russia began, and the shipment did not take place. With a small Russian force, Stepanov made campaigns along the Amur, collected tribute from the Daurs and Duchers, and courageously fought off the incoming Manchurian troops. He had to endure especially strong battles in March 1655 in the new Komarsky prison (lower than Albazin). The Bogdoy army was advancing there with cannons and squeakers. His number, together with the hordes of rebellious natives, reached 10,000; they were led by Prince Togudai. Not limited to firing from cannons, the enemies threw arrows with “fiery charges” into the prison and brought carts loaded with tar and straw to the prison to set fire to the palisade. The siege of the prison continued for three weeks, accompanied by frequent attacks. The Russians bravely defended themselves and made successful sorties. The prison was well fortified with a high rampart, wooden walls and a wide moat, around which there was another palisade with hidden iron bars. During the attack, the enemies stumbled upon the bars and could not come close to the walls to light them; and at this time they were hitting them with cannons. Having lost many people, the Bogdoy army retreated. A lot of its fiery charges, gunpowder and cores were left as booty for the Russians. Stepanov asked the Yakut governor Lodyzhensky to send gunpowder, lead, reinforcements and bread. But his requests were little fulfilled; and the war with the Manchus continued; daurs, duchers and gilyaks refused yasak, rebelled, and beat up small parties of Russians. Stepanov pacified them. The Russians usually tried to capture any of the noble or primary Siberian people as amanats.

In the summer of 1658, Stepanov, having set out from Albazin on 12 boards with a detachment of about 500 people, sailed along the Amur and collected yasak. Below the mouth of the Shingal (Sungari), he unexpectedly met a strong Bogdoy army - a flotilla of almost 50 ships, with many cannons and squeakers. This artillery gave the enemy the upper hand and caused great havoc among the Russians. Stepanov fell with 270 comrades; the remaining 227 fled on ships or into the mountains. Part of the Bogdoy army moved up the Amur to the Russian settlements. Our dominion in the middle and lower Amur has almost been lost; Albazin was abandoned. But on the upper Amur and Shilka, it survived thanks to strong spears. At that time, the Yenisei governor Afanasy Pashkov acted there, who, by founding Nerchinsk (1654), strengthened Russian rule here. In 1662 Pashkov was replaced in Nerchinsk by Hilarion Tolbuzin.

Soon the Russians again established themselves on the middle Amur.

The Ilim governor Obukhov was notable for his greed and violence against the women of his county. He dishonored the sister of the service man Nicephorus of Chernigov, originally from Western Russia. Burning with vengeance, Nicephorus rebelled several dozen people; they attacked Obukhov near the Kirensky prison on the river. Lena and killed him (1665). Avoiding the death penalty, Chernigov and his accomplices went to the Amur, occupied the deserted Albazin, resumed its fortifications and began to collect yasak again from the neighboring Siberian Tunguses, which found themselves between two fires: yasak was demanded of them by both the Russians and the Chinese. In view of the constant danger from the Chinese, Chernigov recognized his subordination to the Nerchinsk governor and asked for pardon in Moscow. Thanks to his merits, he received it and was approved by the Albazin chief. Along with the new Russian occupation of the middle Amur, enmity with the Chinese resumed. It was complicated by the fact that the Tungus prince Gantimur-Ulan, due to Chinese injustices, left the Bogdoy land for Siberia, to Nerchinsk, under Tolbuzin and surrendered with his entire ulus under the royal hand. There were other cases when native clans, unable to endure the oppression of the Chinese, asked for Russian citizenship. The Chinese government was preparing for war. Meanwhile, there were very few Russian servicemen in this part of Siberia. Usually archers and Cossacks from Tobolsk and Yeniseisk were sent here, and they served from 3 to 4 years (with passage). Who among them would like to serve in Dauria for more than 4 years, the salary was increased. Tolbuzin's successor, Arshinsky, reported to the Tobolsk voivode Godunov that in 1669 a horde of mongals came to yasak Buryats and took them to their uluses; despite the fact that the neighboring Tungus refuse to pay yasak; and “there is no one to start a search”: in the three Nerchinsk prisons (actually Nerchinsk, Irgensk and Telenbinsky) there are only 124 service people.

Russian embassies in China: Fedor Baikov, Ivan Perfiliev, Milovanov

The Russian government therefore tried to settle the dispute over Siberia with the Chinese through negotiations and embassies. To enter into direct relations with China, already in 1654 was sent to Kambalyk (Beijing) Tobolsk boyar son Fyodor Baikov. First, he sailed up the Irtysh, and then traveled through the lands of the Kalmyks, through the Mongolian steppes, and finally reached Beijing. But after unsuccessful negotiations with Chinese officials, he, having achieved nothing, returned back by the same route, having spent more than three years on the journey. But at least he delivered to the Russian government important information about China and the caravan route to it. In 1659, Ivan Perfilyev traveled to China by the same route with a royal charter. He received a Bogdykhan reception, received gifts and brought the first batch of tea to Moscow. When enmity arose with the Chinese over the Tungus prince Gantimur and the Albazin actions of Nikifor of Chernigov, the son of the boyar Milovanov was sent to Beijing by order from Moscow from Nerchinsk (1670). He swam up the Argun; reached the Chinese wall through the Manchurian steppes, arrived in Beijing, was honorably received by the Bogdykhan and gifted with kumachs and silk belts. Milovanov was released not only with a letter of reply to the tsar, but also accompanied by a Chinese official (Mugotei) with a significant retinue. At the request of the latter, the Nerchinsk governor sent Nikifor of Chernigov an order not to fight daur and ducher without the decree of the great sovereign. Such a soft attitude of the Chinese government towards the Russians in Siberia, apparently, was due to the unrest still going on in China. The second god of the Manchurian dynasty, the famous Kang-si (1662-1723) was still young, and he had to fight a lot with rebellions to consolidate his dynasty and the integrity of the Chinese Empire.

In the 1670s, the famous journey to China of the Russian ambassador Nikolai Spafariy took place.

When writing the article, the book by D. I. Ilovaisky “History of Russia. In 5 volumes"


The following details are interesting. In 1647, Shelkovnik from the Okhotsk prison sent an industrial man Fedulka Abakumov to Yakutsk with a request to send reinforcements. When Abakumov and his comrades camped on the top of the May River, they were approached by the Tungus with Prince Kovyrey, whose two sons were atamans in Russian prisons. Not understanding their language, Abakumov thought that Kovyrya wanted to kill him; fired from the squeaker and put the prince in place. Annoyed by this, the children and relatives of the latter were indignant, attacked the Russians, who were engaged in sable hunting on the river. Mae, and killed eleven people. And the son of Kovyri Turchenei, who was sitting as an ataman in the Yakut prison, demanded that the Russian governor hand over Fedulka Abakumov to their relatives for execution. Voivode Pushkin and his comrades tortured him and, having put him in prison, informed the tsar about this and asked what he should do. A letter was obtained from the tsar, in which it was confirmed that the Siberian natives were brought under the tsar's high hand with caress and greetings. Fedulka was ordered, having punished mercilessly with a whip in the presence of Turchenei, put him in prison, and refuse to extradite him, citing the fact that he killed Kovyrya by mistake and that the Tungus had already taken revenge by killing 11 Russian industrialists.

About the campaigns of M. Stadukhin and other experimenters in the north-east of Siberia - see Supplementary. how. East III. Nos. 4, 24, 56 and 57. IV. No. 2, 4–7, 47. In No. 7, Dezhnev’s reply to the Yakut governor about a campaign on the river. Anadyr. Slovtsev "Historical Review of Siberia". 1838. I. 103. He objects to Dezhnev sailing in the Bering Strait. But Krizhanich in his Historia de Siberia positively says that under Alexei Mikhailovich they were convinced of the connection of the Arctic Sea with the Eastern Ocean. On Pushchin's campaign against the Yukaghirs and Lamuts Akty Istor. IV. No. 219. You. Kolesnikov - to the Angara and Baikal. Additional how. East III. No. 15. On the campaigns of Poyarkov and others in Transbaikalia and the Amur. Ibid. Nos. 12, 26, 37, 93, 112, and FROM. In No. 97 (p. 349), servicemen who went with Stadukhin across the Kolyma River say: "And there is a lot of overseas bone lying here on the shore, it is possible to load many courts with that bone." Campaigns of Khabarov and Stepanov: Acts of History. IV. No. 31. Add. how. East III. Nos. 72, 99, 100 - 103, 122. IV. Nos. 8, 12, 31, 53, 64 and 66 (about the death of Stepanov, about Pashkov), (about Tolbuzin). V. No. 5 (an unsubscribe from the Yenisei governor Golokhvostov to the Nerchinsk governor Tolbuzin about sending him 60 archers and Cossacks in 1665. There are mentions of prisons in Dauria: Nerchinsky, Irgensky and Telenbinsky), 8 and 38 (about the construction of the Selenginsk prison in 1665 - 6 years. and examined it in 1667). Regarding the Siberian events or their sequence in the acts, there is some inconsistency. So, according to one piece of news, Yerofey Khabarov had a fight with the Daurs on his first campaign and at the same time occupied Albazin (1650), where he left 50 people, who "all lived until his Yarofey's health", i.e. before his return. (Ac. History IV. No. 31). And according to another act (Suppl. III. No. 72), during this campaign he found all the uluses of the desert; nothing is said about the occupation of Albazin. In No. 22 (Suppl. VI) Albazin is called the "Shopping prison". In the journey of Spafariy, the Albazinsky prison is called the "Shopping Town". In an extensive order of 1651 from the Siberian order sent to the Russian governor of the Daurian land, Afanasy Pashkov, Albazin is mentioned among the Lavable uluses. Pashkov, among other things, is ordered to send people to the river. Shingal to the kings of Bogdoi Andrikan and Nikon (Japanese?) to persuade them to "look for his great sovereign of mercy and salary." (Rus. Historical Bibl. T. XV). About Baikov's travel to China Acts Ist. IV. No. 75. Sakharov "The Tale of the Russian People". P. and Spassky "Siberian Herald" 1820. Krizhanich mentions the dishonor of Chernigov's sister and his revenge in his "History of Siberia" (the aforementioned Collection of A. A. Titova. 213). In general, about greed, the rape of women in Siberia and the murder of Obukhov by Chernigov and his comrades for that, in Supplementary. VIII. No.73.

The same example of a bribe-taker and fornicator-rapist is presented by the Nerchinsk clerk Pavel Shulgin at the end of the reign of Alexei Mikhailovich. The Russian service people of the Nerchinsk prisons filed a complaint against him with the tsar in his following acts. Firstly, the property of service people, left after the dead or killed at the yasak collection, he appropriates for himself. Secondly, he took bribes from some Buryat princes and released their amanats, after which they went to Mongolia, driving away the state and Cossack herds; and to other Buryat clans, it was Abakhai Shulengi and Turaki, who sent the Tungus to drive away the herds from them. “Yes, he has Abakhai Shulengi in Nerchinskoye, a son in amanats and with his wife Gulankay, and he is Pavel that Amanat wife, and his daughter-in-law, by his violence, takes his daughter-in-law to his bed for a long time, and in the bathhouse he takes a steam bath with her, and that Hamanat wife informed your sovereign envoy Nikolai Spafaria in that Pavlovian fornication violence and showed people in every rank all over the world. For this reason, Abakhai with all his family drove away from the prison and drove away the sovereign and the Cossack herds. Further, Pavel Shulgin was accused of smoking wine and brewing beer for sale from state-owned grain reserves, which made bread very expensive in Nerchinsk and service people suffer hunger. Shulgin's people "kept the grain", i.e. prohibited gambling. Not content with his Amanat wife, he also "brought three Cossack yasirs (captives)" to a moving hut, and from here he took them to his place for the night, "and after himself he gave those yasirs to his people for desecration." He “beats the servants with a whip, and with batogs innocently; taking five or six batogs in his hand, he orders to beat the naked on the back, on the belly, on the sides and on the steg, etc. terrible person the Russian service people of the Siberian Nerchinsk themselves dismissed from the authorities, and in his place they chose the son of the boyar Lonshakov and the Cossack foreman Astrakhantsev to the sovereign's decree; about the confirmation of their choice, they beat the sovereign with their foreheads. (Supplement to Ak. Ist. VII. No. 75). According to the report of this Shulgin, shortly before his dismissal in 1675, part of the yasak Tunguses, taken away by the Mongols from Siberia, then returned to Dauria into Russian citizenship (Acts of History. IV. No. 25). In the same 1675, we see examples of the fact that the Daurs themselves, as a result of Chinese oppression, asked for Russian citizenship. In order to defend them from the Chinese, the Albazin clerk Mikhail Chernigovsky (successor and relative of Nikifor?), with 300 service people, arbitrarily undertook a campaign or "repaired a search" over the Chinese people on the Gan River (Additional VI. P. 133).

URBAN INDUSTRY OF SIBERIA IN THE 17TH CENTURY

In the initial period of its history, the Siberian city had to go through three stages of development. Almost each of them arose as a fortress, a military-administrative center. Most of such fortresses quickly became trading centers, more or less significant. This was the second stage in the development of the Siberian city. The third is already connected with the transformation of a fortified settlement into a center of relatively developed trade, crafts, handicrafts and commodity (designed for trade) agriculture, that is, into a real city in full meaning this word.

Far from all the settlements called "cities" in Siberia passed through all these three stages in their development. Some remained mainly military-administrative centers (Pelym became such), others quickly turned into centers of developed trade, but either remained so for decades (like Berezov), or fell into decay due to the depletion of the fur reserves of the region (like Mangazeya). And only fortified settlements successfully located in favorable economic and geographical conditions rose in the 17th century. to the level of developed cities of European Russia.

These favorable conditions prevailed primarily in the most vigorously populated regions of Western Siberia and in the adjoining part of Eastern Siberia. There, Tobolsk, Tyumen, Verkhoturye, Yeniseisk, and Tomsk quickly turned into trade and craft centers. Somewhat later, some of the more distant cities began to develop just as successfully - Ilimsk, Nerchinsk, Irkutsk. This does not mean at all that there were no handicrafts in other cities. Craftsmen and all sorts of craftsmen were available in every relatively large settlement, but not everywhere the craft acquired a developed and, all the more so, commercial character.

Economically developed were those cities that were built on the main directions of colonization, in areas favorable for agriculture, rich in furs or minerals. The largest city in Siberia in the XVII century. became Tobolsk - its capital, the main commercial and industrial center. But the economic processes that took place inside and around its walls were also characteristic of other trade and craft centers of Siberia.

What they had in common was, first of all, the development of industries related to the processing of livestock products. So, major center leather production along with Tobolsk became Tyumen. In Verkhoturye, Yeniseisk and Tomsk, tanners, shoemakers, furriers, butchers, soap makers, and candle makers also made up the most prominent part of the artisans. Widespread in all Siberian cities were specialties related to the manufacture of clothing, bread products and various wooden crafts (dishes, buckets, barrels, wheels, etc.). Blacksmithing and its variety - boiler "crafts" were presented everywhere. However, in the distribution various kinds industry inside Siberia had some features.

For example, the Verkhoturye region, which was considered the "gateway" to Siberia, was an important transport service center. Shipbuilding and related industries, as well as blacksmithing, were well established there. Woodworking was widespread in the east from Verkhoturye to Turinsk, and to the south, along the eastern slope of the Ural Mountains, a zone of highly developed iron-making production extended. The flour-grinding industry was located on the tributaries of the Tobol, and, as already noted, industries associated with the processing of animal raw materials gravitated towards Tyumen. In Tobolsk, on the other hand, all the main types of Siberian crafts were well developed for those times and local conditions.

Tomsk and Yeniseisk were the centers of the second largest industrial region in Siberia, economically close to Tyumen, Tobolsk and Verkhoturye. In the area of ​​Yeniseisk, large Siberia XVII in. size reached shipbuilding, iron production, salt production. The same extractive industries developed south and east of the Tomsk-Yenisei region. In the Baikal and Transbaikalia industrial production in the 17th century. was just beginning to take shape, and his first successes brought the economic appearance of the cities of this region closer to those of Tyumen, Tobolsk and Tomsk.

One of the most widespread branches of the manufacturing industry in Siberia was leather production. Only the most remote Siberian cities did not have it, although leather for supply to the market was produced in significant quantities only in Tobolsk, Tyumen, Yeniseisk and Tomsk, and even then only by the middle of the 17th century. There, in the city workshops, a hundred or more skins were made a year, and at the beginning of the 18th century. enterprises arose that produced 1,000 skins a year. As a result, Siberians provided themselves with ordinary skins and even exported them abroad - to Kazakhstan, Central Asia, Mongolia and China.

Leather production provided raw materials for the manufacture of shoes. It was a very important branch of craft; it produced products that were in great demand everywhere. As historians recently found out, in the XVII century. in Siberia (and not only in it), Russians almost never used bast shoes and wore mostly leather shoes. Shoemaking, "boot" and other crafts, therefore, were available in almost every Siberian city. In the largest of them, dozens of craftsmen produced shoes. In the second half of the XVII century. There is an increasing shift from making shoes to order to making them for the market. In some places, it gained a wide scope: merchants supplied shoemakers with raw materials for large orders, several hundred pairs.

Soap and candle "crafts" were closely connected with leather production. One and the same person could be engaged in both the manufacture of leather and the processing of lard into soap and candles. Soap making in Siberia first appeared in Tobolsk, then in Tyumen, and by the middle of the 17th century. - in Tomsk and Yeniseisk. Like candle production, it mainly provided the needs of the region in its products.

Woodworking has reached a high degree of specialization in a number of Siberian cities. The craftsmen employed by it were divided into carpenters, countertops, caddies, window makers, peddlers, chest makers, turners, etc. In each city, specialists of those types of woodworking that were more necessary and corresponded to it prevailed. general direction his economic life. So, pails, rushes, matting, slats turned out to be most of all in the centers of flour-grinding, soap-making and leather production, which showed great demand for buckets, mats, sieves, sieves. There were many sannikovs, chariots, and collars where horse-drawn (horse-drawn) transport played an important role.

In the manufacture of clothing, the most developed branch of the craft outside the Urals for some reason was the manufacture of hats. "Hat fishing" made many Siberians wealthy people.

In the Siberian cities of the XVII century. there were still many handicraft specialties designed to satisfy the most diverse needs of the population. The documents of that time mention blacksmiths, silversmiths, icon painters, masons and brick-makers, potters, tar-makers, bakers, pastry-makers and many others. Their total number indicates that the most developed Siberian cities at the end of the 17th century. were on the same level with the average cities of European Russia. For example, in Yeniseisk in 1669 there were 24 craft specialties, in Tomsk in the second half of the 17th century. - 50, in Tobolsk at the end of the 17th century. - more than 30, and at the beginning of the next century already about 60.

Residents of Siberia in the 17th century. often combined various occupations, so among the artisans we meet not only and not even so much townspeople, but also servicemen, peasants, coachmen. They gravitated towards the city, even if they did not live in it directly. But often up to half of the artisans were dispersed in small villages. The posad layers of the Siberian city remained until the end of the 17th century. still quite small in number, and even in trade and craft centers they were often much inferior in number to the service population.

The weakness of the Siberian settlement in the past led some historians to think about the economic weakness of the Siberian cities. However, this has not been confirmed by recent studies. As it turned out, a feature of Siberia was that in the 17th century. strong positions in its "bidding and trades" were occupied by service people. They constituted not only the original core, but also the most numerous group of the urban population. In terms of their numbers, the Cossacks, archers, and their “unserved” relatives, engaged in trade and crafts, usually either surpassed the townspeople and other non-serving strata, or were almost not inferior to them.

Thus, the Siberian city, even with the predominance of the military service population in it, did not lose the appearance of a commercial and industrial center. In each of these centers by the end of the XVII century. there was at least a small market square with trading shops, several forges. In large cities, large living yards appeared with retail spaces adjacent to them, there were dozens of commercial and warehouse premises, and craft workshops. fast paced development - one of the features of the Siberian cities of the XVII century. The largest of them achieved in one century what the old trade and craft centers of Russia took centuries to achieve.

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From the author's book

CHAPTER XXXIX Industry and Crooks In the region of Vicksburg, where the river formerly corkscrewed, it is now relatively straight, having changed its course; her former journey of seventy miles was reduced to thirty-five. Because of this change, Vicksburg's neighboring city of Delta in

Siberia is a region in the northern part of Asia, bounded from the west by the Ural Mountains, from the east and north by the oceans (the Pacific and the Arctic, respectively). It is subdivided into Western Siberia, Eastern Siberia. Sometimes Southern Siberia is also distinguished. The origin of the word "Siberia" is not fully established. According to Z. Ya. Boyarshinova, this term comes from the name of the ethnic group "sipyr", whose linguistic affiliation is controversial. Later, it began to refer to the Turkic-speaking group that lived along the river. Irtysh in the area of ​​modern Tobolsk.

One of the glorious deeds that every Russian, and even more so you and me, should be proud of is the development of Siberia in the feudal period. In order to better imagine the life of Russians at that time in a vast region, one must know what kind of houses they had, how they dressed, what they ate. The analysis of the material culture of the Russian peasants of Western Siberia in the feudal period is important in connection with the discussion of the result of the annexation of Siberia to Russia in the conditions of the development of new territories. In this paper, the features of the development of the material culture of the West Siberian peasants over a century and a half are considered on the example of residential, economic and cultural buildings, clothes, utensils of all categories of the Russian peasantry in different natural and climatic zones of the region, taking into account the influence of socio-economic processes, migrations, government policies, contacts with the native population of the region.

1. Colonization and land development

Yermak's campaign and Kuchum's defeat led Siberian Khanate to collapse. The struggle against Kuchum continued until the end of the 1590s. The Russian administration built strongholds (Tyumen - 1586; Tobolsk - 1587; Pelym - 1593; Berezov - 1593; Surgut - 1594, etc.). The entry of Siberia into the Russian state took place over decades as it was mastered by Russian settlers. The state power, establishing strongholds in Siberia - stockades, which later became cities with a trade and craft population, attracted new settlers with various benefits. Such strongholds were overgrown with villages, and then settlements, which in turn became centers that united the rural population. Such agricultural areas gradually merged and formed more large areas Russian settlement. The first of these regions in Western Siberia was Verkhotursko-Tobolsk, which developed in the 1630s in Western Siberia in the basin of the Tura River and its southern tributaries. Self-sufficiency of Siberia with bread as a result economic activity settlers became possible from the 1680s. By the end of the 17th century, four West Siberian counties - Tobolsk, Verkhotursky, Tyumen and Turin - became the main breadbasket of Siberia. More eastern region agricultural development by Russian settlers in Western Siberia was the territory between Tomsk and Kuznetsk, founded respectively in 1604 and 1618.

The main cities, prisons and winter quarters of Siberia in the 17th century

The penetration of Russian fishermen into Eastern Siberia began in the 17th century. With the development of the Yenisei basin, on its middle reaches up to the mouth of the Angara, the second most important grain-producing region began to be created, which extended to Krasnoyarsk, founded in 1628. To the south, until the end of the 17th century, the Mongol state of Altyn-khans, the Kirghiz and Oirat rulers prevented agricultural land development. Further commercial development of the East of Siberia began to cover Yakutia and the Baikal region. A grain-producing region was created in the upper reaches of the Lena and along the Ilim. On the largest rivers - the Indigirka, Kolyma, Yana, Olenyok, and especially at the mouth of the Lena, part of the industrialists began to settle for permanent residence, and local groups of a permanent old-timer Russian population formed there.

Traditionally, the colonization of Siberia is classified in two directions: government and free people. The purpose of the government's resettlement policy was to provide the serving population with bread allowances through the use of the natural resources of the annexed territories. In the XVIII century, it was planned to create an agricultural region in Siberia, which not only provided for the needs of the region, but also covered the growing needs of the center in bread. Realizing the prospects of the development of Siberia, the state could not and did not intend to reduce control over the course of economic development. The government resettled the arable peasants to Siberia “according to the device” and “by order”. Those wishing to move to Siberia "on the sovereign's arable land" were given benefits for two, three years or more, assistance and loans of various sizes. The device of the peasants was carried out by the region in the form of a duty. "In total, regardless of the sources of formation of the peasant class, the main groups of farmers in Siberia in the 17th century were plowed and quitrent peasants." They performed feudal duties in favor of the owner of the land - the state.

For the cultivation of the sovereign's arable land, peasant hands and peasant farming were needed - draft power, agricultural implements. “By decree”, the “transferees” selected by the local administration in the Chernososhnye counties were sent with their families, horses, other livestock, agricultural implements, food and seeds for their own sowing to a new place of residence. At first, the peasants sent to Siberia were given assistance in their old place. For example, in 1590 it was ordered in Solvychegodsk and in the county to take 30 families of plowed peasants to Siberia and that each person had three good geldings, three cows, two goats, three pigs, five sheep, two geese, five hens, two ducks, bread for a year, a plow for arable land, a sleigh, a cart and "all kinds of worldly junk." The government made sure that the peasants moved to Siberia with a full economy.

Such a measure of the government for the settlement and agricultural development of Siberia, as the establishment of large agricultural settlements there - settlements, which concentrated the bulk of the peasant population, formed from the former inhabitants of the European part of the country, mainly Pomortsy, turned out to be effective. The construction of settlements has become more widespread in Siberia than in Pomorye and other regions of the country. The initiative in their creation at first belonged to the state, and then passed to enterprising natives of the people - Slobodchik. Slobodchiki sometimes met with resistance from the governor. This happened in 1639 during the organization of the Murzinskaya Sloboda. Slobodchik Andrei Buzheninov, who received permission in Tobolsk to organize a settlement, met with sharp opposition from the Verkhoturye governor V. Korsakov when recruiting those wishing to move to a new village on the rights of quitrent peasants with a six-year benefit. The governor forbade recruiting on the territory of the county and informed Moscow that the slobodchik was violating the established rules of recruitment, calling not only children from their fathers, but the whole family.

Already in 1674, 3,903 peasant households were concentrated in the most populated Verkhotursk-Tobolsk district, of which 2,959 were arable peasant households and 944 were grain-growing households. By the end of the XVII century. the number of peasant households there reached 6765. On the banks of the river. Parabels in the Narym district by the beginning of the 18th century. 13 families of arable peasants lived. A small center of agriculture remained on the river. Keti with 17 yards of arable peasants. Within the boundaries of the Tomsk district in 1703, 399 peasant families associated with the processing of tithe arable land, and 88 grain-growing households were settled. 96 families of arable peasants lived in the Kuznetsk district.

Within Western Siberia at the turn of the XVII-XVIII centuries. 7378 families of plowed and grain-growing peasants lived. On the territory of Eastern Siberia, they lived in 5 counties: in Yenisei - 917 families, Krasnoyarsk - 102, Bratsk - 128, Irkutsk - 338, Ilimsk - 225.

The formation of a contingent of arable and quitrent peasants proceeded on the initiative and under the control of the governors of Siberian cities, who systematically reported to the Siberian order on the state and expansion of state arable land, the volume and consumption of the harvest.

The achievements of Russian settlers in Siberia are explained by the specifics of this process. The development of Siberia took place with the participation of peasants who moved to Siberia and cultivated the lands of the new region with their labor. From the very beginning, a broad wave of peasant colonization went to Siberia. By the end of the XVII century. the peasant population of Siberia accounted for 44% of the total Russian population. In addition, the majority of servicemen and townspeople, by the nature of their occupations, were farmers. For some part of the service people, agriculture was a source of subsistence, others, receiving a grain salary, nevertheless, were engaged in agriculture and had a more or less significant plowing, and still others, in addition to their monetary and salt salaries, plowed the land. The state peasants for the received land allotment served corvee on "tithe arable land". Initially, each peasant was obliged to plow 1 dess. state arable land. This was due to the desire to quickly increase the sovereign's plowing, but it led to the fact that the peasants could not plow the arable land for several years. The first Yenisei peasants, even in the fifth year after their settlement, could not plow sob arable land, since they were completely occupied in processing the sovereign's arable land. Gradually, the size of the arable land changed depending on the economic capabilities of the peasant from 0.25 to 1.5 acres per field. The basis of the peasant economy was the "sobin" plot of land. The use of this site was formalized by "this charter". The Sobin area included arable and fallow land, as well as hay meadows. The size of the peasant "sob arable land" was in a certain proportion with the state arable land. For example, in the Yenisei district, the usual ratio between peasant and sovereign arable land was considered to be 4.5:1, i.e., for 4.5 acres of his plowing land, a peasant was obliged to plow 1 acres of sovereign arable land. In Tomsk Uyezd, on average, one peasant household accounted for 1.8 acres in the field of arable land. Labor rent was the dominant form of service throughout the 17th century. The appearance of cash and food rent had great importance but in the 17th century they have not yet become dominant.

The activity of Russia on the southern and western borders was simultaneously accompanied by a less noticeable for foreigners, but therefore no less significant penetration of Russian influence to the east, to Siberia. This was due to several factors. Firstly, Siberian furs were one of the main sources of replenishment of the treasury. In conditions when the fur-bearing animal was almost exterminated in the areas of its former production, the wealth of Siberia acquired special significance. Secondly, the flight to the outskirts, where the heavy hand of the Moscow authorities had not yet reached, was one of the consequences of growing social oppression, as well as urban uprisings and unrest of the peasants.

For this reason, the development of Siberia at the initial stage was not so much the result of state colonization, but rather the work of free industrialists and Cossacks, who, at their own peril and risk, went on long-distance expeditions through uncharted lands. This was an extremely difficult task. The only transport arteries in Siberia were rivers, and when they were covered with ice, travelers had to stop and spend the winter. At the place of wintering, settlements arose, gradually turning into cities. So in 1587 Tobolsk was founded, which became the capital of Siberia for a long time, Tyumen, Surgut, Narym, Tomsk appeared almost simultaneously. At the mouth of the Ob, the city of Mangazeya was built, which turned into the main trading and transshipment point.

Before the arrival of Russian explorers, different, very dissimilar tribes lived on the territory of Siberia. Khanty and Mansi lived along the banks of the Ob River (the Russians called them Ostyaks and Voguls), to the north of them the Nenets (Samoyeds), further to the east - the Evenki (Tungus). The Yakuts settled along the Lena River, and the Buryats settled around Lake Baikal. The Yakuts and Buryats were engaged in cattle breeding, they already had tribal nobility and princes - “noyons”. Other tribes were still at the stage of the tribal system. The main Evenks and other tribes of the forest zone continued to be hunting, the Nenets and Chukchi, who inhabited the extreme northeastern tip of the mainland, were engaged in reindeer herding.

Russian penetration into Siberia did not always proceed peacefully. The indigenous population was forced to pay yasak - tribute in furs. More than once the Siberian tribes raised uprisings against the aliens, but firearms Cossacks, as a rule, provided them with an advantage. Farther and farther to the east, fortified cities arose, which became the mainstay of Russian power. In 1628 Krasnoyarsk was founded, in 1632 Yakutsk, in 1652 the Irkutsk winter hut was built on the Angara River, on the site of which the city of Irkutsk later grew.

Expeditions of industrialists and Cossack explorers made it possible to map vast territories. In 1648, the Cossacks under the command of Fedot Popov and Semyon Dezhnev six kochs (light ships) went to sea from the mouth of the Kolyma River. Going north, they rounded the cape, which they called Big Stone Nose. Now this cape is the eastern point of the Asian continent, it bears the name of Dezhnev. In 1644, the detachment of Vasily Poyarkov, leaving Yakutsk, reached the lower reaches of the Amur. Six years later, the expedition of Yerofei Khabarov marked the beginning of the development of the middle Amur region. The cities of Nerchinsk and Albazin were built here.

In the Amur region, Russian possessions directly approached the borders of China. Khabarov's detachment had already had several skirmishes with the Chinese. In the years that followed, clashes became even more frequent. In order to relieve tension on the border, in 1676 a Russian embassy was sent to Beijing under the command of Nikolai Spafari. The ambassadors were received by the Chinese emperor, but they failed to resolve the disputed issues. Moreover, in 1683, Chinese soldiers attacked Albazin, took the city and took the Cossacks defending it into captivity. Only in August 1689, an agreement between Russia and China was signed in Nerchinsk. According to its terms, the Amur River was declared the border between the two countries. The Russians pledged to leave Albazin, but retained Nerchinsk and other settlements in the area.

It took less than a century for Russia to join a vast territory from the Urals to the Pacific Ocean. Of course, Siberia remained a deserted and sparsely populated region for a long time to come. But the annexation of lands in the east was very important for Russia. In addition to furs and huge reserves of land, Siberia was rich in ore and other minerals. Already at the end of the 17th century, silver mining began in the vicinity of Nerchinsk. The development of Siberia became the basis of the growing Russian power.

The largest region of Russia in the 17th century. was Siberia. It was inhabited by peoples who stood at different levels community development. The most numerous of them were the Yakuts, who occupied a vast territory in the basin of the Lena and its tributaries. The basis of their economy was cattle breeding, hunting and fishing were of secondary importance. In winter, the Yakuts lived in heated wooden yurts, and in the summer they went to pastures.

At the head of the Yakut tribes were elders - toyons, owners of large pastures. Among the peoples of the Baikal region, the first place was occupied by the Buryats. Most of the Buryats were engaged in cattle breeding, led a nomadic lifestyle, but there were also agricultural tribes among them. The Buryats were going through a period of the formation of feudal relations, they still had strong patriarchal-tribal remnants.

Evenki (Tungus) lived in the vast expanses from the Yenisei to the Pacific Ocean, engaged in hunting and fishing. Chukchi, Koryaks and Itelmens (Kamchadals) inhabited the northeastern regions of Siberia with the Kamchatka Peninsula. These tribes then lived in a tribal system; they did not yet know the use of iron.

The expansion of Russian possessions in Siberia was carried out mainly by the local administration and industrial people who were looking for new "lands" rich in fur-bearing animals. Russian industrial people penetrated into Siberia along the high-water Siberian rivers, the tributaries of which come close to each other. Military detachments followed in their footsteps, setting up fortified prisons, which became centers of colonial exploitation of the peoples of Siberia. The path from Western Siberia to Eastern Siberia went along the tributary of the Ob, the Keti River. On the Yenisei, the city of Yeniseisk arose (originally the Yenisei prison, 1619). Somewhat later on upstream Yenisei was founded another Siberian city - Krasnoyarsk. Along the Angara or the Upper Tunguska, the river route led to the upper reaches of the Lena. The Lena prison was built on it (1632, later Yakutsk), which became the center of control of Eastern Siberia.

In 1648, Semyon Dezhnev discovered "the edge and end of the Siberian land." The expedition of Fedot Alekseev (Popov), the clerk of the Ustyug trading people Usovs, consisting of six ships, set out to sea from the mouth of the Kolyma. Dezhnev was on one of the ships. The storm swept the ships of the expedition, some of them died or were washed ashore, and Dezhnev's ship rounded the extreme northeastern tip of Asia. Thus, Dezhnev was the first to make a sea voyage through the Bering Strait and discovered that Asia was separated from America by water.

By the middle of the XVII century. Russian detachments penetrated into Dauria (Transbaikalia and Amur). The expedition of Vasily Poyarkov along the Zeya and Amur rivers reached the sea. Poyarkov sailed by sea to the Ulya River (Okhotsk region), climbed up it and returned to Yakutsk along the rivers of the Lena basin. A new expedition to the Amur was made by the Cossacks under the command of Yerofey Khabarov, who built a town on the Amur. After the government recalled Khabarov from the town, the Cossacks stayed in it for some time, but due to a lack of food they were forced to leave it.

Penetration into the Amur basin brought Russia into conflict with China. Military operations ended with the conclusion of the Nerchinsk Treaty (1689). The treaty defined the Russian-Chinese border and promoted the development of trade between the two states.

Following industrial and service people, peasant settlers were sent to Siberia. The influx of “free people” into Western Siberia began immediately after the construction of Russian towns and especially intensified in the second half of the 17th century, when “many numbers” of peasants moved here, mainly from the northern and neighboring Ural counties. The arable peasant population settled mainly in Western Siberia, which became the main center of the agricultural economy of this vast region.

Peasants settled on empty lands or seized lands that belonged to local "yasak people". The size of arable plots owned by peasants in the 17th century was not limited. In addition to arable land, it included shrunken mowing, and sometimes fishing grounds. The Russian peasants brought with them the skills of a higher agricultural culture than that of the Siberian peoples. Rye, oats and barley became the main agricultural crops of Siberia. Along with them, industrial crops appear, primarily hemp. Animal husbandry has been widely developed. Already by the end of the XVII century. Siberian agriculture satisfied the needs of the population of Siberian cities in agricultural products and, thus, freed the government from the expensive delivery of bread from European Russia.

The conquest of Siberia was accompanied by the taxation of the conquered population with yasak - tribute. The payment of yasak was usually made in furs, the most valuable commodity that enriched the royal treasury. The "explaining" of the Siberian peoples by service people was often accompanied by outrageous violence. Official documents admitted that Russian merchants sometimes invited "people to trade and had wives and children from them, and they robbed their stomachs and cattle, and many people did violence to them."

The vast territory of Siberia was under the control of the Siberian order. The intensity of the robbery of the peoples of Siberia by tsarism is evidenced by the fact that the income of the Siberian order in 1680 accounted for more than 12% of the total budget of Russia. The peoples of Siberia, moreover, were subjected to exploitation by Russian merchants, whose wealth was created by exchanging handicrafts and cheap ornaments for fine furs, which constituted an important article of Russian export. The merchants Usovs, Pankratievs, Filatievs and others, having accumulated large capitals in Siberian trade, became owners of manufactories for boiling salt in Pomorye, without stopping their trading activities at the same time. G. Nikitin, a native of the black-haired peasants, at one time worked as a clerk E. Filatiev and in a short time advanced into the ranks of the Moscow merchant nobility. In 1679, Nikitin was enrolled in the living room hundred, and two years later he was granted the title of guest. By the end of the XVII century. Nikitin's capital exceeded 20 thousand rubles. (about 350 thousand rubles for the money of the beginning of the 20th century). Nikitin, like his former patron Filatiev, made his fortune in the predatory fur trade in Siberia. He was one of the first Russian merchants who organized trade with China.

By the end of the XVII century. significant areas of Western and partly Eastern Siberia were already populated by Russian peasants, who had mastered many previously deserted areas. Most of Siberia became Russian in terms of its population, especially the black earth regions of Western Siberia. Ties with the Russian people, despite the colonial policy of tsarism, were of great importance for the development of the economic and cultural life all the peoples of Siberia. Under the direct influence of Russian agriculture, the Yakuts and nomadic Buryats began to cultivate arable land. The accession of Siberia to Russia created conditions for the further economic and cultural development of this vast country.