Russian California, 1806-1860

Russian California, 1806-1860 A History in Documents - Hakluyt Society. Third Series

Paperback (28 May 2014)

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Publisher's Synopsis

This two-volume book is a documentary history of Russia's 19th-century settlement in California. It contains 492 documents (letters, reports, travel descriptions, censuses, ethnographic and geographical information), mostly translated from the Russian for the first time, very fully annotated, and with an extensive historical introduction, maps, and illustrations, many in colour. This broad range of primary sources provides a comprehensive and detailed history of the Russian Empire's most distant and most exotic outpost, one whose liquidation in 1841 presaged St Petersburg's abandonment of all of Russian America in 1867. Russia from the sixteenth century onwards had steadily expanded eastwards in search of profitable resources. This expansion was rapid, eased not only by the absence of foreign opposition and disunity of the native peoples but also by Siberia's river network and the North Pacific's convenient causeway of the Aleutian chain leading to Alaska. It was paid for largely by the 'soft gold' of Siberian sables and Pacific sea otters. By the end of the 1700s, however, on the Northwest Coast of North America the Russians met increasing opposition from the indigenous people (Tlingits) and foreign rivals (American and English fur-trading vessels).

Book information

ISBN: 9781908145086
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Imprint: Hakluyt Society
Pub date:
DEWEY: 979.40049171
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 1286
Weight: 3196g
Height: 252mm
Width: 184mm
Spine width: 93mm