ISBN-13: 9780904180602 / Angielski / Twarda / 1998 / 320 str.
ISBN-13: 9780904180602 / Angielski / Twarda / 1998 / 320 str.
In the mid-nineteenth century the eyes of western European explorers were firmly fixed on advancing inland from former maritime colonies in the Americas, Africa, the Indian sub-continent and Australasia, their motives often being inextricably bound up with concerns of imperial politics and commerce. Simultaneously, further east, Russians resumed their perceived mission to civilise Asia, following their own countrya s humiliation during the Crimean War. From a springboard of Siberian territories acquired gradually over the previous three centuries, discovery and expansion radiated from the Imperial Russian Geographical Society, founded in 1845 and incorporating initiatives drawn from descendants of immigrant French and German scientists who themselves inspired a new generation of liberal intellectuals. A key personality in that movement was the Societya s librarian and secretary of its physical geography section, P. P. Semenov (1827a 1914), a member of a minor gentry family who had been tutored by a pupil of Linnacus and who had studied under Ritter and von Humboldt at Berlin during a tour of Europe in 1853a 4. From them he conceived the notion of travelling to the virtually unknown lands of Central Asia, ostensibly to verify opinions on the existence there of active volcanoes and glaciers. In reality his ambition was to penetrate beyond the Kazakh steppe and to reach the fabled Celestial Mountains, the Tiana a Shana range, which constituted the politically sensitive border between Russia and China and the equally hostile buffer zone of Muslim kahnates. Accompanied only by a serf servant, in May 1856 Semenov embarked on a 18-month journey from St Petersburg through Kazana to Semipalatinsk, and thence via the Altai to the newly established Russian settlement of Vernoe (later Alma-Ata, now Almaty). Subsequently he received a Cossack escort on his trek into the high plateaus and ridges surrounding Issyk-kula, to a the very heart of Asiaa . Throughout his travels, his collection of geological and botanical specimens, together with topographical and meteorological observations, and sketches made by the artist Pavel Kosharov, provided a cornucopia of primary data on hitherto sparsely documented environments, alongside ethnographic information and unique insights into the social and economic life of rival nomadic, pastoral clans of the Kirgiz. While presenting a European view of Central Asia before the large-scale influx of Russian peasant settlers that followed the emancipation of the serfs in 1861, a process in which Semenov was also instrumental, his journal of 1856-7 explicitly set out a strategy for imperial expansion that was accomplished within the next three decades, and which in turn laid the foundations for the multi-ethnic agricultural and industrial developments in the region during the Soviet period."