{"id":1445,"date":"2025-08-14T21:07:16","date_gmt":"2025-08-14T21:07:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=1445"},"modified":"2025-08-15T13:56:44","modified_gmt":"2025-08-15T13:56:44","slug":"ocean-ice-and-empire-the-rise-and-fall-of-russian-alaska","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/14\/ocean-ice-and-empire-the-rise-and-fall-of-russian-alaska\/","title":{"rendered":"Ocean, ice, and empire: The rise and fall of Russian Alaska"},"content":{"rendered":"
The dramatic history of Russian America \u2013 and why its legacy still matters as Putin and Trump meet on its shores<\/strong><\/p>\n Choosing Alaska as the meeting place for the presidents of Russia and the United States may look unconventional. However, it is a deeply symbolic and probably intentional choice.<\/p>\n Alaska is more than just a remote US state; it once served as Russia\u2019s frontier, its only significant overseas possession, and was considered almost a mythical land. The story of Russian America, similar to those of other Russian frontiers, was full of drama and adventure.<\/p>\n By the early 18th century, Russians had explored most of Siberia and come up against a natural barrier. For over a century, explorers journeyed eastward in search of fur, walrus ivory, and other treasures that Siberia could offer.<\/p>\n In the southeast, they encountered the vast and largely unknown expanse of China, leading to various confrontations before the borders with the Asian power were established. Further north, they navigated the picturesque, majestic, yet seemingly impractical Kamchatka Peninsula. Beyond lay only the immense Pacific Ocean, and those who reached its waters felt like they were standing at the edge of the world.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Farther north, in some of the harshest terrains where survival was a challenge even by Siberian standards, lay the Chukotka Peninsula, home to the fierce and untamed Chukchi people. This was the farthest corner of Russia, a wild and hostile area fraught with danger.<\/p>\n While developing Chukotka proved to be a challenge, the explorers had a pretty good idea about its contours. In the mid-17th century, while searching for fur, explorer Semyon Dezhnev navigated around Chukotka and reported a strait to the east. It didn\u2019t take long to discover new lands beyond that strait. In Siberia, rumours circulated about Russians who had been swept by storms onto the American continent, where they settled. Captured Chukchi also told tales about the unknown land.<\/p>\n Over time, the conflict with the Chukchi ended and gave way to trade relations, and the Chukchi became Russian subjects. However, there seemed to be no reason to arrange an expedition to Alaska. Crossing the ocean was just too costly.<\/p>\n Nevertheless, the Russians continued to explore the region. In the mid-18th century, a massive research expedition encompassing Siberia, the Arctic Ocean, and eventually the waters of the Pacific was launched. The expedition was split into seven teams, each with a specific task. In 1741, a group led by Captains Bering and Chirikov reached the American continent aboard two packet boats. They didn\u2019t find any Russian settlements, but confirmed that this was indeed the American continent.<\/p>\n Gradually, Russians learned more about the region and began harvesting marine animals \u2013 primarily various seals and sea otters \u2013 in the Pacific. Additionally, they discovered Arctic foxes in Alaska. All these factors made voyages to Alaska economically promising.<\/p>\n The Russians established settlements along the shores of America, and several companies laid claim to the riches of Alaska. In the 1780s, they began constructing small forts along the Alaskan coastline.<\/p>\n In 1784, an expedition led by Irkutsk merchant Grigory Shelikhov built a fort on Kodiak Island. By the end of the century, it had developed into a thriving fortress with residents and priests who baptized the local Aleuts. At that time, there were barely over 500 Russian settlers. Empress Catherine the Great sent additional settlers \u2013 laborers, officials, and clergy. Competition among fur traders culminated in the formation of the Russian-American Company in 1797, which pushed its rivals out of the market.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Shelikhov died a wealthy man, and his heirs transformed the Russian-American Company into a local monopoly; the Russian Empire granted it many privileges. Life in Alaska was extreme even by Russian standards, but there were always people who were willing to come \u2013 usually, to escape serfdom, taxes, and oppressive masters. One such settler shrugged off the hardships, saying, \u201cThere are no masters in America.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n The Russians established friendly relations with the Aleuts, the most numerous local group, who eagerly adopted new tools, useful European household items, and customs, gradually drawing closer to their Russian neighbors.<\/p>\n In 1799, Shelikhov\u2019s close associate Alexander Baranov established a fort in Sitka. Here, the Russians crossed paths with English traders and, more importantly, the Tlingit Indians.<\/p>\n This fierce warrior tribe believed the Russians were encroaching on their land and hunting sea otters within their territory, which was indeed true. Additionally, many Russians married Tlingit women, stoking resentment among the indigenous men. Unlike the British, the Russians also refused to sell firearms to the Tlingits.<\/p>\n Confrontation became nearly inevitable: everyone wanted sea otters, and everyday challenges heightened tensions.<\/p>\n Bloodshed followed. In 1802, the Tlingits attacked, captured and burned down the fort while most of the inhabitants were out hunting, killing nearly all its defenders and ambushing hunting parties in the area. A total of 24 Russians and about 200 allied Aleuts and Eskimos were killed.<\/p>\n Baranov was furious but kept his composure. In 1804, he led an expedition back to Sitka with 150 Russians and 900 Eskimos, Aleuts, and allied Indians. They besieged the Tlingit wooden stronghold, bombarding it with cannons. The Tlingits, fearing capture, killed their elders and children to prevent them from falling into Russian hands and fled. In 1805, fighting broke out again at the Yakutat fort, resulting in more casualties and brutal skirmishes.<\/p>\n While these conflicts slowed Russian expansion, they didn\u2019t stop it. The Tlingits were hardly the peaceful natives of pastoral tales \u2013 having eaten one missionary, they claimed that they had partaken of his body and blood.<\/p>\n Fighting continued, and Baranov did not live to see its end. Old and worn out, he retired and died on his way back to St. Petersburg. Nevertheless, the Russians and Tlingits eventually found common ground and divided the land. In 1818, they signed a peace treaty. Much like with the Chukchi on the Eurasian continent, the Tlingits were ultimately subdued through trade; tobacco, potatoes, and bread proved stronger than cannons.<\/p>\n The Russians continued their journey along the shores of America, and for a time, there was even a Russian settlement in California \u2013 Fort Ross. The land for this little town was acquired from the native tribes in exchange for three blankets, three pairs of trousers, two axes, and three hoes.<\/p>\n The Russians were drawn to California by a practical consideration: Alaska was too cold, so Fort Ross was established to supply food for the hunters. At Fort Ross, they raised livestock, planted orchards, and even built small ships that they sold to the Spanish. Interestingly, alongside the Russians, several dozen Aleuts migrated from Alaska to California as well. Eventually, the colony was dissolved, but it has survived to this day as an open-air museum.<\/p>\nPushing past Siberia: Russia\u2019s road to Alaska<\/h2>\n
Building Russian America\u00a0<\/h2>\n
\n \u00a9\u00a0Wikipedia \/ Wikipedia <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\nConflict and coexistence<\/h2>\n
\n \u00a9\u00a0Wikipedia \/ Wikipedia <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
\n \u00a9\u00a0Wikipedia \/ Wikipedia <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\nExpansion and limits<\/h2>\n