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Nikolay Przhevalsky

Nikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky (or Prjevalsky;[note 1] April 12 [O.S. March 31] 1839 – November 1 [O.S. October 20] 1888) was a Russian geographer[1] of Polish descent (he was born in a Polish noble family), and a renowned explorer of Central and East Asia.

Nikolay Przhevalsky
Born
Nikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky

(1839-04-12)April 12, 1839
DiedNovember 1, 1888(1888-11-01) (aged 49)
Karakol, Russian Empire (now Kyrgyzstan)
NationalityRussian[1]
Occupation(s)explorer, geographer
Known forexploration of Central Asia
AwardsVega Medal (1884)
Nikolay Przhevalsky in 1860 (age 21)

Although he never reached his ultimate goal, the holy city of Lhasa in Tibet, he traveled through regions then unknown to the West, such as northern Tibet (modern Tibet Autonomous Region), Amdo (now Qinghai) and Dzungaria (now northern Xinjiang).[5] He contributed substantially to European knowledge of Central Asian geography.

He also described several species previously unknown to European science: Przewalski's horse, Przewalski's gazelle, and the wild Bactrian camel, all of which are now endangered.

He was a mentor of his follower Pyotr Kozlov.

Biography edit

Przhevalsky was born in Kimborovo, in the Smolensky Uyezd of the Smolensk Governorate of the Russian Empire in a Polish noble family. He studied there and at the military academy in St. Petersburg. In 1864, he became a geography teacher at the military school in Warsaw.

In 1867, Przhevalsky successfully petitioned the Russian Geographical Society to be dispatched to Irkutsk, in central Siberia. His intention was to explore the basin of the Ussuri River, a major tributary of the Amur on the Russian–Chinese frontier. This was his first important expedition. It lasted two years, after which Przhevalsky published a diary of the expedition under the title, Travels in the Ussuri Region, 1867–69.

His most well-known follower and student was Pyotr Kozlov, who discovered the ruins of the Tangut city Khara-Khoto in the Ejin Banner of Alxa League in western Inner Mongolia near Juyan Lake Basin.

Further expeditions edit

In the following years he made four journeys to Central Asia:

  • 1870–1873 from Kyakhta he crossed the Gobi Desert to Beijing then explored the upper Yangtze, and in 1872 crossed into Tibet. He surveyed over 7,000 sq mi (18,000 km2), collected and brought back with him 5000 plants, 1000 birds and 3000 insect species, as well as 70 reptiles and the skins of 130 different mammals.[6] Przehevalsky was awarded the Constantine Medal by the Imperial Geographical Society, promoted to lieutenant-general, appointed to the Tsar's General Staff, and received the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th Class.

During his expedition, the Dungan Revolt (1862–77) was raging in China.[7] The journey provided the General Staff with important intelligence on a Muslim uprising in the kingdom of Yaqub Beg in western China, and his lecture to the Russian Imperial Geographical Society was received with "thunderous applause" from an overflow audience. The Russian newspaper Golos Prikazchika called the journey "one of the most daring of our time".[8]

  • 1876–1877 traveling through East Turkestan through the Tian Shan, he visited what he believed to be Qinghai Lake, which had reportedly not been visited by any European since Marco Polo.[note 2] The expedition consisted of ten men, twenty-four camels, four horses, three tonnes of baggage and a budget of 25,000 rubles, but the expedition was beset by disease and poor quality camels. In September 1877, the caravan was refurbished with better camels and horses, 72,000 rounds of ammunition and large quantities of brandy, tea and Turkish delight and set out for Lhasa, but did not reach its goal.
  • 1879–1880 via Hami and through the Qaidam Basin to Qinghai Lake. The expedition then crossed the Tian Shan into Tibet, proceeding to within 260 km (160 mi) of Lhasa before being turned back by Tibetan officials.
  • 1883–1885 from Kyakhta across the Gobi to Alashan and the eastern Tian Shan mountains, turning back at the Yangze. The expedition then returned to Qinghai Lake and moved westwards to Hotan and Issyk Kul.

The results of these expanded journeys opened a new era for the study of Central Asian geography as well as studies of the fauna and flora of this immense region that were relatively unknown to his Western contemporaries. Among other things, he described Przewalski's horse and Przewalski's gazelle, which were both named after him. He also described what was then considered to be a wild population of Bactrian camel. In the 21st century, the Wild Bactrian camel was shown to be a separate species from the domestic Bactrian camel. Przhevalsky's writings include five major books written in Russian and two English translations: Mongolia, the Tangut Country, and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet [1] (1875) and From Kulja, Across the Tian Shan to Lob-Nor (1879). The Royal Geographical Society awarded him their Founder's Medal in 1879 for his work.[10]

Przhevalsky died of typhus not long before the beginning of his fifth journey, at Karakol on the shore of Issyk Kul in present-day Kyrgyzstan. He contracted typhoid from the Chu River, which was acknowledged as being infected with the disease.[11][12] The Tsar immediately changed the name of the town to Przhevalsk. There are monuments to him, and a museum about his life and work, there and another monument in St. Petersburg.

 
Sketch of Nikolay Przhevalsky in Popular Science Monthly, Volume 30, January, 1887

Less than a year after his premature death, Mikhail Pevtsov succeeded Przhevalsky at the head of his expedition into the depths of Central Asia. Przhevalsky's work was also continued by his young disciple Pyotr Kozlov.

 
Monument to Nikolay Przhevalsky in the Alexander Garden, Saint Petersburg

There is another place named after Przhevalsky: he had lived in a small village called Sloboda, Smolensk Oblast, Russia from 1881-7 (except the period of his travels) and he apparently loved it. The village was renamed after him in 1964 and is now called Przhevalskoye. There is a memorial complex there that includes the old and new houses of Nikolay Przhevalsky, his bust, pond, garden, birch alleys, and khatka (a lodge, watch-house). This is the only museum of the famous traveler in Russia.

Przhevalsky is commemorated by Maxim. in the naming of Przewalskia , a genus of flowering plants from Asia, belonging to the family Solanaceae.[13]

His name is eponymic with more than 80 plant species as well.[citation needed]

Przhevalsky is honored in the scientific names of five species of lizards: Alsophylax przewalskii, Eremias przewalskii, Phrynocephalus przewalskii, Scincella przewalskii, and Teratoscincus przewalskii.[14]

Accusations of imperialism and prejudice edit

According to David Schimmelpenninck Van Der Oye's assessment, Przhevalsky's books on Central Asia feature his disdain for the "Oriental"— particularly Chinese civilization. Przhevalsky explicitly portrayed Chinese people as cowardly, dirty and lazy in his metaphor, "the blend of a mean Moscow pilferer and a kike", in all respects inferior to Western culture.[15][verification needed] He purportedly argued that imperial China's hold on its northern territories, in particular Xinjiang and Mongolia, was tenuous and uncertain, and Przhevalsky openly called for Russia's annexation of bits and pieces of China's territory.[16] Przhevalsky said one should explore Asia "with a carbine in one hand, a whip in the other."[17]

Przhevalsky, as well as other contemporary explorers including Sven Hedin, Francis Younghusband, and Aurel Stein, were active players in the British–Russian struggle for influence in Central Asia, the so-called Great Game.[17]

Here you can penetrate anywhere, only not with the Gospels under your arm, but with money in your pocket, a carbine in one hand and a whip in the other. Europeans must use these to come and bear away in the name of civilisation all these dregs of the human race. A thousand of our soldiers would be enough to subdue all Asia from Lake Baykal to the Himalayas....Here the exploits of Cortez can still be repeated.

— Nikolay Przhevalsky on Asia

Przhevalsky's prejudice extended to non-Chinese Asians as well, describing the Tajik Yaqub Beg in a letter as follows, "Yakub Beg is the same shit as all feckless Asiatics. The Kashgarian empire isn't worth a kopek."[18][19][20] Przhevalsky also claimed Yaqub was "Nothing more than a political impostor," and also disdained the Muslim subjects of Yaqub Beg in Kashgar, claiming that they "constantly cursed their government and expressed their desire to become Russian subjects. [...] The savage Asiatic clearly understands Russian power is the guarantee for prosperity." These statements were made in a report in which Przhevalsky recommended that Russian troops occupy the Kashgarian emirate, but the Russian government took no action, and China recaptured Kashgar. Przhevalsky's dreams of taking land from China did not materialize.[21]

Przhevalsky not only disdained Chinese ethnic groups, he also viewed the eight million non-Chinese peoples of Tibet, Turkestan, and Mongolia as uncivilized, evolutionarily backwards people who needed to be freed from Chinese rule. [22]

Przhevalsky proposed Russia provoke rebellions of the Buddhist and Muslim peoples in these areas of China against the Chinese regime, start a war with China, and, with a small number of Russian troops, wrest control of Turkestan from China.[23]

Personal life edit

Przhevalsky is known to have had a personal relationship with Tasya Nuromskaya, whom he met in Smolensk. According to one legend, during their last meeting Nuromskaya cut off her braid and gave it to him, saying that the braid would travel with him until their marriage. She died of a sunstroke while Przhevalsky was on an expedition.[24]

Another woman in Przhevalsky's life was a mysterious young lady whose portrait, along with a fragment of poetry, was found in Przhevalsky's album. In the poem, she asks him to stay with her and not to go to Tibet, to which he responded in his diary: "I will never betray the ideal, to which is dedicated all of my life. As soon as I write everything necessary, I will return to the desert...where I will be much happier than in the gilded salons that can be acquired by marriage".[24][25]

Myth edit

There is an urban legend that Joseph Stalin was an illegitimate son of Nikolay Przhevalsky.[26][27] The legend is based on the facial similarity of both men, Stalin's official birthdate controversy (claims that he was born on 6 December 1878 instead of 21 December 1879,) and that the late Stalin era saw a resurrection of interest to the personality of Przhevalsky, numerous books and monographs were published in the Soviet Union and satellite Communist countries (which was a rare occurrence in regard to the Tsarist-era scientists,) Soviet encyclopedias portrayed Przhevalsky in sharp similarity to Stalin, which was rumored that in such a discreet manner Stalin was paying a homage to his alleged biological father. M. Khachaturova, a Tbilisi resident, who happened to know an unnamed old lady, the original bearer of the secret, was considered to be a whistleblower of the myth about Stalin's mother's alleged promiscuity. Przhevalsky's diary, if it ever existed, was rumored to disappear from archives during the early days of Stalin's ascent to power as the Communist party career, especially in its highest echelon, was troublesome for the noble blood people, who claimed a hoi polloi origin. There were unsubstantiated claims that certain 1881 paycheck ledger contained brief notes on money transfer from Przhevalsky to Stalin's mother. However, Przhevalsky's visits to Georgia are not recorded, and G. Egnatashvili, a family friend of the Jughashvilis, did not recollect anything which could possibly substantiate those claims.[28] During the Stalin era any talk concerning his ancestry and childhood was a public taboo, but the ferocity, with which the legend was debunked after the Stalin's death with the entire monographs written in order to disprove the myth (up until the 2010s,) also was considered by some as a further proof of veracity of the Przhevalsky's alleged one-night-stand theory. A humorously developed version of this legend appears in The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin (Book Three) by Vladimir Voinovich.

Works edit

  • General N. M. Prjevalsky (1887). Translated by E. Delmar Morgan. "On new Species of Central-Asian Birds". The Ibis. 5 – via Internet Archive.

Film edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ UK: /ˌpɜːrʒəˈvælski/ PUR-zhə-VAL-skee,[2] US: /-ˈvɑːl-/ -⁠VAHL-;[3][4] Russian: Никола́й Миха́йлович Пржева́льский, IPA: [nʲɪkɐˈlaj mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪtɕ prʐɨˈvalʲskʲɪj]; Polish: Nikołaj Przewalski, IPA: [ɲiˈkɔwaj pʂɛˈvalskʲi].
  2. ^ Author August Strindberg, however, believed that Przhevalsky was preceded by Johan Gustaf Renat by almost two centuries.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ "Przewalski's horse". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  3. ^ "Przewalski's horse". Lexico UK English Dictionary US English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  4. ^ "Przewalski's horse". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  5. ^ Luce Boulnois, Silk Road: Monks, Warriors & Merchants, 2005, Odyssey Books, p. 415 ISBN 962-217-721-2
  6. ^ Wood, Francis (2002). The Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. pp. 165–169. ISBN 978-0-520-24340-8.
  7. ^ Rayfield, Donald (1976). The dream of Lhasa: the life of Nikolay Przhevalsky (1839-88) explorer of Central Asia. P. Elek. p. 42. ISBN 0-236-40015-0. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  8. ^ Meyer & Blair Brysac, Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia (1999) at p. 229.
  9. ^ August Strindberg, "En svensk karta över Lop-nor och Tarimbäckenet" (in Swedish) September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "List of Past Gold Medal Winners" (PDF). Royal Geographical Society. (PDF) from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
  11. ^ Elinor S. Shaffer (1994). Comparative Criticism: Volume 16, Revolutions and Censorship. Cambridge University Press. p. 28. ISBN 0-521-47199-0. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  12. ^ Donald Rayfield (2000). Anton Chekhov: a life. Northwestern University Press. p. 183. ISBN 0-8101-1795-9. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  13. ^ "Przewalskia Maxim. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  14. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Przewalski", p. 212).
  15. ^ See, e.g. Nikolay Przhevalsky, "Mongolia, The Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet", two volumes, translated by E. Delmar Morgan with introduction and notes by Colonel Henry Yule (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1876, vol. 2, p. 24.
  16. ^ David Schimmelpenninck Van Der Oye, "Toward the Rising Sun: Russian Ideologies of Empire and the Path to War with Japan" (DeKalb, Il: Northern Illinois University Press, 2001), p. 34
  17. ^ a b David Nalle (June 2000). . Middle East Policy. Washington, US: Blackwell Publishers. VII (3). ISSN 1061-1924. Archived from the original on June 1, 2006.
  18. ^ Christian Tyler (2004). Wild West China: the taming of Xinjiang. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. p. 80. ISBN 0-8135-3533-6. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  19. ^ Frances Wood (2004). The Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia. University of California Press. p. 155. ISBN 0-520-24340-4. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  20. ^ Lutz Kleveman (2004). The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia. Grove Press. p. 100. ISBN 0-8021-4172-2. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  21. ^ Karl Ernest Meyer; Shareen Blair Brysac (2006). Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia. Basic Books. p. 233. ISBN 0-465-04576-6. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  22. ^ Elinor S. Shaffer (1994). Comparative Criticism: Volume 16, Revolutions and Censorship. Cambridge University Press. p. 28. ISBN 0-521-47199-0. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  23. ^ Robert F. Aldrich (2003). Colonialism and homosexuality. Psychology Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-415-19615-9. Retrieved April 27, 2011.
  24. ^ a b Vokrug sveta: The house of the great pathfinder (in Russian)
  25. ^ Yuri Senkevich; Alexander Shumilov (1987). They called the horizon (in Russian). Mysl.
  26. ^ Alexander Portnov Great pseudonym of Joseph Przhevalsky June 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  27. ^ Thoughts after the exhibition or who are you, Joseph Stalin September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Edvard Radzinsky. Stalin, 1998, pp. 26-27.
  29. ^ Nikolay Przhevalsky at IMDb

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Kyrill Kunakhovich, "Nikolai Mikhailovich Przhevalsky and the Politics of Russian Imperialism", in "IDP News", Issue No. 27 (accessed 2007-01-31)

nikolay, przhevalsky, przhevalsky, redirects, here, inhabited, localities, russia, przhevalsky, inhabited, locality, 1951, soviet, film, przhevalsky, film, nikolay, mikhaylovich, przhevalsky, prjevalsky, note, april, march, 1839, november, october, 1888, russi. Przhevalsky redirects here For the inhabited localities in Russia see Przhevalsky inhabited locality For the 1951 Soviet film see Przhevalsky film Nikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky or Prjevalsky note 1 April 12 O S March 31 1839 November 1 O S October 20 1888 was a Russian geographer 1 of Polish descent he was born in a Polish noble family and a renowned explorer of Central and East Asia Nikolay PrzhevalskyBornNikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky 1839 04 12 April 12 1839Kimborovo Smolensky Uyezd Smolensk Governorate Russian EmpireDiedNovember 1 1888 1888 11 01 aged 49 Karakol Russian Empire now Kyrgyzstan NationalityRussian 1 Occupation s explorer geographerKnown forexploration of Central AsiaAwardsVega Medal 1884 Wikisource has original works by or about Nikolay Przhevalsky Nikolay Przhevalsky in 1860 age 21 Although he never reached his ultimate goal the holy city of Lhasa in Tibet he traveled through regions then unknown to the West such as northern Tibet modern Tibet Autonomous Region Amdo now Qinghai and Dzungaria now northern Xinjiang 5 He contributed substantially to European knowledge of Central Asian geography He also described several species previously unknown to European science Przewalski s horse Przewalski s gazelle and the wild Bactrian camel all of which are now endangered He was a mentor of his follower Pyotr Kozlov Contents 1 Biography 2 Further expeditions 3 Accusations of imperialism and prejudice 4 Personal life 5 Myth 6 Works 7 Film 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography editPrzhevalsky was born in Kimborovo in the Smolensky Uyezd of the Smolensk Governorate of the Russian Empire in a Polish noble family He studied there and at the military academy in St Petersburg In 1864 he became a geography teacher at the military school in Warsaw In 1867 Przhevalsky successfully petitioned the Russian Geographical Society to be dispatched to Irkutsk in central Siberia His intention was to explore the basin of the Ussuri River a major tributary of the Amur on the Russian Chinese frontier This was his first important expedition It lasted two years after which Przhevalsky published a diary of the expedition under the title Travels in the Ussuri Region 1867 69 His most well known follower and student was Pyotr Kozlov who discovered the ruins of the Tangut city Khara Khoto in the Ejin Banner of Alxa League in western Inner Mongolia near Juyan Lake Basin Further expeditions editIn the following years he made four journeys to Central Asia 1870 1873 from Kyakhta he crossed the Gobi Desert to Beijing then explored the upper Yangtze and in 1872 crossed into Tibet He surveyed over 7 000 sq mi 18 000 km2 collected and brought back with him 5000 plants 1000 birds and 3000 insect species as well as 70 reptiles and the skins of 130 different mammals 6 Przehevalsky was awarded the Constantine Medal by the Imperial Geographical Society promoted to lieutenant general appointed to the Tsar s General Staff and received the Order of St Vladimir 4th Class During his expedition the Dungan Revolt 1862 77 was raging in China 7 The journey provided the General Staff with important intelligence on a Muslim uprising in the kingdom of Yaqub Beg in western China and his lecture to the Russian Imperial Geographical Society was received with thunderous applause from an overflow audience The Russian newspaper Golos Prikazchika called the journey one of the most daring of our time 8 1876 1877 traveling through East Turkestan through the Tian Shan he visited what he believed to be Qinghai Lake which had reportedly not been visited by any European since Marco Polo note 2 The expedition consisted of ten men twenty four camels four horses three tonnes of baggage and a budget of 25 000 rubles but the expedition was beset by disease and poor quality camels In September 1877 the caravan was refurbished with better camels and horses 72 000 rounds of ammunition and large quantities of brandy tea and Turkish delight and set out for Lhasa but did not reach its goal 1879 1880 via Hami and through the Qaidam Basin to Qinghai Lake The expedition then crossed the Tian Shan into Tibet proceeding to within 260 km 160 mi of Lhasa before being turned back by Tibetan officials 1883 1885 from Kyakhta across the Gobi to Alashan and the eastern Tian Shan mountains turning back at the Yangze The expedition then returned to Qinghai Lake and moved westwards to Hotan and Issyk Kul The results of these expanded journeys opened a new era for the study of Central Asian geography as well as studies of the fauna and flora of this immense region that were relatively unknown to his Western contemporaries Among other things he described Przewalski s horse and Przewalski s gazelle which were both named after him He also described what was then considered to be a wild population of Bactrian camel In the 21st century the Wild Bactrian camel was shown to be a separate species from the domestic Bactrian camel Przhevalsky s writings include five major books written in Russian and two English translations Mongolia the Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet 1 1875 and From Kulja Across the Tian Shan to Lob Nor 1879 The Royal Geographical Society awarded him their Founder s Medal in 1879 for his work 10 Przhevalsky died of typhus not long before the beginning of his fifth journey at Karakol on the shore of Issyk Kul in present day Kyrgyzstan He contracted typhoid from the Chu River which was acknowledged as being infected with the disease 11 12 The Tsar immediately changed the name of the town to Przhevalsk There are monuments to him and a museum about his life and work there and another monument in St Petersburg nbsp Sketch of Nikolay Przhevalsky in Popular Science Monthly Volume 30 January 1887Less than a year after his premature death Mikhail Pevtsov succeeded Przhevalsky at the head of his expedition into the depths of Central Asia Przhevalsky s work was also continued by his young disciple Pyotr Kozlov nbsp Monument to Nikolay Przhevalsky in the Alexander Garden Saint PetersburgThere is another place named after Przhevalsky he had lived in a small village called Sloboda Smolensk Oblast Russia from 1881 7 except the period of his travels and he apparently loved it The village was renamed after him in 1964 and is now called Przhevalskoye There is a memorial complex there that includes the old and new houses of Nikolay Przhevalsky his bust pond garden birch alleys and khatka a lodge watch house This is the only museum of the famous traveler in Russia Przhevalsky is commemorated by Maxim in the naming of Przewalskia a genus of flowering plants from Asia belonging to the family Solanaceae 13 His name is eponymic with more than 80 plant species as well citation needed Przhevalsky is honored in the scientific names of five species of lizards Alsophylax przewalskii Eremias przewalskii Phrynocephalus przewalskii Scincella przewalskii and Teratoscincus przewalskii 14 Accusations of imperialism and prejudice editAccording to David Schimmelpenninck Van Der Oye s assessment Przhevalsky s books on Central Asia feature his disdain for the Oriental particularly Chinese civilization Przhevalsky explicitly portrayed Chinese people as cowardly dirty and lazy in his metaphor the blend of a mean Moscow pilferer and a kike in all respects inferior to Western culture 15 verification needed He purportedly argued that imperial China s hold on its northern territories in particular Xinjiang and Mongolia was tenuous and uncertain and Przhevalsky openly called for Russia s annexation of bits and pieces of China s territory 16 Przhevalsky said one should explore Asia with a carbine in one hand a whip in the other 17 Przhevalsky as well as other contemporary explorers including Sven Hedin Francis Younghusband and Aurel Stein were active players in the British Russian struggle for influence in Central Asia the so called Great Game 17 Here you can penetrate anywhere only not with the Gospels under your arm but with money in your pocket a carbine in one hand and a whip in the other Europeans must use these to come and bear away in the name of civilisation all these dregs of the human race A thousand of our soldiers would be enough to subdue all Asia from Lake Baykal to the Himalayas Here the exploits of Cortez can still be repeated Nikolay Przhevalsky on Asia Przhevalsky s prejudice extended to non Chinese Asians as well describing the Tajik Yaqub Beg in a letter as follows Yakub Beg is the same shit as all feckless Asiatics The Kashgarian empire isn t worth a kopek 18 19 20 Przhevalsky also claimed Yaqub was Nothing more than a political impostor and also disdained the Muslim subjects of Yaqub Beg in Kashgar claiming that they constantly cursed their government and expressed their desire to become Russian subjects The savage Asiatic clearly understands Russian power is the guarantee for prosperity These statements were made in a report in which Przhevalsky recommended that Russian troops occupy the Kashgarian emirate but the Russian government took no action and China recaptured Kashgar Przhevalsky s dreams of taking land from China did not materialize 21 Przhevalsky not only disdained Chinese ethnic groups he also viewed the eight million non Chinese peoples of Tibet Turkestan and Mongolia as uncivilized evolutionarily backwards people who needed to be freed from Chinese rule 22 Przhevalsky proposed Russia provoke rebellions of the Buddhist and Muslim peoples in these areas of China against the Chinese regime start a war with China and with a small number of Russian troops wrest control of Turkestan from China 23 Personal life editPrzhevalsky is known to have had a personal relationship with Tasya Nuromskaya whom he met in Smolensk According to one legend during their last meeting Nuromskaya cut off her braid and gave it to him saying that the braid would travel with him until their marriage She died of a sunstroke while Przhevalsky was on an expedition 24 Another woman in Przhevalsky s life was a mysterious young lady whose portrait along with a fragment of poetry was found in Przhevalsky s album In the poem she asks him to stay with her and not to go to Tibet to which he responded in his diary I will never betray the ideal to which is dedicated all of my life As soon as I write everything necessary I will return to the desert where I will be much happier than in the gilded salons that can be acquired by marriage 24 25 Myth editThere is an urban legend that Joseph Stalin was an illegitimate son of Nikolay Przhevalsky 26 27 The legend is based on the facial similarity of both men Stalin s official birthdate controversy claims that he was born on 6 December 1878 instead of 21 December 1879 and that the late Stalin era saw a resurrection of interest to the personality of Przhevalsky numerous books and monographs were published in the Soviet Union and satellite Communist countries which was a rare occurrence in regard to the Tsarist era scientists Soviet encyclopedias portrayed Przhevalsky in sharp similarity to Stalin which was rumored that in such a discreet manner Stalin was paying a homage to his alleged biological father M Khachaturova a Tbilisi resident who happened to know an unnamed old lady the original bearer of the secret was considered to be a whistleblower of the myth about Stalin s mother s alleged promiscuity Przhevalsky s diary if it ever existed was rumored to disappear from archives during the early days of Stalin s ascent to power as the Communist party career especially in its highest echelon was troublesome for the noble blood people who claimed a hoi polloi origin There were unsubstantiated claims that certain 1881 paycheck ledger contained brief notes on money transfer from Przhevalsky to Stalin s mother However Przhevalsky s visits to Georgia are not recorded and G Egnatashvili a family friend of the Jughashvilis did not recollect anything which could possibly substantiate those claims 28 During the Stalin era any talk concerning his ancestry and childhood was a public taboo but the ferocity with which the legend was debunked after the Stalin s death with the entire monographs written in order to disprove the myth up until the 2010s also was considered by some as a further proof of veracity of the Przhevalsky s alleged one night stand theory A humorously developed version of this legend appears in The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin Book Three by Vladimir Voinovich Works editGeneral N M Prjevalsky 1887 Translated by E Delmar Morgan On new Species of Central Asian Birds The Ibis 5 via Internet Archive Film editA 1951 Soviet drama film is dedicated to Przhevalsky s life and work 29 Notes edit UK ˌ p ɜːr ʒ e ˈ v ae l s k i PUR zhe VAL skee 2 US ˈ v ɑː l VAHL 3 4 Russian Nikola j Miha jlovich Przheva lskij IPA nʲɪkɐˈlaj mʲɪˈxajlevʲɪtɕ prʐɨˈvalʲskʲɪj Polish Nikolaj Przewalski IPA ɲiˈkɔwaj pʂɛˈvalskʲi Author August Strindberg however believed that Przhevalsky was preceded by Johan Gustaf Renat by almost two centuries 9 References edit a b Nikolay Mikhaylovich Przhevalsky Encyclopaedia Britannica Przewalski s horse Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press dead link Przewalski s horse Lexico UK English Dictionary US English Dictionary Oxford University Press dead link Przewalski s horse Merriam Webster com Dictionary Luce Boulnois Silk Road Monks Warriors amp Merchants 2005 Odyssey Books p 415 ISBN 962 217 721 2 Wood Francis 2002 The Silk Road Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 165 169 ISBN 978 0 520 24340 8 Rayfield Donald 1976 The dream of Lhasa the life of Nikolay Przhevalsky 1839 88 explorer of Central Asia P Elek p 42 ISBN 0 236 40015 0 Retrieved April 27 2011 Meyer amp Blair Brysac Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia 1999 at p 229 August Strindberg En svensk karta over Lop nor och Tarimbackenet in Swedish Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine List of Past Gold Medal Winners PDF Royal Geographical Society Archived PDF from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved August 24 2015 Elinor S Shaffer 1994 Comparative Criticism Volume 16 Revolutions and Censorship Cambridge University Press p 28 ISBN 0 521 47199 0 Retrieved April 27 2011 Donald Rayfield 2000 Anton Chekhov a life Northwestern University Press p 183 ISBN 0 8101 1795 9 Retrieved April 27 2011 Przewalskia Maxim Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved May 20 2021 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Przewalski p 212 See e g Nikolay Przhevalsky Mongolia The Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet two volumes translated by E Delmar Morgan with introduction and notes by Colonel Henry Yule London Sampson Low Marston Searle amp Rivington 1876 vol 2 p 24 David Schimmelpenninck Van Der Oye Toward the Rising Sun Russian Ideologies of Empire and the Path to War with Japan DeKalb Il Northern Illinois University Press 2001 p 34 a b David Nalle June 2000 Book Review Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Middle East Policy Washington US Blackwell Publishers VII 3 ISSN 1061 1924 Archived from the original on June 1 2006 Christian Tyler 2004 Wild West China the taming of Xinjiang New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press p 80 ISBN 0 8135 3533 6 Retrieved April 27 2011 Frances Wood 2004 The Silk Road Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia University of California Press p 155 ISBN 0 520 24340 4 Retrieved April 27 2011 Lutz Kleveman 2004 The New Great Game Blood and Oil in Central Asia Grove Press p 100 ISBN 0 8021 4172 2 Retrieved April 27 2011 Karl Ernest Meyer Shareen Blair Brysac 2006 Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Basic Books p 233 ISBN 0 465 04576 6 Retrieved April 27 2011 Elinor S Shaffer 1994 Comparative Criticism Volume 16 Revolutions and Censorship Cambridge University Press p 28 ISBN 0 521 47199 0 Retrieved April 27 2011 Robert F Aldrich 2003 Colonialism and homosexuality Psychology Press p 35 ISBN 0 415 19615 9 Retrieved April 27 2011 a b Vokrug sveta The house of the great pathfinder in Russian Yuri Senkevich Alexander Shumilov 1987 They called the horizon in Russian Mysl Alexander Portnov Great pseudonym of Joseph Przhevalsky Archived June 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Thoughts after the exhibition or who are you Joseph Stalin Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Edvard Radzinsky Stalin 1998 pp 26 27 Nikolay Przhevalsky at IMDbFurther reading editMeyer Karl E Brysac Shareen Blair October 25 1999 Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Basic Books ISBN 978 1 58243 106 2 Sketch of Nicholas Prejevalski in Popular Science Monthly Volume 30 January 1887External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nikolai Przevalski nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Nikolay Przhevalsky Kyrill Kunakhovich Nikolai Mikhailovich Przhevalsky and the Politics of Russian Imperialism in IDP News Issue No 27 accessed 2007 01 31 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nikolay Przhevalsky amp oldid 1190132121, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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